第 6 节
作者:双曲线      更新:2021-04-30 17:21      字数:9322
  although he was never overfond of firearms。
  Nevertheless Bullet had his own sense of dignity。               He was literally as
  gentle   as   a   kitten;   but   he   drew   a   line。 I   shall   never   forget   how   once;
  being possessed of a desire to find out whether we could swim our outfit
  across a certain stretch of the Merced River; I climbed him bareback。                   He
  bucked me off so quickly that I never even got settled on his back。                   Then
  he gazed at me with sorrow; while; laughing irrepressibly at this unusual
  assertion of   independent ideas;   I picked   myself   out   of   a   wild…rose   bush。
  He   did   not   attempt   to   run   away   from   me;   but   stood   to   be   saddled;   and
  plunged   boldly   into     the   swift   water   where   I   told   him   to。 Merely   he
  thought it disrespectful in me to ride him without his proper harness。                  He
  was the pet of the camp。
  As near as I could make out; he had but one fault。               He was altogether
  too   sensitive   about   his   hind   quarters;   and   would   jump   like   a   rabbit   if
  anything touched him there。
  Wes rode a horse we called Old Slob。               Wes; be it premised; was an
  interesting companion。          He had done everything;seal…hunting; abalone…
  gathering; boar…hunting; all kinds of shooting; cow…punching in the rough
  Coast     Ranges;     and    all  other   queer    and    outlandish    and    picturesque
  vocations by which a man can make a living。                 He weighed two hundred
  and twelve pounds and was the best game shot with a rifle I ever saw。
  As you may imagine; Old Slob was a stocky individual。                  He was built
  from the ground up。         His disposition was quiet; slow; honest。           Above all;
  he gave the impression of vast; very vast experience。               Never did he hurry
  his mental processes; although he was quick enough in his movements if
  need arose。      He quite declined to worry about anything。                Consequently;
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  in spite of the fact that he carried by far the heaviest man in the company;
  he stayed always fat and in good condition。              There was something almost
  pathetic in Old Slob's willingness to go on working; even when more work
  seemed   like   an   imposition。      You   could   not   fail   to   fall   in   love   with   his
  mild inquiring   gentle   eyes;  and his utter   trust in the   goodness of   human
  nature。     His   only   fault   was   an   excess   of   caution。 Old   Slob   was   very
  very experienced。        He knew all about trails; and he declined to be hurried
  over what he considered   a bad place。             Wes   used sometimes to   disagree
  with him as to what constituted a bad place。              〃Some day you're going to
  take   a   tumble;   you   old   fool;〃   Wes   used   to   address   him;   〃if   you   go   on
  fiddling down steep rocks with your little old monkey work。                    Why don't
  you step out?〃       Only Old Slob never did take a tumble。              He was willing
  to   do   anything     for  you;   even    to  the  assuming      of  a  pack。     This    is
  considered by a saddle…animal distinctly as a come…down。
  The    Tenderfoot;      by   the  irony    of  fate;   drew    a  tenderfoot     horse。
  Tunemah was a big fool gray that was constitutionally rattle…brained。                   He
  meant well enough; but he didn't know anything。                When he came to a bad
  place in the trail; he took one good lookand rushed it。                 Constantly we
  expected      him   to  come    to  grief。   It   wore   on   the  Tenderfoot's     nerves。
  Tunemah was always trying to wander off the trail; trying fool routes of
  his own invention。        If he were sent ahead to set the pace; he lagged and
  loitered and constantly looked back; worried lest he get too far in advance
  and so lose the bunch。         If put at the rear; he fretted against the bit; trying
  to push on at a senseless speed。           In spite of his extreme anxiety to stay
  with    the  train;  he   would    once   in  a  blue   moon     get  a  strange    idea  of
  wandering   off   solitary   through   the   mountains;   passing   good   feed;   good
  water; good shelter。       We would find him; after a greater or less period of
  difficult tracking; perched in a silly fashion on some elevation。                  Heaven
  knows what his idea was: it certainly was neither search for feed; escape;
  return whence he came; nor desire for exercise。               When we came up with
  him; he would gaze mildly at us from a foolish vacant eye and follow us
  peaceably      back   to  camp。     Like    most    weak    and   silly  people;    he  had
  occasional      stubborn    fits  when    you   could   beat   him    to  a  pulp   without
  persuading him。        He was one of the type already mentioned that knows
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  but two or three kinds of feed。           As time went on he became thinner and
  thinner。     The   other   horses   prospered; but Tunemah   failed。          He   actually
  did not know enough to take care of himself; and could not learn。                   Finally;
  when   about   two   months   out;   we   traded   him   at   a   cow…camp   for   a   little
  buckskin called Monache。
  So much for the saddle…horses。           The pack…animals were four。
  A study of Dinkey's character and an experience of her characteristics
  always left me with mingled feelings。               At times I was inclined to think
  her perfection: at other times thirty cents would have been esteemed by me
  as   a   liberal   offer   for   her。 To   enumerate   her   good   points:   she   was   an
  excellent weight… carrier; took good care of her pack that it never scraped
  nor bumped; knew all about trails; the possibilities of short cuts; the best
  way   of   easing   herself   downhill;   kept   fat   and   healthy   in   districts   where
  grew   next   to   no   feed   at   all;   was   past…mistress   in   the   picking   of   routes
  through      a   trailless   country。      Her     endurance      was    marvelous;       her
  intelligence equally so。        In fact too great intelligence perhaps accounted
  for most of her defects。         She thought too much for herself; she made up
  opinions about people; she speculated on just how far each member of the
  party;   man   or   beast;   would   stand   imposition;   and   tried   conclusions   with
  each to test   the accuracy of   her speculations; she   obstinately insisted on
  her own way in going up and down hill;a way well enough for Dinkey;
  perhaps;   but   hazardous   to   the   other   less   skillful   animals   who   naturally
  would follow her lead。          If she did condescend to do things according to
  your ideas; it was with a mental reservation。            You caught her sardonic eye
  fixed   on   you   contemptuously。        You   felt   at   once   that   she   knew   another
  method;      a   much     better   method;     with    which    yours    compared      most
  unfavorably。       〃I'd like to kick you in the stomach;〃 Wes used to say; 〃you
  know too much for a horse!〃
  If one of the horses bucked under the pack; Dinkey deliberately tried
  to   stampede     the   othersand    generally     succeeded。     She     invariably    led
  them off whenever she could escape her picket…rope。                   In case of trouble
  of any sort; instead of standing still sensibly; she pretended to be subject to
  wild…eyed      panics。    It   was    all  pretense;   for   when    you    DID    yield   to
  temptation and light into her with the toe of your boot; she subsided into
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  common sense。         The spirit of malevolent mischief was hers。
  Her    performances      when     she   was   being    packed    were    ridiculously
  histrionic。    As soon as the saddle was cinched; she spread her legs apart;
  bracing them firmly as though about to receive the weight of an iron safe。
  Then as each article of the pack was thrown across her back; she flinched
  and uttered the most heart…rending groans。             We used sometimes to amuse
  ourselves by adding merely an empty sack; or other article quite without
  weight。      The   groans   and   tremblings   of   the   braced   legs   were   quite   as
  pitiful as though we had piled on a sack of flour。             Dinkey; I had forgotten
  to state; was a white horse; and belonged to Wes。
  Jenny also was white and belonged