登陆注册
37851200000010

第10章 IV. THE LONELY HERDSMAN(1)

The sun was already dipping toward the west when they finished the last crumb of their bread and cheese, washed it down with a drink from the mountain stream, and started once more on their journey. They followed the path without much difficulty, for it had been trampled by the feet of many cattle that morning, and at the end of an hour had covered several miles without meeting a person or finding any sign of human habitation The way grew wilder and wilder and wound slowly upward.

"It's going to be dark pretty soon," said Leneli at last, trying hard to conceal the tremble in her voice, "and we are going up instead of down. Seppi, do you suppose there are any bears and wolves about here?"

"Maybe," said Seppi, and there was a little catch in his throat, too. "But then," he added, trying hard to look on the bright side of things, "if there are, they'd be much more likely to eat the goats. I don't believe they care much about eating people."

"Well, anyway, if they do," quavered Leneli, "I hope they'll begin with Nanni."

The afternoon waned; the shadows grew longer and longer, and they wire just ****** up their minds that they must soon lie down among the goats beside the trail and wait for morning, when a turn in the path brought them out on a spur of the mountain where they could look for miles across a deep valley towards the west.

On the farther side, range after range of snow-capped peaks gave back the golden glory of the sunset, and from somewhere came the sound of an Alpine horn playing the first few notes of the hymn "Praise Ye the Lord."

"The Angelus!" cried Leneli clasping, her hands. "They can't hear the church-bells up here, so they blow the horns instead."

Far away across the valley another horn answered, then another and another, and the echoes took up the refrain until it seemed as if the hills themselves were singing.

Following eagerly the direction of the sound the children were overjoyed to see in the distance a lonely herdsman standing on a great rock overlooking the valley, his long Alpine horn in his hand, and his head bowed in prayer. Leneli and Seppi bowed their heads too, and it comforted them to think that their mother in the old farm-house, and Father and Fritz on the far-away alp, were all at that same moment praying too. It seemed to bring them near together in spite of the distance which separated them.

Their prayers said, the children hastened forward, driving the goats before them, and now the sound of cow-bells mingled with the tinkle of the bells on the goats. Another turn in the path revealed a green pasture where a herd of cows was grazing, and, just beyond, a rough shelter made of logs with the herdsman, still holding his horn, standing beside it. He was gazing in astonishment at the sight of two little children alone on the mountains at so late an hour. He was an old man, with a shaggy white beard, and strange kind eyes that seemed always looking for something that he could not find. Beside him, his ears pointed forward and his tail pointing back, was his dog. The dog was growling.

For an instant the children stood still, not quite daring to go nearer, but Bello, dear friendly old Bello, had no such fears. He ran forward barking joyfully; the two dogs smelled each other, and then trotted back down the path together as if they had been friends since they were puppies.

The man followed at a slower pace. "What in the world are you doing up here on the mountains with your goats at this time o' day?" he said to the children.

The Twins told him their story, and he stood for a moment scratching his head, as if he were much puzzled to know what to do with them.

"Well," he said at length, "you can't get down the mountain tonight, that's certain; and you must be hungry enough to eat an ox roasted whole, that's certain too. And your goats are hungry into the bargain. Goats aren't allowed in this pasture, but they mustn't starve either. Nothing is as it should be."

He scratched his head again, and Leneli, fearing he was going to turn them away, could not keep a large tear from rolling, down her nose and splashing off her chin.

"There, there," said the old herdsman, comfortingly, "don't you cry, sissy. Things aren't so bad but that they might be worse.

You can sleep in the hay up yonder," he jerked his thumb toward the hut, "and I'll give you a bite to eat, and the goats will help themselves, I've no manner of doubt."

"We can drink goat's milk," said Leneli timidly, "and you may have all we don't take."

"We'll have to milk them first," said Seppi, "and we've never done it before. Mother always does the milking."

"I know how," said Leneli proudly. "Don't you remember, Fritz taught me the day Nanni swallowed my lunch?"

"I'll lend you a milk-pail," said the herdsman. "The cows were all milked some time ago."

He went back to the but and soon reappeared with two pails, and as Leneli struggled with one goat he milked another, while Seppi fed both creatures with tufts of grass to keep them quiet. It was the first good grass the goats had seen since morning, and apparently they were determined to eat the pasture clean.

The herdsman looked at them anxiously and scratched his head again. "They certainly have healthy appetites," he said woefully;"they don't calculate to leave anything behind 'em but stones and gravel!"

The milking took some time and after it was done, the old man placed the sad and tired children on the bench beside his door, and while they ate the food he gave them and watched the moon rise over the mountains, he told them about his home in the village fifteen miles away at the foot of the pass, and about his wife and two grandchildren who lived there with him.

"The only thing you can do," he said, "is to go down the pass on this side of the mountain. You can spend the night at my house or at some farm-house on the way and it is only about ten miles back to your own village from the foot of the pass."

"But how can we find the way?" quavered poor Leneli.

The old man scratched his head, as he always did when he was puzzled, and finally said, "Well, I'm blest if I can tell you.

同类推荐
  • 金史

    金史

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 元始洞真慈善孝子报恩成道经

    元始洞真慈善孝子报恩成道经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 清河内传

    清河内传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 道德真经取善集

    道德真经取善集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 关尹子

    关尹子

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 你在我心里何止好几年

    你在我心里何止好几年

    何沁这辈子最后悔的两件事,其一,喜欢陆清让,其二,悔悟太晚。如果你在少女时期遇见一个明媚似骄阳的男孩子,你喜欢他喜欢得发疯,没了梦想没了家人没了朋友。如果你千疮百孔之后回到故事的开端,男孩向你伸手,你还敢不敢握住?
  • 巾帼杀手

    巾帼杀手

    落魄的少女如何在孤苦中艰难成长,无根浮萍怎样在杀戮中不断前行,物欲横流的年代在黑暗中不断前行的她是否能够坚守本心,是放弃,还是抉择,冷艳的外表下究竟隐藏着一颗怎样的内心......
  • 委托事务所

    委托事务所

    做为委托事务所的总管事,也是唯一的一名员工,闫颜不得不奔波在各种世界里完成各种人务的各项委托……
  • 梦流殇

    梦流殇

    初见,她一曲【青花瓷】惊鸿,他赞叹不已。后来,却恍然发现,这是一场蓄意已久的阴谋,她想逃,却无路可逃。“乖乖和我回去,我可以当作什么都没有发生。”他囚禁她,期年之久,母亲的离去,她毅然决定要逃。四年以后,再见,她已不再是她。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 奇怪的侦探

    奇怪的侦探

    性格奇怪的侦探,热血的女警察,古灵精怪的女大学生,在都市当中侦破形形色色案件的故事
  • 似魔非魔

    似魔非魔

    云灵大陆,开云国皇城内,某天的深夜,一团神秘的蓝光,一篇神奇的法决,让一名普通少年的一生发生了极大的转变。自此,一篇富有奇幻色彩的画页也悄悄的摊展开来……练气,筑基,结丹,一路走来,这名少年将会经历怎样惊心动魄的修炼历程呢?慢热书,不喜欢的慎入!(云灵大陆不会呆太久,希望能坚持看下去...)
  • 巨虎被夸就变强

    巨虎被夸就变强

    重生成星际时代殖民星上的一只巨虎,受到夸赞就能不断变强。纵横无数星系的机甲战队?可能扛不住我一虎爪。堪比星球的星河战舰?不过是餐前甜点罢了。能瞬间毁灭一颗星球的星轨打击?勉强可以挠挠痒。号称生命巅峰的宇宙超级战士?梁晓一爪子抓着一个,请问,谁才是宇宙的生命巅峰?(读者群:658674890,欢迎来炸鱼)
  • 恋狐吟

    恋狐吟

    一人一狐守着月宫。他便是幼狐,她是神,狐满眼柔光地问她,她笑着回避了狐狸问过无数次的话。直到后来,他雪白的瞳染尽尘埃,人界天界一片血海...她的脸庞,依然能救他于水火。
  • 残剑新篇

    残剑新篇

    一个出生于飞升者世家白家的少年,白初,勤分苦修,13岁就跨入星辰境,是东霖城府的天才,他所在的白家也是飞升者世家。可世事难料,家族的飞升者陨落仙界,从小就有些喜欢他,并且同他有婚约的周然儿所在的周家得知白家飞升者陨落,便迫使白家解除了婚约。白初并没有自暴自弃,而是更加刻苦修炼,在一次奇遇下进入了一名仙帝所留下的传承,从此踏上了修真之途。