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第118部分

time enough for love-时间足够你爱(英文版)-第118部分


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 on Terra…grain; beef; pork。 The unsightly aspects of this trade are down in river bottoms while the citizens live in beautiful wooded hills。 On a damp morning when the es catches a ?hiff …of stockyards; otherwise the air is clear and clean and beautiful。
  
  It is a quiet city。 Traffic is never dense; and the clopclop of horses' hooves or the warning gong of an electrically propelled street…railroad car~ is just enough to acdent the silence…the sounds of children at play are louder。
  
  Galahad is more interested in how a culture uses its leisure than in its economics…and so am I; as scratching a living is controlled by circumstances。 But not play。 By play I do not mean sex。 Sex can't take up too much time of humans matured beyond adolescence (except a few oddies like the fabled Casanova…and Galahad of course
  
  …~Me 'at's off to the Dyuke!')。
  
  In 1916 (nothing I say necessarily applies ten years
  
  469later and certainly not one hundred… years later; this is the
  
  …very end of an era) …at this time the typical Kansas Citian makes his own play; his social events are associated
  
  with ch&rches; or with relatives by blood and marriage; or both…dining; picnicking; playing games (not gambling); or simply visiting and talking; Most of this costs little or nothing except the expense of supporting their churches
  
  …which are social clubs as much as they are temples of religious faith。
  
  第65节
  
  The major mercial entertainment is called 〃moving pictures〃…dramatic shows presetited as silent blackand…white shadow pictures ifickering against a blank wall。 These are quite new; very popular; and very cheap…they are called 〃nickel shows〃 after the minor coin charged as a fee。 Each neighborhood (defined as walking distance) has at least one such theater。 This form of entertainment; and its technological derivatives; eventually had (will
  
  … have) as much to do with the destruction of this social
  
  … …pattern as the automobile carriages (get Galahad's opinions on this); but…in 19 16…neither has as yet disturbed what appears to be a stable and rather Utopian pattern。
  
  Anomie has not yet set in; the norms are strong; … customs are binding; … and no one here…&…now would believe that the occasional rumble is Cheyne…Stokes breathing of a culture about to die。 Literacy is at the highest level this culture will ever attain…my dears; the people of 1916 simply would not believe 2016。 They won't even believe that they are about to be enmeshed in the first of the Final Wars; that is why the man for whom I am named is about to be reelected。 〃We Are Neutral。〃 〃Too Proud to Fight。〃 〃He Kept Us Out of War。〃 Under these slogans they are marching over the precipice; not knowing it is there。 … …
  
  (I'm depressing myself…hindsight is a vice 。 。 espe
  
  … cially when it is foresight。)
  
  Now let's look at the underside Qf this lovely city:
  
  The city is a nominal democracy。 In fact it is nothing of the sort。 It is governed by one politician who holds no office。 Elections are solemn rituals…and the outes are
  
  …what he ordains。 The streets are beautifully paved because his panies pave them…to his profit。 The schools are excellent; and they actually teach…because this monarch wants it that way。 He is pragmatically benign and does not overreach。 〃Crime〃 (which means anything illegal and
  
  470includes both prostitution and gambling) is franchised through his lieutenants; he never touches it himself。
  
  Much of this crime…by…definition is handled by an
  
  organization sometimes called 〃The Black Hand〃…but in
  
  1916 it usually has no… name and is never seen。 But it is
  
  why I don't dare accept election bets; I would be encroaching on a monopoly of one of this politician's lieu…
  
  … tenants…which would be very dangerous to my health~ Instead; I'll bet by the local rules and keep my mouth
  
  shut。
  
  The 〃respectable〃 citizen; with his pleasant home and garden ai~d church and happy children; sees najie of this and (I think) suspects little of it and thinks about it less。
  
  The city is divided into zones with firm though unmarked bounds。 The descendants of former slaves live in a zone
  
  that forms a buffer between the 〃nice〃 part of town and the area dominated by and lived in by the franchised
  
  monopolists of such things as gambling and prostitution。 At night the zones mix only under unspoken conventions。 In the daytime there is nothing to notice。 The boss
  
  maintains tight discipline but keeps it simple。 I've heard that he has only three unbreakable rules: Keep the streets
  
  … …well paved。 Don't touch the schools。 Don't kill anyone south of a certain street。
  
  In 1916 it works just fine…but not much longer。
  
  I must stop; I have an appointment at K。C。 Photo Supply pany to… use a lab…in private。 Then I must get back to the grift: separating people from dollars painlessly and… fairly legally。 …
  
  Love forever and all the way back;
  
  L
  
  P。S。 You should see me in a derby hat!
  
  DA CAPO471
  
  Ill
  
  Maureen
  
  Mr。 Theodore Bronson n?Woodrow Wilson Smith aka Lazarus Long left his apartment oh Armour Boulevard and
  
  drove his car; a Ford landaulet; to a corner on Thirty…first Street; where he parked it in a shed behind a pawnshop…as he took a dim view of leaving an automobile on the street at night。 Not that the car had cost Lazarus much; he had acquired it as a result of the belief of an optimist from Denver that aces back to back plus a pair showing could certainly
  
  beat a pair of jacks…Mr。 〃Jenkins〃 must be bluffing。 But Mr。
  
  〃Jenkins〃 had a jack in the hole。
  
  It had been a profitable winter; and Lazarus expected a still more prosperous spring。 His guess about a war market on certain stocks and modities had usually been correct; and his spread of investments was wide enough that a wrong guess did not hurt him much as most of his guesses were right… they could hardly be wrong since he had anticipated stepped…up submarine warfare; knowing what would eventually bring this country into the war in Europe。
  
  Watching the market left him time for other 〃investments〃 in other people's optimism; sometimes at pool; sometimes at cards。 He enjoyed pool more; found cards more rewarding。 All winter he had played both; and his plain and rather friendly face; when decorated with his best stupid look; marked him as a natural sucker…a look he enhanced by dressing as a hayseed e to town。
  
  Lazarus did not mind other pool…hall hustlers; or 〃mechanics〃 in card games; or 〃reader〃 cards; he simply kept quiet and accepted any buildup winnings offered him; then 〃lost his nerve〃 and dropped out before the kill。 He enjoyed these crooked games; it was easier…and pleasanter…to take money from a thief than it was to play an honest game to win; and it did not cost as much sleep; he always dropped out of a crooked game early; even when he was behind。 But his timing was rarely that bad。
  
  Winnings he reinvested in the market。
  
  All winter he had stayed 〃'Red' Jenkins;〃 living at the
  
  Y。M。C。A。asid spending almost nothing。 When the weather was very bad; he stayed in and read; avoiding the steep and
  
  …icy streets。 He had forgotten how harsh a Kansas City winter
  
  ……could be。 Once he saw a team of big horses trying gallantly to haul a heavy truck up the steep pitch of Tenth Street above Grand Avenue。 The off horse slipped on the ice and broke a leg…Lazarus heard the cannon bone pop。 It made him feel
  
  sick; and he wanted to horsewhip the teamster…why hadn't the fool taken the long way around?
  
  Such days were best spent in his room or in the Main Public Library near the Y。M。C。A。…hundreds …of thousands … of real books; bound books he could hold in his hands。 They tempted
  
  …him almost into neglecting his pursuit of money。 During that cruel winter he spent every spare hour there; getting reacquainted with his oldest friends…Mark Twain with Dan Beard's illustrations; Dr。 Conan Doyle; the Marvelous Land of Oz as described by the Royal Historian and portrayed in color by John R。 Neil; Rudyard Kipling; Herbert George Wells;
  
  Jules Verne… Lazarus felt that he could easily spend all the ing ten
  
  years in that wonderful building。
  
  But when false spring arrived; he started thinking about moving out of the business district and again changing his persona。 It was being difficult to get picked as a sucker either at pool or at poker; his investment program was plete; he had enough cash in Fidelit? Savings & Trust Bank to allow him to give up the austerity of the Y。M。C。A。; find a better address; and show a more prosperous face to the world
  
  …essential to his final purpose in this city: remeeting his first family…and not much time left before his July deadline。 …
  
  Acquiring a presentable motorcar crystallized his plans。 He spent the next day being 〃Theodore Bronson〃: moved his bank account one street over to the Mis

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