"Вуди Гасри. Bound for glory (engl)" - читать интересную книгу автора I'd seen a thousand kids just like them. They seem to come from homes
somewhere that they've run away from. They seem to come to take the place of the old stiffs that slip on a wet board, miss a ladder, fail out a door, or just dry up and shrivel away riding the mean freights; the old souls that groan somewhere in the darkest corner of a boxcar, moan about a twisted life half lived and nine tenths wasted, cry as their souls hit the highball for heaven, die and pass out of this world like the echo of a foggy whistle. "Evenin', gentulmen, evenin'." The Negro boy raised up to a sitting position. "You gents is a little shade yo'ng t' be out siftin' th' cinders, ain't you?" "C'n we help how old we are?" The biggest kid spit away into the wind without even looking where it would land. "Me ole man's fault. Oughtta been bornt sooner," the little runt piped up. The big one didn't change the expression on his face, because if he'd of looked any tougher, something would have busted. "Pipe down, squoit!" He turned toward us. "Yez hittin' fer de slaughter-house er Wall Street?" "I don't git ya." I looked over at him. "Chi? Er N'Yok?" I tried to keep from busting out laughing in the kid's face. And I could see the colored boy turning his head the other way to hide a snicker. "Me," I answered the kid, "me, I'm headed fer Wall Street, I reckin." Then I thought for a minute and asked him, " 'Bouts you boys goin'?" "Chi." "On da fly." "I make a rattlin' noise." "Sing on toppa dat?" "No. Not on top of it. I stand up and hold it with this leather strap around my shoulder, or else I set down and play it in my lap like this, see?" "Make anyt'ing wid it?" "I've come purty close ta starvin' a couple of times, boys, but never faded plumb out of th' picture yet so far." "Yeah?" "Dat's bad." I come down on some running notes and threw in a few sliding blues notes, and the kids stuck their ears almost down to the sound-hole, listening. "Say ya hit da boog on dere, don'tcha?" "Better boog all yez wants, sarg," the older kid said. "I dunno how dat box'll sound fulla wadder, but we gon'ta be swimmin' on toppa dis train here in about a minnit." The Negro boy turned his head around toward the engine and whiffed of the damp air. "About one minnit's right!" "Will it wreck dat music box?" The biggest kid stood up and threw his pack on his back. The coal dust had covered his face over in the days when this railroad was first laid, and a few drops of the spit and moisture from the lower streets of a lot of towns had been smeared like brushmarks in every direction around his mouth, nose and eyes. Water and sweat had run |
|
|