登陆注册
37869600000030

第30章 JACK LONDON(1)

BY HIMSELF

I was born in San Francisco in 1876. At fifteen I was a man among men, and if I had a spare nickel I spent it on beer instead of candy, because I thought it was more manly to buy beer. Now, when my years are nearly doubled, I am out on a hunt for the boyhood which I never had, and I am less serious than at any other time of my life. Guess I'll find that boyhood! Almost the first things Irealized were responsibilities. I have no recollection of being taught to read or write--I could do both at the age of five--but Iknow that my first school was in Alameda before I went out on a ranch with my folks and as a ranch boy worked hard from my eighth year.

The second school were I tried to pick up a little learning was an irregular hit or miss affair at San Mateo. Each class sat in a separate desk, but there were days when we did not sit at all, for the master used to get drunk very often, and then one of the elder boys would thrash him. To even things up, the master would then thrash the younger lads, so you can think what sort of school it was. There was no one belonging to me, or associated with me in any way, who had literary tastes or ideas, the nearest I can make to it is that my great-grandfather was a circuit writer, a Welshman, known as "Priest" Jones in the backwoods, where his enthusiasm led him to scatter the Gospel.

One of my earliest and strongest impressions was of the ignorance of other people. I had read and absorbed Washington Irving's "Alhambra" before I was nine, but could never understand how it was that the other ranchers knew nothing about it. Later I concluded that this ignorance was peculiar to the country, and felt that those who lived in cities would not be so dense. One day a man from the city came to the ranch. He wore shiny shoes and a cloth coat, and Ifelt that here was a good chance for me to exchange thoughts with an enlightened mind. From the bricks of an old fallen chimney I had built an Alhambra of my own; towers, terraces, and all were complete, and chalk inscriptions marked the different sections.

Here I led the city man and questioned him about "The Alhambra," but he was as ignorant as the man on the ranch, and then I consoled myself with the thought that there were only two clever people in the world--Washington Irving and myself.

My other reading-matter at that time consisted mainly of dime novels, borrowed from the hired men, and newspapers in which the servants gloated over the adventures of poor but virtuous shop-girls.

Through reading such stuff my mind was necessarily ridiculously conventional, but being very lonely I read everything that came my way, and was greatly impressed by Ouida's story "Signa," which Idevoured regularly for a couple of years. I never knew the finish until I grew up, for the closing chapters were missing from my copy, so I kept on dreaming with the hero, and, like him, unable to see Nemesis, at the end. My work on the ranch at one time was to watch the bees, and as I sat under a tree from sunrise till late in the afternoon, waiting for the swarming, I had plenty of time to read and dream. Livermore Valley was very flat, and even the hills around were then to me devoid of interest, and the only incident to break in on my visions was when I gave the alarm of swarming, and the ranch folks rushed out with pots, pans, and buckets of water. Ithink the opening line of "Signa" was "It was only a little lad,"yet he had dreams of becoming a great musician, and having all Europe at his feet. Well, I was only a little lad, too, but why could not I become what "Signa" dreamed of being?

Life on a Californian ranch was then to me the dullest possible existence, and every day I thought of going out beyond the sky-line to see the world. Even then there were whispers, promptings; my mind inclined to things beautiful, although my environment was unbeautiful. The hills and valleys around were eyesores and aching pits, and I never loved them till I left them.

Before I was eleven I left the ranch and came to Oakland, where Ispent so much of my time in the Free Public Library, eagerly reading everything that came to hand, that I developed the first stages of St. Vitus' dance from lack of exercise. Disillusions quickly followed, as I learned more of the world. At this time I made my living as a newsboy, selling papers in the streets; and from then on until I was sixteen I had a thousand and one different occupations--work and school, school and work--and so it ran.

* * *

Then the adventure-lust was strong within me, and I left home. Ididn't run, I just left--went out in the bay, and joined the oyster pirates. The days of the oyster pirates are now past, and if I had got my dues for piracy, I would have been given five hundred years in prison. Later, I shipped as a sailor on a schooner, and also took a turn at salmon fishing. Oddly enough, my next occupation was on a fish-patrol, where I was entrusted with the arrest of any violators of the fishing laws. Numbers of lawless Chinese, Greeks, and Italians were at that time engaged in illegal fishing, and many a patrolman paid his life for his interference. My only weapon on duty was a steel table-fork, but I felt fearless and a man when Iclimbed over the side of a boat to arrest some marauder.

Subsequently I shipped before the mast and sailed for the Japanese coast on a seal-hunting expedition, later going to Behring Sea.

After sealing for seven months I came back to California and took odd jobs at coal shovelling and longshoring and also in a jute factory, where I worked from six in the morning until seven at night. I had planned to join the same lot for another sealing trip the following year, but somehow I missed them. They sailed away on the Mary Thomas, which was lost with all hands.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 这才是真正的千金

    这才是真正的千金

    六年前一场爱恨分离,使叶意繁失去了一切,还被赶出叶家,她下定决心一定要回来复仇,把属于她的一切夺回来。六年后她霸气回归,手撕白莲花,上演了一场宫廷戏码。
  • 带个游戏库在异界

    带个游戏库在异界

    穿越到一个高武世界,随身带着一个游戏库。既没有傲人的天赋,也没有无双的背景,更不存在倾城绝世的青梅竹马,苦逼的罗哲发现,自己想要过上好日子,貌似就只有打游戏这一条路可以走了。于是,他开始了自己‘堕落’之旅。在苦逼消消乐中提升精神力;在疯狂切西瓜中锻炼反应力;在拳皇中获得战斗经验以及武技;在……当有一天罗哲从游戏中抬起头时,才发现原来他,已经站在巅峰……
  • 今天玖爷又发微博秀恩爱了

    今天玖爷又发微博秀恩爱了

    穆时玖上辈子是个金牌编剧,本是前途无量,却被自己尽心尽力捧出的影帝兼隐婚男友害死。父母也为了她而被渣男渣女陷害,遭遇车祸,变成植物人;师兄们为了她失去了骄傲,给渣男渣女跪了下来;姐姐为了她选择失去双手,放弃了一直以来引以为傲的双手,最喜欢的设计。这辈子,她要虑渣男!斗渣女!势必要为上辈子的她复仇!本是想报恩上辈子帮助过她的人,结果却中了他的圈套。片段①:“你到底想让我怎么报恩?”穆时玖注视着比她高了一个头的男人。“以身相许怎么样?”封珏深沉的目光看着穆时玖。“滚你丫的!”穆时玖咬牙切齿地说。片段②:“我胃疼……”封珏委屈巴巴的看着眼前的人。“给,喝水。”穆时玖无奈地倒了杯水。“你喂我……”封珏继续死皮赖脸的说。“……”她以前怎么没有发现,这个男人脸皮这么厚。【高甜双洁×男强女更强×一见钟情×娱乐圈×双重生】PS:本文由妃儿作文,苏初妍提供思路。
  • 陛下不准说脏话

    陛下不准说脏话

    世间有无数个万万没有想到,比如在这里,小杀神盗个墓还能把前世的老情人给挖出来,如果现在把棺材板给再盖上还来得及吗?答案当然是行不通的。凌洛:我*,nmd,甘霖凉……迟珩:陛下,不准说脏话。凌洛:雨女无瓜!前世里死缠烂打的小皇帝与已是自顾不暇的国师,纠纠缠缠,直到躺进了棺材板,方才得到了那人的心。今世变成了会说脏话的小杀神与当年他不可得的国师再度重相逢……前世今生,心悦于你。丹青著明誓,永世不相忘。
  • 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!
  • 逆天邪手

    逆天邪手

    上古之秘,元素核心,玉石纷争,澜荒世界。在这个强者为尊的世界里,他从零开始,攀爬世界的顶峰。种族无尽纷争,美女感情牵绊,官场勾心斗角,王者纵横世界,阴谋与隐秘层层揭开。一切尽在澜荒大陆!
  • 凤凰涅槃之豪门女神医

    凤凰涅槃之豪门女神医

    她,上官筱膤,不过只是个普通人家的独女。家庭分裂,父母离婚,导致她离家出走,一脚踏错,却是走进了神奇的神农世界!五年后的强势归来,继承神农,成为神医,却带着那不可推卸的责任!他,不过是那被困于神农世界的魔界之主,一招错算,主仆契约已成,却是成了她的附属黑执事。从此唯她命是从,和她并肩在这个世界翻手为云,覆手为雨。只是不知是谁先动了心底的那根情弦;不知是谁先步步沦陷;不知是谁为她守候,为她浴血奋战,从而打开那颗冰封的心。
  • 超自然现象处理协会

    超自然现象处理协会

    江羽拿着黑剑对着玲说“这是连接你我的红绳”玲呆呆的看着江羽“什么是红绳?”两人旁边的徐飞一脸茫然“欸?那我呢?”......
  • 快穿之极品公主殿下

    快穿之极品公主殿下

    其实,想成为一个优秀的系统者并不难,你只要掌握以下几点:1:作为一个优秀的系统者,得掌握手撕绿茶婊,脚踩黑莲花的特点2:作为一个优秀的系统者,你怎么能不会撕逼呢,你得成为无时无刻都能撕逼的!comeon!来吧撕逼小能手!于是,公主殿下终于完成了以上任务,结果是—某凶残的公主殿下掐着小正太主神细嫩的脖颈,狡黠一笑,“让本宫给你打工,你想死吗?”
  • 农村干部党风廉政建设实务

    农村干部党风廉政建设实务

    本套丛书定位于基层农村干部,针对农村土地征用、房屋拆迁、治安管理、廉政建设、农民纠纷及农村社会保障等方面的问题,对干部如何运用法治思维和法治方式化解农村社会矛盾提供了解决办法。全书分为《农村干部党风廉政建设实务》《农村干部素质修养与领导实务》《农村干部以法治村管理实务》《农村纠纷与处理法律实务》和《农村常用法律与维权实务》五个分册,囊括了农村社会治理的方方面面,对于农村领导干部加强和创新农村社会治理,依靠法治来统筹农村社会力量、平衡农村社会利益、调节农村社会关系、规范农村社会行为,推进农村社会治理法治化与现代化具有重要意义。