登陆注册
15676100000049

第49章

On the first of May, after their last year together at college, Frank Ashurst and his friend Robert Garton were on a tramp. They had walked that day from Brent, intending to make Chagford, but Ashurst's football knee had given out, and according to their map they had still some seven miles to go. They were sitting on a bank beside the-road, where a track crossed alongside a wood, resting the knee and talking of the universe, as young men will. Both were over six feet, and thin as rails; Ashurst pale, idealistic, full of absence;Garton queer, round-the-corner, knotted, curly, like some primeval beast. Both had a literary bent; neither wore a hat.

Ashurst's hair was smooth, pale, wavy, and had a way of rising on either side of his brow, as if always being flung back; Carton's was a kind of dark unfathomed mop. They had not met a soul for miles.

"My dear fellow," Garton was saying, "pity's only an effect of self-consciousness; it's a disease of the last five thousand years. The world was happier without."Ashurst, following the clouds with his eyes, answered:

"It's the pearl in the oyster, anyway."

"My dear chap, all our modern unhappiness comes from pity. Look at animals, and Red Indians, limited to feeling their own occasional misfortunes; then look at ourselves--never free from feeling the toothaches of others. Let's get back to feeling for nobody, and have a better time.""You'll never practise that."

Garton pensively stirred the hotch-potch of his hair.

"To attain full growth, one mustn't be squeamish. To starve oneself emotionally's a mistake. All emotion is to the good--enriches life.""Yes, and when it runs up against chivalry?"

"Ah! That's so English! If you speak of emotion the English always think you want something physical, and are shocked. They're afraid of passion, but not of lust--oh, no!--so long as they can keep it secret."Ashurst did not answer; he had plucked a blue floweret, and was twiddling it against the sky. A cuckoo began calling from a thorn tree. The sky, the flowers, the songs of birds! Robert was talking through his hat! And he said:

"Well, let's go on, and find some farm where we can put up." In uttering those words, he was conscious of a girl coming down from the common just above them. She was outlined against the sky, carrying a basket, and you could see that sky through the crook of her arm. And Ashurst, who saw beauty without wondering how it could advantage him, thought: 'How pretty!' The wind, blowing her dark frieze skirt against her legs, lifted her battered peacock tam-o'-shanter; her greyish blouse was worn and old, her shoes were split, her little hands rough and red, her neck browned. Her dark hair waved untidy across her broad forehead, her face was short, her upper lip short, showing a glint of teeth, her brows were straight and dark, her lashes long and dark, her nose straight; but her grey eyes were the wonder-dewy as if opened for the first time that day. She looked at Ashurst--perhaps he struck her as strange, limping along without a hat, with his large eyes on her, and his hair falling back. He could not take off what was not on his head, but put up his hand in a salute, and said:

"Can you tell us if there's a farm near here where we could stay the night? I've gone lame.""There's only our farm near, sir." She spoke without shyness, in a pretty soft crisp voice.

"And where is that?"

"Down here, sir."

"Would you put us up?"

"Oh! I think we would."

"Will you show us the way?"

"Yes, Sir."

He limped on, silent, and Garton took up the catechism.

"Are you a Devonshire girl?"

"No, Sir."

"What then?"

"From Wales."

"Ah! I thought you were a Celt; so it's not your farm?""My aunt's, sir."

"And your uncle's?"

"He is dead."

"Who farms it, then?"

"My aunt, and my three cousins."

"But your uncle was a Devonshire man?"

"Yes, Sir."

"Have you lived here long?" "Seven years."

"And how d'you like it after Wales?" "I don't know, sir.""I suppose you don't remember?" "Oh, yes! But it is different.""I believe you!"

Ashurst broke in suddenly: "How old are you?""Seventeen, Sir."

"And what's your name?" "Megan David."

"This is Robert Garton, and I am Frank Ashurst. We wanted to get on to Chagford.""It is a pity your leg is hurting you."

Ashurst smiled, and when he smiled his face was rather beautiful.

Descending past the narrow wood, they came on the farm suddenly-a long, low, stone-built dwelling with casement windows, in a farmyard where pigs and fowls and an old mare were straying. A short steep-up grass hill behind was crowned with a few Scotch firs, and in front, an old orchard of apple trees, just breaking into flower, stretched down to a stream and a long wild meadow. A little boy with oblique dark eyes was shepherding a pig, and by the house door stood a woman, who came towards them. The girl said:

"It is Mrs. Narracombe, my aunt."

"Mrs. Narracombe, my aunt," had a quick, dark eye, like a mother wild-duck's, and something of the same snaky turn about her neck.

"We met your niece on the road," said Ashurst; "she thought you might perhaps put us up for the night."Mrs. Narracombe, taking them in from head to heel, answered:

"Well, I can, if you don't mind one room. Megan, get the spare room ready, and a bowl of cream. You'll be wanting tea, I suppose."Passing through a sort of porch made by two yew trees and some flowering-currant bushes, the girl disappeared into the house, her peacock tam-o'-shanter bright athwart that rosy-pink and the dark green of the yews.

"Will you come into the parlour and rest your leg? You'll be from college, perhaps?""We were, but we've gone down now."

Mrs. Narracombe nodded sagely.

The parlour, brick-floored, with bare table and shiny chairs and sofa stuffed with horsehair, seemed never to have been used, it was so terribly clean. Ashurst sat down at once on the sofa, holding his lame knee between his hands, and Mrs. Narracombe gazed at him. He was the only son of a late professor of chemistry, but people found a certain lordliness in one who was often so sublimely unconscious of them.

同类推荐
  • 大乘四斋日

    大乘四斋日

    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。
  • 佛说奈女耆婆经

    佛说奈女耆婆经

    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。
  • 二荷花史

    二荷花史

    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。
  • 警世钟

    警世钟

    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。
  • 云峰体宗宁禅师语录

    云峰体宗宁禅师语录

    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
  • 会说话赢职场

    会说话赢职场

    本书通过具体生动的案例,深入浅出地阐述了练就好口才的途径、必须掌握的说话技巧、禁忌和把握分寸。具体包括:武器讲道德的魔力、注意和“上帝”交谈的技巧、巧妙的办公室说话艺术、与下属的交谈技巧、会说话赢在每一天等。
  • 走!去妖界

    走!去妖界

    妖界。一只妖面对着坐在桌子上的男人,两只短短的手绞在一起。“我能去现世吗?”男人摇了摇手里的酒壶,说道:“不行,你太丑了,去了会吓到人的。还是每天下午来陪我喝酒吧。”
  • 众星天陆

    众星天陆

    五颗星球冲撞在一起,本是一场浩劫,却慢慢的交融在一起成为一个新的星球,成为了各大种族口中的众星。数万年后,一位星辰族的15岁按照家族的规定,离开家族出去历练,爱情,生死磨练
  • 豪门惊婚:高冷老公太傲娇

    豪门惊婚:高冷老公太傲娇

    被嫡母所害,落水后再次醒来,却来到了二十一世纪。现在,她所面对的世界,陌生、新奇,也让她心里有些怕怕的。十五岁的她穿越而来,占据了一个二十二岁女人的身体。穿就穿了吧!但为何,一穿越就有了相公呢?唉!娘说过,出嫁从夫,这好像由不得她选择。
  • 剑指出云

    剑指出云

    曾经我以为轮回万世是上天的捉弄,却没想到,这一世,才是命运和我开的最大的玩笑——秦离。
  • tfboys爱你不变

    tfboys爱你不变

    在学校的偶遇,一起玩闹,不知不觉已经爱上对方。。
  • 神医废柴:鬼帝的绝品毒妃

    神医废柴:鬼帝的绝品毒妃

    出生自带光环,却被上古神器狠狠嫌弃了,自此受尽欺凌。天才变废柴?NO,只是打开方式不对!再睁眼,惊才绝绝,焰眸无情。什么,她假冒神女?笑话,她乃上古神器守护者,灵脉重宝,上古神兽,统统是她的!绝品丹药都是浮云?炉鼎一开,皇帝老儿来求,都要排排队!绝世兽宠很稀有?不好意思,凤凰帮她烧火,龙王帮她采水!一手妙医惊绝,一手毒术要人骨。左手翻云,右手覆雨,且看她心情如何?不过谁来告诉她,传闻丑陋无比的鬼王千岁,怎么是个黑到骨血、宠妻无度的妖孽美男?
  • 星道记

    星道记

    新书上传,求收藏,求推荐。公元2020年,有陨星自太空飞来,降落在人间,带来强大的能量,道家隐士观陨星而悟道,人类自此进入武道时代。十五岁的少年李墨凡,为给妹妹治病,为了家庭责任,踏修道一途,开启了逆天强者征战星空,追寻道之本源的路。道起源于宇宙,宇宙起源于混沌,混沌起源虚无,道之一途无穷无尽,无始无终。
  • 放手吧,青春

    放手吧,青春

    男孩因为内心的情感,追随着女孩来到了这所学校暗恋的感觉,也只有暗恋的人才体会得到男孩没有因为暗恋没勇气告白而痛苦反观在男孩心里总会有一个信念因为有你的存在,我的青春才有意义地绽放过
  • 谁说我嫁不出去

    谁说我嫁不出去

    不经历人渣,怎么能出嫁,没有人能随随便便当妈! 剩女从来不羡慕女人拥有过多少个男人,因为一个女人的骄傲是要看她身旁的男人肯为她拒绝多少女人。