登陆注册
20102100000010

第10章 CHAPTER III(3)

"Father,"said I,when he ceased talking--and Jael,who always ate her dinner at the same time and table as ourselves,but "below the salt,"had ceased nodding a respectful running comment on all he said--"Father?""Well,my son."

"I should like to go with thee to the tan-yard this afternoon."Here Jael,who had been busy pulling back the table,replacing the long row of chairs,and re-sanding the broad centre Sahara of the room to its dreary,pristine aridness,stopped,fairly aghast with amazement.

"Abel--Abel Fletcher!the lad's just out of his bed;he is no more fit to--""Pshaw,woman!"was the sharp answer."So,Phineas,thee art really strong enough to go out?""If thou wilt take me,father."

He looked pleased,as he always did when I used the Friends'mode of phraseology--for I had not been brought up in the Society;this having been the last request of my mother,rigidly observed by her husband.The more so,people said,as while she lived they had not been quite happy together.But whatever he was to her,in their brief union,he was a good father to me,and for his sake I have always loved and honoured the Society of Friends.

"Phineas,"said he (after having stopped a volley of poor Jael's indignations,beseechings,threats,and prognostications,by a resolute "Get the lad ready to go")--"Phineas,my son,I rejoice to see thy mind turning towards business.I trust,should better health be vouchsafed thee,that some day soon--""Not just yet,father,"said I,sadly--for I knew what he referred to,and that it would never be.Mentally and physically I alike revolted from my father's trade.I held the tan-yard in abhorrence--to enter it made me ill for days;sometimes for months and months Inever went near it.That I should ever be what was my poor father's one desire,his assistant and successor in his business,was,I knew,a thing totally impossible.

It hurt me a little that my project of going with him to-day should in any way have deceived him;and rather silently and drearily we set out together;progressing through Norton Bury streets in our old way,my father marching along in his grave fashion,I steering my little carriage,and keeping as close as I could beside him.Many a person looked at us as we passed;almost everybody knew us,but few,even of our own neighbours,saluted us;we were Nonconformists and Quakers.

I had never been in the town since the day I came through it with John Halifax.The season was much later now,but it was quite warm still in the sunshine,and very pleasant looked the streets,even the close,narrow streets of Norton Bury.I beg its pardon;antiquaries hold it a most "interesting and remarkable"place:and I myself have sometimes admired its quaint,overhanging,ornamented house-fronts--blackened,and wonderfully old.But one rarely notices what has been familiar throughout life;and now I was less struck by the beauty of the picturesque old town than by the muddiness of its pathways,and the mingled noises of murmuring looms,scolding women,and squabbling children,that came up from the alleys which lay between the High Street and the Avon.In those alleys were hundreds of our poor folk living,huddled together in misery,rags,and dirt.Was John Halifax living there too?

My father's tan-yard was in an alley a little further on.Already Iperceived the familiar odour;sometimes a not unpleasant barky smell;at other times borne in horrible wafts,as if from a lately forsaken battle-field.I wondered how anybody could endure it--yet some did;and among the workmen,as we entered,I looked round for the lad Iknew.

He was sitting in a corner in one of the sheds,helping two or three women to split bark,very busy at work;yet he found time to stop now and then,and administered a wisp of sweet hay to the old blind mare,as she went slowly round and round,turning the bark mill.Nobody seemed to notice him,and he did not speak to anybody.

As we passed John did not even see us.I asked my father,in a whisper,how he liked the boy.

"What boy?--eh,him?--Oh,well enough--there's no harm in him that Iknow of.Dost thee want him to wheel thee about the yard?Here,Isay,lad--bless me!I've forgot thy name."

John Halifax started up at the sharp tone of command;but when he saw me he smiled.My father walked on to some pits where he told me he was trying an important experiment,how a hide might be tanned completely in five months instead of eight.I stayed behind.

"John,I want you."

John shook himself free of the bark-heap,and came rather hesitatingly at first.

"Anything I can do for you,sir?"

"Don't call me 'sir';if I say 'John,'why don't you say 'Phineas'?"And I held out my hand--his was all grimed with bark-dust.

"Are you not ashamed to shake hands with me?""Nonsense,John."

So we settled that point entirely.And though he never failed to maintain externally a certain gentle respectfulness of demeanour towards me,yet it was more the natural deference of the younger to the elder,of the strong to the weak,than the duty paid by a serving-lad to his master's son.And this was how I best liked it to be.

He guided me carefully among the tan-pits--those deep fosses of abomination,with a slender network of pathways thrown between--until we reached the lower end of the yard.It was bounded by the Avon only,and by a great heap of refuse bark.

"This is not a bad place to rest in;if you liked to get out of the carriage I'd make you comfortable here in no time."I was quite willing;so he ran off and fetched an old horserug,which he laid upon the soft,dry mass.Then he helped me thither,and covered me with my cloak.Lying thus,with my hat over my eyes,just distinguishing the shiny glimmer of the Avon running below,and beyond that the green,level Ham,dotted with cows,my position was anything but unpleasant.In fact,positively agreeable--ay,even though the tan-yard was close behind;but here it would offend none of my senses.

"Are you comfortable,Phineas?"

"Very,if you would come and sit down too."

"That I will."

同类推荐
  • 李太白全集

    李太白全集

    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。
  • 人本欲生经注

    人本欲生经注

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 五蕴皆空经

    五蕴皆空经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Lorna Doonel

    Lorna Doonel

    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。
  • 金刚能断般若波罗蜜经

    金刚能断般若波罗蜜经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 恶魔没有眼泪

    恶魔没有眼泪

    “所谓的恶魔是没有眼泪的,真是讽刺的格言啊,恰巧我就见过两只爱哭的,是吧,维吉尔,但丁!”——记录于观看迪拜塔的尔彬一世
  • 邪帝狂妻艳倾天下

    邪帝狂妻艳倾天下

    凤临天下,风起云涌。淡然如她、腹黑如她、冷漠如她、强势如她VS妖孽如他、温柔如他、邪魅如他、冷酷如他。且看一帝、一王、一皇、一君追妻之路,谁能俘获美人心?她不想受伤害,只想快快乐乐、自由自在地生活,她是个逃避感情的猫咪……看最后她会不会为爱而去争取?且看文章一一道来。男主女主身心干净。结局一对一,99%宠文+1%虐文=100%爽文
  • 那一生的遗憾

    那一生的遗憾

    如果人生可以从来,一定要让人生了无遗憾!当孟辉真正穿越人生重来之后,却发现一切并不是想的那样,了却了一些遗憾却增添了更多的遗憾;也许,没有遗憾的人生,就不是真正的人生······
  • 史上第一宠:毒夫狂妻

    史上第一宠:毒夫狂妻

    她,慕容将军之孙女—慕容盈,传言花痴草包,恶毒跋扈,无人敢娶。她,现代军事国际佣兵女王,穿越成慕容盈。刚穿越,便因为前身爬床,被谪仙权相扔出了大门。还没消化穿越的事实,便被一纸诏书流放边境,路上更是被各种追杀。这穿越的日子没法过了,靠,非逼着姑奶奶反击,从此她杀伐斗强,样样在行,佛曰:只有想不到的,没有她不会的。他,江灵城江家少主,妖娆魅色,泣血倾城,却冷心冷情,一颦一笑勾人心魂,然为她一生无悔。她曾为他,抛却所有,争风吃醋,闹的将军府一门倾倒。旧爱追杀,生死不休。她从杀戮中崛起,入了江家江绯军,这一世的杀戮和决绝,惊天动地。当烟火灭时,人们才懂,那个让人心疼的女子最后为了江家少主,一世倾城。
  • 仙妻盈门

    仙妻盈门

    空间想把她养肥再吞噬——做梦!亲人见她有利用价值再招回——妄想!青梅竹马要傍重生女想杀她——该死!婆家嫌她身份低微不让进门——忠犬,上!当古代飙悍女将军成为现代懦弱女学生,她照样要玩得风升水起。
  • 盛世长哥

    盛世长哥

    图书管理员李峰成功穿越,发现之不是自己的历史。成功的跑错片场,李峰该如何活下去那.....
  • 气界至尊

    气界至尊

    天地之气,而生人与万物。相传气界九州,有九大至尊,他们是谜一样的存在,他们是九州的至强之人,世世代代他们维护着各个州界的和平,他们是气术师的巅峰,他们是九州的传说。我踩着命运的阶梯,跟着杀戮的轨迹,一步一步走向至尊的王座。
  • 难忘的沽河人

    难忘的沽河人

    朋友,你若足踏胶东,就能叫你吃之不尽的享受,就能叫你产生走之不舍的心情。胶东真是一个有山有水的好地方呀!上有天宫,下有胶东的美称呀!真是不愧为之。
  • 残刀传

    残刀传

    三百年前,有个老头,带着一把六尺长刀,把江湖闹了个天翻地覆。两百年前,有个大叔,带着一把四尺大刀,把朝廷捅了个通透。一百年前,有个青年,带着一把双刃刀,把天下弄成了一锅粥。现在,一个少年,带着一把残缺的刀,被一个雪衣丫头拉着,一个没牙老头撵着,顺带扯上一个冰山少女,出发了。
  • 穿越之美女复仇

    穿越之美女复仇

    如果恨可以忘记,那么生活还有什么意思。你给我的伤害,这辈子我都无法忘怀,我能做的就是就是加倍的将伤害还给你。你为了占有,害死了我最爱的人。我要让你的这辈子都无法忘记你最亲爱的我是怎样将你一步一步设计进沼泽。你毁了我的人生,我灭了你的世界!如果说我的到来是偶然,那你的悲剧就是必然!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】