登陆注册
20036100000102

第102章 CHAPTER XXII.(1)

Next morning Mrs. Little gave her son the benefit of her night's reflections.

"You must let me have some money--all you can spare from your business; and whilst I am doing something with it for you, you must go to London, and do exactly what I tell you to do."

"Exactly? Then please write it down."

"A very good plan. Can you go by the express this morning?"

"Why, yes, I could; only then I must run down to the works this minute and speak to the foreman."

"Well, dear, when you come back, your instructions shall be written, and your bag packed."

"I say, mother, you are going into it in earnest. All the better for me."

At twelve he started for London, with a beautiful set of carving-tools in his bag, and his mother's instructions in his pocket: those instructions sent him to a fashionable tailor that very afternoon.

With some difficulty he prevailed on this worthy to make him a dress-suit in twenty-four hours. Next day he introduced himself to the London trade, showed his carving-tools, and, after a hard day's work, succeeded in obtaining several orders.

Then he bought some white ties and gloves and an opera hat, and had his hair cut in Bond Street.

At seven he got his clothes at the tailor's, and at eight he was in the stalls of the opera. His mother had sent him there, to note the dress and public deportment of gentlemen and ladies, and use his own judgment. He found his attention terribly distracted by the music and the raptures it caused him; but still he made some observations; and, consequently, next day he bought some fashionable shirts and sleeve studs and ribbon ties; ordered a morning suit of the same tailor, to be sent to him at Hillsborough; and after canvassing for customers all day, telegraphed his mother, and reached Hillsborough at eleven P.M.

At first sight of him Mrs. Little exclaimed:

"Oh! What have you done with your beautiful hair?"

He laughed, and said this was the fashion.

"But it is like a private soldier."

"Exactly. Part of the Volunteer movement, perhaps."

"Are you sure it is the fashion, dear?"

"Quite sure. All the swells in the opera were bullet-headed just like this."

"Oh, if it is the fashion!" said Mrs. Little; and her mind succumbed under that potent word.

She asked him about the dresses of the ladies in the opera.

His description was very lame. He said he didn't know he was expected to make notes of them.

"Well, but you might be sure I should like to know. Were there no ladies dressed as you would like to see your mother dressed?"

"Good heavens, no! I couldn't fancy you in a lot of colors; and your beautiful head deformed into the shape of a gourd, with a beast of a chignon stuck out behind, made of dead hair."

"No matter. Mr. Henry; I wish I had been with you at the opera. I should have seen something or other that would have become me. She gave a little sigh.

He was not to come home to dinner that day, but stay at the works, till she sent for him.

At six o'clock, Jael Dence came for him in a fly, and told him he was to go home with her.

"All right," said he; "but how did you come there?"

"She bade me come and see her again--that day I brought the bust.

So I went to see her, and I found her so busy, and doing more than she was fit, poor thing, so I made bold to give her a hand. That was yesterday; and I shall come every day--if 'tis only for an hour--till the curtains are all up."

"The curtains! what curtains?"

"Ask no questions, and you will hear no lies."

Henry remonstrated; Jael recommended patience; and at last they reached a little villa half way up Heath Hill. "You are at home now," said Jael, dryly. The new villa looked very gay that evening, for gas and fires were burning in every room.

The dining-room and drawing room were both on the ground-floor; had each one enormous window with plate glass, and were rooms of very fair size, divided by large folding-doors. These were now open, and Henry found his mother seated in the dining-room, with two workwomen, making curtains, and in the drawing-room were two more, sewing a carpet.

The carpet was down in the dining-room. The tea-table was set, and gave an air of comfort and housewifely foresight, in the midst of all the surrounding confusion.

Young Little stared. Mrs. Little smiled.

"Sit down, and never mind us: give him his tea, my good Jael."

Henry sat down, and, while Jael was making the tea, ventured on a feeble expostulation. "It's all very fine, mother, but I don't like to see you make a slave of yourself."

"Slaving!" said Jael, with a lofty air of pity. "Why, she is working for her own." Rural logic!

"Oh," said Mrs. Little to her, "these clever creatures we look up to so are rather stupid in some things. Slave! Why, I am a general leading my Amazons to victory." And she waved her needle gracefully in the air.

"Well, but why not let the shop do them, where you bought the curtains?'

"Because, my dear, the shop would do them very badly, very dearly, and very slowly. Do you remember reading to me about Caesar, and what he said--'that a general should not say to his troops "GO and attack the enemy," "but COME and attack the enemy"?' Well, that applies to needle-work. I say to these ladies, 'COME sew these curtains with me;' and the consequence is, we have done in three days what no shop in Hillsborough would have done for us in a fortnight; but, as for slaves, the only one has been my good Jael there. She insisted on moving all the heavy boxes herself. She dismissed the porter; she said he had no pith in his arms--that was your expression, I think?"

"Ay, ma'am; that was my word: and I never spoke a truer; the useless body. Why, ma'am, the girls in Cairnhope are most of them well-grown hussies, and used to work in the fields, and carry full sacks of grain up steps. Many's the time I have RUN with a sack of barley on my back: so let us hear no more about your bits of boxes. I wish my mind was as strong."

"Heaven forbid!" said Mrs. Little, with comic fervor. Henry laughed. But Jael only stared, rather stupidly. By-and-by she said she must go now.

"Henry shall take you home, dear."

"Nay, I can go by myself."

同类推荐
  • 续碑传选集

    续碑传选集

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 上清华晨三奔玉诀

    上清华晨三奔玉诀

    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 White Mr. Longfellow

    The White Mr. Longfellow

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 华严经疏注

    华严经疏注

    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。
  • 事林广记后集

    事林广记后集

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 幽魂录

    幽魂录

    你所见到的人,都是人?妩媚笑脸,阴冷身躯……揭开面纱时,究竟是人,是妖,还是鬼?
  • 金牌医妃:废材三小姐

    金牌医妃:废材三小姐

    慕容雪,一个来自21世纪的医生,因为车祸意外来到了历史上根本不存在的朝代----落英大陆。身份变成了一名右丞相的嫡女,穿越也就算了,还变成了一个废材,被毁了容貌,在家里还要遭到虐待,还要代替姐姐嫁给一个双腿废掉,瘫痪在床的三王爷——南宫清明,传闻这位王爷手段残暴,冷酷无情,这位王爷在百姓心里面都是残忍,无情的一个,没有一点好的优点,好的就是国家的战神,她和他会有怎样的结局呢?
  • 冷箭(下)

    冷箭(下)

    《冷箭(套装上下册)》以中国组建的一支监狱部队先遣队押解上千名重犯进行大迁徙为背景,讲述了一段暴狱和反暴狱,我中有敌、敌中有我的反特悬疑故事。已被拍摄成三十五集同名电视剧,由央视金牌制作人俞胜利一手打造。
  • 玄灵转经午朝行道仪

    玄灵转经午朝行道仪

    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。
  • 大学狂想曲

    大学狂想曲

    此时坐在对面的男子早已注意到他面前这个女孩了,是啊,从他上来到现在,时间虽然不是很多,但是他却从对面这对父女的谈话中知道,面前的这个女孩叫刘洁,旁边的中年人是她的父亲,刘信海,一个南方城市的老板,刘洁和自己是同样是来滨海上学的!
  • 天命的命运

    天命的命运

    一个超普通的人觉醒了一种超神秘的“天命”,加入了一个神秘的组织,并开始了自己不平凡的人生。多彩的天命,高深的武技,太阳的象征,暗影中的猎杀者,高傲的血族,华丽的异术,人造的战士,强悍的妖魔,于世间不断的六道轮回……林平原的多彩都市生活,危险而逗比的隐界生活开始了
  • 大魔宫

    大魔宫

    灵脉孕化先天灵光,万般修士唯有得到本命真灵,才算是修真的开始。灵光之内孕育真灵,乃是天下万物所化,铸造修者无上神通。少年林天,初入仙宗,便被罚做杂役十年为心中公道,赫然崛起,与天下英才争锋一时之间,风云际会,天才辈出,搅动天下大势,看林天携霸道之势,铸造无上魔宫
  • 奶与茶相恋一个关于桃花的故事

    奶与茶相恋一个关于桃花的故事

    讲一个叫桃花沟的小村庄里发生的人和事。从闭塞的山沟,经历了各种社会变革,不同的人物经受了不同的生活考验。其中有叫桃花的女人,更是受着跌宕起伏的人生炼历。最后走向幸福生活。
  • 飘(下)

    飘(下)

    本书设立了名家评点、背景透视、内容梗概、妙语佳句、阅读指导五个专栏,浓缩原著精华,提炼作品主旨,给读者指导性的阅读建议。
  • 天下之落神葬

    天下之落神葬

    世传神州武林有六部武学奇典,《圣魔遗策》,《落日葬神剑法》,《万化诀》,《太始之章》,《天禅圣经》,《轩辕七诀》,得其一者可纵横天下。明朝永乐年间,龙玉枫奉师命下山,于泰山之巅独败各派高手,称号至尊。乐山大佛一役,龙玉枫与神月教教主李嫙姬一战,更是名动天下。与此同时海外落日岛入驻中原,沉寂多年的江湖,风云再起……