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the story of a bad boy(顽童故事)-第1部分

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                          The Story of a Bad Boy 



The Story of a Bad Boy 



                 By Thomas Bailey Aldrich 



                                       1 


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                                   The Story of a Bad Boy 



                             CHAPTER One 



                              In Which I Introduce Myself 



     This is the story of a bad boy。 Well; not such a very bad; but a pretty 

bad boy; and I ought to know; for I am; or rather I was; that boy myself。 

     Lest the title should mislead the reader; I hasten to assure him here that 

I have no dark confessions to make。 I call my story the story of a bad boy; 

partly   to   distinguish   myself   from   those   faultless   young   gentlemen   who 

generally figure in narratives of this kind; and partly because I really was 

not a cherub。 I may truthfully say I was an amiable; impulsive lad; blessed 

with fine digestive powers; and no hypocrite。 I didn't want to be an angel 

and with the angels stand; I didn't think the missionary tracts presented to 

me   by  the   Rev。 Wibird   Hawkins   were half   so  nice   as   Robinson   Crusoe; 

and   I   didn't   send   my   little   pocket…money   to   the   natives   of   the   Feejee 

Islands; but spent it royally in peppermint…drops and taffy candy。 In short; 

I was a real human boy; such as you may meet anywhere in New England; 

and no more like the impossible boy in a storybook than a sound orange is 

like one that has been sucked dry。 But let us begin at the beginning。 

     Whenever a new scholar came to our school; I used to confront him at 

recess   with   the   following   words:   〃My   name's   Tom   Bailey;   what's   your 

name?〃 If the name struck me favorably; I shook hands with the new pupil 

cordially; but if it didn't; I would turn on my heel; for I was particular on 

this   point。   Such   names   as   Higgins;  Wiggins;   and   Spriggins   were   deadly 

affronts   to   my   ear;   while   Langdon;   Wallace;   Blake;   and   the   like;   were 

passwords to my confidence and esteem。 

     Ah   me!   some   of   those   dear   fellows   are   rather   elderly   boys   by   this 

time…lawyers;   merchants;   sea…captains;   soldiers;   authors;   what   not?   Phil 

Adams (a special good name that Adams) is consul at Shanghai; where I 

picture him to myself with his head closely shaved…he never had too much 

hair…and a long pigtail banging down behind。 He is married; I hear; and I 

hope he and she that was Miss Wang Wang are very happy together; sitting 

cross…legged   over   their   diminutive   cups   of   tea   in   a   skyblue   tower   hung 

with   bells。   It   is   so   I   think   of   him;   to   me   he   is   henceforth   a   jewelled 



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                                   The Story of a Bad Boy 



mandarin; talking nothing but broken China。 Whitcomb is a judge; sedate 

and wise; with spectacles balanced on the bridge of that remarkable nose 

which; in former days; was so plentifully sprinkled with freckles that the 

boys     christened    him   Pepper     Whitcomb。      just  to   think   of  little  Pepper 

Whitcomb   being   a   judge!   What   would   be   do   to   me   now;   I   wonder;   if   I 

were     to  sing   out  〃Pepper!〃     some     day   in  court?   Fred    Langdon      is  in 

California; in the native…wine business…he used to make the best licorice… 

water   I   ever   tasted!   Binny   Wallace   sleeps     in   the  Old   South    Burying… 

Ground; and Jack Harris; too; is dead…Harris; who commanded us boys; of 

old;   in   the   famous   snow…ball   battles   of   Slatter's   Hill。  Was   it   yesterday   I 

saw him at the head of his regiment on its way to join the shattered Army 

of the Potomac? Not yesterday; but six years ago。 It was at the battle of the 

Seven Pines。 Gallant Jack Harris; that never drew rein until he had dashed 

into the Rebel battery! So they found him…lying across the enemy's guns。 

     How we have parted; and wandered; and married; and died! I wonder 

what has become of all the boys who went to the Temple Grammar School 

at Rivermouth when I was a youngster? 〃All; all are gone; the old familiar 

faces!〃 

     It is with no ungentle hand I summon them back; for a moment; from 

that Past which has closed upon them and upon me。 How pleasantly they 

live again in my memory! Happy; magical Past; in whose fairy atmosphere 

even Conway;   mine ancient foe; stands   forth transfigured; with a sort of 

dreamy glory encircling his bright red hair! 

     With     the  old   school    formula     I  commence       these   sketches    of   my 

boyhood。 My name is Tom Bailey; what is yours; gentle reader? I take for 

granted     it   is   neither   Wiggins   nor  Spriggins;   and   that   we   shall   get  on 

famously together; and be capital friends forever。 



                                                3 


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                                   The Story of a Bad Boy 



                             CHAPTER Two 



                         In Which I Entertain Peculiar Views 



     I was born at Rivermouth; but; before I had a chance to become very 

well acquainted with that pretty New England town; my parents removed 

to New Orleans; where   my father invested his   money so securely in   the 

banking business that be was never able to get any of it out again。 But of 

this hereafter。 

     I was only eighteen months old at the time of the removal; and it didn't 

make   much   difference   to   me   where   I   was;   because   I   was   so   small;   but 

several   years   later;   when   my   father   proposed   to   take   me   North   to    be 

educated; I had my own peculiar views on the subject。 I instantly kicked 

over   the   little   Negro   boy   who   happened   to   be   standing   by   me   at   the 

moment;      and;   stamping     my   foot   violently   on   the  floor   of  the  piazza; 

declared that I would not be taken away to live among a lot of Yankees! 

     You     see   I  was   what    is  called    〃a  Northern     man    with    Southern 

principles。〃 I had no recollection of New England: my earliest memories 

were connected with the South; with Aunt Chloe; my old Negro nurse; and 

with   the   great   ill…kept   garden   in   the   centre   of   which   stood   our   house…a 

whitewashed   stone   house   it   was;   with   wide   verandas…shut   out   from   the 

street by lines of orange; fig; and magnolia trees。 I knew I was born at the 

North; but hoped nobody would find it out。 I looked upon the misfortune 

as   something      so  shrouded     by   time   and    distance   that   maybe     nobody 

remembered it。 I never told my schoolmates I was a Yankee; because they 

talked about the Yankees in such a scornful way it made me feel that it was 

quite   a   disgrace   not   to   be   born   in   Louisiana;   or   at   least   in   one   of   the 

Border States。 And this impression was strengthened by Aunt Chloe; who 

said; 〃dar wasn't no gentl'men in the Norf no way;〃 and on one occasion 

terrified me beyond measure by declaring that; 〃if any of dem mean whites 

tried to git her away from marster; she was jes'gwine to knock 'em on de 

head wid a gourd!〃 

     The way this poor creature's eyes flashed; and the tragic air with which 

she struck at an imaginary 〃mean white;〃 are among the most vivid things 



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                                     The Story of a Bad Boy 



in my memory of those days。 

     To   be   frank;    my   idea   of   the   North   was   about   as    accurate   as   that 

entertained       by    the   well…educated        Englishmen        of   the   present     day 

concerning   America。   I   supposed   the   inhabitants   were   divided   into   two 

classes…Indians   and   white   people;   that   the   Indians   occasionally   dashed 

down      on   New     York;    and    scalped     any   woman       or  child    (giving    the 

preference to children) whom they caught lingering in the outskirts after 

nightfall; that the white men were either hunters or schoolmasters; and that 

it   was   winter   pretty   much   all   the   year   round。   The   prevailing   style   of 

architecture I took to be log…cabins。 

     With   this   delightful   picture   of   Northern   civilization   in   my   eye;   the 

reader     will  easily    understand     my    terror   at  the   bare   thought    of   being 

transported   to   Rivermouth   to   school;   and   possibly   will   forgive   me   for 

kicking over little black Sam; and otherwise misconducting myself; when 

my father announced his determination to me。 As for kicking little Sam…I 

always did that; more or less gently; when anything went wrong with me。 

     My father was greatly perplexed and troubled by this 
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