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英语手抄报:Going Home

时间:2015-06-30 10:11来源:网络整理点击:字体:[ ]

  I first heard this story a few years ago from a girl I had met in New York's Greenwich Village. Probably the story is one of those mysterious bits of folklore(民间传说) that reappear every few years, to be told a new in one form or another. However, I still like to think that it really did happen, somewhere, sometime.

英语手抄报:Going Home

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  They were going to Fort Lauderdalethree boys and three girls and when they boarded the bus, they were carrying sandwiches and wine in paper bags, dreaming of golden beaches as the gray cold of New York vanished behind them.

  As the bus passed through New Jersey, they began to notice Vingo. He sat in front of them, dressed in a plain, ill-fitting suit, never moving, his dusty face masking his age. He kept chewing the inside of his lip a lot, frozen into some personal cocoon(茧) of silence.

  Deep into the night, outside Washington, the bus pulled into Howard Johnson's, and everybody got off except Vingo. He sat rooted in his seat, and the young people began to wonder about him, trying to imagine his life: perhaps he was a sea captain, a runaway from his wife, an old soldier going home. When they went back to the bus, one of the girls sat beside him and introduced herself.

  "We're going to Florida," she said brightly." I hear it's really beautiful."

  "It is, " he said quietly, as if remembering something he had tried to forget.

  "Want some wine?" she said. He smiled and took a swig. He thanked her and retreated again into his silence. After a while, she went back to the others, and Vingo nodded in sleep.

  In the morning, they awke outside another Howard Johnson's,and this time Vingo went in. The girl insisted that he join them. He seemed very shy, and ordered black coffee and smoked nervously as the young people chattered about sleeping on beaches. When they returned to the bus, the girl sat with Vingo again, and after a while, slowly and painfully, he told his story. He had been in jail in New York for the past four years, and now he was going home.

  "Are you married?"

  "I don't know."

  "You don't know?" she said.

  "Well, when I was in jail I wrote to my wife," he said. " I told her that I was going to be away a long time, and that if she couldn't stand it, if the kids kept asking questions, if it hurt too much, well, she could just forget me, I'd understand. Get a new guy, I said she's a wonderful woman, really somethingand forget about me. I told her she didn't have to write me for nothing. And she didn't. Not for three and a half years."

  "And you're going home now, not knowing?"