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
狗狗书籍 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

Coming up for Air-第50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!



 they like。 and i’m not suggesting that the whole of humanity could spend the whole of their lives wandering round picking primroses and so forth。 i know perfectly well that we’ve got to work。 it’s only because chaps are coughing their lungs out in mines and girls are hammering at typewriters that anyone ever has time to pick a flower。 besides; if you hadn’t a full belly and a warm house you wouldn’t want to pick flowers。 but that’s not the point。 here’s this feeling that i get inside me—not often; i admit; but now and again。 i know it’s a good feeling to have。 what’s more; so does everybody else; or nearly everybody。 it’s just round the corner all the time; and we all know it’s there。 stop firing that machine…gun! stop chasing whatever you’re chasing! calm down; get your breath back; let a bit of peace seep into your bones。 no use。 we don’t do it。 just keep on with the same bloody fooleries。

and the next war ing over the horizon; 1941; they say。 three more circles of the sun; and then we whizz straight into it。 the bombs diving down on you like black cigars; and the streamlined bullets streaming from the bren machine…guns。 not that that worries me particularly。 i’m too old to fight。 there’ll be air… raids; of course; but they won’t hit everybody。 besides; even if that kind of danger exists; it doesn’t really enter into one’s thoughts beforehand。 as i’ve said several times already; i’m not frightened of the war; only the after…war。 and even that isn’t likely to affect me personally。 because who’d bother about a chap like me? i’m too fat to be a political suspect。 no one would bump me off or cosh me with a rubber truncheon。 i’m the ordinary middling kind that moves on when the policeman tells him。 as for hilda and the kids; they’d probably never notice the difference。 and yet it frightens me。 the barbed wire! the slogans! the enormous faces! the cork…lined cellars where the executioner plugs you from behind! for that matter it frightens other chaps who are intellectually a good deal dumber than i am。 but why! because it means good…bye to this thing i’ve been telling you about; this special feeling inside you。 call it peace; if you like。 but when i say peace i don’t mean absence of war; i mean peace; a feeling in your guts。 and it’s gone for ever if the rubber truncheon boys get hold of us。

i picked up my bunch of primroses and had a smell at them。 i was thinking of lower binfield。 it was funny how for two months past it had been in and out of my mind all the time; after twenty years during which i’d practically forgotten it。 and just at this moment there was the zoom of a car ing up the road。

it brought me up with a kind of jolt。 i suddenly realized what i was doing—wandering round picking primroses when i ought to have been going through the inventory at that ironmonger’s shop in pudley。 what was more; it suddenly struck me what i’d look like if those people in the car saw me。 a fat man in a bowler hat holding a bunch of primroses! it wouldn’t look right at all。 fat men mustn’t pick primroses; at any rate in public。 i just had time to chuck them over the hedge before the car came in sight。 it was a good job i’d done so。 the car was full of young fools of about twenty。 how they’d have sniggered if they’d seen me! they were all looking at me—you know how people look at you when they’re in a car ing towards you—and the thought struck me that even now they might somehow guess what i’d been doing。 better let ‘em think it was something else。 why should a chap get out of his car at the side of a country road? obvious! as the car went past i pretended to be doing up a fly…button。

i cranked up the car (the self…starter doesn’t work any longer) and got in。 curiously enough; in the very moment when i was doing up the fly…button; when my mind was about three…quarters full of those young fools in the other car; a wonderful idea had occurred to me。

i’d go back to lower binfield!

why not? i thought as i jammed her into top gear。 why shouldn’t i? what was to stop me? and why the hell hadn’t i thought of it before? a quiet holiday in lower binfield—just the thing i wanted。

don’t imagine that i had any ideas of going back to live in lower binfield。 i wasn’t planning to desert hilda and the kids and start life under a different name。 that kind of thing only happens in books。 but what was to stop me slipping down to lower binfield and having a week there all by myself; on the q。t。?

i seemed to have it all planned out in my mind already。 it was all right as far as the money went。 there was still twelve quid left in that secret pile of mine; and you can have a very fortable week on twelve quid。 i get a fortnight’s holiday a year; generally in august or september。 but if i made up some suitable story— relative dying of incurable disease; or something—i could probably get the firm to give me my holiday in two separate halves。 then i could have a week all to myself before hilda knew what was happening。 a week in lower binfield; with no hilda; no kids; no flying salamander; no ellesmere road; no rumpus about the hire… purchase payments; no noise of traffic driving you silly—just a week of loafing round and listening to the quietness?

but why did i want to go back to lower binfield? you say。 why lower binfield in particular? what did i mean to do when i got there?

i didn’t mean to do anything。 that was part of the point。 i wanted peace and quiet。 peace! we had it once; in lower binfield。 i’ve told you something about our old life there; before the war。 i’m not pretending it was perfect。 i dare say it was a dull; sluggish; vegetable kind of life。 you can say we were like turnips; if you like。 but turnips don’t live in terror of the boss; they don’t lie awake at night thinking about the next slump and the next war。 we had peace inside us。 of course i knew that even in lower binfield life would have changed。 but the place itself wouldn’t have。 there’d still be the beech woods round binfield house; and the towpath down by burford weir; and the horse…trough in the market…place。 i wanted to get back there; just for a week; and let the feeling of it soak into me。 it was 
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!