登陆注册
15704700000008

第8章 SCHOOLROOM AND MEETING-HOUSE(1)

THERE were only two or three houses between ours and the main street,and then our lane came out directly opposite the finest house in town,a three-story edifice of brick,painted white,the "Colonel's"residence.There was a spacious garden behind it,from which we caught glimpses and perfumes of unknown flowers.

Over its high walls hung boughs of splendid great yellow sweet apples,which,when they fell on the outside,we children considered as our perquisites.When I first read about the apples of the Hesperides,my idea of them was that they were like the Colonel's "pumpkin-sweetings."Beyond the garden were wide green fields which reached eastward down to the beach.It was one of those large old estates which used to give to the very heart of our New England coast towns a delightful breeziness and roominess.

A coach-and-pair was one of the appurtenances of this estate,with a coachman on the box;and when he took the family out for an airing we small children thought it was a sort of Cinderella spectacle,prepared expressly for us.

It was not,however,quite so interesting as the Boston stage -coach,that rolled regularly every day past the head of our lane into and out of its headquarters,a big,unpainted stable close at hand.This stage-coach,in our minds,meant the city,--twenty miles off;an immeasurable distance to us then.Even our elders did not go there very often.

In those early days,towns used to give each other nicknames,like schoolboys.Ours was called "Bean-town"not because it was especially devoted to the cultivation of this leguminous edible,but probably because it adhered a long time to the Puritanic custom of saving Sunday-work by baking beans on Saturday evening,leaving them in the oven over night.After a while,as families left off heating their ovens,the bean-pots were taken by the village baker on Saturday afternoon,who returned them to each house early on Sunday morning with the pan of brown bread that went with them.The jingling of the baker's bells made the matter a public one.

The towns through which our stage-coach passed sometimes called it the "bean-pot."The Jehn who drove it was something of a wag.

Once,coming through Charlestown,while waiting in the street for a resident passenger,he was hailed by another resident who thought him obstructing the passage,with the shout,--"Halloo there!Get your old bean-pot out of the way!""I will,when I have got my pork in,"was the ready reply.What the sobriquet of Charlestown was,need not be explained.

We had a good opportunity to watch both coaches,as my father's shop was just at the head of the lane,and we went to school up-stairs in the same building.After he left off going to sea,--before my birth,--my father took a store for the sale of what used to be called "West India goods,"and various other domestic commodities.

The school was kept by a neighbor whom everybody called "Aunt Hannah."It took in all the little ones about us,no matter how young they were,provided they could walk and talk,and were considered capable of learning their letters.

A ladder-like flight of stairs on the outside of the house led up to the schoolroom,and another flight,also outside,took us down into a bit of a garden,where grew tansy and spearmint and southernwood and wormwood,and,among other old-fashioned flowers,an abundance of many-tinted four o'clocks,whose regular afternoon-opening just at the close of school,was a daily wonder to us babies.From the schoolroom window we could watch the slow hands of the town clock and get a peep at what was going on in the street,although there was seldom anybody in sight except the Colonel's gardener or coachman,going into or out of the driveway directly opposite.It was a very still street;the front windows of the houses were generally closed,and a few military-looking Lombardy poplars stood like sentinels on guard before them.

Another shop--a very small one--joined my father's,where three shoemakers,all of the same name--the name our lane went by--sat at their benches and plied their "waxed ends."One of them,an elderly man,tall and erect,used to come out regularly every day,and stand for a long time at the corner,motionless as a post,with his nose and chin pointing skyward,usually to the northeast.I watched his face with wonder,for it was said that "Uncle John"was "weatherwise,"and knew all the secrets of the heavens.

Aunt Hannah's schoolroom and "our shop"are a blended memory to me.As I was only a baby when I began to go to school,I was often sent down-stairs for a half hour's recreation not permitted to the older ones.I think I looked upon both school and shop entirely as places of entertainment for little children.

同类推荐
  • 伤寒证治准绳

    伤寒证治准绳

    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。
  • 三国遗事

    三国遗事

    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。
  • 黄箓斋十天尊仪

    黄箓斋十天尊仪

    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。
  • 拳意述真

    拳意述真

    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。
  • 医学真传

    医学真传

    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
  • 夜幕下的硝烟

    夜幕下的硝烟

    他是生在法国长在德国的中国劳工之子,亲历水晶之夜后,在法西斯盛行的世界上,他会如何选择属于自己的人生?
  • 半糖咖啡

    半糖咖啡

    本书讲述耗子与老婆婷猪儿的曲折爱情故事,纯粹是为了纪念我们几番折磨才终成正果的爱情。耗子的故事很精彩,在写本书很多章节时耗子的心情都跟随着起起落落,甚至一度落泪。本书部分剧情都是在身边真实发生过,因此绝非YY小说。书中部分人名可能会出现在现实生活中,如有雷同纯属巧合!请勿对号入座!
  • 我本狂人

    我本狂人

    我本狂人,我的狂来源于我对自己的自信,我无条件的相信我自己,从来不怀疑自己,无论遇到什么我都狂热的相信我自己,我相信我能做到,我就一定要做到,即使后果会万劫不复,我也不在乎,我对惹怒我的人很狠,对我自己更狠,因为我知道,只有我足够强大,强大到天下苍生都必须仰望我的时候,我才能保护我想要的,在你眼里或许疯子这个名字更适合我。
  • 贵族学院:复仇公主的爱恋

    贵族学院:复仇公主的爱恋

    十一年前,她们也是天真可爱的小女孩,因为父亲杀害了母亲而变的冷血,十一年后,她们回来了,回来复仇了,但在复仇路上又遇见了自己的真命天子,她们到底是选择复仇还是爱情呢?
  • 冥婚哑嫁,我的老公不是人

    冥婚哑嫁,我的老公不是人

    南筱做了一个无比真实的梦后,醒来发现现实反而开始变得无比玄幻起来。脑海里多了一些不属于她的记忆,从小一起长大的竹马也变得怪怪的,被家里人逼着找了风水先生。风水先生说她被鬼缠上了,但是桃木剑,剪刀,五帝钱那些驱鬼神器对那个神秘的鬼却没有一点作用。南筱深深的慌了。但是就在这个时候,她的老公站出来了,看着她宠溺的说道:“老婆,你确定要驱我吗?”南筱:“……”她的老公什么时候变成鬼的?
  • 甲乙日历

    甲乙日历

    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。
  • 迎晨诡事

    迎晨诡事

    凤歌一直觉得老妈憧憬的师范类学校不好,因为女生多,这女生一多,容易撞衫、撞鞋、撞包、撞发型,甚至于——撞男朋友!于是,在躲过老妈24小时无线雷达扫射后,她偷偷把第一志愿的女校,改成了几年内突然挤入全国名校版的“迎晨学院”。据说,这学校男生多,她想,这样应该不会撞男朋友了吧?!哪知,这所学校和她八字不合,从进校开始,就不断的发生灵异事件,一桩桩似乎都是冲着她来的......
  • 原来她是童养媳

    原来她是童养媳

    李方浩,第一次听到这个名字的时候,她来不及回味,就硬生生被他扯着辫子,还改了她的姓。那时候她只知道名字只是一个代称,并没有很重要。第二次看见这个人的时候,已经是国小,他捏了捏她的脸蛋,一脸的嫌弃。那时候她并不知道他的嫌弃是有原因的。直到第三次看见这个人这个名,才知道接下来的日子并不好过。她注定是他的玩偶,带了一个童养媳的称号随他玩耍。
  • 百涩恋人

    百涩恋人

    这世界没有长生不老,却有着永远的生长。本故事讲述一个行将就木之人,遇到了一个秘密实验的组织,变成了一个更加“奇怪”的人。他是一个好的恋人,也是一个充满正义的人。这一切的改变,是痛苦的相告。
  • 神奇宝贝之逆天宝贝

    神奇宝贝之逆天宝贝

    不一样的小智,不一样的神奇宝贝……本书纯属自己虚构与原著不同,但不脱离原著………'