Help
for the Helper
简墨 选注
At age eighteen, I left my home in Brooklyn,
New York, and went off to study history at Leeds University in Yorkshire,
England. It was an exciting but stressful time in my life, for while
trying to adjust to the novelty of unfamiliar surroundings, I was still
learning to cope with the all-too-familiar pain of my father's recent
death—an event with which I had not yet come to terms1.
While at the market one day, trying to decide
which bunch of flowers would best brighten up my comfortable but colorless
student digs2,
I spied an elderly gentleman having difficulty holding onto his walking
stick and his bag of apples. I rushed over and relieved him of the apples,
giving him time to regain his balance.
"Thanks,
luv3,?he said
in that distinctive Yorkshire lilt I never tire of hearing.4
"I'm quite all right now, not to worry,?he said, smiling at me not only
with his mouth but with a pair of dancing bright blue eyes.
"May I walk with you?" I inquired. "Just
to make sure those apples don't become sauce prematurely."5
He laughed and said, "Now, you are a long
way from home, lass. From the States, are you?"
"Only from one of them.6
New York. I'll tell you all about it as we walk.?
So began my friendship with Mr. Burns, a
man whose smile and warmth would very soon come to mean a great deal
to me.
As we walked, Mr. Burns (whom I always addressed
as such and never by his first name) leaned heavily on his stick, a
stout, gnarled affair that resembled my notion of a biblical staff 7.
When we arrived at his house, I helped him set his parcels on the table
and insisted on lending a hand with the preparations for his "tea"-that
is, his meal. I interpreted his weak protest as gratitude for the assistance.8
After making his tea, I asked if it would
be all right if I came back and visited with him again. I thought I'd
look in on him9
from time to time, to see if he needed anything. With a wink and a smile
he replied, "I've never been one to turn down an offer from a good-hearted
lass.?
I came back the next day, at about the same
time, so I could help out once more with his evening meal. The great
walking stick was a silent reminder of his infirmity10,
and, though he never asked for help, he didn't protest when it was given.
That very evening we had our first "heart to heart." Mr. Burns asked
about my studies, my plans, and, mostly, about my family. I told him
that my father had recently died, but I didn't offer much else about
the relationship I'd had with him. In response, he gestured toward the
two framed photographs on the end table next to his chair. They were
pictures of two different women, one notably older than the other. But
the resemblance between the two was striking.
"That's Mary," he said, indicating the photograph
of the older woman. "She's been gone11
for six years. And that's our Alice. She was a very fine nurse. Losing
her was too much for my Mary."
I responded with the tears I hadn't been
able to shed for my own pain. I cried for Mary. I cried for Alice. I
cried for Mr. Burns. And I cried for my father to whom I never had the
chance to say good-bye.
I visited with Mr. Burns twice a week, always
on the same days and at the same time. Whenever I came, he was seated
in his chair, his walking stick propped up against the wall. Mr. Burns
owned a small black-and-white television set, but he evidently preferred
his books and photograph records for entertainment. He always seemed
especially glad to see me. Although I told myself I was delighted to
be useful, I was happier still to have met someone to whom I could reveal
those thoughts and feelings that, until then, I'd hardly acknowledged
to myself.
While fixing the tea, our chats would begin.
I told Mr. Burns how terribly guilty I felt about not having been on
speaking terms with my father12
the two weeks prior to his death. I'd never had the chance to ask my
father's forgiveness. And he had never had the chance to ask for mine.
Although Mr. Burns talked, he allowed me
the lion's share.13
Mostly I recall him listening. But how he listened! It wasn't just that
he was attentive to what I said. It was as if he were reading me, absorbing
all the information I provided, and adding details from his own experience
and imagination to create a truer understanding of my words.
After about a month, I decided to pay my
friend a visit on an "off day14."
I didn't bother to telephone as that type of formality did not seem
requisite in our relationship15.
Coming up to the house, I saw him working in his garden, bending with
ease and getting up with equal facility16.
I was dumbfounded. Could this be the same man who used that massive
walking stick?
He suddenly looked in my direction. Evidently
sensing my puzzlement over his mobility, he waved me over17,
looking more than a bit sheepish18.
I said nothing, but accepted his invitation to come inside.
"Well, luv. Allow me to make you a 'cuppa'19
this time. You look all done in."20
"How?" I began. "I thought..."
"I know what you thought, luv. When you first
saw me at the market...well, I'd twisted my ankle a bit earlier in the
day. Tripped on a stone while doing a bit of gardening. Always been
a clumsy fool.?
"But...when were you able to...walk normally
again??
Somehow, his eyes managed to look merry and
contrite21
at the same time. "Ah, well, I guess that'll be the very next day after
our first meeting."
"But why?" I asked, truly perplexed.
Surely he couldn't have been feigning helplessness to get me to make
him his tea every now and then.
"That second time you came 'round, luv, it
was then I saw how unhappy you were. Feeling lonely and sad about your
dad and all. I thought, well, the lass could use a bit of an old shoulder
to lean on. But I knew you were telling yourself you were visiting me
for my sake and not your own. Didn't think you'd come back if you knew
I was fit. And I knew you were in sore need of someone to talk to. Someone
older, older than your dad, even. And someone who knew how to listen."
"And the stick?"
"Ah. A fine stick, that. I use it when I
walk the moors22.
We must do that together soon."
So we did. And Mr. Burns, the man I'd set
out to23 help,
helped me. He'd made a gift of his time,24
bestowing attention and kindness to a young girl who needed both.
1. come to terms with:对……能够接受。
2. digs: [用作单数]寄宿舍。
3. luv:亲爱的,宝贝儿[love的变体]。
4. 用那种我从来都听不厌的约克郡人特有的轻快调子说。
5. 免得让这些苹果过早地变成苹果酱(意即不让苹果摔烂)。
6. 这里是作者故意跟老人开玩笑,把the States曲解为众州。Mr.
Burns 所说的 “the States” 指 the
United States(美国)。
7. 一根粗大多节的东西,很符合我头脑中《圣经》里的手杖的形象。 affair:物品,东西。
8. 我把他的不太强烈的拒绝看作是对我帮助他的答谢。
9. look in on sb:看望某人。
10. infirmity:虚弱。
11. 去世。
12. 和我父亲不说话(关系闹僵)。
13. 大部分时间都是他让我在说话。 lion's share:最大的部分。
14. 休息日。
15.我们的关系中似乎不需要那样的礼节。 requisite:需要的,必不可少的。
16. facility:灵巧。
17. 他招手示意我过去。
18. sheepish:羞怯的。
19. 给你沏杯茶。
20. 你看起来累坏了。
21. contrite:怀着歉意的。
22. moor:荒野。
23. set out to do sth:开始做……。
24. 他把自己的时间做成了一份礼物。