登陆注册
15515400000045

第45章 CHAPTER VIII(5)

The thing that's wrong about it is that, do what you will, you can't get it to go off before six o'clock in the morning. I set it on Sunday evening for half-past four--we farmers do have to work, I can tell you. But it's worth it. I had no idea that the world was so beautiful. There is a light you never see at any other time, and the whole air seems to be full of fluttering song. You feel--but you must get up and come out with me, Dad. I can't describe it. If it hadn't been for the good old cow, Lord knows what time I'd have been up. The clock went off at half-past four in the afternoon, just as they were sitting down to tea, and frightened them all out of their skins. We have fiddled about with it all we know, but there's no getting it to do anything between six p.m. and six am. Anything you want of it in the daytime it is quite agreeable to. But it seems to have fixed its own working hours, and isn't going to be bustled out of its proper rest. I got so mad with it myself I wanted to pitch it out of the window, but Robin thought we ought to keep it till you came, that perhaps you might be able to do something with it--writing something about it, she means. I said I thought alarm clocks were pretty well played out by this time; but, as she says, there is always a new generation coming along to whom almost everything must be fresh. Anyhow, the confounded thing cost seven and six, and seems to be no good for anything else.

"Whatever was it that you really did say to Robin about her room?

Young Bute came round to me on Monday quite upset about it. He says it is going to be all windows, and will look, when finished, like an incorrect copy of the Eddystone lighthouse. He says there will be no place for the bed, and if there is to be a fireplace at all it will have to be in the cupboard, and that the only way, so far as he can see, of her getting in and out of it will be by a door through the bathroom. She said that you said she could have it entirely to her own idea, and that he was just to carry out her instructions; but, as he points out, you can't have a room in a house as if the rest of the house wasn't there, even if it is your own room. Nobody, it seems, will be able to have a bath without first talking it over with her, and arranging a time mutually convenient. I told him I was sure you never meant him to do anything absurd; and that his best plan would be to go straight back to her, explain to her that she'd been talking like a silly goat--he could have put it politely, of course--and that he wasn't going to pay any attention to her. You might have thought I had suggested his walking into a den of lions and pulling all their tails. I don't know what Robin has done to him, but he seems quite frightened of her. I had to promise that I would talk to her. He'd better have done it himself. I only told her just what he said, and off she went in one of her tantrums. You know her style: If she liked to live in a room where she could see to do her hair that was no business of his, and if he couldn't design a plain, simple bedroom that wasn't going to look ridiculous and make her the laughing-stock of all the neighbourhood, then the Royal Institute of British Architects must have strange notions of the sort of person entitled to go about the country building houses; that if he thought the proper place for a fire was in a cupboard, she didn't; that his duty was to carry out the instructions of his employers, and if he imagined for a moment she was going to consent to remain shut up in her room till everybody in the house had finished bathing it would be better for us to secure the services of somebody possessed of a little commonsense; that next time she met him she would certainly tell him what she thought of him, also that she should certainly decline to hold any further communication with him again; that she doesn't want a bedroom now of any sort--perhaps she may be permitted a shakedown in the pantry, or perhaps Veronica will allow her an occasional night's rest with her, and if not it doesn't matter.

You'll have to talk to her yourself. I'm not going to say any more.

"Don't forget that Friday is the St. Leonards' 'At Home' day. I've promised Janie that you shall be there in all your best clothes.

(Don't tell her I'm calling her Janie. It might offend her. But nobody calls her Miss St. Leonard.) Everybody is coming, and all the children are having their hair washed. You will have it all your own way down here. There's no other celebrity till you get to Boss Croker, the Tammany man, the other side of Ilsley Downs. Artists they don't count. The rumour was all round the place last week that you were here incognito in the person of a dismal-looking Johnny, staying at the 'Fisherman's Retreat,' who used to sit all day in a punt up the backwater drinking whisky. It made me rather mad when I saw him. I suppose it was the whisky that suggested the idea to them. They have got the notion in these parts that a literary man is a sort of inspired tramp. A Mrs. Jaggerswade--or some such name--whom I met here on Sunday and who is coming on Friday, took me aside and asked me 'what sort of things' you said when you talked? She said she felt sure it would be so clever, and, herself, she was looking forward to it; but would I--'quite between ourselves'--advise her to bring the children.

"I say, you will have to talk seriously to Veronica. Country life seems to agree with her. She's taken to poaching already--she and the twins. It was the one sin that hitherto they had never committed, and I fancy the old man was feeling proud of this.

Luckily I caught them coming home--with ten dead rabbits strung on a pole, the twins carrying it between them on their shoulders, suggesting the picture of the spies returning from the promised land with that bunch of grapes--Veronica scouting on ahead with, every ten yards, her ear to the ground, listening for hostile footsteps. The thing that troubled her most was that she hadn't heard me coming; she seemed to fear that something had gone wrong with the laws of Nature.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 遇见你才有了爱

    遇见你才有了爱

    一次姐妹战争一触即发,原本闺密反目成仇,原因只是因为她们同时喜欢上一个男生,朋友喜欢的男生而喜欢上了她
  • 甲铁城的卡巴内瑞2

    甲铁城的卡巴内瑞2

    将军已死,天皇万岁。恐怖的真正不是卡巴内,而是人心...卡巴内的存在并非偶然,而是交织着血泪的阴谋。
  • 天府传说

    天府传说

    万里江山如画屏,仙魔妖人代代生,小小少年如何挣脱命运的枷锁,走上长生不死之路?身入囹圄,遭遇元神高手擒拿献祭,如何逃脱这盖世凶魔之手?天道不公,命运多舛,但我相信我就是那天命之人,任你万千劫火加身,我自傲然挺立,终会百炼成钢!仙路坎坷……
  • EXO之遇见天使

    EXO之遇见天使

    她,在高考中一鸣惊人的高三留级生;他,舞台上风光无限的花样美男。当平凡以狼狈的姿态遇上完美,会发生什么事呢?而她们,为了梦想付出很多,初衷却只是博得偶像的赞许。付出无数心血之后终于见到了他们,却是否只是普通粉丝的命运……(作者是鹿饭,偏向主角鹿晗,吴世勋)
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 凤凰涅槃:腹黑冥后太撩人!

    凤凰涅槃:腹黑冥后太撩人!

    她名宫若寒,炼丹界NO.1,阵法界NO.1,毒师NO.1,实力也是杠杠滴。凭她一身毒舌功夫也能走遍天下,说她是狐狸?还真对了,狡猾是她的本性,毒舌是她的天赋。可她身边这个大腹黑是怎么回事?怎么是个黏人精?传言不是说他性情暴躁,冷酷无情吗?谁来解释下这个跟屁虫是谁,还一直叫她夫人?宫若寒表示:娘子夫人你个毛线!滚滚滚!某妖孽:好,夫人我们一起滚……
  • love在起跑线上

    love在起跑线上

    世界上再也不会有第二个他,原以为是他回来了,却貌似是不可能的呢。带走了他,回国后遇见了那个他,她该怎么办呢,她将会选择谁呢,她最终会独自一人还是会与谁擦出火花呢,亲们,敬请期待吧~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·
  • 轻送年华如羽

    轻送年华如羽

    青春是美好的,但它仅是我们生命长卷里短暂的一行。初恋是刻骨铭心的,可也并非生命的全部。——郭果作此书,与过往种种告别。
  • 绯月下的苍穹

    绯月下的苍穹

    活不过几章的主角,跟屁虫酥酥,逆天高冷的卿莫,淫中之王绯木,神秘的阴阳师檀溪,他们因缘际会之下的交织,并肩,生死与共。又因何而反目成仇,敬请期待《绯月下的苍穹》
  • 游猎人间

    游猎人间

    这世间只剩下一个神仙会怎样?神算刘伯温斩断天地桥,仙凡通道关闭。从此再无生灵飞升。六百年后的现代,一位少年却意外寻得仙缘,从此,纵横花都,游猎人间!