第2章

类别:其他 作者:George MacDonald字数:16220更新时间:18/12/21 16:58:57
“Please,NorthWind。”hesaid,“whatisthatnoise?” FromhighoverhisheadcamethevoiceofNorthWind,answeringhim,gently—— “Thenoiseofmybesom。Iamtheoldwomanthatsweepsthecobwebsfromthe,sky;onlyI’mbusywiththefloornow。” “Whatmakesthehouseslookasiftheywererunningaway?” “Iamsweepingsofastoverthem。” “But,please,NorthWind,IknewLondonwasverybig,butIdidn’tknowitwassobigasthis。Itseemsasifweshouldnevergetawayfromit。” “Wearegoingroundandround,elseweshouldhaveleftitlongago。” “Isthisthewayyousweep,NorthWind?” “Yes;Igoroundandroundwithmygreatbesom。” “Please,wouldyoumindgoingalittleslower,forIwanttoseethestreets?” “Youwon’tseemuchnow。” “Why?” “BecauseIhavenearlysweptallthepeoplehome。” “Oh!Iforgot。”saidDiamond,andwasquietafterthat,forhedidnotwanttobetroublesome。 Butshedroppedalittletowardstheroofsofthehouses,andDiamondcouldseedownintothestreets。Therewereveryfewpeopleabout,though。Thelampsflickeredandflaredagain,butnobodyseemedtowantthem。 SuddenlyDiamondespiedalittlegirlcomingalongastreet。Shewasdreadfullyblownbythewind,andabroomshewastrailingbehindherwasverytroublesome。Itseemedasifthewindhadaspiteather—— itkeptworryingherlikeawildbeast,andtearingatherrags。 Shewassolonelythere! “Oh!please,NorthWind。”hecried,“won’tyouhelpthatlittlegirl?” “No,Diamond;Imustn’tleavemywork。” “Butwhyshouldn’tyoubekindtoher?” “Iamkindtoher。Iamsweepingthewickedsmellsaway。” “Butyou’rekindertome,dearNorthWind。Whyshouldn’tyoubeaskindtoherasyouaretome?” “Therearereasons,Diamond。Everybodycan’tbedonetoallthesame。 Everybodyisnotreadyforthesamething。” “ButIdon’tseewhyIshouldbekinderusedthanshe。” “Doyouthinknothing’stobedonebutwhatyoucansee,Diamond,yousilly!It’sallright。Ofcourseyoucanhelpherifyoulike。 You’vegotnothingparticulartodoatthismoment;Ihave。” “Oh!doletmehelpher,then。Butyouwon’tbeabletowait,perhaps?” “No,Ican’twait;youmustdoityourself。And,mind,thewindwillgetaholdofyou,too。” “Don’tyouwantmetohelpher,NorthWind?” “Notwithouthavingsomeideawhatwillhappen。Ifyoubreakdownandcry,thatwon’tbemuchofahelptoher,anditwillmakeagooseoflittleDiamond。” “Iwanttogo。”saidDiamond。“Onlythere’sjustonething—— howamItogethome?” “Ifyou’reanxiousaboutthat,perhapsyouhadbettergowithme。 Iamboundtotakeyouhomeagain,ifyoudo。” “There!“criedDiamond,whowasstilllookingafterthelittlegirl。 “I’msurethewindwillblowherover,andperhapskillher。 Doletmego。” Theyhadbeensweepingmoreslowlyalongthelineofthestreet。 Therewasalullintheroaring。 “Well,thoughIcannotpromisetotakeyouhome。”saidNorthWind,asshesanknearerandnearertothetopsofthehouses,“Icanpromiseyouitwillbeallrightintheend。Youwillgethomesomehow。 Haveyoumadeupyourmindwhattodo?” “Yes;tohelpthelittlegirl。”saidDiamondfirmly。 ThesamemomentNorthWinddroptintothestreetandstood,onlyatalllady,butwithherhairflyingupoverthehousetops。 Sheputherhandstoherback,tookDiamond,andsethimdowninthestreet。Thesamemomenthewascaughtinthefiercecoilsoftheblast,andallbutblownaway。NorthWindsteppedbackastep,andatoncetoweredinstaturetotheheightofthehouses。 Achimney-potclashedatDiamond’sfeet。Heturnedinterror,butitwastolookforthelittlegirl,andwhenheturnedagaintheladyhadvanished,andthewindwasroaringalongthestreetasifithadbeenthebedofaninvisibletorrent。Thelittlegirlwasscuddingbeforetheblast,herhairflyingtoo,andbehindhershedraggedherbroom。Herlittlelegsweregoingasfastasevertheycouldtokeepherfromfalling。Diamondcreptintotheshelterofadoorway,thinkingtostopher;butshepassedhimlikeabird,cryinggentlyandpitifully。 “Stop!stop!littlegirl。”shoutedDiamond,startinginpursuit。 “Ican’t。”wailedthegirl,“thewindwon’tleavegoofme。” Diamondcouldrunfasterthanshe,andhehadnobroom。Inafewmomentshehadcaughtherbythefrock,butittoreinhishand,andawaywentthelittlegirl。Sohehadtorunagain,andthistimeheransofastthathegotbeforeher,andturningroundcaughtherinhisarms,whendowntheywentbothtogether,whichmadethelittlegirllaughinthemidstofhercrying。 “Whereareyougoing?”askedDiamond,rubbingtheelbowthathadstuckfarthestout。Thearmitbelongedtowastwinedroundalamp-postashestoodbetweenthelittlegirlandthewind。 “Home。”shesaid,gaspingforbreath。 “ThenIwillgowithyou。”saidDiamond。 Andthentheyweresilentforawhile,forthewindblewworsethanever,andtheyhadbothtoholdontothelamp-post。 “Whereisyourcrossing?”askedthegirlatlength。 “Idon’tsweep。”answeredDiamond。 “Whatdoyoudo,then?”askedshe。“Youain’tbigenoughformostthings。” “Idon’tknowwhatIdodo。”answeredhe,feelingratherashamed。 “Nothing,Isuppose。Myfather’sMr。Coleman’scoachman。” “Haveyouafather?”shesaid,staringathimasifaboywithafatherwasanaturalcuriosity。 “Yes。Haven’tyou?”returnedDiamond。 “No;normotherneither。OldSal’sallI’vegot。”Andshebegantocryagain。 “Iwouldn’tgotoherifshewasn’tgoodtome。”saidDiamond。 “Butyoumustgosomewheres。” “Moveon。”saidthevoiceofapolicemanbehindthem。 “Itoldyouso。”saidthegirl。“Youmustgosomewheres。 They’realwaysatit。” “ButoldSaldoesn’tbeatyou,doesshe?” “Iwishshewould。” “Whatdoyoumean?”askedDiamond,quitebewildered。 “Shewouldifshewasmymother。Butshewouldn’tlieabeda-cuddlin’ ofheruglyoldbones,andlaughtohearmecryingatthedoor。” “Youdon’tmeanshewon’tletyouinto-night?” “It’llbeagoodchanceifshedoes。” “Whyareyououtsolate,then?”askedDiamond。 “Mycrossing’salongwayoffattheWestEnd,andIhadbeenindulgin’ indoor-stepsandmewses。” “We’dbetterhaveatryanyhow。”saidDiamond。“Comealong。” AshespokeDiamondthoughthecaughtaglimpseofNorthWindturningacornerinfrontofthem;andwhentheyturnedthecornertoo,theyfounditquietthere,buthesawnothingofthelady。 “Nowyouleadme。”hesaid,takingherhand,“andI’lltakecareofyou。” Thegirlwithdrewherhand,butonlytodryhereyeswithherfrock,fortheotherhadenoughtodowithherbroom。Sheputitinhisagain,andledhim,turningafterturning,untiltheystoppedatacellar-doorinaverydirtylane。Theresheknocked。 “Ishouldn’tliketolivehere。”saidDiamond。 “Oh,yes,youwould,ifyouhadnowhereelsetogoto。” answeredthegirl。“Ionlywishwemaygetin。” “Idon’twanttogoin。”saidDiamond。 “Wheredoyoumeantogo,then?” “Hometomyhome。” “Where’sthat?” “Idon’texactlyknow。” “Thenyou’reworseoffthanIam。” “Ohno,forNorthWind——“beganDiamond,andstopped,hehardlyknewwhy。 “What?”saidthegirl,assheheldhereartothedoorlistening。 ButDiamonddidnotreply。NeitherdidoldSal。 “Itoldyouso。”saidthegirl。“Sheiswideawakehearkening。 Butwedon’tgetin。” “Whatwillyoudo,then?”askedDiamond。 “Moveon。”sheanswered。 “Where?” “Oh,anywheres。Blessyou,I’musedtoit。” “Hadn’tyoubettercomehomewithme,then?” “That’sagoodjoke,whenyoudon’tknowwhereitis。Comeon。” “Butwhere?” “Oh,nowheresinparticular。Comeon。” Diamondobeyed。Thewindhadnowfallenconsiderably。Theywanderedonandon,turninginthisdirectionandthat,withoutanyreasonforonewaymorethananother,untiltheyhadgotoutofthethickofthehousesintoawastekindofplace。Bythistimetheywerebothverytired。Diamondfeltagooddealinclinedtocry,andthoughthehadbeenverysillytogetdownfromthebackofNorthWind; notthathewouldhavemindeditifhehaddonethegirlanygood; buthethoughthehadbeenofnousetoher。Hewasmistakenthere,forshewasfarhappierforhavingDiamondwithherthanifshehadbeenwanderingaboutalone。Shedidnotseemsotiredashewas。 “Doletusrestabit。”saidDiamond。 “Let’ssee。”sheanswered。“There’ssomethinglikearailwaythere。 Perhapsthere’sanopenarch。” Theywenttowardsitandfoundone,and,betterstill,therewasanemptybarrellyingunderthearch。 “Hallo!hereweare!“saidthegirl。“Abarrel’sthejolliestbedgoing——onthetramp,Imean。We’llhavefortywinks,andthengoonagain。” Shecreptin,andDiamondcreptinbesideher。Theyputtheirarmsroundeachother,andwhenhebegantogrowwarm,Diamond’scouragebegantocomeback。 “Thisisjolly!“hesaid。“I’msoglad!“ “Idon’tthinksomuchofit。”saidthegirl。“I’musedtoit,Isuppose。ButIcan’tthinkhowakidlikeyoucomestobeoutallalonethistimeo’night。” Shecalledhimakid,butshewasnotreallyamontholderthanhewas; onlyshehadhadtoworkforherbread,andthatsosoonmakespeopleolder。 “ButIshouldn’thavebeenoutsolateifIhadn’tgotdowntohelpyou。”saidDiamond。“NorthWindisgonehomelongago。” “Ithinkyoumustha’gotouto’oneo’themHidgetAsylms。” saidthegirl。“YousaidsomethingaboutthenorthwindaforethatIcouldn’tgettherightsof。” Sonow,forthesakeofhischaracter,Diamondhadtotellherthewholestory。 Shedidnotbelieveawordofit。Shesaidhewasn’tsuchaflatastobelieveallthatbosh。Butasshespoketherecameagreatblastofwindthroughthearch,andsetthebarrelrolling。Sotheymadehastetogetoutofit,fortheyhadnonotionofbeingrolledoverandoverasiftheyhadbeenpackedtightandwouldn’thurt,likeabarrelofherrings。 “Ithoughtweshouldhavehadasleep。”saidDiamond;“butIcan’tsayI’mverysleepyafterall。Come,let’sgoonagain。” Theywanderedonandon,sometimessittingonadoor-step,butalwaysturningintolanesorfieldswhentheyhadachance。 Theyfoundthemselvesatlastonarisinggroundthatslopedrathersteeplyontheotherside。Itwasawastekindofspotbelow,boundedbyanirregularwall,withafewdoorsinit。Outsidelaybrokenthingsingeneral,fromgardenrollerstoflower-potsandwine-bottles。Butthemomenttheyreachedthebrowoftherisingground,agustofwindseizedthemandblewthemdownhillasfastastheycouldrun。NorcouldDiamondstopbeforehewentbangagainstoneofthedoorsinthewall。Tohisdismayitburstopen。Whentheycametothemselvestheypeepedin。Itwasthebackdoorofagarden。 “Ah,ah!“criedDiamond,afterstaringforafewmoments,“Ithoughtso! NorthWindtakesnobodyin!HereIaminmaster’sgarden! Itellyouwhat,littlegirl,youjustboreaholeinoldSal’swall,andputyourmouthtoit,andsay,“Please,NorthWind,mayn’tIgooutwithyou?”andthenyou’llseewhat’llcome。” “IdaresayIshall。ButI’moutinthewindtoooftenalreadytowantmoreofit。” “IsaidwiththeNorthWind,notinit。” “It’sallone。” “It’snotallone。” “Itisallone。” “ButIknowbest。” “AndIknowbetter。I’llboxyourears。”saidthegirl。 Diamondgotveryangry。Butherememberedthatevenifshedidboxhisears,hemusn’tboxhersagain,forshewasagirl,andallthatboysmustdo,ifgirlsarerude,istogoawayandleavethem。 Sohewentinatthedoor。 “Good-bye,mister“saidthegirl。 ThisbroughtDiamondtohissenses。 “I’msorryIwascross。”hesaid。“Comein,andmymotherwillgiveyousomebreakfast。” “No,thankyou。Imustbeofftomycrossing。It’smorningnow。” “I’mverysorryforyou。”saidDiamond。 “Well,itisalifetobetiredof——whatwitholdSal,andsomanyholesinmyshoes。” “Iwonderyou’resogood。Ishouldkillmyself。” “Oh,no,youwouldn’t!WhenIthinkofit,Ialwayswanttoseewhat’scomingnext,andsoIalwayswaittillnextisover。Well!Isupposethere’ssomebodyhappysomewheres。Butitain’tinthemcarriages。 Ohmy!howtheydolooksometimes——fittobiteyourheadoff!Good-bye!“ Sheranupthehillanddisappearedbehindit。ThenDiamondshutthedoorashebestcould,andranthroughthekitchen-gardentothestable。Andwasn’thegladtogetintohisownblessedbedagain! CHAPTERV THESUMMER-HOUSE DIAMONDsaidnothingtohismotherabouthisadventures。HehadhalfanotionthatNorthWindwasafriendofhismother,andthat,ifshedidnotknowallaboutit,atleastshedidnotmindhisgoinganywherewiththeladyofthewind。Atthesametimehedoubtedwhetherhemightnotappeartobetellingstoriesifhetoldall,especiallyashecouldhardlybelieveithimselfwhenhethoughtaboutitinthemiddleoftheday,althoughwhenthetwilightwasoncehalf-wayontonighthehadnodoubtaboutit,atleastforthefirstfewdaysafterhehadbeenwithher。Thegirlthatsweptthecrossinghadcertainlyrefusedtobelievehim。Besides,hefeltsurethatNorthWindwouldtellhimifheoughttospeak。 Itwassometimebeforehesawtheladyofthewindagain。 IndeednothingremarkabletookplaceinDiamond’shistoryuntilthefollowingweek。Thiswaswhathappenedthen。Diamondthehorsewantednewshoes,andDiamond’sfathertookhimoutofthestable,andwasjustgettingonhisbacktoridehimtotheforge,whenhesawhislittleboystandingbythepump,andlookingathimwistfully。 Thenthecoachmantookhisfootoutofthestirrup,lefthisholdofthemaneandbridle,cameacrosstohisboy,liftedhimup,andsettinghimonthehorse’sback,toldhimtosituplikeaman。 HethenledawaybothDiamondstogether。 Theboyatopfeltnotalittletremulousasthegreatmusclesthatliftedthelegsofthehorseknottedandrelaxedagainsthislegs,andhecoweredtowardsthewithers,graspingwithhishandsthebitofmanewornshortbythecollar;butwhenhisfatherlookedbackathim,sayingoncemore,“Situp,Diamond。”heletthemanegoandsatup,notwithstandingthatthehorse,thinking,Isuppose,thathismasterhadsaidtohim,“Comeup,Diamond。”steppedoutfaster。 ForboththeDiamondswerejustgrandlyobedient。AndDiamondsoonfoundthat,ashewasobedienttohisfather,sothehorsewasobedienttohim。Forhehadnotriddenfarbeforehefoundcouragetoreachforwardandcatchholdofthebridle,andwhenhisfather,whosehandwasuponit,felttheboypullittowardshim,helookedupandsmiled,and,wellpleased,letgohishold,andleftDiamondtoguideDiamond;andtheboysoonfoundthathecoulddosoperfectly。 Itwasagrandthingtobeabletoguideagreatbeastlikethat。 Andanotherdiscoveryhemadewasthat,inordertoguidethehorse,hehadinameasuretoobeythehorsefirst。Ifhedidnotyieldhisbodytothemotionsofthehorse’sbody,hecouldnotguidehim; hemustfalloff。 Theblacksmithlivedatsomedistance,deeperintoLondon。 Astheycrossedtheangleofasquare,Diamond,whowasnowquitecomfortableonhislivingthrone,wasglancingthiswayandthatinagentlepride,whenhesawagirlsweepingacrossingscuddinglybeforealady。Theladywashisfather’smistress,Mrs。Coleman,andthelittlegirlwassheforwhosesakehehadgotoffNorthWind’sback。HedrewDiamond’sbridleineageranxietytoseewhetherheroutstretchedhandwouldgatherapennyfromMrs。Coleman。 Butshehadgivenoneatthelastcrossing,andthehandreturnedonlytograspitsbroom。Diamondcouldnotbearit。Hehadapennyinhispocket,agiftofthesameladythedaybefore,andhetumbledoffhishorsetogiveittothegirl。Hetumbledoff,Isay,forhedidtumblewhenhereachedtheground。Buthegotupinaninstant,andran,searchinghispocketasheran。Shemadehimaprettycourtesywhenheofferedhistreasure,butwithabewilderedstare。 Shethoughtfirst:“ThenhewasonthebackoftheNorthWindafterall!“but,lookingupatthesoundofthehorse’sfeetonthepavedcrossing,shechangedheridea,sayingtoherself,“NorthWindishisfather’shorse!That’sthesecretofit! Whycouldn’thesayso?”Andshehadamindtorefusethepenny。 Buthissmileputitallright,andshenotonlytookhispennybutputitinhermouthwitha“Thankyou,mister。Didtheywollopyouthen?” “Ohno!“answeredDiamond。“Theyneverwollopsme。” “Lor!“saidthelittlegirl,andwasspeechless。 Meantimehisfather,lookingup,andseeingthehorse’sbackbare,sufferedapangofawfuldread,butthenextmomentcatchingsightofhim,tookhimupandputhimon,saying—— “Don’tgetoffagain,Diamond。Thehorsemighthaveputhisfootonyou。” “No,father。”answeredtheboy,androdeoninmajesticsafety。 Thesummerdrewnear,warmandsplendid。MissColemanwasalittlebetterinhealth,andsatagooddealinthegarden。OnedayshesawDiamondpeepingthroughtheshrubbery,andcalledhim。 Hetalkedtohersofranklythatsheoftensentforhimafterthat,andbydegreesitcameaboutthathehadleavetoruninthegardenashepleased。Henevertouchedanyoftheflowersorblossoms,forhewasnotlikesomeboyswhocannotenjoyathingwithoutpullingittopieces,andsopreventingeveryonefromenjoyingitafterthem。 Aweekevenmakessuchalongtimeinachild’slife,thatDiamondhadbegunoncemoretofeelasifNorthWindwereadreamofsomefar-offyear。 Onehotevening,hehadbeensittingwiththeyoungmistress,astheycalledher,inalittlesummer-houseatthebottomofthelawn——awonderfulthingforbeauty,theboythought,foralittlewindowinthesideofitwasmadeofcolouredglass。 Itgrewdusky,andtheladybegantofeelchill,andwentin,leavingtheboyinthesummer-house。Hesattheregazingoutatabedoftulips,which,althoughtheyhadclosedforthenight,couldnotgoquiteasleepforthewindthatkeptwavingthemabout。 Allatoncehesawagreatbumble-beeflyoutofoneofthetulips。 “There!thatissomethingdone。”saidavoice——agentle,merry,childishvoice,butsotiny。“Atlastitwas。Ithoughthewouldhavehadtostaythereallnight,poorfellow!Idid。” Diamondcouldnottellwhetherthevoicewasnearorfaraway,itwassosmallandyetsoclear。Hehadneverseenafairy,buthehadheardofsuch,andhebegantolookallaboutforone。 Andtherewasthetiniestcreatureslidingdownthestemofthetulip! “Areyouthefairythatherdsthebees?”heasked,goingoutofthesummer-house,anddownonhiskneesonthegreenshoreofthetulip-bed。 “I’mnotafairy。”answeredthelittlecreature。 “Howdoyouknowthat?” “Itwouldbecomeyoubettertoaskhowyouaretoknowit。” “You’vejusttoldme。” “Yes。Butwhat’stheuseofknowingathingonlybecauseyou’retoldit?” “Well,howamItoknowyouarenotafairy?Youdolookverylikeone。” “Inthefirstplace,fairiesaremuchbiggerthanyouseeme。” “Oh!“saidDiamondreflectively;“Ithoughttheywereverylittle。” “ButtheymightbetremendouslybiggerthanIam,andyetnotverybig。Why,IcouldbesixtimesthesizeIam,andnotbeveryhuge。Besides,afairycan’tgrowbigandlittleatwill,thoughthenursery-talesdosayso:theydon’tknowbetter。 YoustupidDiamond!haveyouneverseenmebefore?” And,asshespoke,amoanofwindbentthetulipsalmosttotheground,andthecreaturelaidherhandonDiamond’sshoulder。 InamomentheknewthatitwasNorthWind。 “Iamverystupid。”hesaid;“butIneversawyousosmallbefore,notevenwhenyouwerenursingtheprimrose。” “Mustyouseemeeverysizethatcanbemeasuredbeforeyouknowme,Diamond?” “ButhowcouldIthinkitwasyoutakingcareofagreatstupidbumble-bee?” “Themorestupidhewasthemoreneedhehadtobetakencareof。 Whatwithsuckinghoneyandtryingtoopenthedoor,hewasnearlydated; andwhenitopenedinthemorningtoletthesunseethetulip’sheart,whatwouldthesunhavethoughttofindsuchastupidthinglyingthere—— withwingstoo?” “Buthowdoyouhavetimetolookafterbees?” “Idon’tlookafterbees。Ihadthisonetolookafter。 Itwashardwork,though。” “Hardwork!Why,youcouldblowachimneydown,or——oraboy’scapoff。”saidDiamond。 “Bothareeasierthantoblowatulipopen。ButIscarcelyknowthedifferencebetweenhardandeasy。IamalwaysableforwhatI havetodo。WhenIseemywork,Ijustrushatit——anditisdone。 ButImustn’tchatter。Ihavegottosinkashipto-night。” “Sinkaship!What!withmeninit?” “Yes,andwomentoo。” “Howdreadful!Iwishyouwouldn’ttalkso。” “Itisratherdreadful。Butitismywork。Imustdoit。” “Ihopeyouwon’taskmetogowithyou。” “No,Iwon’taskyou。Butyoumustcomeforallthat。” “Iwon’tthen。” “Won’tyou?”AndNorthWindgrewatalllady,andlookedhimintheeyes,andDiamondsaid—— “Pleasetakeme。Youcannotbecruel。” “No;IcouldnotbecruelifIwould。Icandonothingcruel,althoughIoftendowhatlookslikecrueltothosewhodonotknowwhatIreallyamdoing。ThepeopletheysayIdrown,Ionlycarryawayto——to——to——well,thebackoftheNorthWind——thatiswhattheyusedtocallitlongago,onlyIneversawtheplace。” “Howcanyoucarrythemthereifyouneversawit?” “Iknowtheway。” “Buthowisityouneversawit?” “Becauseitisbehindme。” “Butyoucanlookround。” “Notfarenoughtoseemyownback。No;Ialwayslookbeforeme。 Infact,IgrowquiteblindanddeafwhenItrytoseemyback。 Ionlymindmywork。” “Buthowdoesitbeyourwork?” “Ah,thatIcan’ttellyou。Ionlyknowitis,becausewhenIdoitIfeelallright,andwhenIdon’tIfeelallwrong。EastWindsays—— onlyonedoesnotexactlyknowhowmuchtobelieveofwhatshesays,forsheisverynaughtysometimes——shesaysitisallmanagedbyababy;butwhethersheisgoodornaughtywhenshesaysthat,Idon’tknow。Ijuststicktomywork。Itisallonetometoletabeeoutofatulip,ortosweepthecobwebsfromthesky。 Youwouldliketogowithmeto-night?” “Idon’twanttoseeashipsunk。” “ButsupposeIhadtotakeyou?” “Why,then,ofcourseImustgo。” “There’sagoodDiamond——IthinkIhadbetterbegrowingabit。 Onlyyoumustgotobedfirst。Ican’ttakeyoutillyou’reinbed。 That’sthelawaboutthechildren。SoIhadbettergoanddosomethingelsefirst。” “Verywell,NorthWind。”saidDiamond。“Whatareyougoingtodofirst,ifyouplease?” “IthinkImaytellyou。Jumpuponthetopofthewall,there。” “Ican’t。” “Ah!andIcan’thelpyou——youhaven’tbeentobedyet,yousee。 Comeouttotheroadwithme,justinfrontofthecoach-house,andI willshowyou。” NorthWindgrewverysmallindeed,sosmallthatshecouldnothaveblownthedustoffadustymiller,astheScotchchildrencallayellowauricula。Diamondcouldnotevenseethebladesofgrassmoveassheflittedalongbyhisfoot。Theyleftthelawn,wentoutbythewicketinthe-coach-housegates,andthencrossedtheroadtothelowwallthatseparateditfromtheriver。 “Youcangetuponthiswall,Diamond。”saidNorthWind。 “Yes;butmymotherhasforbiddenme。” “Thendon’t。”saidNorthWind。 “ButIcanseeover。”saidDiamond。 “Ah!tobesure。Ican’t。” Sosaying,NorthWindgavealittlebound,andstoodonthetopofthewall。Shewasjustabouttheheightadragon-flywouldbe,ifitstoodonend。 “Youdarling!“saidDiamond,seeingwhatalovelylittletoy-womanshewas。 “Don’tbeimpertinent,MasterDiamond。”saidNorthWind。 “Ifthere’sonethingmakesmemoreangrythananother,itisthewayyouhumansjudgethingsbytheirsize。IamquiteasrespectablenowasIshallbesixhoursafterthis,whenItakeanEastIndiamanbytheroyals,twistherround,andpushherunder。 Youhavenorighttoaddressmeinsuchafashion。” Butasshespoke,thetinyfaceworethesmileofagreat,grandwoman。 ShewasonlyhavingherownbeautifulfunoutofDiamond,andtruewoman’sfunneverhurts。 “Butlookthere!“sheresumed。“Doyouseeaboatwithonemaninit—— agreenandwhiteboat?” “Yes;quitewell。” “That’sapoet。” “Ithoughtyousaiditwasabo-at。” “Stupidpet!Don’tyouknowwhatapoetis?” “Why,athingtosailonthewaterin。” “Well,perhapsyou’renotsofarwrong。Somepoetsdocarrypeopleoverthesea。ButIhavenobusinesstotalksomuch。 Themanisapoet。” “Theboatisaboat。”saidDiamond。 “Can’tyouspell?”askedNorthWind。 “Notverywell。” “SoIsee。Apoetisnotabo-at,asyoucallit。Apoetisamanwhoisgladofsomething,andtriestomakeotherpeoplegladofittoo。” “Ah!nowIknow。Likethemaninthesweety-shop。” “Notvery。ButIseeitisnouse。Iwasn’tsenttotellyou,andsoIcan’ttellyou。Imustbeoff。Onlyfirstjustlookattheman。” “He’snotmuchofarower“saidDiamond——“paddlingfirstwithonefinandthenwiththeother。” “Nowlookhere!“saidNorthWind。 Andsheflashedlikeadragon-flyacrossthewater,whosesurfacerippledandpuckeredasshepassed。Thenextmomentthemanintheboatglancedabouthim,andbenttohisoars。Theboatflewovertheripplingwater。Manandboatandriverwereawake。 Thesameinstantalmost,NorthWindperchedagainupontheriverwall。 “Howdidyoudothat?”askedDiamond。 “Iblewinhisface。”answeredNorthWind。“Idon’tseehowthatcoulddoit。”saidDiamond。“Idaresaynot。Andthereforeyouwillsayyoudon’tbelieveitcould。” “No,no,dearNorthWind。Iknowyoutoowellnottobelieveyou。” “Well,Iblewinhisface,andthatwokehimup。” “Butwhatwasthegoodofit?” “Why!don’tyousee?Lookathim——howheispulling。Iblewthemistoutofhim。” “Howwasthat?” “ThatisjustwhatIcannottellyou。” “Butyoudidit。” “Yes。Ihavetodotenthousandthingswithoutbeingabletotellhow。” “Idon’tlikethat。”saidDiamond。 Hewasstaringaftertheboat。Hearingnoanswer,helookeddowntothewall。 NorthWindwasgone。Awayacrosstheriverwentalongripple—— whatsailorscallacat’spaw。Themanintheboatwasputtingupasail。Themoonwascomingtoherselfontheedgeofagreatcloud,andthesailbegantoshinewhite。Diamondrubbedhiseyes,andwonderedwhatitwasallabout。Thingsseemedgoingonaroundhim,andalltounderstandeachother,buthecouldmakenothingofit。 Soheputhishandsinhispockets,andwentintohavehistea。 Thenightwasveryhot,forthewindhadfallenagain。 “Youdon’tseemverywellto-night,Diamond。”saidhismother。 “Iamquitewell,mother。”returnedDiamond,whowasonlypuzzled。 “Ithinkyouhadbettergotobed。”sheadded。 “Verywell,mother。”heanswered。 Hestoppedforonemomenttolookoutofthewindow。Abovethemoonthecloudsweregoingdifferentways。Somehoworotherthistroubledhim,but,notwithstanding,hewassoonfastasleep。 Hewokeinthemiddleofthenightandthedarkness。Aterriblenoisewasrumblingoverhead,liketherollingbeatofgreatdrumsechoingthroughabrazenvault。Theroofoftheloftinwhichhelayhadnoceiling;onlythetileswerebetweenhimandthesky。 Forawhilehecouldnotcomequiteawake,forthenoisekeptbeatinghimdown,sothathisheartwastroubledandflutteredpainfully。 Asecondpealofthunderburstoverhishead,andalmostchokedhimwithfear。Nordidherecoveruntilthegreatblastthatfollowed,havingtornsometilesofftheroof,sentaspoutofwinddownintohisbedandoverhisface,whichbroughthimwideawake,andgavehimbackhiscourage。Thesamemomentheheardamightyyetmusicalvoicecallinghim。 “Comeup,Diamond。”itsaid。“It’sallready。I’mwaitingforyou。” Helookedoutofthebed,andsawagigantic,powerful,butmostlovelyarm——withahandwhosefingerswerenothingthelessladylikethattheycouldhavestrangledaboa-constrictor,orchokedatigressoffitsprey——stretcheddownthroughabigholeintheroof。 Withoutamoment’shesitationhereachedouthistinyone,andlaiditinthegrandpalmbeforehim。 CHAPTERVI OUTINTHESTORM THEhandfeltitswayuphisarm,and,graspingitgentlyandstronglyabovetheelbow,liftedDiamondfromthebed。Themomenthewasthroughtheholeintheroof,allthewindsofheavenseemedtolayholduponhim,andbuffethimhitherandthither。 Hishairblewoneway,hisnight-gownanother,hislegsthreatenedtofloatfromunderhim,andhisheadtogrowdizzywiththeswiftnessoftheinvisibleassailant。Cowering,heclungwiththeotherhandtothehugehandwhichheldhisarm,andfearinvadedhisheart。 “Oh,NorthWind!“hemurmured,butthewordsvanishedfromhislipsashehadseenthesoap-bubblesthatbursttoosoonvanishfromthemouthofhispipe。Thewindcaughtthem,andtheywerenowhere。 Theycouldn’tgetoutatall,butweretornawayandstrangled。 AndyetNorthWindheardthem,andinheransweritseemedtoDiamondthatjustbecauseshewassobigandcouldnothelpit,andjustbecauseherearandhermouthmustseemtohimsodreadfullyfaraway,shespoketohimmoretenderlyandgraciouslythaneverbefore。 Hervoicewaslikethebassofadeeporgan,withoutthegroaninit; likethemostdelicateofviolintoneswithoutthewailinit; likethemostgloriousoftrumpet-ejaculationswithoutthedefianceinit;likethesoundoffallingwaterwithouttheclatterandclashinit:itwaslikeallofthemandneitherofthem——allofthemwithouttheirfaults,eachofthemwithoutitspeculiarity: afterall,itwasmorelikehismother’svoicethananythingelseintheworld。 “Diamond,dear。”shesaid,“beaman。Whatisfearfultoyouisnottheleastfearfultome。” “Butitcan’thurtyou。”murmuredDiamond,“foryou’reit。” “ThenifI’mit,andhaveyouinmyarms,howcanithurtyou?” “Ohyes!Isee。”whisperedDiamond。“Butitlookssodreadful,anditpushesmeaboutso。” “Yes,itdoes,mydear。Thatiswhatitwassentfor。” Atthesamemoment,apealofthunderwhichshookDiamond’sheartagainstthesidesofhisbosomhurtledoutoftheheavens: Icannotsayoutofthesky,fortherewasnosky。Diamondhadnotseenthelightning,forhehadbeenintentonfindingthefaceofNorthWind。Everymomentthefoldsofhergarmentwouldsweepacrosshiseyesandblindhim,butbetween,hecouldjustpersuadehimselfthathesawgreatgloriesofwoman’seyeslookingdownthroughriftsinthemountainouscloudsoverhishead。 Hetrembledsoatthethunder,thathiskneesfailedhim,andhesunkdownatNorthWind’sfeet,andclaspedherroundthecolumnofherankle。 Sheinstantlystooped,liftedhimfromtheroof——up——upintoherbosom,andheldhimthere,saying,asiftoaninconsolablechild—— “Diamond,dear,thiswillneverdo。” “Ohyes,itwill。”answeredDiamond。“Iamallrightnow—— quitecomfortable,Iassureyou,dearNorthWind。Ifyouwillonlyletmestayhere,Ishallbeallrightindeed。” “Butyouwillfeelthewindhere,Diamond。” “Idon’tmindthatabit,solongasIfeelyourarmsthroughit。” answeredDiamond,nestlingclosertohergrandbosom。 “Braveboy!“returnedNorthWind,pressinghimcloser。 “No。”saidDiamond,“Idon’tseethat。It’snotcourageatall,solongasIfeelyouthere。” “Buthadn’tyoubettergetintomyhair?Thenyouwouldnotfeelthewind;youwillhere。” “Ah,but,dearNorthWind,youdon’tknowhowniceitistofeelyourarmsaboutme。Itisathousandtimesbettertohavethemandthewindtogether,thantohaveonlyyourhairandthebackofyourneckandnowindatall。” “Butitissurelymorecomfortablethere?” “Well,perhaps;butIbegintothinktherearebetterthingsthanbeingcomfortable。” “Yes,indeedthereare。Well,Iwillkeepyouinfrontofme。 Youwillfeelthewind,butnottoomuch。Ishallonlywantonearmtotakecareofyou;theotherwillbequiteenoughtosinktheship。” “Oh,dearNorthWind!howcanyoutalkso?” “Mydearboy,Inevertalk;IalwaysmeanwhatIsay。” “Thenyoudomeantosinktheshipwiththeotherhand?” “Yes。” “It’snotlikeyou。” “Howdoyouknowthat?” “Quiteeasily。Hereyouaretakingcareofapoorlittleboywithonearm,andthereyouaresinkingashipwiththeother。 Itcan’tbelikeyou。” “Ah!butwhichisme?Ican’tbetwomes,youknow。” “No。Nobodycanbetwomes。” “Well,whichmeisme?” “NowImustthink。Therelookstobetwo。” “Yes。That’stheverypoint——Youcan’tbeknowingthethingyoudon’tknow,canyou?” “No。” “Whichmedoyouknow?” “Thekindest,goodest,bestmeintheworld。”answeredDiamond,clingingtoNorthWind。 “WhyamIgoodtoyou?” “Idon’tknow。” “Haveyoueverdoneanythingforme?” “No。” “ThenImustbegoodtoyoubecauseIchoosetobegoodtoyou。” “Yes。” “WhyshouldIchoose?” “Because——because——becauseyoulike。” “WhyshouldIliketobegoodtoyou?” “Idon’tknow,exceptitbebecauseit’sgoodtobegoodtome。” “That’sjustit;IamgoodtoyoubecauseIliketobegood。” “Thenwhyshouldn’tyoubegoodtootherpeopleaswellastome?” “That’sjustwhatIdon’tknow。Whyshouldn’tI?” “Idon’tknoweither。Thenwhyshouldn’tyou?” “BecauseIam。” “Thereitisagain。”saidDiamond。“Idon’tseethatyouare。 Itlooksquitetheotherthing。” “Well,butlistentome,Diamond。Youknowtheoneme,yousay,andthatisgood。” “Yes。” “Doyouknowtheothermeaswell?” “No。Ican’t。Ishouldn’tliketo。” “Thereitis。Youdon’tknowtheotherme。Youaresureofoneofthem?” “Yes。” “Andyouaresuretherecan’tbetwomes?” “Yes。” “Thenthemeyoudon’tknowmustbethesameasthemeyoudoknow,—— elsetherewouldbetwomes?” “Yes。” “Thentheothermeyoudon’tknowmustbeaskindasthemeyoudoknow?” “Yes。” “Besides,Itellyouthatitisso,onlyitdoesn’tlooklikeit。 ThatIconfessfreely。Haveyouanythingmoretoobject?” “No,no,dearNorthWind;Iamquitesatisfied。” “ThenIwilltellyousomethingyoumightobject。Youmightsaythatthemeyouknowisliketheotherme,andthatIamcruelallthrough。” “Iknowthatcan’tbe,becauseyouaresokind。” “Butthatkindnessmightbeonlyapretenceforthesakeofbeingmorecruelafterwards。” Diamondclungtohertighterthanever,crying—— “No,no,dearNorthWind;Ican’tbelievethat。Idon’tbelieveit。 Iwon’tbelieveit。Thatwouldkillme。Iloveyou,andyoumustloveme,elsehowdidIcometoloveyou?Howcouldyouknowhowtoputonsuchabeautifulfaceifyoudidnotlovemeandtherest?No。Youmaysinkasmanyshipsasyoulike,andIwon’tsayanotherword。Ican’tsayIshallliketoseeit,youknow。” “That’squiteanotherthing。”saidNorthWind;andasshespokeshegaveonespringfromtheroofofthehay-loft,andrushedupintotheclouds,withDiamondonherleftarmclosetoherheart。 Andasifthecloudsknewshehadcome,theyburstintoafreshjubilationofthunderouslight。Forafewmoments,Diamondseemedtobeborneupthroughthedepthsofanoceanofdazzlingflame; thenext,thewindswerewrithingaroundhimlikeastormofserpents。 Fortheywereinthemidstofthecloudsandmists,andtheyofcoursetooktheshapesofthewind,eddyingandwreathingandwhirlingandshootinganddashingaboutlikegreyandblackwater,sothatitwasasifthewinditselfhadtakenshape,andhesawthegreyandblackwindtossingandravingmostmadlyallabouthim。 Nowitblindedhimbysmitinghimupontheeyes;nowitdeafenedhimbybellowinginhisears;forevenwhenthethundercameheknewnowthatitwasthebillowsofthegreatoceanoftheairdashingagainsteachotherintheirhastetofillthehollowscoopedoutbythelightning;nowittookhisbreathquiteawaybysuckingitfromhisbodywiththespeedofitsrush。Buthedidnotmindit。Heonlygaspedfirstandthenlaughed,forthearmofNorthWindwasabouthim,andhewasleaningagainstherbosom。 Itisquiteimpossibleformetodescribewhathesaw。Didyoueverwatchagreatwaveshootintoawindingpassageamongstrocks? Ifyoueverdid,youwouldseethatthewaterrushedeverywayatonce,someofiteventurningbackandopposingtherest; greaterconfusionyoumightseenowhereexceptinacrowdoffrightenedpeople。Well,thewindwaslikethat,exceptthatitwentmuchfaster,andthereforewasmuchwilder,andtwistedandshotandcurledanddodgedandclashedandravedtentimesmoremadlythananythingelseincreationexcepthumanpassions。 Diamondsawthethreadsofthelady’shairstreakingitall。 Inpartsindeedhecouldnottellwhichwashairandwhichwasblackstormandvapour。Itseemedsometimesthatallthegreatbillowsofmist-muddywindwerewovenoutofthecrossinglinesofNorthWind’sinfinitehair,sweepinginendlessintertwistings。 AndDiamondfeltasthewindseizedonhishair,whichhismotherkeptratherlong,asifhetoowasapartofthestorm,andsomeofitslifewentoutfromhim。ButsoshelteredwashebyNorthWind’sarmandbosomthatonlyattimes,inthefierceronslaughtofsomecurl-billowededdy,didherecogniseforamomenthowwildwasthestorminwhichhewascarried,nestlinginitsverycoreandformativecentre。 ItseemedtoDiamondlikewisethattheyweremotionlessinthiscentre,andthatalltheconfusionandfightingwentonaroundthem。 Flashafterflashilluminatedthefiercechaos,revealinginvariedyellowandblueandgreyandduskyredthevapourouscontention; pealafterpealofthundertoretheinfinitewaste;butitseemedtoDiamondthatNorthWindandheweremotionless,allbutthehair。 Itwasnotso。Theyweresweepingwiththespeedofthewinditselftowardsthesea。