第 1 节
作者:浮游云中      更新:2021-02-20 16:27      字数:9321
  TALES FROM TWO HEMISPHERES。
  TALES FROM TWO
  HEMISPHERES。
  BY HJALMAR HJORTH BOYSEN。
  THE MAN WHO LOST HIS
  NAME。
  I
  ON the second day of June; 186; a young Norseman; Halfdan Bjerk
  by   name;   landed   on   the   pier   at   Castle   Garden。 He   passed   through   the
  straight   and   narrow   gate   where   he   was   asked   his   name;   birthplace;   and
  how much money he had;at which he grew very much frightened。
  〃And   your   destination?〃demanded   the   gruff…looking   functionary   at
  the desk。
  〃America;〃 said the youth; and touched his hat politely。
  〃Do   you   think   I   have   time   for   joking?〃   roared   the   official;   with   an
  oath。
  The    Norseman    ran  his  hand  through   his  hair;  smiled  his  timidly
  conciliatory smile; and tried his best to look brave; but his hand trembled
  and his heart thumped away at an alarmingly quickened tempo。
  〃Put   him   down   for   Nebraska!〃   cried   a   stout   red…cheeked   individual
  (inwrapped in the mingled fumes of tobacco and whisky) whose function
  it was to open and shut the gate。
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  TALES FROM TWO HEMISPHERES。
  〃There aint many as go to Nebraska。〃
  〃All right; Nebraska。〃
  The   gate   swung   open   and   the   pressure   from   behind   urged   the   timid
  traveler on; while an extra push from the gate…keeper sent him flying in the
  direction of a board fence; where he sat down and tried to realize that he
  was now in the land of liberty。
  Halfdan Bjerk was a tall; slender…limbed youth of very delicate frame;
  he   had   a   pair   of   wonderfully   candid;   unreflecting   blue   eyes;   a   smooth;
  clear;   beardless   face;   and   soft;   wavy   light   hair;   which   was   pushed   back
  from   his   forehead   without   parting。      His   mouth   and   chin   were   well   cut;
  but their lines were; perhaps; rather weak for a man。               When in repose; the
  ensemble of his features was exceedingly pleasing and somehow reminded
  one of Correggio's St。 John。           He had left his native land because he was
  an   ardent   republican   and   was   abstractly  convinced   that   man;   generically
  and individually; lives more happily in a republic than in a monarchy。                    He
  had anticipated with keen pleasure the large; freely breathing life he was
  to lead in a land where every  man was his neighbor's brother; where no
  senseless traditions kept a jealous watch over obsolete systems and shrines;
  and no chilling prejudice blighted the spontaneous blossoming of the soul。
  Halfdan   was   an   only   child。    His   father;   a   poor   government   official;
  had died during his infancy; and his mother had given music lessons; and
  kept boarders; in order to gain the means to give her son what is called a
  learned     education。       In    the   Latin   school     Halfdan     had    enjoyed     the
  reputation   of   being   a   bright   youth;   and   at   the   age   of   eighteen;   he   had
  entered     the  university    under    the   most   promising      auspices。    He     could
  make very fair verses; and play all imaginable instruments with equal ease;
  which made him a favorite in society。              Moreover; he possessed that very
  old…fashioned accomplishment of cutting silhouettes; and what was more;
  he   could   draw   the   most   charmingly   fantastic   arabesques   for   embroidery
  patterns;     and    he   even    dabbled     in   portrait   and    landscape     painting。
  Whatever he turned his hand to; he did well; in fact; astonishingly well for
  a dilettante; and yet not well enough to claim the title of an artist。                   Nor
  did   it   ever   occur   to   him   to   make   such   a   claim。 As   one   of   his   fellow…
  students remarked in a fit of jealousy; 〃Once when Nature had made three
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  TALES FROM TWO HEMISPHERES。
  geniuses; a poet; a musician; and a painter; she took all the remaining odds
  and ends and shook them together at random and the result was Halfdan
  Bjerk。〃      This   agreeable   melange   of   accomplishments;   however;   proved
  very   attractive   to   the   ladies;   who   invited   the   possessor   to   innumerable
  afternoon   tea…parties;   where   they   drew   heavy   drafts   on   his   unflagging
  patience;   and   kept   him   steadily   engaged   with   patterns   and   designs   for
  embroidery; leather flowers; and other dainty knickknacks。                     And in return
  for all his exertions they called him 〃sweet〃 and 〃beautiful;〃 and applied to
  him  many  other   enthusiastic adjectives seldom  heard in   connection   with
  masculine names。          In the university; talents of this order gained but slight
  recognition; and when Halfdan had for three years been preparing himself
  in   vain    for  the   examen     philosophicum;        he   found    himself    slowly    and
  imperceptibly   drifting   into   the   ranks   of   the   so…called   studiosi   perpetui;
  who preserve a solemn silence at the examination tables; fraternize with
  every   new   generation   of   freshmen;   and   at   last   become   part   of   the   fixed
  furniture of their Alma Mater。            In the larger American colleges; such men
  are   mercilessly   dropped   or   sent   to   a   Divinity   School;   but   the   European
  universities; whose tempers the centuries have mellowed; harbor in their
  spacious      Gothic     bosoms     a   tenderer    heart   for   their   unfortunate     sons。
  There the professors greet them at the green tables with a good…humored
  smile   of   recognition;   they   are   treated   with   gentle   forbearance;   and   are
  allowed   to   linger   on;   until   they   die   or   become   tutors   in   the   families   of
  remote clergymen; where they invariably fall in love with the handsomest
  daughter; and thus lounge into a modest prosperity。
  If this had been the fate of our friend Bjerk; we should have dismissed
  him     here    with    a   confident     〃vale〃    on    his   life's  pilgrimage。       But;
  unfortunately;   Bjerk   was   inclined   to   hold   the   government   in   some   way
  responsible for his own poor success as a student; and this; in connection
  with an aesthetic enthusiasm for ancient Greece; gradually convinced him
  that the republic was the only form of government under which men of his
  tastes and temperament were apt to flourish。                 It was; like everything that
  pertained to him; a cheerful; genial conviction; without the slightest tinge
  of   bitterness。     The   old   institutions   were   obsolete;   rotten   to   the   core;   he
  said;    and   needed     a  radical   renovation。      He    could    sit  for  hours    of  an
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  TALES FROM TWO HEMISPHERES。
  evening in the Students' Union; and discourse over a glass of mild toddy;
  on    the   benefits    of   universal    suffrage     and   trial  by   jury;   while    the
  picturesqueness of his language; his genial sarcasms; or occasional witty
  allusions would   call   forth uproarious   applause   from throngs   of admiring
  freshmen。       These were the sunny days in Halfdan's career; days long to
  be remembered。         They came to an abrupt end when old Mrs。 Bjerk died;
  leaving nothing behind her but her furniture and some trifling debts。                   The
  son;   who   was   not   an   eminently   practical   man;   underwent   long   hours   of
  misery in trying to settle up her affairs; and finally in a moment of extreme
  dejection sold his entire inheritance in a lump to a pawnbroker (reserving
  for   himself   a   few   rings   and   trinkets)   for   the   modest   sum  of   250   dollars
  specie。     He  then   took   formal   leave  of   the   Students'   Union   in   a  brilliant
  speech; in which he traced the parallelisms between the lives of Pericles
  and Washington; in his opinion the two greatest men the world had ever
  seen;expounded his theory of democratic government; and explained the
  causes of the rapid rise of the American Republic。                 The next morning he
  exchanged half of his worldly possessions for a ticket to New York; and
  within a few days set sail for the land of promise; in the far West。
  II。
  From Castle   Garden;  Halfdan   made   his   way  up   through   Greenwich
  street; pursued by a clamorous troop of confidence men and hotel runners。