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第49章 A MAN OF DEVON(6)

"Grandfather's God is simply awful.When I'm playing the fiddle, Ican feel God; but grandfather's is such a stuffy God--you know what Imean: the sea, the wind, the trees, colours too--they make one feel.

But I don't believe that life was meant to 'be good' in.Isn't there anything better than being good? When I'm 'good,' I simply feel wicked." She reached up, caught a flower from the hedge, and slowly tore its petals.

"What would you do," she muttered, "if you wanted a thing, but were afraid of it? But I suppose you're never afraid!" she added, mocking me.I admitted that I was sometimes afraid, and often afraid of being afraid.

"That's nice! I'm not afraid of illness, nor of grandfather, nor of his God; but--I want to be free.If you want a thing badly, you're afraid about it."I thought of Zachary Pearse's words, "free as a man.""Why are you looking at me like that?" she said.

I stammered: "What do you mean by freedom?""Do you know what I shall do to-night?" she answered."Get out of my window by the apple-tree, and go to the woods, and play!"We were going down a steep lane, along the side of a wood, where there's always a smell of sappy leaves, and the breath of the cows that come close to the hedge to get the shade.

There was a cottage in the bottom, and a small boy sat outside playing with a heap of dust.

"Hallo, Johnny!" said Pasiance."Hold your leg out and show this man your bad place!" The small boy undid a bandage round his bare and dirty little leg, and proudly revealed a sore.

"Isn't it nasty?" cried Pasiance ruefully, tying up the bandage again; "poor little feller! Johnny, see what I've brought you!" She produced from her pocket a stick of chocolate, the semblance of a soldier made of sealing-wax and worsted, and a crooked sixpence.

It was a new glimpse of her.All the way home she was telling me the story of little Johnny's family; when she came to his mother's death, she burst out: "A beastly shame, wasn't it, and they're so poor; it might just as well have been somebody else.I like poor people, but I hate rich ones--stuck-up beasts."Mrs.Hopgood was looking over the gate, with her cap on one side, and one of Pasiance's cats rubbing itself against her skirts.At the sight of us she hugged herself.

"Where's grandfather?" asked Pasiance.The old lady shook her head.

"Is it a row?" Mrs.Hopgood wriggled, and wriggled, and out came:

"Did you get yure tay, my pretty? No? Well, that's a pity; yu'll be falin' low-like."Pasiance tossed her head, snatched up the cat, and ran indoors.Iremained staring at Mrs.Hopgood.

"Dear-dear," she clucked," poor lamb.So to spake it's--" and she blurted out suddenly, "chuckin' full of wra-ath, he is.Well, there!"My courage failed that evening.I spent it at the coastguard station, where they gave me bread and cheese and some awful cider.Ipassed the kitchen as I came back.A fire was still burning there, and two figures, misty in the darkness, flitted about with stealthy laughter like spirits afraid of being detected in a carnal-meal.

They were Pasiance and Mrs.Hopgood; and so charming was the smell of eggs and bacon, and they had such an air of tender enjoyment of this dark revel, that I stifled many pangs, as I crept hungry up to bed.

In the middle of the night I woke and heard what I thought was screaming; then it sounded like wind in trees, then like the distant shaking of a tambourine, with the high singing of a human voice.

Suddenly it stopped--two long notes came wailing out like sobs--then utter stillness; and though I listened for an hour or more there was no other sound....

IV

"4th August.

......For three days after I wrote last, nothing at all happened here.I spent the mornings on the cliff reading, and watching the sun-sparks raining on the sea.It's grand up there with the gorse all round, the gulls basking on the rocks, the partridges calling in the corn, and now and then a young hawk overhead.The afternoons Ispent out in the orchard.The usual routine goes on at the farm all the time--cow-milking, bread-baking, John Ford riding in and out, Pasiance in her garden stripping lavender, talking to the farm hands;and the smell of clover, and cows and hay; the sound of hens and pigs and pigeons, the soft drawl of voices, the dull thud of the farm carts; and day by day the apples getting redder.Then, last Monday, Pasiance was away from sunrise till sunset--nobody saw her go--nobody knew where she had gone.It was a wonderful, strange day, a sky of silver-grey and blue, with a drift of wind-clouds, all the trees sighing a little, the sea heaving in a long, low swell, the animals restless, the birds silent, except the gulls with their old man's laughter and kitten's mewing.

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