第 17 节
作者:随便看看      更新:2022-07-12 16:23      字数:9321
  house at a fair; and I am a mere Post…office anchorite in a cell much too
  small for him; and I can't get out; and I can't get in; and I have no space to
  be idle in; even if I would。〃         So; the boy;' said Mr。 Goodchild; concluding
  the   tale;   'comes   back    with   the   letters   after   all;   and   lives   happy   never
  afterwards。'
  But it may; not unreasonably; be asked … while Francis Goodchild was
  wandering hither and thither; storing his mind with perpetual observation
  of   men    and    things;   and   sincerely    believing    himself    to   be  the   laziest
  creature   in   existence   all   the   time   …   how   did   Thomas   Idle;   crippled   and
  confined to the house; contrive to get through the hours of the day?
  Prone on the sofa; Thomas made no attempt to get through the hours;
  but passively allowed the hours to get through HIM。                  Where other men in
  his   situation   would   have   read   books   and   improved   their   minds;  Thomas
  slept    and   rested   his   body。    Where      other    men    would     have   pondered
  anxiously over their future prospects; Thomas dreamed lazily of his past
  life。   The one solitary thing he did; which most other people would have
  done     in  his   place;   was   to  resolve    on   making     certain    alterations   and
  improvements   in   his   mode   of   existence;   as   soon   as   the   effects   of   the
  misfortune   that   had   overtaken   him  had   all   passed   away。       Remembering
  that the current of his life had hitherto oozed along in one smooth stream
  of laziness; occasionally troubled on the surface by a slight passing ripple
  of industry; his present ideas on the subject of self…reform; inclined him …
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  not as the reader may be disposed to imagine; to project schemes for a new
  existence of enterprise and exertion … but; on the contrary; to resolve that
  he would never; if he could possibly help it; be active or industrious again;
  throughout the whole of his future career。
  It   is   due   to   Mr。   Idle   to   relate   that   his   mind   sauntered   towards   this
  peculiar  conclusion   on  distinct   and logically…producible grounds。              After
  reviewing; quite at his ease; and with many needful intervals of repose; the
  generally…placid spectacle of his past existence; he arrived at the discovery
  that all the great disasters which had tried his patience and equanimity in
  early life; had been caused by his having allowed himself to be deluded
  into imitating some pernicious example of activity and industry that had
  been set him by others。         The trials to which he here alludes were three in
  number;   and   may   be   thus   reckoned   up:      First;   the   disaster   of   being   an
  unpopular and a thrashed boy at   school; secondly; the disaster of   falling
  seriously ill; thirdly; the disaster of becoming acquainted with a great bore。
  The first disaster occurred after Thomas had been an idle and a popular
  boy    at  school;    for  some    happy    years。    One     Christmas…time;      he   was
  stimulated   by   the   evil   example   of   a   companion;   whom   he   had   always
  trusted   and   liked;   to   be   untrue   to   himself;   and   to   try   for   a   prize   at   the
  ensuing half…yearly examination。            He did try; and he got a prize … how; he
  did not distinctly  know at the moment; and   cannot remember   now。                    No
  sooner; however; had the book … Moral Hints to the Young on the Value of
  Time … been placed in his hands; than the first troubles of his life began。
  The idle boys deserted him; as a traitor to their cause。                The industrious
  boys avoided him; as a dangerous interloper; one of their number; who had
  always won the prize on previous occasions; expressing just resentment at
  the invasion of his privileges by calling Thomas into the play… ground; and
  then and there administering to him the first sound and genuine thrashing
  that he had ever received in his life。          Unpopular from that moment; as a
  beaten boy; who belonged to no side and was rejected by all parties; young
  Idle soon lost caste with his masters; as he had previously lost caste with
  his schoolfellows。 He had forfeited the comfortable reputation of being the
  one lazy member of the youthful community whom it was quite hopeless
  to punish。     Never again did he hear the headmaster say reproachfully to
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  an industrious boy who had committed a fault; 'I might have expected this
  in   Thomas      Idle;   but   it  is  inexcusable;    sir;  in  you;   who     know    better。'
  Never   more;   after   winning   that   fatal   prize;   did   he   escape   the   retributive
  imposition; or the avenging birch。             From that time; the masters made him
  work;   and   the   boys   would   not   let   him   play。    From   that   time   his   social
  position steadily declined; and his life at school became a perpetual burden
  to him。
  So; again; with the second disaster。            While Thomas was lazy; he was a
  model of health。        His first attempt at active exertion and his first suffering
  from   severe   illness   are   connected   together   by   the   intimate   relations   of
  cause and effect。        Shortly after leaving school; he accompanied a party of
  friends     to  a  cricket…field;     in  his  natural    and   appropriate      character    of
  spectator only。       On the ground it was discovered that the players fell short
  of   the   required   number;   and   facile   Thomas   was   persuaded   to   assist   in
  making up the complement。               At a certain appointed time; he was roused
  from peaceful slumber in a dry ditch; and placed before three wickets with
  a bat in his hand。       Opposite to him; behind three more wickets; stood one
  of his bosom friends; filling the situation (as he was informed) of bowler。
  No words can describe Mr。 Idle's horror and amazement; when he saw this
  young   man   …   on   ordinary   occasions;   the   meekest   and   mildest   of   human
  beings   …  suddenly  contract   his   eye…brows;   compress   his   lips;  assume   the
  aspect of an infuriated savage; run back a few steps; then run forward; and;
  without the slightest previous provocation; hurl a detestably hard ball with
  all his might straight at Thomas's legs。 Stimulated to preternatural activity
  of body and sharpness of eye by the instinct of self…preservation; Mr。 Idle
  contrived; by jumping deftly aside at the right moment; and by using his
  bat (ridiculously narrow as it was for the purpose) as a shield; to preserve
  his life and limbs from the dastardly attack that had been made on both; to
  leave the full force of the deadly missile to strike his wicket instead of his
  leg;   and   to   end   the   innings;   so   far   as   his   side   was   concerned;   by   being
  immediately bowled out。 Grateful for his escape; he was about to return to
  the dry ditch; when he was peremptorily stopped; and told that the other
  side was 'going in;' and that he was expected to 'field。'                His conception of
  the  whole   art   and   mystery  of   'fielding;'  may  be   summed   up   in   the   three
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  words of serious advice which he privately administered to himself on that
  trying   occasion   …   avoid   the   ball。   Fortified   by   this   sound   and   salutary
  principle; he took his own course; impervious alike to ridicule and abuse。
  Whenever the ball came near him; he thought of his shins; and got out of
  the way immediately。          'Catch it!'    'Stop it!'    'Pitch it up!' were cries that
  passed by him like the idle wind that he regarded not。                  He ducked under
  it;   he   jumped   over   it;   he   whisked   himself   away   from   it   on   either   side。
  Never once; through the whole innings did he and the ball come together
  on anything approaching to intimate terms。 The unnatural activity of body
  which was necessarily  called   forth   for   the   accomplishment   of   this   result
  threw Thomas Idle; for the first time in his life; into a perspiration。                  The
  perspiration; in consequence of his want of practice in the management of
  that    particular    result   of   bodily    activity;   was   suddenly      checked;     the
  inevitable chill succeeded; and that; in its turn; was followed by a fever。
  For the  first time  since his birth;  Mr。 Idle  found himself confined   to   his
  bed for many