登陆注册
18991900000029

第29章

"Thank you heartily!" said Hugh; that would be delightful. It seems too good to be possible. But will not wooden walls be rather a poor protection against such winters as I suppose you have in these parts?""Hootoot, Mr. Sutherlan', ye micht gie me credit for raither mair rumgumption nor that comes till. Timmer was the only thing I not (needed) to spier for; the lave lies to ony body's han'--a few cart-fu's o' sods frae the hill ahint the hoose, an' a han'fu' or twa o' stanes for the chimla oot o' the quarry--there's eneuch there for oor turn ohn blastit mair; an' we'll saw the wood oorsels; an' gin we had ance the wa's up, we can carry on the inside at oor leisur'. That's the way 'at the Maker does wi' oorsels; he gie's us the wa's an' the material, an' a whole lifetime, maybe mair, to furnish the house.""Capital!" exclaimed Hugh. "I'll work like a horse, and we'll be at it the morn.""I'se be at it afore daylicht, an' ane or twa o' the lads'll len' me a han' efter wark-hours; and there's yersel', Mr. Sutherlan', worth ane an' a half o' ordinary workers; an' we'll hae truff aneuch for the wa's in a jiffey. I'll mark a feow saplin's i' the wud here at denner-time, an' we'll hae them for bauks, an' couples, an' things;an' there's plenty dry eneuch for beurds i' the shed, an' bein' but a lean-to, there'll be but half wark, ye ken."They went out directly, in the moonlight, to choose the spot; and soon came to the resolution to build it so, that a certain back door, which added more to the cold in winter than to the convenience in summer, should be the entrance to the new chamber. The chimney was the chief difficulty; but all the materials being in the immediate neighbourhood, and David capable of turning his hands to anything, no obstruction was feared. Indeed, he set about that part first, as was necessary; and had soon built a small chimney, chiefly of stones and lime; while, under his directions, the walls were making progress at the same time, by the labour of Hugh and two or three of the young men from the farm, who were most ready to oblige David with their help, although they were still rather unfriendly to the colliginer, as they called him. But Hugh's frankness soon won them over, and they all formed within a day or two a very comfortable party of labourers. They worked very hard; for if the rain should set in before the roof was on, their labour would be almost lost from the soaking of the walls. They built them of turf, very thick, with a slight slope on the outside towards the roof;before commencing which, they partially cut the windows out of the walls, putting wood across to support the top. I should have explained that the turf used in building was the upper and coarser part of the peat, which was plentiful in the neighbourhood. The thatch-eaves of the cottage itself projected over the joining of the new roof, so as to protect it from the drip; and David soon put a thick thatch of new straw upon the little building. Second-hand windows were procured at the village, and the holes in the walls cut to their size. They next proceeded to the saw-pit on the estate--for almost everything necessary for keeping up the offices was done on the farm itself--where they sawed thin planks of deal, to floor and line the room, and make it more cosie. These David planed upon one side; and when they were nailed against slight posts all round the walls, and the joints filled in with putty, the room began to look most enticingly habitable. The roof had not been thatched two days before the rain set in; but now they could work quite comfortably inside; and as the space was small, and the forenights were long, they had it quite finished before the end of November. David bought an old table in the village, and one or two chairs; mended them up; made a kind of rustic sofa or settle; put a few bookshelves against the wall; had a peat fire lighted on the hearth every day; and at length, one Saturday evening, they had supper in the room, and the place was consecrated henceforth to friendship and learning. From this time, every evening, as soon as lessons, and the meal which immediately followed them, were over, Hugh betook himself to the cottage, on the shelves of which all his books by degrees collected themselves; and there spent the whole long evening, generally till ten o'clock; the first part alone reading or writing; the last in company with his pupils, who, diligent as ever, now of course made more rapid progress than before, inasmuch as the lessons were both longer and more frequent.

The only drawback to their comfort was, that they seemed to have shut Janet out; but she soon remedied this, by contriving to get through with her house work earlier than she had ever done before;and, taking her place on the settle behind them, knitted away diligently at her stocking, which, to inexperienced eyes, seemed always the same, and always in the same state of progress, notwithstanding that she provided the hose of the whole family, blue and grey, ribbed and plain. Her occasional withdrawings, to observe the progress of the supper, were only a cheerful break in the continuity of labour. Little would the passer-by imagine that beneath that roof, which seemed worthy only of the name of a shed, there sat, in a snug little homely room, such a youth as Hugh, such a girl as Margaret, such a grand peasant king as David, and such a true-hearted mother to them all as Janet. There were no pictures and no music; for Margaret kept her songs for solitary places; but the sound of verse was often the living wind which set a-waving the tops of the trees of knowledge, fast growing in the sunlight of Truth. The thatch of that shed-roof was like the grizzled hair of David, beneath which lay the temple not only of holy but of wise and poetic thought. It was like the sylvan abode of the gods, where the architecture and music are all of their own making, in their kind the more beautiful, the more simple and rude; and if more doubtful in their intent, and less precise in their finish, yet therein the fuller of life and its grace, and the more suggestive of deeper harmonies.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 轻舞飞扬

    轻舞飞扬

    “闲着没事,出来打打劫”轩辕千叶说“师父,我可以吃你豆腐吗”轩辕千叶问道,“可以”轩辕千叶来自大山深处,师从魔尊,杀天神,破蛮荒,一路高歌。
  • 圣帝

    圣帝

    三十三重天外,九大天圣坐镇天都,号令诸天执掌三十六界。主界之外,武界之中,一位神秘的少年陪练,顺承天命逆天而为。他的道,是顺?是逆?不由命!不由天!由心!
  • 倩女幽魂之黑山娶亲

    倩女幽魂之黑山娶亲

    小女孩的心底都有这样一个偶像,她美丽得让周围闪闪发光,她强大得让人心生敬仰,你会将你的一些美好的期望偷偷地寄托在她身上,你希望她一切都好,可有时候她却并不愿意像你想的那样。七月半那晚逍遥观医仙紫萍和剑仙纳兰清桑去兰若寺捉妖捡到一个呆萌小徒弟宁采臣,倩女幽魂的故事又将在兰若寺继续上演,五章出傲娇萌耳,黑山老妖是强大古怪的人类少年,众人偶入魔界,主角死了一下……
  • 龙劫战神

    龙劫战神

    吾有玉皇经一部,修吾之法,可成神通之身,即无量身、自在身、不坏身、如意身等无上法身;身成神通自现,可放大神通光,即大慈悲光、大自在光、大如意光,大解脱光等无上神光…能无敌否?神通之身无敌!神通之光无敌!故而双修无敌!石云大叫:“妖月,我有一部双修之法,我们一起修炼…”妖月说:“双修是我吸你的真元在体内运转一周,你吸我的妖元在体内运转一周,你体内的真元塞牙缝都不够,我的妖元却能把你撑死,你也好意思和我双修…”
  • 凡人哲学

    凡人哲学

    本书是一本尝试探讨人、人生、人事、人世等相关内容的小册子。有关人、人生、人事、人世的内涵、本质、意义的讨论,是一个既古老又庞大的话题。说其古老,是指自有人类智慧以来,古今中外,不知有多少大家都在思考、探讨这个话题,著述立说,汗牛充栋。说其庞大,是指这个话题本身内涵的无限延展性、结论的不确定性和认知结果的多样性。尽管很多人都在说,但没有人能说得全面、说得彻底、说得绝对准确。只能见仁见智,各抒己见。
  • 月落竹语

    月落竹语

    山中修心十数年,灵力强大无比,心性亦十分坚韧,却始终不得升仙。师傅放话,让她入世历练。一朝偶遇某狐妖,一切都改变了。狐妖的死缠烂打让她烦躁不堪,而当某无耻狐妖遭遇危险时,她又控制不住地为他担心。【乖徒,为师早就算到你修行足矣,只需经历一场情劫便可飞升】无耻师傅如是说。【呵,竟是那个人的转世啊······】堕落为魔的仙子如是说。不过一场历练,却牵扯了前世爱恨情仇。当前世回忆涌入脑海,她究竟该如何抉择。
  • 记者的感悟

    记者的感悟

    这么多年,我写了许多杂文、短评、述评、时评,也写了许多业务研究文章、采访体会、记下了自己的工作经历,还为各类培训班写过不少演讲稿。与采写消息通讯等本职业务相比,我对这类东西的重视程度并不低、所花精力并不小、所获的感悟并不少。因此,我一直希望将这些凝聚着我的心血、汗水的文字结集出版。现在,奉献给读者的,是继《记者的天空》之后又一部研究业务的书。
  • 遥遥修魔路

    遥遥修魔路

    魔,印度梵语魔罗,中华译为杀者,他能杀害正修道人的法身慧命。强者如林的大陆上,渴望得到力量的少年,误入修魔之道。天下乱因我起便因我终。
  • 狄仁杰评传

    狄仁杰评传

    对于历史人物传记来说,仅仅做到事迹真实还不够,还应该从更多的方面丰富人物的形象,给读者一个鲜活的立体的印象。为此本书还从思想、信仰、品格、心理、君臣关系、同僚关系等方面,对狄仁杰进行研究和评价。此外,人总是生活在社会之中的。由于历代都有以狄仁杰为题材的文学艺术作品出出,为了反映不同时代对他形象的描写,使读者便于对历史上真实的狄仁杰和文学艺术作品中的狄仁杰有一个全面的了解,本书在附录中对这些作品进行了介绍,并加了简略的评论。
  • 染血的碎手

    染血的碎手

    某个断手残疾兽人白手起家的奋斗史,算是异界版本的部落崛起史,现在作者君补满了节操准备稳定一天一更!