the friendly road-第35节
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n Tucker;〃 or he may produce a battered old volume of Montaigne from which he will read you a passage。 If such an adventure should befall you; know that you have met
Your friend;
David Grayson。
P。 S。 Harriet bemoans most of all the unsolved mystery of the sign man。 But it doesn't bother me in the least。 I'm glad now I never found him。 The poet sings his song and goes his way。 If we sought him out how horribly disappointed we might be! We might find him shaving; or eating sausage; or drinking a bottle of beer。 We might find him shaggy and unkempt where we imagined him beautiful; weak where we thought him strong; dull where we thought him brilliant。 Take then the vintage of his heart and let him go。 As for me; I'm glad some mystery is left in this world。 A thousand signs on my roadways are still as unexplainable; as mysterious; and as beguiling as this。 And I can close my narrative with no better motto for tired spirits than that of the country roadside:
' REST '
End