Missing by Mrs. Humphry Ward (sight word readers txt) π
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- Author: Mrs. Humphry Ward
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Father Time,' out for the mowing of men. The other was the little son of a neighbouring parson, an urchin of eight, who had succumbed to an innocent passion for the pretty lady at the farm.
One radiant October afternoon, Nelly carried out a chair and some sketching things into the garden. But the scheme Farrell had suggested to her, of making a profession of her drawing, had not come to much. Whether it was the dying down of hope, and therewith of physical energy, or whether she had been brought up sharp against the limits of her small and graceful talent, and comparing herself with Farrell, thought it no use to go on--in any case, she had lately given it up, except as an amusement. But there are days when the humblest artist feels the creative stir; and on this particular afternoon there were colours and lights abroad on the fells, now dyed red with withering fern, and overtopped by sunny cloud, that could not be resisted. She put away the splints she was covering, and spread out her easel.
And presently, through every bruised and tired sense, as she worked and worked, the 'Eternal Fountain of that Heavenly Beauty' distilled His constant balm. She worked on, soothed and happy.
In a few minutes there was a sound at the gate. A child looked in--black tumbled hair, dark eyes, a plain but most engaging countenance.
'I'm tomin in,' he announced, and without any more ado, came in. Nelly held out a hand and kissed him.
'You must be very good.'
'I is good,' said the child, radiantly.
Nelly spread a rug for him to lie on, and provided him with a piece of paper, some coloured chalks and a piece of mill board. He turned over on his front and plunged into drawing--
Silence--till Nelly asked--
'What are you drawing, Tommy?'
'Haggans and Hoons,' said a dreamy voice, the voice of one absorbed.
'I forget'--said Nelly gravely--'which are the good ones?'
'The Hoons are good. The Haggans are awfully wicked!' said the child, slashing away at his drawing with bold vindictive strokes.
'Are you drawing a Haggan, Tommy?'
'Yes.'
He held up a monster, half griffin, half crocodile, for her to see, and she heartily admired it.
'Where do the Haggans live, Tommy?'
'In Jupe,' said the child, again drawing busily.
'You mean Jupiter?'
'I _don't_!' said Tommy reproachfully, 'I said Jupe, and I mean Jupe. Perhaps'--he conceded, courteously--'I may have got the idea from that other place. But it's quite different. You do believe it's quite different--don't you?'
'Certainly,' said Nelly.
'I'm glad of that--because--well, because I can't be friends with people that say it isn't different. You do see that, don't you?'
Nelly assured him she perfectly understood, and then Tommy rolled over on his back, and staring at the sky, began to talk in mysterious tones of 'Jupe,' and the beings that lived in it, Haggans, and Hoons, lions and bears, and white mice. His voice grew dreamier and dreamier. Nelly thought he was asleep, and she suddenly found herself looking at the little figure on the grass with a passionate hunger. If such a living creature belonged to her--to call her its very own--to cling to her with its dear chubby hands!
She bent forward, her eyes wet, above the unconscious Tommy. But a step on the road startled her, and raising her head she saw 'Old Father Time,' with scythe on shoulder, leaning on the little gate which led from the strip of garden to the road, and looking at her with the expression which implied a sarcastic view of things in general, and especially of 'gentlefolk.' But he was favourably inclined to Mrs. Sarratt, and when Nelly invited him in, he obeyed her, and grounding his scythe, as though it had been a gun, he stood leaning upon it, indulgently listening while she congratulated him on a strange incident which, as she knew from Hester, had lately occurred to him.
A fortnight before, the old man had received a letter from the captain of his son's company in France sympathetically announcing to him the death in hospital of his eldest son, from severe wounds received in a raid, and assuring him he might feel complete confidence 'that everything that could be done for your poor boy has been done.'
The news had brought woe to the cottage where the old man and his wife lived alone, since the fledging of their sturdy brood, under a spur of Loughrigg. The wife, being now a feeble body, had taken to her bed under the shock of grief; the old man had gone to his work as usual, 'nobbut a bit queerer in his wits,' according to the farmer who employed him. Then after three days came a hurried letter of apology from the captain, and a letter from the chaplain, to say there had been a most deplorable mistake, and 'your son, I am glad to say, was only slightly wounded, and is doing well!'
Under so much contradictory emotion, old Backhouse's balance had wavered a good deal. He received Nelly's remarks with a furtive smile, as though he were only waiting for her to have done, and when they ceased, he drew a letter slowly from his pocket.
'D'ye see that, Mum?'
Nelly nodded.
'I'se juist gotten it from t' Post Office. They woant gie ye noothin' till it's forced oot on 'em. But I goa regular, an to-day owd Jacob--'at's him as keps t' Post Office--handed it ower. It's from Donald, sure enoof.'
He held it up triumphantly. Nelly's heart leapt--and sank. How often in the first months of her grief had she seen--in visions--that blessed symbolic letter held up by some ministering hand!--only to fall from the ecstasy of the dream into blacker depths of pain.
'Oh, Mr. Backhouse, I'm so glad!' was all she could find to say. But her sweet trembling face spoke for her. After a pause, she added--'Does he write with his own hand?'
'You mun see for yorsel'.' He held it out to her. She looked at it mystified.
'But it's not opened!'
'I hadna juist me spectacles,' said Father Time, cautiously. 'Mebbee yo'll read it to me.'
'But it's to his mother!' cried Nelly. 'I can't open your wife's letter!'
'You needn't trooble aboot that. You read it, Mum. There'll be noothin' in it.'
He made her read it. There was nothing in it. It was just a nice letter from a good boy, saying that he had been knocked over in 'a bit of a scrap,' but was nearly all right, and hoped his father and mother were well, 'as it leaves me at present.' But when it was done, Father Time took off his hat, bent his grey head, and solemnly thanked his God, in broad Westmorland. Nelly's eyes swam, as she too bowed the head, thinking of another who would never come back; and Tommy, thumb in mouth, leant against her, listening attentively.
At the end of the thanksgiving however, Backhouse raised his head briskly.
'Not that I iver believed that foolish yoong mon as wrote me that Dick wor dead,' he said, contemptuously. 'Bit it's as weel to git things clear.'
Nelly heartily agreed, adding--
'I may be going to London next week, Mr. Backhouse. You say your son will be in the London Hospital. Shall I go and see him?'
Backhouse looked at her cautiously.
'I doan't know, Mum. His moother will be goin', likely.'
'Oh, I don't want to intrude, Mr. Backhouse. But if she doesn't go?'
'Well, Mum; I will say you've a pleasant coontenance, though yo're not juist sich a thrivin' body as a'd like to see yer. But theer's mony people as du more harm nor good by goin' to sit wi' sick foak.'
Nelly meekly admitted it; and then she suggested that she might be the bearer of anything Mrs. Backhouse would like to send her son--clothes, for instance? The old man thawed rapidly, and the three, Nelly, Tommy, and Father Time, were soon sincerely enjoying each other's society, when a woman in a grey tweed costume, and black sailor hat, arrived at the top of a little hill in the road outside the garden, from which the farm and its surroundings could be seen.
At the sight of the group in front of the farm, she came to an abrupt pause, and hidden from them by a projecting corner of wall she surveyed the scene--Nelly, with Tommy on her knee, and the old labourer who had just shouldered his scythe again, and was about to go on his way.
It was Bridget Cookson, who had been to Kendal for the day, and had walked over from Grasmere, where the char-a-banc, alias the 'Yellow Peril,' had deposited her. She had passed the Post Office on her way, and had brought thence a letter which she held in her hand. Her face was pale and excited. She stood thinking; her eyes on Nelly, her lips moving as though she were rehearsing some speech or argument.
Then when she had watched old Backkhouse make his farewell, and turn towards the gate, she hastily opened a black silk bag hanging from her wrist, and thrust the letter into it.
After which she walked on, meeting the old man in the lane, and run into by Tommy, who, head foremost, was rushing home to shew his glorious Haggan to his 'mummy.'
Nelly's face at sight of her sister stiffened insensibly.
'Aren't you very tired, Bridget? Have you walked all the way? Yes, you _do_ look tired! Have you had tea?'
'Yes, at Windermere.'
Bridget cleared the chair on which Nelly had placed her paint-box, and sat down. She was silent a little and then said abruptly--
'It's a horrid bore, I shall have to go to London again.'
'Again?' Nelly's look of surprise was natural. Bridget had returned from another long stay in the Bloomsbury boarding-house early in October, and it was now only the middle of the month. But Bridget's doings were always a great mystery to Nelly. She was translating something from the Spanish--that was all Nelly knew--and also, that when an offer had been made to her through a friend, of some translating work for the Foreign Office, she had angrily refused it. She would not, she said, be a slave to any public office.
'Won't it be awfully expensive?' said Nelly after a pause, as Bridget did not answer. The younger sister was putting her painting things away, and making ready to go in. For though the day had been wonderfully warm for October, the sun had just set over Bowfell, and the air had grown suddenly chilly.
'Well, I can't help it,' said Bridget, rather roughly. 'I shall have to go.'
Something in her voice made Nelly look at her.
'I say you _are_ tired! Come in and lie down a little. That walk from Grasmere's too much for you!'
Bridget submitted with most unusual docility.
The sisters entered the house together.
'I'll go upstairs for a little,' said Bridget. 'I shall be all right by supper.' Then, as she slowly mounted the stairs, a rather gaunt and dragged figure in her dress of grey alpaca, she turned to say--
'I met Sir William on the road just now. He passed me in the car, and waved his hand. He called out something--I couldn't hear it.'
'Perhaps to say he would come to supper,' said Nelly, her face brightening. 'I'll go and see what there is.'
Bridget went upstairs.
One radiant October afternoon, Nelly carried out a chair and some sketching things into the garden. But the scheme Farrell had suggested to her, of making a profession of her drawing, had not come to much. Whether it was the dying down of hope, and therewith of physical energy, or whether she had been brought up sharp against the limits of her small and graceful talent, and comparing herself with Farrell, thought it no use to go on--in any case, she had lately given it up, except as an amusement. But there are days when the humblest artist feels the creative stir; and on this particular afternoon there were colours and lights abroad on the fells, now dyed red with withering fern, and overtopped by sunny cloud, that could not be resisted. She put away the splints she was covering, and spread out her easel.
And presently, through every bruised and tired sense, as she worked and worked, the 'Eternal Fountain of that Heavenly Beauty' distilled His constant balm. She worked on, soothed and happy.
In a few minutes there was a sound at the gate. A child looked in--black tumbled hair, dark eyes, a plain but most engaging countenance.
'I'm tomin in,' he announced, and without any more ado, came in. Nelly held out a hand and kissed him.
'You must be very good.'
'I is good,' said the child, radiantly.
Nelly spread a rug for him to lie on, and provided him with a piece of paper, some coloured chalks and a piece of mill board. He turned over on his front and plunged into drawing--
Silence--till Nelly asked--
'What are you drawing, Tommy?'
'Haggans and Hoons,' said a dreamy voice, the voice of one absorbed.
'I forget'--said Nelly gravely--'which are the good ones?'
'The Hoons are good. The Haggans are awfully wicked!' said the child, slashing away at his drawing with bold vindictive strokes.
'Are you drawing a Haggan, Tommy?'
'Yes.'
He held up a monster, half griffin, half crocodile, for her to see, and she heartily admired it.
'Where do the Haggans live, Tommy?'
'In Jupe,' said the child, again drawing busily.
'You mean Jupiter?'
'I _don't_!' said Tommy reproachfully, 'I said Jupe, and I mean Jupe. Perhaps'--he conceded, courteously--'I may have got the idea from that other place. But it's quite different. You do believe it's quite different--don't you?'
'Certainly,' said Nelly.
'I'm glad of that--because--well, because I can't be friends with people that say it isn't different. You do see that, don't you?'
Nelly assured him she perfectly understood, and then Tommy rolled over on his back, and staring at the sky, began to talk in mysterious tones of 'Jupe,' and the beings that lived in it, Haggans, and Hoons, lions and bears, and white mice. His voice grew dreamier and dreamier. Nelly thought he was asleep, and she suddenly found herself looking at the little figure on the grass with a passionate hunger. If such a living creature belonged to her--to call her its very own--to cling to her with its dear chubby hands!
She bent forward, her eyes wet, above the unconscious Tommy. But a step on the road startled her, and raising her head she saw 'Old Father Time,' with scythe on shoulder, leaning on the little gate which led from the strip of garden to the road, and looking at her with the expression which implied a sarcastic view of things in general, and especially of 'gentlefolk.' But he was favourably inclined to Mrs. Sarratt, and when Nelly invited him in, he obeyed her, and grounding his scythe, as though it had been a gun, he stood leaning upon it, indulgently listening while she congratulated him on a strange incident which, as she knew from Hester, had lately occurred to him.
A fortnight before, the old man had received a letter from the captain of his son's company in France sympathetically announcing to him the death in hospital of his eldest son, from severe wounds received in a raid, and assuring him he might feel complete confidence 'that everything that could be done for your poor boy has been done.'
The news had brought woe to the cottage where the old man and his wife lived alone, since the fledging of their sturdy brood, under a spur of Loughrigg. The wife, being now a feeble body, had taken to her bed under the shock of grief; the old man had gone to his work as usual, 'nobbut a bit queerer in his wits,' according to the farmer who employed him. Then after three days came a hurried letter of apology from the captain, and a letter from the chaplain, to say there had been a most deplorable mistake, and 'your son, I am glad to say, was only slightly wounded, and is doing well!'
Under so much contradictory emotion, old Backhouse's balance had wavered a good deal. He received Nelly's remarks with a furtive smile, as though he were only waiting for her to have done, and when they ceased, he drew a letter slowly from his pocket.
'D'ye see that, Mum?'
Nelly nodded.
'I'se juist gotten it from t' Post Office. They woant gie ye noothin' till it's forced oot on 'em. But I goa regular, an to-day owd Jacob--'at's him as keps t' Post Office--handed it ower. It's from Donald, sure enoof.'
He held it up triumphantly. Nelly's heart leapt--and sank. How often in the first months of her grief had she seen--in visions--that blessed symbolic letter held up by some ministering hand!--only to fall from the ecstasy of the dream into blacker depths of pain.
'Oh, Mr. Backhouse, I'm so glad!' was all she could find to say. But her sweet trembling face spoke for her. After a pause, she added--'Does he write with his own hand?'
'You mun see for yorsel'.' He held it out to her. She looked at it mystified.
'But it's not opened!'
'I hadna juist me spectacles,' said Father Time, cautiously. 'Mebbee yo'll read it to me.'
'But it's to his mother!' cried Nelly. 'I can't open your wife's letter!'
'You needn't trooble aboot that. You read it, Mum. There'll be noothin' in it.'
He made her read it. There was nothing in it. It was just a nice letter from a good boy, saying that he had been knocked over in 'a bit of a scrap,' but was nearly all right, and hoped his father and mother were well, 'as it leaves me at present.' But when it was done, Father Time took off his hat, bent his grey head, and solemnly thanked his God, in broad Westmorland. Nelly's eyes swam, as she too bowed the head, thinking of another who would never come back; and Tommy, thumb in mouth, leant against her, listening attentively.
At the end of the thanksgiving however, Backhouse raised his head briskly.
'Not that I iver believed that foolish yoong mon as wrote me that Dick wor dead,' he said, contemptuously. 'Bit it's as weel to git things clear.'
Nelly heartily agreed, adding--
'I may be going to London next week, Mr. Backhouse. You say your son will be in the London Hospital. Shall I go and see him?'
Backhouse looked at her cautiously.
'I doan't know, Mum. His moother will be goin', likely.'
'Oh, I don't want to intrude, Mr. Backhouse. But if she doesn't go?'
'Well, Mum; I will say you've a pleasant coontenance, though yo're not juist sich a thrivin' body as a'd like to see yer. But theer's mony people as du more harm nor good by goin' to sit wi' sick foak.'
Nelly meekly admitted it; and then she suggested that she might be the bearer of anything Mrs. Backhouse would like to send her son--clothes, for instance? The old man thawed rapidly, and the three, Nelly, Tommy, and Father Time, were soon sincerely enjoying each other's society, when a woman in a grey tweed costume, and black sailor hat, arrived at the top of a little hill in the road outside the garden, from which the farm and its surroundings could be seen.
At the sight of the group in front of the farm, she came to an abrupt pause, and hidden from them by a projecting corner of wall she surveyed the scene--Nelly, with Tommy on her knee, and the old labourer who had just shouldered his scythe again, and was about to go on his way.
It was Bridget Cookson, who had been to Kendal for the day, and had walked over from Grasmere, where the char-a-banc, alias the 'Yellow Peril,' had deposited her. She had passed the Post Office on her way, and had brought thence a letter which she held in her hand. Her face was pale and excited. She stood thinking; her eyes on Nelly, her lips moving as though she were rehearsing some speech or argument.
Then when she had watched old Backkhouse make his farewell, and turn towards the gate, she hastily opened a black silk bag hanging from her wrist, and thrust the letter into it.
After which she walked on, meeting the old man in the lane, and run into by Tommy, who, head foremost, was rushing home to shew his glorious Haggan to his 'mummy.'
Nelly's face at sight of her sister stiffened insensibly.
'Aren't you very tired, Bridget? Have you walked all the way? Yes, you _do_ look tired! Have you had tea?'
'Yes, at Windermere.'
Bridget cleared the chair on which Nelly had placed her paint-box, and sat down. She was silent a little and then said abruptly--
'It's a horrid bore, I shall have to go to London again.'
'Again?' Nelly's look of surprise was natural. Bridget had returned from another long stay in the Bloomsbury boarding-house early in October, and it was now only the middle of the month. But Bridget's doings were always a great mystery to Nelly. She was translating something from the Spanish--that was all Nelly knew--and also, that when an offer had been made to her through a friend, of some translating work for the Foreign Office, she had angrily refused it. She would not, she said, be a slave to any public office.
'Won't it be awfully expensive?' said Nelly after a pause, as Bridget did not answer. The younger sister was putting her painting things away, and making ready to go in. For though the day had been wonderfully warm for October, the sun had just set over Bowfell, and the air had grown suddenly chilly.
'Well, I can't help it,' said Bridget, rather roughly. 'I shall have to go.'
Something in her voice made Nelly look at her.
'I say you _are_ tired! Come in and lie down a little. That walk from Grasmere's too much for you!'
Bridget submitted with most unusual docility.
The sisters entered the house together.
'I'll go upstairs for a little,' said Bridget. 'I shall be all right by supper.' Then, as she slowly mounted the stairs, a rather gaunt and dragged figure in her dress of grey alpaca, she turned to say--
'I met Sir William on the road just now. He passed me in the car, and waved his hand. He called out something--I couldn't hear it.'
'Perhaps to say he would come to supper,' said Nelly, her face brightening. 'I'll go and see what there is.'
Bridget went upstairs.
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