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第18节

redgauntlet-第18节

小说: redgauntlet 字数: 每页4000字

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ear to the ford from which the palfrey's legitimate owner had already turned back。

Here a contest of opinions took place between the horse and his rider。  The latter; according to his instructions; attempted to direct Solomon towards the distant bridge of stone; but Solomon opined that the ford was the shortest way to his own stable。  The point was sharply contested; and we heard Benjie gee…hupping; tchek…tcheking; and; above all; flogging in great style; while Solomon; who; docile in his general habits; was now stirred beyond his patience; made a great trampling and recalcitration; and it was their joint noise which we heard; without being able to see; though Joshua might too well guess; the cause of it。

Alarmed at these indications; the Quaker began to shout out; 'Benjiethou varlet!  Solomonthou fool!'  when the couple presented themselves in full drive; Solomon having now decidedly obtained the better of the conflict; and bringing his unwilling rider in high career down to the ford。  Never was there anger changed so fast into humane fear; as that of my good companion。 'The varlet will be drowned!'  he exclaimed'a widow's son! her only son!and drowned!let me go'And he struggled with me stoutly as I hung upon him; to prevent him from plunging into the ford。

I had no fear whatever for Benjie; for the blackguard vermin; though he could not manage the refractory horse; stuck on his seat like a monkey。  Solomon and Benjie scrambled through the ford with little inconvenience; and resumed their gallop on the other side。

It was impossible to guess whether on this last occasion Benjie was running off with Solomon; or Solomon with Benjie; but; judging from character and motives; I rather suspected the former。  I could not help laughing as the rascal passed me; grinning betwixt terror and delight; perched on the very pommel of the saddle; and holding with extended arms by bridle and mane while Solomon; the bit secured between his teeth; and his head bored down betwixt his forelegs; passed his master in this unwonted guise as hard as he could pelt。

'The mischievous bastard!'  exclaimed the Quaker; terrified out of his usual moderation of speech'the doomed gallows…bird!he will break Solomon's wind to a certainty。'

I prayed him to be comfortedassured; him a brushing gallop would do his favourite no harm and reminded him of the censure he had bestowed on me a minute before; for applying a harsh epithet to the boy。

But Joshua was not without his answer; 'Friend youth;' he said; 'thou didst speak of the lad's soul; which thou didst affirm belonged to the enemy; and of that thou couldst say nothing of thine own knowledge; on the contrary; I did but speak of his outward man; which will assuredly be suspended by a cord; if he mendeth not his manners。  Men say that; young as he is; he is one of the laird's gang。'

'Of the laird's gang!'  said I; repeating the words in surprise。 'Do you mean the person with whom I slept last night?  I heard you call him the laird。  Is he at the head of a gang?'

'Nay; I meant not precisely a gang;' said the Quaker; who appeared in his haste to have spoken more than he intendeda company; or party; I should have said; but thus it is; friend Latimer; with the wisest men when they permit themselves to be perturbed with passion; and speak as in a fever; or as with the tongue of the foolish and the forward。  And although thou hast been hasty to mark my infirmity; yet I grieve not that thou hast been a witness to it; seeing that the stumbles of the wise may be no less a caution to youth and inexperience; than is the fall of the foolish。'

This was a sort of acknowledgement of what I had already begun to suspectthat my new friend's real goodness of disposition; joined to the acquired quietism of his religious sect; had been unable entirely to check the effervescence of a temper naturally warm and hasty。

Upon the present occasion; as if sensible he had displayed a greater degree of emotion than became his character; Joshua avoided further allusion to Benjie and Solomon; and proceeded to solicit my attention to the natural objects around us; which increased in beauty and interest; as; still conducted by the meanders of the brook; we left the common behind us; and entered a more cultivated and enclosed country; where arable and pasture ground was agreeably varied with groves and hedges。  Descending now almost close to the stream; our course lay through a little gate; into a pathway kept with great neatness; the sides of which were decorated with trees and flowering shrubs of the hardier species; until; ascending by a gentle slope; we issued from the grove; and stood almost at once in front of a low but very neat building; of an irregular form; and my guide; shaking me cordially by the hand; made me welcome to Mount Sharon。

The wood through which we had approached this little mansion was thrown around it both on the north and north…west; but; breaking off into different directions; was intersected by a few fields well watered and sheltered。  The house fronted to the south…east; and from thence the pleasure…ground; or; I should rather say; the gardens; sloped down to the water。  I afterwards understood that the father of the present proprietor had a considerable taste for horticulture; which had been inherited by his son; and had formed these gardens; which; with their shaven turf; pleached alleys; wildernesses; and exotic trees and shrubs; greatly excelled anything of the kind which had been attempted in the neighbourhood。

If there was a little vanity in the complacent smile with which Joshua Geddes saw me gaze with delight on a scene so different from the naked waste we had that day traversed in company; it might surely be permitted to one who; cultivating and improving the beauties of nature; had found therein; as he said; bodily health; and a pleasing relaxation for the mind。  At the bottom of the extended gardens the brook wheeled round in a wide semicircle; and was itself their boundary。  The opposite side was no part of Joshua's domain; but the brook was there skirted by a precipitous rock of limestone; which seemed a barrier of nature's own erecting around his little Eden of beauty; comfort; and peace。

'But I must not let thee forget;' said the kind Quaker; 'amidst thy admiration of these beauties of our little inheritance; that thy breakfast has been a light one。'

So saying; Joshua conducted me to a small sashed door; opening under a porch amply mantled by honeysuckle and clematis; into a parlour of moderate size; the furniture of which; in plainness and excessive cleanliness; bore the characteristic marks of the sect to which the owner belonged。

Thy father's Hannah is generally allowed to be an exception to all Scottish housekeepers; and stands unparalleled for cleanliness among the women of Auld Reekie; but the cleanliness of Hannah is sluttishness compared to the scrupulous purifications of these people; who seem to carry into the minor decencies of life that conscientious rigour which they affect in their morals。

The parlour would have been gloomy; for the windows were small and the ceiling low; but the present proprietor had rendered it more cheerful by opening one end into a small conservatory; roofed with glass; and divided from the parlour by a partition of the same。  I have never before seen this very pleasing manner of uniting the comforts of an apartment with the beauties of a garden; and I wonder it is not more practised by the great。 Something of the kind is hinted at in a paper of the SPECTATOR。

As I walked towards the conservatory to view it more closely; the parlour chimney engaged my attention。  It was a pile of massive stone; entirely out of proportion to the size of the apartment。 On the front had once been an armorial scutcheon; for the hammer; or chisel; which had been employed to deface the shield or crest; had left uninjured the scroll beneath; which bore the pious motto; 'TRUST IN GOD。'  Black…letter; you know; was my early passion; and the tombstones in the Greyfriars' churchyard early yielded up to my knowledge as a decipherer what little they could tell of the forgotten dead。

Joshua Geddes paused when he saw my eye fixed on this relic of antiquity。  'Thou canst read it?'  he said。

I repeated the motto; and added; there seemed vestiges of a date。

'It should be 1537;' said he; 'for so long ago; at the least computation; did my ancestors; in the blinded times of Papistry; possess these lands; and in that year did they build their house。'

'It is an ancient descent;' said I; looking with respect upon the monument。  'I am sorry the arms have been defaced。'

It was perhaps impossible for my friend; Quaker as he was; to seem altogether void of respect for the pedigree which he began to recount to me; disclaiming all the while the vanity usually connected with the subject; in short; with the air of mingled melancholy; regret; and conscious dignity; with which Jack Fawkes used to tell us at college of his ancestor's unfortunate connexion with the Gunpowder Plot。

'Vanity of vanities; saith the Preacher;' thus harangued Joshua Gleddes of Mount Sharon; 'if we ourselves are nothing in the sight of Heaven; how much less than nothing must be our deriv

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