Away out in the Creek1 Nation we learned things about New York.
We were on a hunting trip, and were camped one night on the bank of a little stream. Bud Kingsbury was our skilled hunter and guide, and it was from his lips that we had explanations of Manhattan and the queer folks that inhabit it. Bud had once spent a month in the metropolis2, and a week or two at other times, and he was pleased to discourse3 to us of what he had seen.
Fifty yards away from our camp was pitched the teepee of a wandering family of Indians that had come up and settled there for the night. An old, old Indian woman was trying to build a fire under an iron pot hung upon three sticks.
Bud went over to her assistance, and soon had her fire going. When he came back we complimented him playfully upon his gallantry.
“Oh,” said Bud, “don’t mention it. It’s a way I have. Whenever I see a lady trying to cook things in a pot and having trouble I always go to the rescue. I done the same thing once in a high-toned house in. New York City. Heap big society teepee on Fifth Avenue. That Injun lady kind of recalled it to my mind. Yes, I endeavours to be polite and help the ladies out.”
The camp demanded the particulars.
“I was manager of the Triangle B Ranch4 in the Panhandle,” said Bud. “It was owned at that time by old man Sterling5, of New York. He wanted to sell out, and he wrote for me to come on to New York and explain the ranch to the syndicate that wanted to buy. So I sends to Fort Worth and has a forty dollar suit of clothes made, and hits the trail for the big village.
“Well, when I got there, old man Sterling and his outfit6 certainly laid themselves out to be agreeable. We had business and pleasure so mixed up that you couldn’t tell whether it was a treat or a trade half the time. We had trolley7 rides, and cigars, and theatre round-ups, and rubber parties.”
“Rubber parties?” said a listener, inquiringly.
“Sure,” said Bud. “Didn’t you never attend ’em? You walk around and try to look at the tops of the skyscrapers8. Well, we sold the ranch, and old man Sterling asks me ’round to his house to take grub on the night before I started back. It wasn’t any high-collared affair—just me and the old man and his wife and daughter. But they was a fine-haired outfit all right, and the lilies of the field wasn’t in it. They made my Fort Worth clothes carpenter look like a dealer9 in horse blankets and gee10 strings11. And then the table was all pompous12 with flowers, and there was a whole kit13 of tools laid out beside everybody’s plate. You’d have thought you was fixed14 out to burglarize a restaurant before you could get your grub. But I’d been in New York over a week then, and I was getting on to stylish15 ways. I kind of trailed behind and watched the others use the hardware supplies, and then I tackled the chuck with the same weapons. It ain’t much trouble to travel with the high-flyers after you find out their gait. I got along fine. I was feeling cool and agreeable, and pretty soon I was talking away fluent as you please, all about the ranch and the West, and telling ’em how the Indians eat grasshopper16 stew17 and snakes, and you never saw people so interested.
“But the real joy of that feast was that Miss Sterling. Just a little trick she was, not bigger than two bits’ worth of chewing plug; but she had a way about her that seemed to say she was the people, and you believed it. And yet, she never put on any airs, and she smiled at me the same as if I was a millionaire while I was telling about a Creek dog feast and listened like it was news from home.
“By and by, after we had eat oysters18 and some watery19 soup and truck that never was in my repertory, a Methodist preacher brings in a kind of camp stove arrangement, all silver, on long legs, with a lamp under it.
“Miss Sterling lights up and begins to do some cooking right on the supper table. I wondered why old man Sterling didn’t hire a cook, with all the money he had. Pretty soon she dished out some cheesy tasting truck that she said was rabbit, but I swear there had never been a Molly cotton tail in a mile of it.
“The last thing on the programme was lemonade. It was brought around in little flat glass bowls and set by your plate. I was pretty thirsty, and I picked up mine and took a big swig of it. Right there was where the little lady had made a mistake. She had put in the lemon all right, but she’d forgot the sugar. The best housekeepers20 slip up sometimes. I thought maybe Miss Sterling was just learning to keep house and cook—that rabbit would surely make you think so—and I says to myself, ‘Little lady, sugar or no sugar I’ll stand by you,’ and I raises up my bowl again and drinks the last drop of the lemonade. And then all the balance of ’em picks up their bowls and does the same. And then I gives Miss Sterling the laugh proper, just to carry it off like a joke, so she wouldn’t feel bad about the mistake.
“After we all went into the sitting room she sat down and talked to me quite awhile.
“‘It was so kind of you, Mr. Kingsbury,’ says she, ‘to bring my blunder off so nicely. It was so stupid of me to forget the sugar.’
“‘Never you mind,’ says I, ‘some lucky man will throw his rope over a mighty22 elegant little housekeeper21 some day, not far from here.’
“‘If you mean me, Mr. Kingsbury,’ says she, laughing out loud, ‘I hope he will be as lenient23 with my poor housekeeping as you have been.’
“‘Don’t mention it,’ says I. ‘Anything to oblige the ladies.’”
Bud ceased his reminiscences. And then some one asked him what he considered the most striking and prominent trait of New Yorkers.
“The most visible and peculiar24 trait of New York folks,” answered Bud, “is New York. Most of ’em has New York on the brain. They have heard of other places, such as Waco, and Paris, and Hot Springs, and London; but they don’t believe in ’em. They think that town is all Merino. Now to show you how much they care for their village I’ll tell you about one of ’em that strayed out as far as the Triangle B while I was working there.
“This New Yorker come out there looking for a job on the ranch. He said he was a good horseback rider, and there was pieces of tanbark hanging on his clothes yet from his riding school.
“Well, for a while they put him to keeping books in the ranch store, for he was a devil at figures. But he got tired of that, and asked for something more in the line of activity. The boys on the ranch liked him all right, but he made us tired shouting New York all the time. Every night he’d tell us about East River and J. P. Morgan and the Eden Musee and Hetty Green and Central Park till we used to throw tin plates and branding irons at him.
“One day this chap gets on a pitching pony25, and the pony kind of sidled up his back and went to eating grass while the New Yorker was coming down.
“He come down on his head on a chunk26 of mesquit wood, and he didn’t show any designs toward getting up again. We laid him out in a tent, and he begun to look pretty dead. So Gideon Pease saddles up and burns the wind for old Doc Sleeper’s residence in Dogtown, thirty miles away.
“The doctor comes over and he investigates the patient.
“‘Boys,’ says he, ‘you might as well go to playing seven-up for his saddle and clothes, for his head’s fractured and if he lives ten minutes it will be a remarkable27 case of longevity28.’
“Of course we didn’t gamble for the poor rooster’s saddle—that was one of Doc’s jokes. But we stood around feeling solemn, and all of us forgive him for having talked us to death about New York.
“I never saw anybody about to hand in his checks act more peaceful than this fellow. His eyes were fixed ’way up in the air, and he was using rambling29 words to himself all about sweet music and beautiful streets and white-robed forms, and he was smiling like dying was a pleasure.
“‘He’s about gone now,’ said Doc. ‘Whenever they begin to think they see heaven it’s all off.’
“Blamed if that New York man didn’t sit right up when he heard the Doc say that.
“‘Say,’ says he, kind of disappointed, ‘was that heaven? Confound it all, I thought it was Broadway. Some of you fellows get my clothes. I’m going to get up.’
“And I’ll be blamed,” concluded Bud, “if he wasn’t on the train with a ticket for New York in his pocket four days afterward30!”
1 creek [kri:k] 第8级 | |
n.小溪,小河,小湾 | |
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2 metropolis [məˈtrɒpəlɪs] 第9级 | |
n.首府;大城市 | |
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3 discourse [ˈdɪskɔ:s] 第7级 | |
n.论文,演说;谈话;话语;vi.讲述,著述 | |
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4 ranch [rɑ:ntʃ] 第8级 | |
n.大牧场,大农场 | |
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5 sterling [ˈstɜ:lɪŋ] 第9级 | |
adj.英币的(纯粹的,货真价实的);n.英国货币(英镑) | |
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6 outfit [ˈaʊtfɪt] 第8级 | |
n.(为特殊用途的)全套装备,全套服装 | |
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7 trolley [ˈtrɒli] 第7级 | |
n.手推车,台车;无轨电车;有轨电车 | |
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8 skyscrapers ['skaɪˌskreɪpəz] 第7级 | |
n.摩天大楼 | |
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9 dealer [ˈdi:lə(r)] 第7级 | |
n.商人,贩子 | |
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10 gee [dʒi:] 第10级 | |
n.马;int.向右!前进!,惊讶时所发声音;v.向右转 | |
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11 strings [strɪŋz] 第12级 | |
n.弦 | |
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12 pompous [ˈpɒmpəs] 第9级 | |
adj.傲慢的,自大的;夸大的;豪华的 | |
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13 kit [kɪt] 第7级 | |
n.用具包,成套工具;随身携带物 | |
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14 fixed [fɪkst] 第8级 | |
adj.固定的,不变的,准备好的;(计算机)固定的 | |
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15 stylish [ˈstaɪlɪʃ] 第9级 | |
adj.流行的,时髦的;漂亮的,气派的 | |
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16 grasshopper [ˈgrɑ:shɒpə(r)] 第8级 | |
n.蚱蜢,蝗虫,蚂蚱 | |
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17 stew [stju:] 第8级 | |
n.炖汤,焖,烦恼;v.炖汤,焖,忧虑 | |
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18 oysters ['ɔɪstəz] 第9级 | |
牡蛎( oyster的名词复数 ) | |
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19 watery [ˈwɔ:təri] 第9级 | |
adj.有水的,水汪汪的;湿的,湿润的 | |
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20 housekeepers [ˈhaʊsˌki:pəz] 第8级 | |
n.(女)管家( housekeeper的名词复数 ) | |
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21 housekeeper [ˈhaʊski:pə(r)] 第8级 | |
n.管理家务的主妇,女管家 | |
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22 mighty [ˈmaɪti] 第7级 | |
adj.强有力的;巨大的 | |
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23 lenient [ˈli:niənt] 第9级 | |
adj.宽大的,仁慈的 | |
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24 peculiar [pɪˈkju:liə(r)] 第7级 | |
adj.古怪的,异常的;特殊的,特有的 | |
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25 pony [ˈpəʊni] 第8级 | |
adj.小型的;n.小马 | |
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26 chunk [tʃʌŋk] 第8级 | |
n.厚片,大块,相当大的部分(数量) | |
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27 remarkable [rɪˈmɑ:kəbl] 第7级 | |
adj.显著的,异常的,非凡的,值得注意的 | |
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28 longevity [lɒnˈdʒevəti] 第9级 | |
n.长命;长寿 | |
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