友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
热门书库 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

tracks of a rolling stone-第57章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



; ornamented with rows of silvered buttons; gaiters;  a short jacket with a red flower…pot and blue lily on the  back; and elbows with green and scarlet patterns; a red FAJA  or sash; and the sombrero which I believe is worn nowhere  except in the bull…ring。  The whole of this picturesque dress  is now; I think; given up。  I have spent the last two winters  in the south of Spain; but have not once seen it。

It must not be supposed that we chose this 'get…up' to  gratify any aesthetic taste of our own or other people's; it  was long before the days of the 'Too…toos;' whom Mr。 Gilbert  brought to a timely end。  We had settled to ride through  Spain from Gibraltar to Bayonne; choosing always the bridle… roads so as to avoid anything approaching a beaten track。  We  were to visit the principal cities and keep more or less a  northerly course; staying on the way at such places as  Malaga; Cordova; Toledo; Madrid; Valladolid; and Burgos。  The  rest was to be left to chance。  We were to take no map; and  when in doubt as to diverging roads; the toss of a coin was  to settle it。  This programme was conscientiously adhered to。   The object of the dress then was obscurity。  For safety  (brigands abounded) and for economy; it was desirable to pass  unnoticed。  We never knew in what dirty POSADA or road…side  VENTA we should spend the night。  For the most part it was at  the resting…place of the muleteers; which would be nothing  but a roughly paved dark chamber; one end occupied by mules  and the other by their drivers。  We made our own omelets and  salad and chocolate; with the exception of the never failing  BACALLAO; or salt fish; we rarely had anything else; and  rolling ourselves into our cloaks; with saddles for pillows;  slept amongst the muleteers on the stone flags。  We had  bought a couple of ponies in the Seville market for 7L。 and  8L。  Our ALFORJAS or saddlebags contained all we needed。  Our  portmanteaus were sent on from town to town; wherever we had  arranged to stop。  Rough as the life was; we saw the people  of Spain as no ordinary travellers could hope to see them。   The carriers; the shepherds; the publicans; the travelling  merchants; the priests; the barbers; the MOLINERAS of  Antequera; the Maritornes'; the Sancho Panzas … all just as  they were seen by the immortal knight。

From the MOZOS DE LA CUADRA (ostlers) and ARRIEROS; upwards  and downwards; nowhere have I met; in the same class; with  such natural politeness。  This is much changed for the worse  now; but before the invasion of tourists one never passed a  man on the road who did not salute one with a 'Vaya usted con  Dios。'  Nor would the most indigent vagabond touch the filthy  BACALLAO which he drew from his wallet till he had  courteously addressed the stranger with the formula 'Quiere  usted comer?'  ('Will your Lordship please to eat?')  The  contrast between the people and the nobles in this respect  was very marked。  We saw something of the latter in the club  at Seville; where one met men whose high…sounding names and  titles have come down to us from the greatest epochs of  Spanish history。  Their ignorance was surprising。  Not one of  them had been farther than Madrid。  Not one of them knew a  word of any language but his own; nor was he acquainted with  the rudiments even of his country's history。  Their  conversation was restricted to the bull…ring and the cockpit;  to cards and women。  Their chief aim seemed to be to stagger  us with the number of quarterings they bore upon their  escutcheons; and they appraised others by a like estimate。

Cayley; tickled with the humour of their childish vanity;  painted an elaborate coat of arms; which he stuck in the  crown of his hat; and by means of which he explained to them  that he too was by rights a Spanish nobleman。  With the  utmost gravity he delivered some such medley as this:  His  Iberian origin dated back to the time of Hannibal; who; after  his defeat of the Papal forces and capture of Rome; had; as  they well knew; married Princess Peri Banou; youngest  daughter of Ferdinand and Isabella。  The issue of the  marriage was the famous Cardinal Chicot; from whom he …  George Cayley … was of direct male descent。  When Chicot was  slain by Oliver Cromwell at the battle of Hastings; his  descendants; foiled in their attempt to capture England with  the Spanish Armada; settled in the principality of Yorkshire;  adopted the noble name of Cayley; and still governed that  province as members of the British Parliament。

From that day we were treated with every mark of distinction。

Here is another of my friend's pranks。  I will let Cayley  speak; for though I kept no journal; we had agreed to write a  joint account of our trip; and our notebooks were common  property。

After leaving Malaga we met some beggars on the road; to one  of whom; 'an old hag with one eye and a grizzly beard;' I  threw the immense sum of a couple of 2…cuarto pieces。  An old  man riding behind us on an ass with empty panniers; seeing  fortunes being scattered about the road with such reckless  and unbounded profusion; came up alongside; and entered into  a piteous detail of his poverty。  When he wound up with plain  begging; the originality and boldness of the idea of a  mounted beggar struck us in so humorous a light that we could  not help laughing。  As we rode along talking his case over;  Cayley said; 'Suppose we rob him。  He has sold his market  produce in Malaga; and depend upon it; has a pocketful of  money。'  We waited for him to come up。  When he got fairly  between us; Cayley pulled out his revolver (we both carried  pistols) and thus addressed him:

'Impudent old scoundrel! stand still。  If thou stirr'st hand  or foot; or openest thy mouth; I will slay thee like a dog。   Thou greedy miscreant; who art evidently a man of property  and hast an ass to ride upon; art not satisfied without  trying to rob the truly poor of the alms we give them。   Therefore hand over at once the two dollars for which thou  hast sold thy cabbages for double what they were worth。'

The old culprit fell on his knees; and trembling violently;  prayed Cayley for the love of the Virgin to spare him。

'One moment; CABALLEROS;' he cried; 'I will give you all I  possess。  But I am poor; very poor; and I have a sick wife at  the disposition of your worships。'

'Wherefore art thou fumbling at thy foot?  Thou carriest not  thy wife in thy shoe?'

'I cannot untie the string … my hand trembles; will your  worships permit me to take out my knife?'

He did so; and cutting the carefully knotted thong of a  leather bag which had been concealed in the leg of his  stocking; poured out a handful of small coin and began to  weep piteously。

Said Cayley; 'Come; come; none of that; or we shall feel it  our duty to shoot thy donkey that thou may'st have something  to whimper for。'

The genuine tears of the poor old fellow at last touched the  heart of the jester。

'We know now that thou art poor;' said he; 'for we have taken 

all thou hadst。  And as it is the religion of the Ingleses;  founded on the practice of their celebrated saint; Robino  Hoodo; to levy funds from the rich for the benefit of the  needy; hold out thy sombero; and we w
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!