门罗小说的叙事艺术探析:逃离外文翻译资料

 2023-02-18 11:02

He took his hands off the keyboard but sat still.

“just donrsquo;t be mad at me,” she said.

“Irsquo;m not mad. i hate when yoursquo;re like this, thatrsquo;s all.”

“Irsquo;m like this because yoursquo;re mad.”

“donrsquo;t tell me what i am. yoursquo;re choking me. go and get control of yourself. start supper.”

That was what she did. it was obvious by now that the five-orsquo;clock person wasnrsquo;t coming. she got out the potatoes and started to peel them, but her tears would not stop. she wiped her face with a paper towel and tore off a fresh one to take with her and went out into the rain. she didnrsquo;t go into the barn because it was too miserable in there without flora. she walked along the lane back to the woods. the horses were in the other field. they came over to the fence to watch her, but all except Lizzie, who capered and snorted a bit, had the sense to understand that her attention was elsewhere.

It had started when they read the obituary, Mr. Jamiesonrsquo;s obituary, in the city paper. until the year before, they had known the Jamiesons only as neighbors who kept to themselves. she taught botany at the college forty miles away, so she had to spend a good deal of her time on the road. he was a poet. but for a poet, and for an old man—perhaps twenty years older than Mrs. Jamieson—he was rugged and active. he improved the drainage system on his place, cleaning out the culvert and lining it with rocks. he dug and planted and fenced a vegetable garden, cut paths through the woods, looked after repairs on the house—not just the sort of repairs that almost any house owner could manage after a while but those that involved plumbing, wiring, roofing, too.

When they read the obituary, Carla and Clark learned for the first time that Leon Jamieson had been the recipient of a large prize five years before his death. a prize for poetry.

shortly afterward, Clark said, “we could have made him pay.”

Carla knew at once what he was talking about, but she took it as a joke.

“too late now,” she said. “you canrsquo;t pay once yoursquo;re dead.”

“he canrsquo;t. she could.”

“shersquo;s gone to Greece.”

“shersquo;s not going to stay in Greece.”

“she didnrsquo;t know,” Carla said more soberly. “she didnrsquo;t have anything to do with it.”

“i didnrsquo;t say she did.”

“she doesnrsquo;t have a clue about it.”

“we could fix that.”

Carla said, “no. no.”

Clark went on as if she hadnrsquo;t spoken.

“we could say wersquo;re going to sue. people get money for stuff like that all the time.”

“how could you do that? you canrsquo;t sue a dead person.”

“threaten to go to the papers. big-time poet. the papers would eat it up. all we have to do is threaten and shersquo;d cave in. how much are we going to ask for?”

“yoursquo;re just fantasizing,” Carla said. “yoursquo;re joking.”

“no. actually, Irsquo;m not.”

Carla said that she didnrsquo;t want to talk about it anymore, and he said o.k. but they talked about it the next day, and the next, and the next. he sometimes got notions like this, which were not practicable, which might even be illegal. he talked about them with growing excitement and then—she wasnrsquo;t sure why—he dropped them. if the rain had stopped, if this had turned into a normal summer, he might have let this idea go the way of the others. but that had not happened, and during the last month he had harped on about the scheme as if it were perfectly feasible. the question was how much money to ask for. too little and the woman might not take them seriously; she might think they were bluffing. too much might get her back up and she might become stubborn.

Carla had stopped pretending she thought he was joking. instead, she told him that it wouldnrsquo;t work. she said that, for one thing, people expected poets to behave that way. so it wouldnrsquo;t be worth paying out money to cover it up.

“how do you know?” Clark said.

He said that it would work if it was done right. Carla was to break down and tell Mrs. Jamieson the whole story. then Clark would move in, as if it had all been a surprise to him, he had just found out. he would be outraged; he would talk about telling the world. he would let Mrs. Jamieson be the one who first mentioned money.

“you were injured. you were molested and humiliated and i was injured and humiliated because you are my wife. itrsquo;s a question of respect.”

Over and over again he talked to her in this way. she tried to deflect him, but he insisted.

“promise,” he said. “promise.”

All this was because of what she had told him—things she could not now retract or deny.

sometimes he gets interested in me ?

the old guy ?

Sometimes he calls me into the room when shersquo;s not there ?

When she has to go out shopping and the nurse isnrsquo;t there, either ?

A lucky inspiration of hers, one that instantly pleased him.

So what do you do then ? Do you go in ?

She played shy.

Sometimes.

He calls you into his room. so ? Carla ? so, then ?

I go in to see what he wants.

So what does he want ?

This was asked and told in whispers, even when there was nobody to hear, even when they were in the neverland of their bed. a bedtime story, in which the details were important and had to be added to each time, with convincing reluctance, shyness, giggles. (dirty, dirty .) and it was not only he who was eager and grateful. she was, too. eager to please and excite him, to excite herself. grateful every time that it still worked.

And in one part of her mind it was true: she saw the randy old man, the bump he made in the sheet, bedridden, almost beyond speech but proficient in sign language, indicating his desire, trying to nudge and finger her into complicity, into obliging stunts and intimacies. (her refusal a necessity, but also, perhaps, strangely, slightly disappointing to Clark.)

Now and then came an image that she had to hammer down lest it spoil everything. she would think of the re

剩余内容已隐藏,支付完成后下载完整资料


附录A 译文

逃离

  在汽车还没有翻过小山——附近的人都把这稍稍隆起的土堆称为小山——的顶部时,卡拉就已经听到声音了。那是她呀,她想。是贾米森太太——西尔维亚——从希腊度假回来了。她站在马厩房门的后面——只是在更靠内里一些的地方,这样就不至于一下子让人瞥见——朝贾米森太太驾车必定会经过的那条路望过去,贾米森太太就住在这条路上她和克拉克的家再进去半英里路的地方。

  倘若开车的人是准备拐向他们家大门的,车子现在应当减速了。可是卡拉仍然在抱着希望。但愿那不是她呀。

  那就是她。贾米森太太的头扭过来了一次,速度很快——她得集中精力才能对付这条让雨水弄得满处是车辙和水坑的砾石路呢——可是她并没有从方向盘上举起一只手来打招呼,她并没有看见卡拉。卡拉瞥见了一只裸到肩部的晒成棕褐色的胳膊,比先前颜色更淡一些的头发——白的多了一些而不是以前的那种银褐色了,还有那副表情,很决断和下了狠劲的样子,却又为自己这么认真而暗自好笑——贾米森太太在跟这样的路况死死纠缠的时候表情总是这样的。在她扭过头来的时候脸上似乎有一瞬间闪了一下亮——是在询问,也是在希望——这使卡拉的身子不禁往后缩了缩。

  情况就是这样。

  也许克拉克还不知道呢。如果他是在摆弄电脑,那就一定是背对着窗户和这条路的。

  不过贾米森太太很可能还会开车出去的。她从飞机场开车回家,也许并没有停下来去买食物——她应该径直回到家里,想好需要买些什么,然后再出去一趟。那时候克拉克可能会见到她。而且天黑之后,她家里的灯也会亮起来的。不过此刻是七月,天要很晚才会黑。她也许太累了,灯不开就早早儿上床了。

  再说了,她还会打电话的。从现在起,什么时候都可能会打的。

  这是个雨下得没完没了的夏天。早上醒来,你听到的第一个声音就是雨声,很响地打在活动房子屋顶上的声音。小路上泥泞很深,长长的草吸饱了水,头上的树叶也会浇下来一片小阵雨,即使此时天上并没有真的在下雨,阴云也仿佛正在飘散。卡拉每次出门,都要戴一顶高高的澳大利亚宽边旧毡帽,并且把她那条又粗又长的辫子和衬衫一起掖在腰后。

  来练习骑马的客人连一个都没有,虽然克拉克和卡拉没少走路,在他们能想起来的所有野营地、咖啡屋里都树起了广告牌,在旅行社的海报栏里也都贴上了广告。只有很少几个学生来上骑马课,那都是长期班的老学员,而不是来休假的成群结队的小学生,那一客车又一客车来夏令营的小家伙呀,去年一整个夏天两人的生计就是靠他们才得以维持的。即令是两人视为命根子的长期班老学员现在也大都出外度假去了,或是因为天气太差而退班了。如果他们电话来得迟了些,克拉克还要跟他们把账算清楚,该收的钱一个都不能少。有几个学员嘀嘀咕咕表示不满,以后就再也不露面了。

  从寄养在他们这儿的三匹马身上,他们还能得些收益。这三匹马,连同他们自己的那四匹,此刻正放养在外面的田野里,在树底下四处啃草觅食。它们的神情似乎都懒得去管雨暂时歇住了,这种情况在下午是会出现片刻的,也就是刚能勾起你的希望罢了——云变得白了一些,薄了一些,透过来一些散漫的亮光,它们却永远也不会凝聚成真正的阳光,而且一般总是在晚饭之前就收敛了。

  卡拉已经清完了马厩里的粪便。她做得不慌不忙的——她喜欢干日常杂活时的那种节奏,喜欢畜棚屋顶底下那宽阔的空间,以及这里的气味。现在她又走到环形训练跑道那里去看看地上够不够干,说不定五点钟一班的学员还会来呢。

  通常,一般的阵雨都不会下得特别大,或是随着带来什么风,可是上星期突然出现异象,树顶上刮过一阵大风,接着一阵让人睁不开眼睛的大雨几乎从横斜里扫过来。一刻钟以内,暴风雨就过去了。可是路上落满了树枝,高压电线断了,环形跑道顶上有一大片塑料屋顶给扯松脱落了。跑道的一头积起了一片像湖那么大的水潭,克拉克只得天黑之后加班干活,以便挖出一条沟来把水排走。

  屋顶至今未能修复,克拉克只能用绳子编起一张网,不让马匹走到泥潭里去,卡拉则用标志拦出一条缩短些的跑道。

  就在此刻,克拉克在网上寻找有什么地方能买到做屋顶的材料。可有某个清仓处理尾货的铺子,开的价是他们能够承受的,或是有没有什么人要处理这一类的二手货。他再也不去镇上的那家海—罗伯特·伯克利建材商店了,他已经把那店改称为海—鸡奸犯·捞大利商店,因为他欠了他们不少钱,而且还跟他们打过一架。

  克拉克不单单跟他欠了钱的人打架。他上一分钟跟你还显得挺友好的——那原本也是装出来的——下一分钟说翻脸就翻脸。有些地方他现在不愿进去了,他总是让卡拉去,就是因为他跟那儿的人吵过架。药房就是这样的一个地方。有位老太太在他站的队前面加塞——其实她是去取她忘了要买的一样什么东西,回来时站回到他的前面而没有站到队尾去,他便嘀嘀咕咕抱怨起来了,那收银员对他说,“她有肺气肿呢。”克拉克就接茬说,“是吗,我还一身都有毛病呢。”后来经理也让他给叫出来了,他硬要经理承认对自己不公平。还有,公路边上的一家咖啡店没给他打广告上承诺的早餐折扣,因为时间已经过了十一点,克拉克便跟他们吵了起来,还把外带的一杯咖啡摔到地上——就差那么一点点,店里的人说,就会泼到推车里一个小娃娃的身上了。他则说那孩子离自己足足有半英里远呢,而且他没拿住杯子是因为没给他杯套。店里说他自己没说要杯套。他说这种事本来就是不需要特地关照的。

  “你脾气也太火爆了。”卡拉说。

  “脾气不火爆还算得上是男子汉吗?”

  她还没提他跟乔依·塔克吵架的事呢。乔依·塔克是镇上的女图书馆员,把自己的马寄养在他们这里。那是一匹脾气很躁的栗色小母马,名叫丽姬——乔依·塔克爱逗乐的时候就管它叫丽姬·博登。昨天她来骑过马了,当时正碰到她脾气不顺,便抱怨说棚顶怎么还没修好,还说丽姬看上去状态不佳,是不是着凉了呀。

  其实丽姬并没有什么问题。克拉克倒是——对他来说已经是很不容易了——想要息事宁人的。可是接下来发火的反而是乔依·塔克,她指责说这块地方简直就是片垃圾场,出了这么多钱丽姬不该受到这样的待遇,于是克拉克说,“那就悉听尊便吧。”乔依倒没有——或者是还没有——当即就把丽姬领回去,卡拉本来料想会这样。可是原来总把这匹小母马当作自己小宠物的克拉克却坚决不想再跟它有任何牵扯了。自然,丽姬在感情上也受到了伤害。在练习的时候总是跟你闹别扭,你要清理它的蹄子时它便乱踢乱蹬。马蹄是每天都必须清的,否则里面会长霉菌。卡拉得提防着被它瞅冷子咬上一口。

  不过让卡拉最不开心的一件事还得说是弗洛拉的丢失了,那是只小小的白山羊,老是在畜棚和田野里跟几匹马做伴。有两天都没见到它的踪影了。卡拉担心它会不会是被野狗、土狼叼走了,没准还是撞上熊了呢。

  昨天晚上还有前天晚上她都梦见弗洛拉了。在第一个梦里,弗洛拉径直走到床前,嘴里叼着一只红苹果,而在第二个梦里——也就是在昨天晚上——它看到卡拉过来,就跑了开去。它一条腿似乎受了伤,但它还是跑开去了。它引导卡拉来到一道铁丝网栅栏的跟前,也就是某些战场上用的那一种,接下去它——也就是弗洛拉——从那底下钻过去了,受伤的脚以及整个身子,就像一条白鳗鱼似的扭着身子钻了过去,然后就不见了。

  那些马匹看到卡拉穿过去上了环形马道,便全都簇拥着来到栏杆边上——显得又湿又脏,尽管它们身上披有新西兰毛毯——好让她走回来的时候能注意到它们。她轻轻地跟它们说话,对于手里没带吃的表示抱歉。她抚摩它们的脖颈,蹭蹭它们的鼻子,还问它们可知道弗洛拉有什么消息。

  格雷斯和朱尼珀喷了喷气,又伸过鼻子来顶她,好像它们认出了这个名字并想为她分忧似的,可是这时丽姬从它们之间插了进来,把格雷斯的脑袋从卡拉的手边顶了开去。它还进而把她的手轻轻咬了一下,卡拉只得又花了些时间来指责它。

匆匆(1)

  两个侧面彼此相对。其中之一是一头纯白色小母牛脸的一侧,有着特别温柔安详的表情,另外的那个则是一个绿面人的侧面,这人既不年轻也不年老,看来像是个小公务员,也许是个邮差——他戴的是那样的制帽。他嘴唇颜色很淡,眼白部分却闪闪发亮。一只手,也许就是他的手,从画的下端献上一棵小树或是一根茂密的枝子,上面结的果子则是一颗颗的宝石。

  画的上端是一片乌云,底下是坐落在一片凹凸不平的土坡上的几所歪歪斜斜的小房子和一座玩具教堂,教堂上还插着个玩具十字架。土坡上有个小小的人儿(所用的比例要比房子的大上一些)目的很明确地往前走着,肩膀上扛着一把长镰刀,一个大小跟他差不多的妇人似乎在等候他,不过她却是头足颠倒的。

  画里还有别的东西。比方说,一个姑娘在给一头奶牛挤奶,但那是画在小母牛面颊上的。

  朱丽叶立刻决定要买这张印刷的图片,作为圣诞节送给她父母亲的礼物。

  “因为它使我想起了他们。”她对克里斯塔说,那是陪她从鲸鱼湾来到这儿买东西的一个朋友。她们此刻是在温哥华画廊的礼品商店里。

  克里斯塔笑了。“那个绿颜色的人和那头母牛吗?他们会感到不胜荣幸的。”

  克里斯塔对任何事情一开头总是不肯一本正经,非得对它调侃上几句才肯放过。朱丽叶倒一点儿也不在乎。她怀着三个月的身孕——肚子里那个胎儿就是日后的佩内洛普了,忽然之间,让她不舒服的反应一下子全都没有了,为了这一点以及别的原因,她每隔上一阵子就不由自主地感到高兴。每时每刻,她脑子里在想的都是吃的东西,她本来都不想进礼品店了,因为她眼角里扫到旁边的什么地方还有一个小吃部。

  她看了看画的标题。我和村庄。

  这就使这幅画意味更加深长了。

  “夏加尔1。我喜欢夏加尔,”克里斯塔说,“毕加索算是什么东西。”

  朱丽叶因为自己的发现而欣喜不已,她发现自己注意力几乎都无法集中了。

  “你知道据传他说过什么话吗?夏加尔的画让女售货员看最合适,”克里斯塔告诉她,“女售货员有什么不好?夏加尔应该回敬一句,毕加索的画让脸长得奇形怪状的人看最合适不过了。”

  “我的意思是,它让我想起了我父母亲的生活,”朱丽叶说,“我不知道为什么,不过事实就是这样。”

  她已经跟克里斯塔谈过一些她父母亲的情况了——他们如何生活在一种有点古怪却并非不快乐的孤立状态中,虽然她的父亲是一位口碑不错的老师。大家不太跟他们来往的主要原因是萨拉心脏有毛病,但也因为他们订的杂志是周围的人全都不看的,他们听的是国家电台的广播节目,周围再没有其他人听。再加上萨拉不从巴特里克公司的目录上挑选衣服,却总是根据《时尚》杂志上的样子自己缝制——有时候简直是不伦不类。他们身上多少残留着一些年轻人的气质,而不像朱丽叶同学的双亲那样,越来越胖,越来越懒散。这也是他们不合群的原因之一。朱丽叶形容过她爸爸山姆模样跟她自己差不多——长脖颈,下巴颏有点儿往上翘,浅棕色的松垂头发——而萨拉则是个纤细、苍白的金发美人,头发总有点乱,不修边幅。

  佩内洛普十三个月大的时候,朱丽叶带着她坐飞机去到多伦多,然后换乘火车。那是1969年。她在一个小镇下了车,这儿离她长大、山姆和萨拉仍旧住着的那个小镇还有二十来英里。显然,火车已不再在那里设站了。

匆匆(2)

  她感到很失望,因为是在这个不熟悉的小站下车,而没有一下子重新又见到自己记忆中的树木、人行道和房屋——然后,很快很快,就能见到坐落在一棵硕大无朋的枫树后面的她自己的房子——山姆和萨拉的房子,很宽敞但是也很普通,肯定仍然是刷着那种起泡的、脏兮兮的白漆。

  看到山姆和萨拉了,就在这里,在这个她从未见到他们来过的小镇里,正在微笑呢,但也很着急,他们的身影在一点点地变小。

  萨拉发出了一声古怪的小尖叫,仿佛是被什么啄了一下似的。月台上有几个人回过头来看看。

  显然,只不过是激动罢了。

  “我们一长一短,不过仍然很般配。”她说。

  起初,朱丽叶不明白是什么意思。紧接着她猜出来了——萨拉穿着一条长及小腿肚子的黑亚麻长裙和一件配套的黑夹克。夹克的领子和衣袖用的是一种光闪闪的酸橙绿色的布料子,上面还有一个个黑色的大圆点。她头上也缠着用同样的绿料子做的头巾。这套服装必定是她自己缝制的,或是请某个裁缝按照她的设计做的。这样的颜色对她的皮肤可不太厚道,因为看着像是皮肤上洒满了细细的粉笔灰。

  朱丽叶穿的是一条黑色的超短连衣裙。

  “我方才还寻思你对我会怎么想,大夏天穿一身黑,仿佛是为什么人穿丧服似的,”萨拉说,“可是你穿得正好跟我很般配。你看上去真漂亮,我是完全赞成这种短衣服的。”

  “再加上一头长披发,”山姆说,“简直就是个彻头彻尾的嬉皮士了。”他弯下身子去细看婴儿的脸,“你好,佩内洛普。”

  萨拉说:“多么漂亮的玩具娃娃呀。”

  她伸出手想去抱佩内洛普——虽然从她袖管里滑出来的手臂仿佛是两根细棍子,根本不可能支撑住这样的重量。其实也用不着这两只手来做这件事了,因为佩内洛普刚听到外婆发出的第一个声音便已经很紧张,这会儿更是哭喊着把身子往外扭,把小脸藏到朱丽叶的脖颈窝里去了。

  萨拉笑了。“我就那么可怕吗,像个稻草人?”她的声音再次失去控制,升高时仿佛是在尖叫,下降时又一下子没了声音,引来了周围人的瞪视。这可是个新情况呢——虽然没准并不完全是这样。朱丽叶有这样的印象,只要她母亲大笑或是开始说话,人们总会朝她的方向看过来,但是早年间他们所注意到的总是很有爆发力的一阵欢笑声——那是很有少女风采和吸引力的(虽然并不是谁都喜欢,有人会说她总想卖弄风情、惹人注意)。

  朱丽叶说:“宝宝太累了。”

  山姆把站在他们身后的一个年轻女子介绍给她,那人站得稍开一些,似乎是有意不让人认为她跟他们是一伙的。事实上朱丽叶也完全没想到她是跟她父母一起来的。

  “朱丽叶,这是艾琳·艾弗里。”

  朱丽叶抱着佩内洛普又拿着放尿片的包包,她尽可能地把手往外伸,可是发现艾琳显然没打算握手——或许是没有注意到她的意图——她便微笑了一下。艾琳并没有笑上一笑作为回应,只是一动不动地站着

剩余内容已隐藏,支付完成后下载完整资料


资料编号:[502582],资料为PDF文档或Word文档,PDF文档可免费转换为Word

您需要先支付 30元 才能查看全部内容!立即支付

课题毕业论文、开题报告、任务书、外文翻译、程序设计、图纸设计等资料可联系客服协助查找。