登陆注册
15424200000035

第35章 CHAPTER XVII(1)

North we raced from the Bonin Islands to pick up the seal-herd,and north we hunted it for a hundred days into frosty,mitten weather and into and through vast fogs which hid the sun from us for a week at a time.It was wild and heavy work,without a drink or thought of drink.Then we sailed south to Yokohama,with a big catch of skins in our salt and a heavy pay-day coming.

I was eager to be ashore and see Japan,but the first day was devoted to ship's work,and not until evening did we sailors land.

And here,by the very system of things,by the way life was organised and men transacted affairs,John Barleycorn reached out and tucked my arm in his.The captain had given money for us to the hunters,and the hunters were waiting in a certain Japanese public house for us to come and get it.We rode to the place in rickshaws.Our own crowd had taken possession of it.Drink was flowing.Everybody had money,and everybody was treating.After the hundred days of hard toil and absolute abstinence,in the pink of physical condition,bulging with health,over-spilling with spirits that had long been pent by discipline and circumstance,of course we would have a drink or two.And after that we would see the town.

It was the old story.There were so many drinks to be drunk,and as the warm magic poured through our veins and mellowed our voices and affections we knew it was no time to make invidious distinctions--to drink with this shipmate and to decline to drink with that shipmate.We were all shipmates who had been through stress and storm together,who had pulled and hauled on the same sheets and tackles,relieved one another's wheels,laid out side by side on the same jib-boom when she was plunging into it and looked to see who was missing when she cleared and lifted.So we drank with all,and all treated,and our voices rose,and we remembered a myriad kindly acts of comradeship,and forgot our fights and wordy squabbles,and knew one another for the best fellows in the world.

Well,the night was young when we arrived in that public house,and for all of that first night that public house was what I saw of Japan--a drinking-place which was very like a drinking-place at home or anywhere else over the world.

We lay in Yokohama harbour for two weeks,and about all we saw of Japan was its drinking-places where sailors congregated.

Occasionally,some one of us varied the monotony with a more exciting drunk.In such fashion I managed a real exploit by swimming off to the schooner one dark midnight and going soundly to sleep while the water-police searched the harbour for my body and brought my clothes out for identification.

Perhaps it was for things like that,I imagined,that men got drunk.In our little round of living what I had done was a noteworthy event.All the harbour talked about it.I enjoyed several days of fame among the Japanese boatmen and ashore in the pubs.It was a red-letter event.It was an event to be remembered and narrated with pride.I remember it to-day,twenty years afterward,with a secret glow of pride.It was a purple passage,just as Victor's wrecking of the tea-house in the Bonin Islands and my being looted by the runaway apprentices were purple passages.

The point is that the charm of John Barleycorn was still a mystery to me.I was so organically a non-alcoholic that alcohol itself made no appeal;the chemical reactions it produced in me were not satisfying because I possessed no need for such chemical satisfaction.I drank because the men I was with drank,and because my nature was such that I could not permit myself to be less of a man than other men at their favourite pastime.And Istill had a sweet tooth,and on privy occasions when there was no man to see,bought candy and blissfully devoured it.

We hove up anchor to a jolly chanty,and sailed out of Yokohama harbour for San Francisco.We took the northern passage,and with the stout west wind at our back made the run across the Pacific in thirty-seven days of brave sailing.We still had a big pay-day coming to us,and for thirty-seven days,without a drink to addle our mental processes,we incessantly planned the spending of our money.

The first statement of each man--ever an ancient one in homeward-bound forecastles--was:"No boarding-house sharks in mine."Next,in parentheses,was regret at having spent so much money in Yokohama.And after that,each man proceeded to paint his favourite phantom.Victor,for instance,said that immediately he landed in San Francisco he would pass right through the water-front and the Barbary Coast,and put an advertisement in the papers.His advertisement would be for board and room in some simple working-class family."Then,"said Victor,"I shall go to some dancing-school for a week or two,just to meet and get acquainted with the girls and fellows.Then I'll get the run of the different dancing crowds,and be invited to their homes,and to parties,and all that,and with the money I've got I can last out till next January,when I'll go sealing again."No;he wasn't going to drink.He knew the way of it,particularly his way of it,wine in,wit out,and his money would be gone in no time.He had his choice,based on bitter experience,between three days'debauch among the sharks and harpies of the Barbary Coast and a whole winter of wholesome enjoyment and sociability,and there wasn't any doubt of the way he was going to choose.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 魔女仙尊

    魔女仙尊

    凌霄之上,你可愿伴我参灵悟道,忘却一世尘俗纷扰?幽冥之下,你可愿随我堕心成魔,舍弃一身仙风傲骨?奈何之上,你可愿等我共聚轮回,换得一世回眸相望?西窗之下,你可愿同我花烛共剪,抛下一界众生缘果?……
  • 信仰之命运

    信仰之命运

    曾经有人这样对我说,杀手从他拿起刀杀死第一个人的时候起他的命运便就已经注定了。我是一个雇佣兵,也是一个现代型的杀手;对于杀手而言这句话就像一句魔咒,仿佛谁都摆脱不了这样的命运。不管你是谁,只要沾上了你人生的第一滴血那么你这辈子就都将失去那些曾经属于和不属于你的东西。我是一个现代型的杀手,我的名字叫“夜”。夜只是一个杀手的代号,杀手自从成为杀手的那一天那一刻开始他的姓名、身体、灵魂、信仰便都就失去了。这句话是曾经一位老杀手死之前亲口告诉我的,曾经我也见很多人印证了这一点。我一直认为我也是这样的命运,但是那仅仅也是认为而已。或许这个预言也需要有人来打破它,我虽然不愿意做这件预言的第一人,但是我却绝对不会做这个预言的最后一人,于是我背叛了………。
  • 我在律师界混饭的日子

    我在律师界混饭的日子

    任建律师左手《黄帝内经》,右手波尔多红酒,恶搞法庭,调戏美人的故事。
  • 亲手为狗狗做美食

    亲手为狗狗做美食

    每个狗狗的主人都希望自己的狗狗有个健康的身体,能够快乐地生活。那么狗狗的健康身体从哪里来呢?和人一样,狗狗的健康从饮食中来。人以食为天,狗狗也是如此。
  • 相思谋:妃常难娶

    相思谋:妃常难娶

    某日某王府张灯结彩,婚礼进行时,突然不知从哪冒出来一个小孩,对着新郎道:“爹爹,今天您的大婚之喜,娘亲让我来还一样东西。”说完提着手中的玉佩在新郎面前晃悠。此话一出,一府宾客哗然,然当大家看清这小孩与新郎如一个模子刻出来的面容时,顿时石化。此时某屋顶,一个绝色女子不耐烦的声音响起:“儿子,事情办完了我们走,别在那磨矶,耽误时间。”新郎一看屋顶上的女子,当下怒火攻心,扔下新娘就往女子所在的方向扑去,吼道:“女人,你给本王站住。”一场爱与被爱的追逐正式开始、、、、、、、
  • 宠物小精灵之史诗

    宠物小精灵之史诗

    左手掌握黑暗,右手波导纵横。冠军之路,是我的目的。万法归宗,是我的传奇。骑在喷火龙的身上俯视众生,尊重,只属于强者。
  • 魔女逆天行

    魔女逆天行

    她是西大陆万药谷的天才少谷主。她是遗落下位面的废物异族女孩。当天才重生成废材!高阶丹药,不是问题;天品灵器,本姑娘有的是。万药谷来人?那自然是有冤报怨!唉!那谁,你别妨碍我报仇!她已经看着这个男人好久了!很是不爽啊!本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 复仇半生

    复仇半生

    因为《校废》还没有修完,我就打算重新写一篇简单一点的,你们无聊的时候能消遣消遣时间,这样也能减少我的压力。这篇就是第二篇文,这篇文是我的一个梦境的联想、改编,所以我写的就会像流水账,你们就当做是看童话故事吧。这文后期可能会玛丽苏,不喜的左拐!不勉强。
  • 默默的快穿

    默默的快穿

    “系统,系统,系统,商量个事呗,,,,,”默默在心里面都快哭了,别人家都是系统帮助自己完成任务,自己累死累活还没有一点好处T^T呜呜呜~~~黄想哭啊。“说”秦风玉看着自己这个弱智契约者就想翻白眼,不过为了形象忍。。。“那个,,,,那个,,,,”默默拉着衣角慢慢吞吞半天不说话。“不想说就别说了,走了”秦风玉看着秦默默这个样子无语了,每次都这样烦死了,抬起脚一下蹿过去。“啊!啊啊啊啊~~~我想说的就是能不能别每次都蹿我啊,你个暴力狂,没人性的家伙”秦默默这下不管骂了他会怎么样,怎么会有这样的人,呜呜呜www~每次都这样,不活了。。。
  • 武者锋芒

    武者锋芒

    将军立志征沙场,死后方知节未寒。若为帝国付生死,谁教无辰不丈夫!凄凄惨惨,寻寻匿匿。古来征战,醉卧沙场,叶无辰叹:“人生太短!”相顾白刃雪纷纷,死节从来岂顾勋,君不见沙场征战苦,至今犹忆李将军。玄幻仙侠小说,不为传统,小银想想写写,还是战国最好。各位读者大大,你们怎么看?读者齐呼:“票票,推荐,收藏!”小银受宠若惊:“谢谢大神!”