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MR. LAMMIE'S FARM.
One of the first warm mornings in the beginning of summer, the boy
woke early, and lay awake, as was his custom, thinking. The sun, in
all the indescribable purity of its morning light, had kindled a
spot of brilliance just about where his grannie's head must be lying
asleep in its sad thoughts, on the opposite side of the partition.
He lay looking at the light. There came a gentle tapping at his
window. A long streamer of honeysuckle, not yet in blossom, but
alive with the life of the summer, was blown by the air of the
morning against his window-pane, as if calling him to get up and
look out. He did get up and look out.
But he started back in such haste that he fell against the side of
his bed. Within a few yards of his window, bending over a bush, was
the loveliest face he had ever seen--the only face, in fact, he had
ever yet felt to be beautiful. For the window looked directly into
the garden of the next house: its honeysuckle tapped at his window,
its sweet-peas grew against his window-sill. It was the face of the
angel of that night; but how different when illuminated by the
morning sun from then, when lighted up by a chamber-candle! The
first thought that came to him was the half-ludicrous, all-fantastic
idea of the shoemaker about his grandfather's violin being a woman.
A vaguest dream-vision of her having escaped from his grandmother's
aumrie (store-closet), and wandering free amidst the wind and among
the flowers, crossed his mind before he had recovered sufficiently
from his surprise to prevent Fancy from cutting any more of those
too ridiculous capers in which she indulged at will in sleep, and as
often besides as she can get away from the spectacles of old Grannie
Judgment.
But the music of her revelation was not that of the violin; and
Robert vaguely felt this, though he searched no further for a
fitting instrument to represent her. If he had heard the organ
indeed!--but he knew no instrument save the violin: the piano he had
only heard through the window. For a few moments her face brooded
over the bush, and her long, finely-modelled fingers travelled about
it as if they were creating a flower upon it--probably they were
assisting the birth or blowing of some beauty--and then she raised
herself with a lingering look, and vanished from the field of the
window.
But ever after this, when the evening grew dark, Robert would steal
out of the house, leaving his book open by his grannie's lamp, that
its patient expansion might seem to say, 'He will come back
presently,' and dart round the corner with quick quiet step, to hear
if Miss St. John was playing. If she was not, he would return to
the Sabbath stillness of the parlour, where his grandmother sat
meditating or reading, and Shargar sat brooding over the freedom of
the old days ere Mrs. Falconer had begun to reclaim him. There he
would seat himself once more at his book--to rise again ere another
hour had gone by, and hearken yet again at her window whether the
stream might not be flowing now. If he found her at her instrument
he would stand listening in earnest delight, until the fear of being
missed drove him in: this secret too might be discovered, and this
enchantress too sent, by the decree of his grandmother, into the
limbo of vanities. Thus strangely did his evening life oscillate
between the two peaceful negations of grannie's parlour and the
vital gladness of the unknown lady's window. And skilfully did he
manage his retreats and returns, curtailing his absences with such
moderation that, for a long time, they awoke no suspicion in the
mind of his grandmother.
I suspect myself that the old lady thought he had gone to his
prayers in the garret. And I believe she thought that he was
praying for his dead father; with which most papistical, and,
therefore, most unchristian observance, she yet dared not interfere,
because she expected Robert to defend himself triumphantly with the
simple assertion that he did not believe his father was dead.
Possibly the mother was not sorry that her poor son should be
prayed for, in case he might be alive after all, though she could no
longer do so herself--not merely dared not, but persuaded herself
that she would not. Robert, however, was convinced enough, and
hopeless enough, by this time, and had even less temptation to break
the twentieth commandment by praying for the dead, than his
grandmother had; for with all his imaginative outgoings after his
father, his love to him was as yet, compared to that father's
mother's, 'as moonlight unto sunlight, and as water unto wine.'
Shargar would glance up at him with a queer look as he came in from
these excursions, drop his head over his task again, look busy and
miserable, and all would glide on as before.
When the first really summer weather came, Mr. Lammie one day paid
Mrs. Falconer a second visit. He had not been able to get over the
remembrance of the desolation in which he had left her. But he
could do nothing for her, he thought, till it was warm weather. He
was accompanied by his daughter, a woman approaching the further
verge of youth, bulky and florid, and as full of tenderness as her
large frame could hold. After much, and, for a long time,
apparently useless persuasion, they at last believed they had
prevailed upon her to pay them a visit for a fortnight. But she had
only retreated within another of her defences.
'I canna leave thae twa laddies alane. They wad be up to a'
mischeef.'
'There's Betty to luik efter them,' suggested Miss Lammie.
'Betty!' returned Mrs. Falconer, with scorn. 'Betty's naething but a
bairn hersel'--muckler and waur faured (worse favoured).'
'But what for shouldna ye fess the lads wi' ye?' suggested Mr.
Lammie.
'I hae no richt to burden you wi' them.'
'Weel, I hae aften wonnert what gart ye burden yersel' wi' that
Shargar, as I understan' they ca' him,' said Mr. Lammie.
'Jist naething but a bit o' greed,' returned the old lady, with the
nearest approach to a smile that had shown itself upon her face
since Mr. Lammie's last visit.
'I dinna understan' that, Mistress Faukner,' said Miss Lammie.
'I'm sae sure o' haein' 't back again, ye ken,--wi' interest,'
returned Mrs. Falconer.
'Hoo's that? His father winna con ye ony thanks for haudin' him in
life.'
'He that giveth to the poor lendeth to the Lord, ye ken, Miss
Lammie.'
'Atweel, gin ye like to lippen to that bank, nae doobt ae way or
anither it'll gang to yer accoont,' said Miss Lammie.
'It wad ill become us, ony gait,' said her father, 'nae to gie him
shelter for your sake, Mrs. Faukner, no to mention ither names, sin'
it's yer wull to mak the puir lad ane o' the family.--They say his
ain mither's run awa' an' left him.'
''Deed she's dune that.'
'Can ye mak onything o' 'im?'
'He's douce eneuch. An' Robert says he does nae that ill at the
schuil.'
'Weel, jist fess him wi' ye. We'll hae some place or ither to put
him intil, gin it suld be only a shak'-doon upo' the flure.'
'Na, na. There's the schuilin'--what's to be dune wi' that?'
'They can gang i' the mornin', and get their denner wi' Betty here;
and syne come hame to their fower-hoors (four o'clock tea) whan the
schule's ower i' the efternune. 'Deed, mem, ye maun jist come for
the sake o' the auld frien'ship atween the faimilies.'
'Weel, gin it maun be sae, it maun be sae,' yielded Mrs. Falconer,
with a sigh.
She had not left her own house for a single night for ten years.
Nor is it likely she would have now given in, for immovableness was
one of the most marked of her characteristics, had she not been so
broken by mental suffering, that she did not care much about
anything, least of all about herself.
Innumerable were the instructions in propriety of behaviour which
she gave the boys in prospect of this visit. The probability being
that they would behave just as well as at home, these instructions
were considerably unnecessary, for Mrs. Falconer was a strict
enforcer of all social rules. Scarcely less unnecessary were the
directions she gave as to the conduct of Betty, who received them
all in erect submission, with her hands under her apron. She ought
to have been a young girl instead of an elderly woman, if there was
any propriety in the way her mistress spoke to her. It proved at
least her own belief in the description she had given of her to Miss
Lammie.
'Noo, Betty, ye maun be dooce. An' dinna stan' at the door i' the
gloamin'. An' dinna stan' claikin' an' jawin' wi' the ither lasses
whan ye gang to the wall for watter. An' whan ye gang intil a chop,
dinna hae them sayin' ahint yer back, as sune's yer oot again,
"She's her ain mistress by way o'," or sic like. An' min' ye hae
worship wi' yersel', whan I'm nae here to hae 't wi' ye. Ye can
come benn to the parlour gin ye like. An' there's my muckle
Testament. And dinna gie the lads a' thing they want. Gie them
plenty to ait, but no ower muckle. Fowk suld aye lea' aff wi' an
eppiteet.'
Mr. Lammie brought his gig at last, and took grannie away to
Bodyfauld. When the boys returned from school at the dinner-hour,
it was to exult in a freedom which Robert had never imagined before.
But even he could not know what a relief it was to Shargar to eat
without the awfully calm eyes of Mrs. Falconer watching, as it
seemed to him, the progress of every mouthful down that capacious
throat of his. The old lady would have been shocked to learn how
the imagination of the ill-mothered lad interpreted her care over
him, but she would not have been surprised to know that the two were
merry in her absence. She knew that, in some of her own moods, it
would be a relief to think that that awful eye of God was not upon
her. But she little thought that even in the lawless proceedings
about to follow, her Robert, who now felt such a relief in her
absence, would be walking straight on, though blindly, towards a
sunrise of faith, in which he would know that for the eye of his God
to turn away from him for one moment would be the horror of the
outer darkness.
Merriment, however, was not in Robert's thoughts, and still less was
mischief. For the latter, whatever his grandmother might think, he
had no capacity. The world was already too serious, and was soon to
be too beautiful for mischief. After that, it would be too sad, and
then, finally, until death, too solemn glad. The moment he heard of
his grandmother's intended visit, one wild hope and desire and
intent had arisen within him.
When Betty came to the parlour door to lay the cloth for their
dinner, she found it locked.
'Open the door!' she cried, but cried in vain. From impatience she
passed to passion; but it was of no avail: there came no more
response than from the shrine of the deaf Baal. For to the boys it
was an opportunity not at any risk to be lost. Dull Betty never
suspected what they were about. They were ranging the place like
two tiger-cats whose whelps had been carried off in their
absence--questing, with nose to earth and tail in air, for the scent
of their enemy. My simile has carried me too far: it was only a
dead old gentleman's violin that a couple of boys was after--but
with what eagerness, and, on the part of Robert, what alternations
of hope and fear! And Shargar was always the reflex of Robert, so
far as Shargar could reflect Robert. Sometimes Robert would stop,
stand still in the middle of the room, cast a mathematical glance of
survey over its cubic contents, and then dart off in another
inwardly suggested direction of search. Shargar, on the other hand,
appeared to rummage blindly without a notion of casting the
illumination of thought upon the field of search. Yet to him fell
the success. When hope was growing dim, after an hour and a half of
vain endeavour, a scream of utter discordance heralded the
resurrection of the lady of harmony. Taught by his experience of
his wild mother's habits to guess at those of douce Mrs. Falconer,
Shargar had found the instrument in her bed at the foot, between the
feathers and the mattress. For one happy moment Shargar was the
benefactor, and Robert the grateful recipient of favour. Nor, I do
believe, was this thread of the still thickening cable that bound
them ever forgotten: broken it could not be.
Robert drew the recovered treasure from its concealment, opened the
case with trembling eagerness, and was stooping, with one hand on
the neck of the violin, and the other on the bow, to lift them from
it, when Shargar stopped him.
His success had given him such dignity, that for once he dared to
act from himself.
'Betty 'll hear ye,' he said.
'What care I for Betty? She daurna tell. I ken hoo to manage her.'
'But wadna 't be better 'at she didna ken?'
'She's sure to fin' oot whan she mak's the bed. She turns 't ower
and ower jist like a muckle tyke (dog) worryin' a rottan (rat).'
'De'il a bit o' her s' be a hair wiser! Ye dinna play tunes upo'
the boxie, man.'
Robert caught at the idea. He lifted the 'bonny leddy' from her
coffin; and while he was absorbed in the contemplation of her risen
beauty, Shargar laid his hands on Boston's Four-fold State, the
torment of his life on the Sunday evenings which it was his turn to
spend with Mrs. Falconer, and threw it as an offering to the powers
of Hades into the case, which he then buried carefully, with the
feather-bed for mould, the blankets for sod, and the counterpane
studiously arranged for stone, over it. He took heed, however, not
to let Robert know of the substitution of Boston for the fiddle,
because he knew Robert could not tell a lie. Therefore, when he
murmured over the volume some of its own words which he had read the
preceding Sunday, it was in a quite inaudible whisper: 'Now is it
good for nothing but to cumber the ground, and furnish fuel for
Tophet.'
Robert must now hide the violin better than his grannie had done,
while at the same time it was a more delicate necessity, seeing it
had lost its shell, and he shrunk from putting her in the power of
the shoemaker again. It cost him much trouble to fix on the place
that was least unsuitable. First he put it into the well of the
clock-case, but instantly bethought him what the awful consequence
would be if one of the weights should fall from the gradual decay of
its cord. He had heard of such a thing happening. Then he would
put it into his own place of dreams and meditations. But what if
Betty should take a fancy to change her bed? or some friend of his
grannie's should come to spend the night? How would the bonny leddy
like it? What a risk she would run! If he put her under the bed,
the mice would get at her strings--nay, perhaps, knaw a hole right
through her beautiful body. On the top of the clock, the brass
eagle with outspread wings might scratch her, and there was not
space to conceal her. At length he concluded--wrapped her in a
piece of paper, and placed her on the top of the chintz tester of
his bed, where there was just room between it and the ceiling: that
would serve till he bore her to some better sanctuary. In the
meantime she was safe, and the boy was the blessedest boy in
creation.
These things done, they were just in the humour to have a lark with
Betty. So they unbolted the door, rang the bell, and when Betty
appeared, red-faced and wrathful, asked her very gravely and
politely whether they were not going to have some dinner before they
went back to school: they had now but twenty minutes left. Betty
was so dumfoundered with their impudence that she could not say a
word. She did make haste with the dinner, though, and revealed her
indignation only in her manner of putting the things on the table.
As the boys left her, Robert contented himself with the single
hint:
'Betty, Bodyfauld 's i' the perris o' Kettledrum. Min' ye that.'
Betty glowered and said nothing.
But the delight of the walk of three miles over hill and dale and
moor and farm to Mr. Lammie's! The boys, if not as wild as
colts--that is, as wild as most boys would have been--were only the
more deeply excited. That first summer walk, with a goal before
them, in all the freshness of the perfecting year, was something
which to remember in after days was to Falconer nothing short of
ecstasy. The westering sun threw long shadows before them as they
trudged away eastward, lightly laden with the books needful for the
morrow's lessons. Once beyond the immediate purlieus of the town
and the various plots of land occupied by its inhabitants, they
crossed a small river, and entered upon a region of little hills,
some covered to the top with trees, chiefly larch, others
cultivated, and some bearing only heather, now nursing in secret its
purple flame for the outburst of the autumn. The road wound
between, now swampy and worn into deep ruts, now sandy and broken
with large stones. Down to its edge would come the dwarfed oak, or
the mountain ash, or the silver birch, single and small, but lovely
and fresh; and now green fields, fenced with walls of earth as green
as themselves, or of stones overgrown with moss, would stretch away
on both sides, sprinkled with busily-feeding cattle. Now they would
pass through a farm-steading, perfumed with the breath of cows, and
the odour of burning peat--so fragrant! though not yet so grateful
to the inner sense as it would be when encountered in after years
and in foreign lands. For the smell of burning and the smell of
earth are the deepest underlying sensuous bonds of the earth's
unity, and the common brotherhood of them that dwell thereon. Now
the scent of the larches would steal from the hill, or the wind
would waft the odour of the white clover, beloved of his
grandmother, to Robert's nostrils, and he would turn aside to pull
her a handful. Then they clomb a high ridge, on the top of which
spread a moorland, dreary and desolate, brightened by nothing save
'the canna's hoary beard' waving in the wind, and making it look
even more desolate from the sympathy they felt with the forsaken
grass. This crossed, they descended between young plantations of
firs and rowan-trees and birches, till they reached a warm house on
the side of the slope, with farm-offices and ricks of corn and hay
all about it, the front overgrown with roses and honeysuckle, and a
white-flowering plant unseen of their eyes hitherto, and therefore
full of mystery. From the open kitchen door came the smell of
something good. But beyond all to Robert was the welcome of Miss
Lammie, whose small fat hand closed upon his like a very
love-pudding, after partaking of which even his grandmother's
stately reception, followed immediately by the words 'Noo be dooce,'
could not chill the warmth in his bosom.
I know but one writer whose pen would have been able worthily to set
forth the delights of the first few days at Bodyfauld--Jean Paul.
Nor would he have disdained to make the gladness of a country
school-boy the theme of that pen. Indeed, often has he done so. If
the writer has any higher purpose than the amusement of other boys,
he will find the life of a country boy richer for his ends than that
of a town boy. For example, he has a deeper sense of the marvel of
Nature, a tenderer feeling of her feminality. I do not mean that
the other cannot develop this sense, but it is generally feeble, and
there is consequently less chance of its surviving. As far as my
experience goes, town girls and country boys love Nature most. I
have known town girls love her as passionately as country boys.
Town boys have too many books and pictures. They see Nature in
mirrors--invaluable privilege after they know herself, not before.
They have greater opportunity of observing human nature; but here
also the books are too many and various. They are cleverer than
country boys, but they are less profound; their observation may be
quicker; their perception is shallower. They know better what to do
on an emergency; they know worse how to order their ways. Of
course, in this, as in a thousand other matters, Nature will burst
out laughing in the face of the would-be philosopher, and bringing
forward her town boy, will say, 'Look here!' For the town boys are
Nature's boys after all, at least so long as doctrines of
self-preservation and ambition have not turned them from children of
the kingdom into dirt-worms. But I must stop, for I am getting up
to the neck in a bog of discrimination. As if I did not know the
nobility of some townspeople, compared with the worldliness of some
country folk. I give it up. We are all good and all bad. God mend
all. Nothing will do for Jew or Gentile, Frenchman or Englishman,
Negro or Circassian, town boy or country boy, but the kingdom of
heaven which is within him, and must come thence to the outside of
him.
To a boy like Robert the changes of every day, from country to town
with the gay morning, from town to country with the sober
evening--for country as Rothieden might be to Edinburgh, much more
was Bodyfauld country to Rothieden--were a source of boundless
delight. Instead of houses, he saw the horizon; instead of streets
or walled gardens, he roamed over fields bathed in sunlight and
wind. Here it was good to get up before the sun, for then he could
see the sun get up. And of all things those evening shadows
lengthening out over the grassy wildernesses--for fields of a very
moderate size appeared such to an imagination ever ready at the
smallest hint to ascend its solemn throne--were a deepening marvel.
Town to country is what a ceiling is to a cælum.
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