"Вуди Гасри. Bound for glory (engl)" - читать интересную книгу автораdown his neck and dried there in long strings. He said it again: "Will de
rain wreck dat rackit box?" I stood up and looked ahead at the black smoke rolling out of the engine. The air was cool and heavy and held the big coil of smoke low to the ground along the side of the train. It boiled and turned, mixed in with the patches of heavy fog, and spun into all kinds of shapes. The picture in the weeds and bushes alongside the tracks was like ten thousand drunkards rolling in the weeds with the bellyache. When the first three or four splats of rain hit me in the face I said to the kids, "This water won't exactly do this guitar any good!" "Take dis ole sweater," the smallest kid yelled at me, " 'S all I got! Wrap it aroun' yer music! Help a little!" I blinked the water out of my eyes and waited a jiffy for him to pull the sweater from around his neck where he had tied the sleeves. His face looked like a quick little picture, blackish tobacco brown colors, that somebody was wiping from a window glass with a dirty rag. "Yeah," I told him, "much oblige! Keep out a few drops, won't it?" I slipped the sweater over the guitar like a man putting clothes on a dummy in a window. Then I skint out of my new khaki shirt and put it on the guitar, and buttoned the buttons up, and tied the sleeves around the neck. Everybody laughed. Then we all squatted down in a little half circle with our backs to the rain and wind. "I don't give a dam how drippin' I git, boys, but I gotta keep my meal ticket dry!" The wind struck against our boxcar and the rain beat itself to pieces and blew over our heads like a spray from a fire hose shooting sixty miles The colored rider was laughing and saying, "Man! Man! When th' good Lord was workin' makin' Minnesoty, He couldn' make up His mind whethah ta make anothah ocean or some mo' land, so He just got 'bout half done an' then He quit an' went home! Wowie!" He ducked his head and shook it and kept laughing, and at the same time, almost without me noticing what he was doing, he had slipped his blue work shirt off and jammed it over into my hands."One mo' shirt might keep yo' meal ticket a little bettah!" "Don't you need a shirt to keep dry?" I don't know why I asked him that. I was already dressing the guitar up in the shirt. He squared his shoulders back into the wind and rubbed the palms of his hands across his chest and shoulders, still laughing and talking, "You think dat little ole two-bit shirt's gonna keep out this cloudbu'st?" When I looked back around at my guitar on my lap, I seen one more little filthy shirt piled up on top of it. I don't know exactly how I felt when my hands come down and touched this shirt. I looked around at the little tough guys and saw them humped up with their naked backs splitting the wind and the rain glancing six feet in the air off their shoulders. I didn't say a word. The little kid pooched his lips out so the water would run down into his mouth like a trough, and every little bit he'd save up a mouthful and spit it out in a long thin spray between his teeth. When he saw that I was keeping my eyes nailed on him, he spit the last of his rainwater out and said, "I ain't t'oisty." 'I'll wrap this one around the handle an' the strings will keep dry |
|
|