登陆注册
20287100000047

第47章 Chapter 46

When Barnaby returned with the bread,the sight of the pious old pilgrim smoking his pipe and making himself so thoroughly at home,appeared to surprise even him;the more so,as that worthy person,instead of putting up the loaf in his wallet as a scarce and precious article,tossed it carelessly on the table,and producing his bottle,bade him sit down and drink.

'For I carry some comfort,you see,'he said.'Taste that.Is it good?'

The water stood in Barnaby's eyes as he coughed from the strength of the draught,and answered in the affirmative.

'Drink some more,'said the blind man;'don't be afraid of it.

You don't taste anything like that,often,eh?'

'Often!'cried Barnaby.'Never!'

'Too poor?'returned the blind man with a sigh.'Ay.That's bad.

Your mother,poor soul,would be happier if she was richer,Barnaby.'

'Why,so I tell her--the very thing I told her just before you came to-night,when all that gold was in the sky,'said Barnaby,drawing his chair nearer to him,and looking eagerly in his face.'Tell me.Is there any way of being rich,that I could find out?'

'Any way!A hundred ways.'

'Ay,ay?'he returned.'Do you say so?What are they?--Nay,mother,it's for your sake I ask;not mine;--for yours,indeed.

What are they?'

The blind man turned his face,on which there was a smile of triumph,to where the widow stood in great distress;and answered,'Why,they are not to be found out by stay-at-homes,my good friend.'

'By stay-at-homes!'cried Barnaby,plucking at his sleeve.'But Iam not one.Now,there you mistake.I am often out before the sun,and travel home when he has gone to rest.I am away in the woods before the day has reached the shady places,and am often there when the bright moon is peeping through the boughs,and looking down upon the other moon that lives in the water.As Iwalk along,I try to find,among the grass and moss,some of that small money for which she works so hard and used to shed so many tears.As I lie asleep in the shade,I dream of it--dream of digging it up in heaps;and spying it out,hidden under bushes;and seeing it sparkle,as the dew-drops do,among the leaves.But Inever find it.Tell me where it is.I'd go there,if the journey were a whole year long,because I know she would be happier when Icame home and brought some with me.Speak again.I'll listen to you if you talk all night.'

The blind man passed his hand lightly over the poor fellow's face,and finding that his elbows were planted on the table,that his chin rested on his two hands,that he leaned eagerly forward,and that his whole manner expressed the utmost interest and anxiety,paused for a minute as though he desired the widow to observe this fully,and then made answer:

'It's in the world,bold Barnaby,the merry world;not in solitary places like those you pass your time in,but in crowds,and where there's noise and rattle.'

'Good!good!'cried Barnaby,rubbing his hands.'Yes!I love that.Grip loves it too.It suits us both.That's brave!'

'--The kind of places,'said the blind man,'that a young fellow likes,and in which a good son may do more for his mother,and himself to boot,in a month,than he could here in all his life--that is,if he had a friend,you know,and some one to advise with.'

'You hear this,mother?'cried Barnaby,turning to her with delight.'Never tell me we shouldn't heed it,if it lay shining at out feet.Why do we heed it so much now?Why do you toil from morning until night?'

'Surely,'said the blind man,'surely.Have you no answer,widow?

Is your mind,'he slowly added,'not made up yet?'

'Let me speak with you,'she answered,'apart.'

'Lay your hand upon my sleeve,'said Stagg,arising from the table;'and lead me where you will.Courage,bold Barnaby.We'll talk more of this:I've a fancy for you.Wait there till I come back.

Now,widow.'

She led him out at the door,and into the little garden,where they stopped.

'You are a fit agent,'she said,in a half breathless manner,'and well represent the man who sent you here.'

'I'll tell him that you said so,'Stagg retorted.'He has a regard for you,and will respect me the more (if possible)for your praise.We must have our rights,widow.'

'Rights!Do you know,'she said,'that a word from me--'

'Why do you stop?'returned the blind man calmly,after a long pause.'Do I know that a word from you would place my friend in the last position of the dance of life?Yes,I do.What of that?

It will never be spoken,widow.'

'You are sure of that?'

'Quite--so sure,that I don't come here to discuss the question.Isay we must have our rights,or we must be bought off.Keep to that point,or let me return to my young friend,for I have an interest in the lad,and desire to put him in the way of making his fortune.Bah!you needn't speak,'he added hastily;'I know what you would say:you have hinted at it once already.Have I no feeling for you,because I am blind?No,I have not.Why do you expect me,being in darkness,to be better than men who have their sight--why should you?Is the hand of Heaven more manifest in my having no eyes,than in your having two?It's the cant of you folks to be horrified if a blind man robs,or lies,or steals;oh yes,it's far worse in him,who can barely live on the few halfpence that are thrown to him in streets,than in you,who can see,and work,and are not dependent on the mercies of the world.

A curse on you!You who have five senses may be wicked at your pleasure;we who have four,and want the most important,are to live and be moral on our affliction.The true charity and justice of rich to poor,all the world over!'

He paused a moment when he had said these words,and caught the sound of money,jingling in her hand.

'Well?'he cried,quickly resuming his former manner.'That should lead to something.The point,widow?'

'First answer me one question,'she replied.'You say he is close at hand.Has he left London?'

'Being close at hand,widow,it would seem he has,'returned the blind man.

'I mean,for good?You know that.'

'Yes,for good.The truth is,widow,that his making a longer stay there might have had disagreeable consequences.He has come away for that reason.'

'Listen,'said the widow,telling some money out,upon a bench beside them.'Count.'

'Six,'said the blind man,listening attentively.'Any more?'

'They are the savings,'she answered,'of five years.Six guineas.'

He put out his hand for one of the coins;felt it carefully,put it between his teeth,rung it on the bench;and nodded to her to proceed.

'These have been scraped together and laid by,lest sickness or death should separate my son and me.They have been purchased at the price of much hunger,hard labour,and want of rest.If you CAN take them--do--on condition that you leave this place upon the instant,and enter no more into that room,where he sits now,expecting your return.'

'Six guineas,'said the blind man,shaking his head,'though of the fullest weight that were ever coined,fall very far short of twenty pounds,widow.'

'For such a sum,as you know,I must write to a distant part of the country.To do that,and receive an answer,I must have time.'

'Two days?'said Stagg.

'More.'

'Four days?'

'A week.Return on this day week,at the same hour,but not to the house.Wait at the corner of the lane.'

'Of course,'said the blind man,with a crafty look,'I shall find you there?'

'Where else can I take refuge?Is it not enough that you have made a beggar of me,and that I have sacrificed my whole store,so hardly earned,to preserve this home?'

'Humph!'said the blind man,after some consideration.'Set me with my face towards the point you speak of,and in the middle of the road.Is this the spot?'

'It is.'

'On this day week at sunset.And think of him within doors.--For the present,good night.'

She made him no answer,nor did he stop for any.He went slowly away,turning his head from time to time,and stopping to listen,as if he were curious to know whether he was watched by any one.

The shadows of night were closing fast around,and he was soon lost in the gloom.It was not,however,until she had traversed the lane from end to end,and made sure that he was gone,that she re-entered the cottage,and hurriedly barred the door and window.

'Mother!'said Barnaby.'What is the matter?Where is the blind man?'

'He is gone.'

'Gone!'he cried,starting up.'I must have more talk with him.

Which way did he take?'

'I don't know,'she answered,folding her arms about him.'You must not go out to-night.There are ghosts and dreams abroad.'

'Ay?'said Barnaby,in a frightened whisper.

'It is not safe to stir.We must leave this place to-morrow.'

'This place!This cottage--and the little garden,mother!'

'Yes!To-morrow morning at sunrise.We must travel to London;lose ourselves in that wide place--there would be some trace of us in any other town--then travel on again,and find some new abode.'

Little persuasion was required to reconcile Barnaby to anything that promised change.In another minute,he was wild with delight;in another,full of grief at the prospect of parting with his friends the dogs;in another,wild again;then he was fearful of what she had said to prevent his wandering abroad that night,and full of terrors and strange questions.His light-heartedness in the end surmounted all his other feelings,and lying down in his clothes to the end that he might be ready on the morrow,he soon fell fast asleep before the poor turf fire.

His mother did not close her eyes,but sat beside him,watching.

Every breath of wind sounded in her ears like that dreaded footstep at the door,or like that hand upon the latch,and made the calm summer night,a night of horror.At length the welcome day appeared.When she had made the little preparations which were needful for their journey,and had prayed upon her knees with many tears,she roused Barnaby,who jumped up gaily at her summons.

His clothes were few enough,and to carry Grip was a labour of love.As the sun shed his earliest beams upon the earth,they closed the door of their deserted home,and turned away.The sky was blue and bright.The air was fresh and filled with a thousand perfumes.Barnaby looked upward,and laughed with all his heart.

But it was a day he usually devoted to a long ramble,and one of the dogs--the ugliest of them all--came bounding up,and jumping round him in the fulness of his joy.He had to bid him go back in a surly tone,and his heart smote him while he did so.The dog retreated;turned with a half-incredulous,half-imploring look;came a little back;and stopped.

It was the last appeal of an old companion and a faithful friend--cast off.Barnaby could bear no more,and as he shook his head and waved his playmate home,he burst into tears.

'Oh mother,mother,how mournful he will be when he scratches at the door,and finds it always shut!'

There was such a sense of home in the thought,that though her own eyes overflowed she would not have obliterated the recollection of it,either from her own mind or from his,for the wealth of the whole wide world.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 我在人间:写封信给你

    我在人间:写封信给你

    Leslie,你永远活在我心中。我是荣迷万千大军中的一员,我还怀揣着希望在人间徘徊,心中甚是思念你,不知你可否能收到我的来信?我们都深深地深深地爱着你,最最亲爱的国荣哥哥,不管你在哪里,我们都愿你幸福。
  • 绝世拳霸

    绝世拳霸

    郑重声明:喜欢看小白的不要进来,鄙人不欢迎!【起点第五编辑组】作品泰森的格斗能力有多少?天拉,竟然只有可怜的11李小龙当然最厉害,他的格斗能力值高达87,不过,我们的主人公却有998究竟是现代的高科技格斗术厉害,还是古代的绝世武功强悍?一个好的主人公,应该象一个孩子一样,慢慢长大,所以,慢热想必大家也能接受的吧本故事属于成长型,后面将有更多新奇的元素等待着大家挖掘小刘出品,精品品质以记者的职业道德保证完本绝世拳霸”读者群:50341262谢谢大家的支持,请提出批评意见。天气冷了,记得多加衣服,熬夜的时候多喝点开水
  • 未命名小说蓝版

    未命名小说蓝版

    一口气看完《剑与魔法日常》(未命名小说蓝版港版名字),呆了半晌,不能说是因为受到了震撼,应该说一贯的思维运作方式被小说的新奇独特打乱了,须要时间来适应。是的,在此之前,没看过情节设想如此新奇,却又和现实的青少年感情结合得如此水乳交溶的幻想故事。作者所构想的‘一个大光球降临,世界秩序完全改变,只剩下他一个人’的情景,造成了书中主角进入了复杂的思想迷宫,他运用青少年的智慧来应付环境的异动,寻求出路和解答。通过流利轻松的笔法展现乐观,使小说读来令人兴致盎然。但作者不是没有感叹,请看以下的句子:‘众人皆醉我独醒可不是什麽值得高兴的事,除了照顾那些醉倒的人,我还要配合他们说醉话,问题是,我根本没有醉,不可能知道怎样说醉话。’字里行间的无奈,适当地展现了小说的深度,岂止是好看而已。倪匡二零一二年六月三十日大光球来了吗?哈哈
  • 李公案奇闻

    李公案奇闻

    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。
  • 许家印内部讲话

    许家印内部讲话

    本书深刻还原和剖析了恒大集团发展过程中关键性的时间点,以及其精神领袖许家印所扮演的角色,他如何创业,指引企业的成长,如何以一人引领创业团队,战胜种种困难,成功应对企业所面临的一次次危机。在创业过程中难免会遇到种种困难,如资金不足,人才亟缺,没有市场,等等,纵观商海风云,许家印也有自己的核心价值理念。他是如何带领恒大度过一个又一个“寒冬”,使其成为中国规模最大,销售面积最广的地产企业呢?他又是如何在前途黯淡遭人唾骂的中国足球大背景下扛起中国足球大旗的呢?相信你从这本书可以找到答案。
  • 聪明女人零伤害秘笈

    聪明女人零伤害秘笈

    着重介绍女性防范伤害的知识,引导女性加强自身防范意识,避免外界的侵害,并举例分析了诈骗、抢劫等案例和解决办法,指导女性学会自我保护,《聪明女人零伤害秘笈》是女性朋友的枕边书。
  • 赤帝传

    赤帝传

    三族圣战延续万年,终于迎来了最辉煌的时代旷古烁今,人杰辈出,共同争霸在这一方世界而他,边南少主唐离,自妖族战场上崛起凭借灵脉灭世天火,入飘雨,战枯龙,斩群妖一步一步走上世界的巅峰,却依旧被锁在枷锁之下...
  • 重生之不做傻白甜

    重生之不做傻白甜

    这是一个自暴自弃,自哀自怜的女孩重新振作起来,努力变成富一代的故事。一场意外林落落回到了十二岁那年,然而重来一次所以的一切却颠覆了她以前的认知。
  • 高高的白杨

    高高的白杨

    本书是小小说,作者用自己平实的笔触为读者勾描了一幅社会百态图。内容涉及校园、职场、情感等多个领域,共九十余篇,读后启人心智,引人深思,特别是青少年朋友可以开阔视野,认识社会,给自己的写作以及日常生活带来帮助,是本值得一读的课外读物。
  • 青春的爱恋

    青春的爱恋

    一个从未相识的女子,竟然会爱上主角,还莫名其妙的谈上了恋爱......