登陆注册
5263200000008

第8章 CHAPTER I(8)

Our young man's first impression of the Western world was received on the landing-place of the German steamers at Jersey City--a huge wooden shed covering a wooden wharf which resounded under the feet, an expanse palisaded with rough-hewn piles that leaned this way and that, and bestrewn with masses of heterogeneous luggage. At one end; toward the town, was a row of tall painted palings, behind which he could distinguish a press of hackney-coachmen, who brandished their whips and awaited their victims, while their voices rose, incessant, with a sharp strange sound, a challenge at once fierce and familiar. The whole place, behind the fence, appeared to bristle and resound. Out there was America, Count Otto said to himself, and he looked toward it with a sense that he should have to muster resolution. On the wharf people were rushing about amid their trunks, pulling their things together, trying to unite their scattered parcels. They were heated and angry, or else quite bewildered and discouraged. The few that had succeeded in collecting their battered boxes had an air of flushed indifference to the efforts of their neighbours, not even looking at people with whom they had been fondly intimate on the steamer. A detachment of the officers of the Customs was in attendance, and energetic passengers were engaged in attempts to drag them toward their luggage or to drag heavy pieces toward them. These functionaries were good-natured and taciturn, except when occasionally they remarked to a passenger whose open trunk stared up at them, eloquent, imploring, that they were afraid the voyage had been "rather glassy." They had a friendly leisurely speculative way of discharging their duty, and if they perceived a victim's name written on the portmanteau they addressed him by it in a tone of old acquaintance. Vogelstein found however that if they were familiar they weren't indiscreet. He had heard that in America all public functionaries were the same, that there wasn't a different tenue, as they said in France, for different positions, and he wondered whether at Washington the President and ministers, whom he expected to see--to HAVE to see--a good deal of, would be like that.

He was diverted from these speculations by the sight of Mr. and Mrs.

Day seated side by side upon a trunk and encompassed apparently by the accumulations of their tour. Their faces expressed more consciousness of surrounding objects than he had hitherto recognised, and there was an air of placid expansion in the mysterious couple which suggested that this consciousness was agreeable. Mr. and Mrs. Day were, as they would have said, real glad to get back. At a little distance, on the edge of the dock, our observer remarked their son, who had found a place where, between the sides of two big ships, he could see the ferry-boats pass; the large pyramidal low-laden ferry-boats of American waters.

He stood there, patient and considering, with his small neat foot on a coil of rope, his back to everything that had been disembarked, his neck elongated in its polished cylinder, while the fragrance of his big cigar mingled with the odour of the rotting piles, and his little sister, beside him, hugged a huge post and tried to see how far she could crane over the water without falling in. Vogelstein's servant was off in search of an examiner; Count Otto himself had got his things together and was waiting to be released, fully expecting that for a person of his importance the ceremony would be brief.

Before it began he said a word to young Mr. Day, raising his hat at the same time to the little girl, whom he had not yet greeted and who dodged his salute by swinging herself boldly outward to the dangerous side of the pier. She was indeed still unformed, but was evidently as light as a feather.

"I see you're kept waiting like me. It's very tiresome," Count Otto said.

The young American answered without looking behind him. "As soon as we're started we'll go all right. My sister has written to a gentleman to come down."

"I've looked for Miss Day to bid her good-bye," Vogelstein went on;

"but I don't see her."

"I guess she has gone to meet that gentleman; he's a great friend of hers."

"I guess he's her lover!" the little girl broke out. "She was always writing to him in Europe."

Her brother puffed his cigar in silence a moment. "That was only for this. I'll tell on you, sis," he presently added.

But the younger Miss Day gave no heed to his menace; she addressed herself only, though with all freedom, to Vogelstein. "This is New York; I like it better than Utica."

He had no time to reply, for his servant had arrived with one of the dispensers of fortune; but as he turned away he wondered, in the light of the child's preference, about the towns of the interior.

同类推荐
  • 将发循州社日于所居

    将发循州社日于所居

    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。
  • WASHINGTON SQUARE

    WASHINGTON SQUARE

    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。
  • 大花严长者问佛那罗延力经

    大花严长者问佛那罗延力经

    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。
  • 丘隅意见

    丘隅意见

    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。
  • Heroes of the Telegraph

    Heroes of the Telegraph

    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
  • 果园飘香之独宠医妃

    果园飘香之独宠医妃

    杜晓璃,人人瞻望的传奇人物,却抵挡不住可笑的命运!再次睁眼,坚定如她还是被自己枯枝一样的小手,和眼前四处漏风漏雨又漏鼠的景象惊得嘴角直抽!父母双亡,三餐不继,唯一的财产便是一座破房子和一个可爱的小哥哥。这都叫什么破事!买山头,种果树,开酒厂,酿果酒,发展产业链,从此财源滚滚来,带着哥哥发家致富!交知己,拐王爷,斗牛鬼蛇神,农家女也能混得风生水起,一朝笑看天下!咦?这个小哥长的不错,来给我种果树吧!顺便再定个娃娃亲怎么样?白眼一翻,正在被奴役种树的小娃娃给了她一个酷酷地背影。一别几年,看到眼前这个名副其实的高富帅一脸冰冷地说自己和他已经定亲,并且早已一吻定情,让她负责的面瘫王爷,真的是当初那个小帅哥?!杜晓璃无语望天:不想当王妃啊,可不可以退货?!!冷面王爷一脸委屈:你说过一经出售,概不退货,几年前我就已经乖乖从了你,这些年一直谨遵你的教诲,为你守身如玉,你现在怎么能狠心抛弃我?杜晓璃下巴快落到地上:好吧,看在你这么乖的份上,跟我回家吧!某爷魅惑一笑:为夫遵命!
  • 给我一个理由忘记

    给我一个理由忘记

    我爱我的丈夫宋离予,心甘情愿踏进婚姻坟,想为他筑起温暖家。幻想家里有我,有他,有宝宝两仨。可结果,他和白莲花情比真金,我引掉孩子扫下堂。我有千百种理由走开,可又被十四年前的阴谋拖进深渊。当另一人成为我心口朱砂,我为令一人伤心而哑。宋离予才终于信我,我才是他许诺要娶小哑巴,是他恨着不想放手慕穆。小瞎子:【小哑巴,如果我们都活着,我娶你做新娘。】小哑巴:【啊..啊..】这是我追随他,守着他,恨透他,无视他,却依然学不会忘记的故事。情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 云的诗

    云的诗

    使生如夏花般绚烂死若秋叶般静美 (=^^=)
  • 喊一声战友

    喊一声战友

    赵平思索了很长一段时间,最终还是决定去找县长张思甜。作为一名转业军人,赵平刚脱下军装时,和其他战友一样怀着到地方大干一番事业的壮志凌云,可到了地方,他发现要想把自己的梦想变成现实,并不像前些年转业的战友说的那样容易,赵平的许多战友转业到地方工作后,经常向他吹嘘地方赚钱如何容易、工作如何轻松,战友的话使赵平产生了错觉,以为地方遍地是黄金,转业到地方后,过不了几年便能飞黄腾达。事实上,赵平的战友转业到地方工作后,混得很好的并不是太多,他们到部队探望领导和战友时,往自己脸上贴金,那是因为他们抹不下面子,想在部队领导面前摆摆谱。
  • 农女来袭:相公,你要乖

    农女来袭:相公,你要乖

    一朝穿越,夏锦萱秒变农家小媳妇。上有强势公婆,下有各路渣亲。最要命的是她夫君还是个瘸了腿的!面对人生困境,且看她如何逆转,斗极品,虐渣渣,发家致富。空间在手,天下她有,却不想丈夫竟然是个大尾巴狼?这完全不按套路出牌啊!
  • 周易参同契分章通真义

    周易参同契分章通真义

    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。
  • 特工嫣然

    特工嫣然

    这是一个虚空的世界,这是一段缠绵悱恻的爱恋,这是一群爱恨交织纠缠不清的男人和女人们。她一朝穿越,是冥冥之中的命运安排?还是不小心踏错了红尘?敬请阅读,智慧狡黠美丽妖娆的女神,为君歌尽静胡沙。
  • 惊鸿一瞥心悦你

    惊鸿一瞥心悦你

    [不定期更新]可能一见钟情这个词太敷衍了, 大概日久生情这个词也算不上, 那,命中注定,可能是最合适的吧。
  • 三国之裴元庆传奇

    三国之裴元庆传奇

    一箭敌胆寒,一枪扫乾坤,一锤定天下,九零后颓废青年穿越三国,身兼隋唐三大名将武艺于一身,且看裴枫在蜀汉军中掀起怎样的波澜。
  • 中国古代高僧传

    中国古代高僧传

    在波澜壮阔的中国历史长河中,在富饶广袤的神州大地上,数千年来,曾经涌现出了一批批叱咤风云、扭转乾坤的英雄豪杰。他们如夜空中的群星,交相辉映,璀璨夺目。岁月的流逝,冲刷不掉他们的英名;朝代的兴废,也改变不了他们不朽的业绩。他们中间,有雄才大略、举贤任能的国君;有变法图强、励精图治的名相;有横刀立马、席卷千军的将帅;有运筹帷幄、料事如神的谋士;有忧国忧民、忠言直谏的贤臣……他们是我们民族的精英、祖国的脊梁。