The Cloister and the Hearth by Charles Reade (most interesting books to read .TXT) ๐
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- Author: Charles Reade
Read book online ยซThe Cloister and the Hearth by Charles Reade (most interesting books to read .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Charles Reade
โNay, not to take them unbidden: but at night we aye question travellers, are they for linen washed. So I came into you, but you were both sound. Then said I to the little mistress, 'La! where is the sense of waking wearied men, t'ask them is Charles the Great dead, and would they liever carry foul linen or clean, especially this one with a skin like cream? 'And so he has, I declare,' said the young mistress.โ
โThat was me,โ remarked Denys, with the air of a commentator.
โGuess once more, and you'll hit the mark.โ
โNotice him not, Marion, he is an impudent fellow; and I am sure we cannot be grateful enough for your goodness, and I am sorry I ever refused youโanything you fancied you should like.โ
โOh, are ye there,โ said l'espiegle. โI take that to mean you would fain brush the morning dew off, as your bashful companion calls it; well then, excuse me, 'tis customary, but not prudent. I decline. Quits with you, lad.โ
โStop! stop!โ cried Denys, as she was making off victorious, โI am curious to know how many, of ye were here last night a-feasting your eyes on us twain.
โ'Twas so satisfactory a feast as we weren't half a minute over't. Who? why the big mistress, the little mistress, Janet, and me, and the whole posse comitatus, on tiptoe. We mostly make our rounds the last thing, not to get burned down; and in prodigious numbers. Somehow that maketh us bolder, especially where archers lie scattered about.โ
โWhy did not you tell me? I'd have lain awake.โ
โBeau sire, the saying goes that the good and the ill are all one while their lids are closed. So we said, 'Here is one who will serve God best asleep, Break not his rest!'โ
โShe is funny,โ said Gerard dictatorially.
โI must be either that or knavish.โ
โHow so?โ
โBecause 'The Three Fish' pay me to be funny. You will eat before you part? Good! then I'll go see the meat be fit for such worshipful teeth.โ
โDenys!โ
โWhat is your will?โ
โI wish that was a great boy, and going along with us, to keep us cheery.โ
โSo do not I. But I wish it was going along with us as it is.โ
โNow Heaven forefend! A fine fool you would make of yourself.โ
They broke their fast, settled their score, and said farewell. Then it was they found that Marion had not exaggerated the โcustom of the country.โ The three principal women took and kissed them right heartily, and they kissed the three principal women. The landlord took and kissed them, and they kissed the landlord; and the cry was, โCome back, the sooner the better!โ
โNever pass 'The Three Fish'; should your purses be void, bring yourselves: 'le sieur credit' is not dead for you.โ
And they took the road again.
They came to a little town, and Denys went to buy shoes. The shopkeeper was in the doorway, but wide awake. He received Denys with a bow down to the ground. The customer was soon fitted, and followed to the street, and dismissed with graceful salutes from the doorstep.
The friends agreed it was Elysium to deal with such a shoemaker as this. โNot but what my German shoes have lasted well enough,โ said Gerard the just.
Outside the town was a pebbled walk.
โThis is to keep the burghers's feet dry, a-walking o' Sundays with their wives and daughters,โ said Denys.
Those simple words of Denys, one stroke of a careless tongue, painted โhomeโ in Gerard's heart. โOh, how sweet!โ said he.
โMercy! what is this? A gibbet! and ugh, two skeletons thereon! Oh, Denys, what a sorry sight to woo by!โ
โNay,โ said Denys, โa comfortable sight; for every rogue i' the air there is one the less a-foot.โ
A little farther on they came to two pillars, and between these was a huge wheel closely studded with iron prongs; and entangled in these were bones and fragments of cloth miserably dispersed over the wheel.
Gerard hid his face in his hands. โOh, to think those patches and bones are all that is left of a man! of one who was what we are now.โ
โExcusez! a thing that went on two legs and stole; are we no more than that?โ
โHow know ye he stole? Have true men never suffered death and torture too?โ
โNone of my kith ever found their way to the gibbet, I know.โ
โThe better their luck. Prithee, how died the saints?โ
โHard. But not in Burgundy.โ
โYe massacred them wholesale at Lyons, and that is on Burgundy's threshold. To you the gibbet proves the crime, because you read not story. Alas! had you stood on Calvary that bloody day we sigh for to this hour, I tremble to think you had perhaps shouted for joy at the gibbet builded there; for the cross was but the Roman gallows, Father Martin says.โ
โThe blaspheming old hound!โ
โOh, fie! fie! a holy and a book-learned man. Ay, Denys, y'had read them, that suffered there, by the bare light of the gibbet. 'Drive in the nails!' y'had cried: 'drive in the spear!' Here be three malefactors. Three 'roues.' Yet of those little three one was the first Christian saint, and another was the Saviour of the world which gibbeted him.โ
Denys assured him on his honour they managed things better in Burgundy. He added, too, after profound reflection, that the horrors Gerard had alluded to had more than once made him curse and swear with rage when told by the good cure in his native village at Eastertide: โbut they chanced in an outlandish nation, and near a thousand years agone. Mort de ma vie, let us hope it is not true; or at least sore exaggerated. Do but see how all tales gather as they roll!โ
Then he reflected again, and all in a moment turned red with ire. โDo ye not blush to play with your book-craft on your unlettered friend, and throw dust in his eyes, evening the saints with these reptiles?โ
Then suddenly he recovered his good humour. โSince your heart beats for vermin, feel for the carrion crows! they be as good vermin as these; would ye send them to bed supperless, poor pretty poppets? Why, these be their larder; the pangs of hunger would gnaw them dead, but for cold cut-purse hung up here and there.โ
Gerard, who had for some time maintained a dead silence, informed him the subject was closed between them, and for ever. โThere are things,โ said he, โin which our hearts seem
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