登陆注册
5260500000037

第37章 XVIII(2)

What with the ache in his back and his chagrin at losing the pigs, Claude was feeling desperate. "Mother," he shouted, "if you don't take Mahailey into the house, I'll go crazy!"

That evening Mrs. Wheeler asked him how much the twelve hogs would have been worth in money. He looked a little startled.

"Oh, I don't know exactly; three hundred dollars, anyway."

"Would it really be as much as that? I don't see how we could have prevented it, do you?" Her face looked troubled.

Claude went to bed immediately after supper, but he had no sooner stretched his aching body between the sheets than he began to feel wakeful. He was humiliated at losing the pigs, because they had been left in his charge; but for the loss in money, about which even his mother was grieved, he didn't seem to care. He wondered whether all that winter he hadn't been working himself up into a childish contempt for money-values.

When Ralph was home at Christmas time, he wore on his little finger a heavy gold ring, with a diamond as big as a pea, surrounded by showy grooves in the metal. He admitted to Claude that he had won it in a poker game. Ralph's hands were never free from automobile grease--they were the red, stumpy kind that couldn't be kept clean. Claude remembered him milking in the barn by lantern light, his jewel throwing off jabbing sparkles of colour, and his fingers looking very much like the teats of the cow. That picture rose before him now, as a symbol of what successful farming led to.

The farmer raised and took to market things with an intrinsic value; wheat and corn as good as could be grown anywhere in the world, hogs and cattle that were the best of their kind. In return he got manufactured articles of poor quality; showy furniture that went to pieces, carpets and draperies that faded, clothes that made a handsome man look like a clown. Most of his money was paid out for machinery,--and that, too, went to pieces.

A steam thrasher didn't last long; a horse outlived three automobiles.

Claude felt sure that when he was a little boy and all the neighbours were poor, they and their houses and farms had more individuality. The farmers took time then to plant fine cottonwood groves on their places, and to set osage orange hedges along the borders of their fields. Now these trees were all being cut down and grubbed up. Just why, nobody knew; they impoverished the land . . . they made the snow drift . . . nobody had them any more. With prosperity came a kind of callousness; everybody wanted to destroy the old things they used to take pride in. The orchards, which had been nursed and tended so carefully twenty years ago, were now left to die of neglect. It was less trouble to run into town in an automobile and buy fruit than it was to raise it.

The people themselves had changed. He could remember when all the farmers in this community were friendly toward each other; now they were continually having lawsuits. Their sons were either stingy and grasping, or extravagant and lazy, and they were always stirring up trouble. Evidently, it took more intelligence to spend money than to make it.

When he pondered upon this conclusion, Claude thought of the Erlichs. Julius could go abroad and study for his doctor's degree, and live on less than Ralph wasted every year. Ralph would never have a profession or a trade, would never do or make anything the world needed.

Nor did Claude find his own outlook much better. He was twenty-one years old, and he had no skill, no training,--no ability that would ever take him among the kind of people he admired. He was a clumsy, awkward farmer boy, and even Mrs.

Erlich seemed to think the farm the best place for him. Probably it was; but all the same he didn't find this kind of life worth the trouble of getting up every morning. He could not see the use of working for money, when money brought nothing one wanted. Mrs.

Erlich said it brought security. Sometimes he thought this security was what was the matter with everybody; that only perfect safety was required to kill all the best qualities in people and develop the mean ones.

Ernest, too, said "it's the best life in the world, Claude."

But if you went to bed defeated every night, and dreaded to wake in the morning, then clearly it was too good a life for you. To be assured, at his age, of three meals a day and plenty of sleep, was like being assured of a decent burial. Safety, security; if you followed that reasoning out, then the unborn, those who would never be born, were the safest of all; nothing could happen to them.

Claude knew, and everybody else knew, seemingly, that there was something wrong with him. He had been unable to conceal his discontent. Mr. Wheeler was afraid he was one of those visionary fellows who make unnecessary difficulties for themselves and other people. Mrs. Wheeler thought the trouble with her son was that he had not yet found his Saviour. Bayliss was convinced that his brother was a moral rebel, that behind his reticence and his guarded manner he concealed the most dangerous opinions. The neighbours liked Claude, but they laughed at him, and said it was a good thing his father was well fixed. Claude was aware that his energy, instead of accomplishing something, was spent in resisting unalterable conditions, and in unavailing efforts to subdue his own nature. When he thought he had at last got himself in hand, a moment would undo the work of days; in a flash he would be transformed from a wooden post into a living boy. He would spring to his feet, turn over quickly in bed, or stop short in his walk, because the old belief flashed up in him with an intense kind of hope, an intense kind of pain,- the conviction that there was something splendid about life, if he could but find it

同类推荐
  • 父母恩重经

    父母恩重经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 千眼千臂观世音菩萨陀罗尼神咒经

    千眼千臂观世音菩萨陀罗尼神咒经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说十力经

    佛说十力经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 随机应化录

    随机应化录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 六十种曲杀狗记

    六十种曲杀狗记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 逆天狂妃:邪帝用力宠

    逆天狂妃:邪帝用力宠

    血薇,人人闻之色变的佣兵之王。凌雪薇,被未婚夫退婚,被妹妹算计,凌府人人厌弃的废物一朝穿越,血薇带着研究基地和超级电脑成了凌府的废物,从此开启逆袭之路。天玄大陆任她翻手为云覆手为雨。随便拿出一把刀就是绝世神器;珍贵无比的冰晶仙露研可以大批量生产;丹药想练就练,神器想造就造。开挂的人生是如此的寂寞
  • 顾先生,您有个儿子请签收

    顾先生,您有个儿子请签收

    车祸之后,她被他从医院带回家。记忆全无,她只能缠上他。失忆时的她琢磨着怎么逼婚,恢复记忆的她琢磨着怎么逼婚逼婚逼婚。终于在她的步步紧逼下,他决然丢出一叠照片。车祸真相大白,本以为一切都该归位时,她扔给他一张宝宝B超图。于是,八个月后顾念收到了一个快递,里面装着他亲儿子。还有一张照片,一模一样两个宝宝边上提字:AA
  • 筠廊偶笔

    筠廊偶笔

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 后悔药专卖铺

    后悔药专卖铺

    燕国国君殷湛玉树临风神机妙算厚颜无耻,伪装成虞国将军李璟之,潜入“不悔药铺”接近老板娘红溪。啥?红溪居然还是个妖精?还卖后悔药?!国之将乱,妖孽丛生。他要亲手结束这乱世。而她,却依附乱世而生。高贵冷艳的女主VS耍流氓耍无赖死缠烂打的男主!
  • 福尔摩斯探案全集:归来记

    福尔摩斯探案全集:归来记

    《归来记》为短篇小说集,是系列第六部。《空屋猎“猛兽”》是福尔摩斯历劫归来后办理的第一则案子——自从福尔摩斯与伦敦罪犯首领莫里亚蒂教授双双跌落雷清贝瀑布后,所有的人都以为福尔摩斯死在雷清贝瀑布——未料八年后福尔摩斯化装成老流浪汉回来,利用他在贝格街的旧宅一举破了三起伦敦市悬而未决的案子……故事不仅极大地满足了侦探小说迷的愿望,其创作过程本身即以足构成世界文学史上一段永难磨灭的佳话。
  • Lincoln's Personal Life

    Lincoln's Personal Life

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 安苏宝藏

    安苏宝藏

    刘大壮出生于四川,后来家中突生变故,逃往东北,之后当兵在一场战斗中故意被俘,后被东北抗联的同志解救,送往河西村一农家养伤,期间结识了苏联红军排长诺夫斯基,俩人“村民的口中得知山上有个满是宝藏的“老虎洞”,并从中得到一份藏宝图,藏宝图上记录四个玉狮子的所在地,集齐后便可以在长白山找到遗失的安苏宝藏,俩人假借抗日为借口,为了发财而开始夺宝,最终虽然寻获宝藏,却付出了惨重代价。
  • 家有悍妻怎么破

    家有悍妻怎么破

    前世,她因软弱可欺不得善终。重回归来,她步步为营摆脱极品家人,顺道再报个恩。“喂,你别误会,我只是报你上辈子的救命之恩。”“救命之恩,当以身相报。”
  • 妖孽总裁冷冷妻

    妖孽总裁冷冷妻

    女主在婚礼上逃婚后,在酒吧买醉,在酒吧看到男主长的妖艳便萌生出想和其结婚,后两人慢慢开始各种奇葩的追爱模式,且看男主是怎样俘获女主芳心……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 乔乔的鹿鹿

    乔乔的鹿鹿

    (已完结,请放心阅读)鹿鹿抱着一个文件夹匆匆跑到太阳大厦,虽然初秋有些清冷,她还是穿了一条及膝短裙,今天是去太阳集团应聘的日子,千万不能迟到了。咦?怎么那么多人哪,还个个都是美女,刚到大厅,鹿鹿就被眼前的景象给吓了一跳,不愧是太阳集团,一个秘书职位就来了那么多美女。鹿鹿接过一张表认真填写起来,身高,体重,三维?是否处女??这太阳集团的招聘也太严格了吧?若干年后,当你的身影已经深深烙在某个人心里,而你却皱着眉头怎么也想不起他来,这算不算是一个悲剧。。。