书城英文图书加拿大学生文学读本(第5册)
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第23章 THE FOURHORSE RACE(1)

The great event of the day,however,was to be the fourhorse race,for which three teams were entered one from the mines driven by Nixon,Craig‘s friend,a citizens’team,and Sandy‘s.The race was really between the miners’team and that from the woods,for the citizens‘team,though made up of speedy horses,had not been driven much together,and knew neither their driver nor each other.In the miners’team were four bays,very powerful,a trifle heavy perhaps,but well matched,perfectly trained,and perfectly handled by their driver.Sandy had his long rangy roans,and for leaders,a pair of halfbroken pinto bronchos.The pintos,caught the summer before upon the Alberta prairies,were fleet as deer,but wicked and uncertain.They were Baptiste‘s special care and pride.If they would only run straight,there was little doubt that they would carry the roans and themselves to glory;but one could not tell the moment they might bolt or kick things to pieces.

Being the only nonpartisan in the crowd,I was asked to referee.The race was about half a mile and return,the first and last quarters being upon the ice.The course,after leaving the ice,led up from the river by a long,easy slope to the level above;and at the further end,curved somewhat sharply around the Old Fort.The only condition attaching to the race was,that the teams shouldstart from the scratch,make the turn of the Fort,and finish at the scratch.There were no vexing regulations as to fouls.The man making the foul would find it necessary to reckon with the crowd,which was considered sufficient guarantee for a fair and square race.Owing to the hazards of the course,the result would depend upon the skill of the drivers quite as much as the speed of the teams.The points of hazard were at the turn round the Old Fort,and at a little ravine which led down to the river,over which the road passed by means of a long,log bridge or causeway.

From a point upon the high bank of the river,the whole course lay in open view.It was a scene full of life and vividly picturesque.There were miners in dark clothes and peak caps;citizens in ordinary garb;ranchmen in wide cowboy hats and buckskin shirts and leggings,some with cartridgebelts and pistols;a few halfbreeds and Indians in halfnative,halfcivilized dress;and scattering through the crowd,the lumbermen with gay scarlet and blue blanket coats,and some with knitted tuques of the same colour.A very goodnatured but extremely uncertain crowd it was.At the head of each horse stood a man,but at the pintos’heads Baptiste stood alone,trying to hold down the offleader,thrown into a frenzy of fear by the yelling of the crowd.

Gradually all became quiet,till,in the midst of absolute stillness,came the words:“Are you ready?”then the pistolshot,and the great race had begun.Above the roar of the crowd came the shrill cry of Baptiste,as he struck his broncho with the palm of his hand,and swung himself into the sleigh beside Sandy,as it shot past.

Like a flash the bronchos sprang to the front,two lengths before the other teams;but,terrified by the yelling of the crowd,instead of bending to the left bank up which the road wound,they wheeled to the right and were almost across the river before Sandy could swing them back into the course.