登陆注册
38536600000019

第19章 CHAPTER III THE BALLOON(1)

IBert Smallways was a vulgar little creature, the sort of pert, limited soul that the old civilisation of the early twentieth century produced by the million in every country of the world.

He had lived all his life in narrow streets, and between mean houses he could not look over, and in a narrow circle of ideas from which there was no escape. He thought the whole duty of man was to be smarter than his fellows, get his hands, as he put it, "on the dibs," and have a good time. He was, in fact, the sort of man who had made England and America what they were. The luck had been against him so far, but that was by the way. He was a mere aggressive and acquisitive individual with no sense of the State, no habitual loyalty, no devotion, no code of honour, no code even of courage. Now by a curious accident he found himself lifted out of his marvellous modern world for a time, out of all the rush and confused appeals of it, and floating like a thing dead and disembodied between sea and sky. It was as if Heaven was experimenting with him, had picked him out as a sample from the English millions, to look at him more nearly, and to see what was happening to the soul of man. But what Heaven made of him in that case I cannot profess to imagine, for I have long since abandoned all theories about the ideals and satisfactions of Heaven.

To be alone in a balloon at a height of fourteen or fifteen thousand feet--and to that height Bert Smallways presently rose is like nothing else in human experience. It is one of the supreme things possible to man. No flying machine can ever better it. It is to pass extraordinarily out of human things.

It is to be still and alone to an unprecedented degree. It is solitude without the suggestion of intervention; it is calm without a single irrelevant murmur. It is to see the sky. No sound reaches one of all the roar and jar of humanity, the air is clear and sweet beyond the thought of defilement. No bird, no insect comes so high. No wind blows ever in a balloon, no breeze rustles, for it moves with the wind and is itself a part of the atmosphere. Once started, it does not rock nor sway; you cannot feel whether it rises or falls. Bert felt acutely cold, but he wasn't mountain-sick; he put on the coat and overcoat and gloves Butteridge had discarded--put them over the "Desert Dervish"sheet that covered his cheap best suit--and sat very still for a long, time, overawed by the new-found quiet of the world.

Above him was the light, translucent, billowing globe of shining brown oiled silk and the blazing sunlight and the great deep blue dome of the sky.

Below, far below, was a torn floor of sunlit cloud slashed by enormous rents through which he saw the sea.

If you had been watching him from below, you would have seen his head, a motionless little black knob, sticking out from the car first of all for a long time on one side, and then vanishing to reappear after a time at some other point.

He wasn't in the least degree uncomfortable nor afraid. He did think that as this uncontrollable thing had thus rushed up the sky with him it might presently rush down again, but this consideration did not trouble him very much. Essentially his state was wonder. There is no fear nor trouble in balloons--until they descend.

"Gollys!" he said at last, feeling a need for talking; "it's better than a motor-bike.

"It's all right!

"I suppose they're telegraphing about, about me."...

The second hour found him examining the equipment of the car with great particularity. Above him was the throat of the balloon bunched and tied together, but with an open lumen through which,Bert could peer up into a vast, empty, quiet interior, and out of which descended two fine cords of unknown import, one white, one crimson, to pockets below the ring. The netting about the balloon-ended in cords attached to the ring, a big steel-bound hoop. to which the car was slung by ropes. From it depended the trail rope and grapnel, and over the sides of the car were a number of canvas bags that Bert decided must be ballast to "chuck down" if the balloon fell. ("Not much falling just yet," said Bert.)There were an aneroid and another box-shaped instrument hanging from the ring. The latter had an ivory plate bearing "statoscope" and other words in French, and a little indicator quivered and waggled, between Montee and Descente. "That's all right," said Bert. "That tells if you're going up or down." On the crimson padded seat of the balloon there lay a couple of rugs and a Kodak, and in opposite corners of the bottom of the car were an empty champagne bottle and a glass. "Refreshments," said Bert meditatively, tilting the empty bottle. Then he had a brilliant idea. The two padded bed-like seats, each with blankets and mattress, he perceived, were boxes, and within he found Mr. Butteridge's conception of an adequate equipment for a balloon ascent: a hamper which included a game pie, a Roman pie, a cold fowl, tomatoes, lettuce, ham sandwiches, shrimp sandwiches, a large cake, knives and forks and paper plates, self-heating tins of coffee and cocoa, bread, butter, and marmalade, several carefully packed bottles of champagne, bottles of Perrier water, and a big jar of water for washing, a portfolio, maps, and a compass, a rucksack containing a number of conveniences, including curling-tongs and hair-pins,, a cap with ear-flaps, and so forth.

"A 'ome from 'ome," said Bert, surveying this provision as he tied the ear-flaps under his chin. He looked over the side of the car. Far below were the shining clouds. They had thickened so that the whole world was hidden. Southward they were piled in great snowy masses, so that he was half disposed to think them mountains; northward and eastward they were in wavelike levels, and blindingly sunlit.

"Wonder how long a balloon keeps up?" he said.

He imagined he was not moving, so insensibly did the monster drift with the air about it. "No good coming down till we shift a bit," he said.

He consulted the statoscope.

"Still Monty," he said.

同类推荐
  • 玄奘三藏法师资传丛书

    玄奘三藏法师资传丛书

    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。
  • East Lynne

    East Lynne

    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。
  • 正朝摘梅

    正朝摘梅

    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。
  • 千山剩人禅师语录

    千山剩人禅师语录

    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。
  • 庆芝堂集

    庆芝堂集

    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。
热门推荐
  • 蕴道仙尊

    蕴道仙尊

    人为成仙,一生一执念,孤独一生,却依旧平凡。人为成人,一生保平安,膝下有子,得幸福美满。成仙到底为何成仙?一人一剑天涯走遍凡人虽死不留遗憾孤独一生长生何谈?泉下良友轮回几番?本不想成仙,为何逼我上神巅?绝情池水改我一生执念,天道逼我,岂能不反!
  • TFBOYS之致青春

    TFBOYS之致青春

    “撞包撞衫甚至撞脸都没令我那么害怕我最害怕的是你看别人的眼神跟看我时一样”---by上官雅。“他伤了你那么多次你怎么还没离开?”---by路人。“偶尔他也会给我敷药,喂我吃糖。”---by初萦。"“我都忘了这是我第几次说要放弃你,情不知所起,一往而深。我等一等,再放弃。”---by南宫紫璃。"你太重要,别人碰一下我都觉得是抢。"---by王俊凯。"如果有缘,错过了还会重来;如果无缘,相遇了也会离开。"---by王源。"最怕的是关系突然变淡而你却连原因都不知道。"by易烊千玺。
  • 百鬼名单之捉妖邪说

    百鬼名单之捉妖邪说

    我叫吴杰,左手鬼王令,百鬼召集,阎君也要颤抖跪拜,右手化佛手,超度一切,如来也要俱我三分。
  • 蛇妖弟弟

    蛇妖弟弟

    苏叶小时候捡了一个弟弟,取名苏流天,没想到他居然自称是一条蛇妖。蛇妖苏流天编了一张网,把苏叶一步一步地引进去。苏叶一点点发现苏流天的真实身份,发现自己的真实身份。其实不管是神、是妖、还是人,自己已经生生世世被困。
  • 人生健康枕边书全集

    人生健康枕边书全集

    本书针对现代人保健养生的迫切需求,集中提供了营养、运动、心理、生活习惯等方面的健康知识、从营养健康、运动健康、心理健康几个角度全面介绍了生活中应当注意的健康细节。通过本书,你可以轻松把握自己的健康状况,提高健康素质,消除自身存在的健康隐患。举手之劳,让健康常伴左右。
  • 梦回神醒

    梦回神醒

    养了一只高智商的崽,牵出来溜溜。每天想带他打打游戏,警醒他少做白日梦啦。
  • 欢笑年华

    欢笑年华

    有人说,大学是所整容院,能让胖的变成瘦的,丑的变成美的。也有人说,大学是社会的缩影,里面发生的一切都是现实社会的真实反照。更有人说,大学是世界上最混乱的地方,在这里,只要你的颜值够高,你可以泡到任何你想要的女神,也可以钓到任何你想要的男神。能上一所大学是任何一个人都想要的经历,因为在这里,你可以遇到你想要的,你可以得到你想要的。直到毕业将近,你的爱情你的人脉包括你以后的发展,所面临的最大考验也要开始了。时间不多,一个月够了吗?
  • 快穿之反派大佬了不起

    快穿之反派大佬了不起

    男强女强,双洁1V1 系统,沿江,好不容易找到一个宿主,可谁知道,宿主不仅是个超级毒舌,居然还有隐藏的蛇精病属性,做任务又懒散,又爱作死。最重要的是他拿她还没得法!!!夜佳愿表示:我就静静的看着你的表演,以免你死的太惨。言江:天!宿主我还是不是你最爱的那个统统了? 夜佳愿:滚!再碰我,我让你见不到明天的太阳!
  • 迷恋殇

    迷恋殇

    一次绑架,她邂逅了黑帮老大的他。他果然够狠,杀人如麻,甚至可以绝情到把她送给兄弟品尝。她不恨他,那时。因为,她不爱他。可是,当他因为一个未降临的孩子,打了她一巴掌,当得知他杀了她的父母时,她爱了,所以恨了!她选择离开,然后报复。几年后,台北的商界,她驻足于顶峰,叱诧商场风云。他俩再次偶遇,他再也放不开她,死死地将她套住,用婚姻的链子也无所谓。
  • 青龙劫殇引

    青龙劫殇引

    源起天界,劫于人心。前世纠葛,后世不移。天下四分,逐战皇域。乱世再现,伏魔觉醒。阿七马蹄,羊驼少年。白都谜情,幻城活尸。九天玄刹,曼珠沙华。容若惊现,雄雌难辨。朱雀城里,巫蛊男子。美男面具,竟是女子。漫天雪域,其情难却。青龙一难,青泽王现。玄武大婚,恩断义绝。玄黎陵墓,前世今生。最后一战,情归缘欠。