登陆注册
38048700000043

第43章 CHAPTER X(3)

"By-the-by,did not the father's name strike you?MARCH--suppose it should turn out to be the very Mr.March you pulled out of Severn five years ago.What a romantic conjuncture of circumstances?""Nonsense,"said John,quickly--more quickly than he usually spoke to me;then came back to wish me a kind goodbye."Take care of yourself,old fellow.It will be nightfall before I am back from Norton Bury."I watched him mount,and ride slowly down the bit of common--turning once to look back at Rose Cottage,ere he finally disappeared between the chestnut trees:a goodly sight--for he was an admirable horseman.

When he was gone,I,glancing lazily up at Mr.March's window,saw a hand,and I fancied a white-furred wrist,pulling down the blind.It amused me to think Miss March might possibly have been watching him likewise.

I spent the whole long day alone in the cottage parlour,chiefly meditating;though more than once friendly Mrs.Tod broke in upon my solitude.She treated me in a motherly,free-and-easy way:not half so deferentially as she treated John Halifax.

The sun had gone down over Nunnely Hill,behind the four tall Italian poplars,which stood on the border of our bit of wilderness--three together and one apart.They were our landmarks--and skymarks too--for the first sunbeam coming across the common struck their tops of a morning,and the broad western glimmer showed their forms distinctly until far in the night.They were just near enough for me to hear their faint rustling in windy weather;on calm days they stood up straight against the sky,like memorial columns.They were friends of mine--those four poplars;sometimes they almost seemed alive.We made acquaintance on this first night,when I sat watching for John;and we kept up the friendship ever afterwards.

It was nine o'clock before I heard the old mare's hoofs clattering up the road:joyfully I ran out.

David was not quite his youthful,gay self that night;not quite,as he expressed it,"the David of the sheep-folds."He was very tired,and had what he called "the tan-yard feeling,"the oppression of business cares.

"Times are hard,"said he,when we had finally shut out the starlight,and Mrs.Tod had lit candles,bade us good-night in her free,independent way,and "hoped Mr.Halifax had everything he wanted."She always seemed to consider him the head of our little menage.

"The times are very hard,"repeated John,thoughtfully."I don't see how your father can rightly be left with so many anxieties on his shoulders.I must manage to get to Norton Bury at least five days a week.You will have enough of solitude,I fear.""And you will have little enough of the pleasant country life you planned,and which you seem so to delight in.""Never mind--perhaps it's good for me.I have a life of hard work before me,and can't afford to get used to too much pleasure.But we'll make the most of every bit of time we have.How have you felt to-day?Strong?""Very strong.Now what would you like us to do tomorrow?""I want to show you the common in early morning--the view there is so lovely.""Of Nature,or human nature?"

He half smiled,though only at my mischievousness.I could see it did not affect him in the least."Nay,I know what you mean;but Ihad forgotten her,or,if not absolutely forgotten,she was not in my mind just then.We will go another way,as indeed I had intended:it might annoy the young lady,our meeting her again."His grave,easy manner of treating and dismissing the subject was a tacit reproach to me.I let the matter drop;we had much more serious topics afloat than gossip about our neighbours.

At seven next morning we were out on the Flat.

"I'm not going to let you stand here in the dews,Phineas.Come a little farther on,to my terrace,as I call it.There's a panorama!"It was indeed.All around the high flat a valley lay,like a moat,or as if some broad river had been dried up in its course,and,century after century,gradually converted into meadow,woodland,and town.For a little white town sat demurely at the bottom of the hollow,and a score or two of white cottages scattered themselves from this small nucleus of civilisation over the opposite bank of this imaginary river,which was now a lovely hill-side.Gorges,purple with shadow,yellow corn-fields,and dark clumps of woodland dressed this broad hill-side in many colours;its highest point,Nunnely Hill,forming the horizon where last night I had seen the sun go down,and which now was tinted with the tenderest western morning grey.

"Do you like this,Phineas?I do,very much.A dear,smiling,English valley,holding many a little nest of an English home.Fancy being patriarch over such a region,having the whole valley in one's hand,to do good to,or ill.You can't think what primitive people they are hereabouts--descendants from an old colony of Flemish cloth-weavers:they keep to the trade.Down in the valley--if one could see through the beech wood--is the grand support of the neighbourhood,a large cloth mill!""That's quite in your line,John;"and I saw his face brighten up as it had done when,as a boy,he had talked to me about his machinery.

"What has become of that wonderful little loom you made?""Oh!I have it still.But this is such a fine cloth-mill!--I have been all over it.If the owner would put aside his old Flemish stolidity!I do believe he and his ancestors have gone on in the same way,and with almost the same machinery,ever since Queen Elizabeth's time.Now,just one or two of our modern improvements,such as--but I forget,you never could understand mechanics.""You can,though.Explain clearly,and I'll try my best."He did so,and so did I.I think he even managed to knock something of the matter into my stupid head,where it remained--for ten minutes!Much longer remained the impression of his energetic talk--his clear-headed way of putting before another what he understood so well himself.I marvelled how he had gained all his information.

同类推荐
  • 佛说观经

    佛说观经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 道德真经解

    道德真经解

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 文殊问经字母品

    文殊问经字母品

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 六十种曲节侠记

    六十种曲节侠记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Story of a Pioneer

    The Story of a Pioneer

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 夜太太有点甜

    夜太太有点甜

    初见她,内心毫无波澜第二次相见,夜二少蹙了蹙眉再次遇见是在她的婚礼上,他嘴角轻扬抢婚!!!Z市豪门夜家薄情寡义的夜二少开始走在宠妻的道路上一路不复返【宠文】
  • 女神一号

    女神一号

    《女神一号》,是作家冯唐的第六部长篇小说,试图以独特的视角,探究人对外面的世界及自己内心世界无休止的质疑,解决人性中的困扰、困境与纠葛。作者希望通过这部纯文学作品,深挖人性,诊断问题,解决精神层面的问题。
  • 封魔词

    封魔词

    一首词,道尽悲欢离合,却数不尽我提笔时落下的泪。待我写完之时,没有感慨,只有无奈。且看主角是如何用一生去书写属于他自己的词。
  • 寻灵纪

    寻灵纪

    千年前众神意外的发现了新世界,而后众神之战爆发陨落无数神阶大能。千年后三个不同的世界因为一道空间缝隙出现了一点短暂的交集。而那些穿越者几乎全部陨落在了新世界中无尽的森林里。。。。。若干年后一个少年带着梦想走出了森里。。。。。不为码字,只想写出心中的故事.......
  • 娘亲之男人靠不住论

    娘亲之男人靠不住论

    我叫陈诺,我和我娘亲相依为命十二载。谁知道,那一夜,四个美得各有特色的男子来到了我和娘亲居住的小山头,将娘亲掳了去……我的四个“爹爹”哟,你们的女儿……女儿掉了呀!
  • 正常的学院生活

    正常的学院生活

    这是个正常的故事,请相信我。还有简介为什么一定要20字
  • 卡耐基写给女人的一生幸福书

    卡耐基写给女人的一生幸福书

    幸福是女人的最大愿望,幸福是一种感觉,是女人心海里一道亮丽的彩虹,它折射到女人的脸上,呈现的是美丽,是从容,是自信。如果说女人是花,那么爱情就是它最好的滋养品,在爱的滋润下,女人的幸福感,才会得到极大的满足。
  • 爱上黑夜爱上你

    爱上黑夜爱上你

    试图让你慢慢接受我,可最终我还是失败了。你对待我早已习以为惯,可最终我无论做的再好你都不会接受我。离你而去或许是最好的选择……那天你不声不响的从他的世界里消失,而他却因你而疯狂!!!!
  • 宇宙玄界

    宇宙玄界

    在远离地球遥远的宇宙星空之中,有一座巨大无边的大陆静静悬浮,它的体积比之恒星还要大上几百倍不止,它就是玄界。而在地球之上一位宿命少年正在慢慢崛起,搅动风云。。。在古代本是极度辉煌盛世的修道者文明,由于灵气的骤然消失渐渐在岁月长河中衰败,到如今已是几乎不可见了。完全被另一种科技文明所替代。而当未来某一天,天空炸裂,大地崩塌,有未知的天外来客降临地球,所有的一切都改变了。。。他们自称来自玄界,人类的最初原始之地。
  • 怪物之界

    怪物之界

    这是一个怪兽的世界,这里有很多不可思议的东西