God's Good Man by Marie Corelli (speld decodable readers txt) đ
Here his mind became altogether distracted from classic lore, by the appearance of a very unclassic boy, clad in a suit of brown corduroys and wearing hob-nailed boots a couple of sizes too large for him, who, coming suddenly out from a box-tree alley behind the gabled corner of the rectory, shuffled to the extreme verge of the lawn and stopped there, pulling his cap off, and treading on his own toes from left to right, and from right to left in a state of sheepish hesitancy.
"Come along,--come along! Don't stand there, Bob Keeley!" And Walden rose, placing Epictetus on the seat he vacated--"What is it?"
Bob Keeley set his hob-nailed feet on the velvety lawn with gingerly precaution, and advancing cap in hand, produced a letter, slightly grimed by his thumb and finger.
"From Sir Morton, please
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Mr. Netlips smiled condescendingly, and nodded as one who should sayââYou do well, my poor fellow, to be humble in my presence!ââ and buried his nose in his tankard of ale.
âMebbe Cohesionâs got hold oâ my red cowââsaid the burly farmer who had spoken beforeââFor sheâs as ailinâ as ever she was, anâ if I lose her, I loses a bit oâ my livin.â Anâ thatâs what I sez anâ âolds by, no church-goinâ seems to âelp us in a bit oâ trouble, anâ it ainât decent or Christian like, so it âpears, to pray to the Almighty for the savinâ of a cow. I asked Passon Walden if âtwould be right, for the cowâs as valuable to me as ever my wife was when she was alive, if not more, anâ he sez quite pleasant-likeââWell no, Mister Thorpe, I think it best not to make any sort of special prayer for the poor beast, but just do all you can for it, and leave the rest to Providence. A cow is worldly goods, you seeâand weâre not quite justified in praying to be allowed to keep our worldly goods.â âAinât we!â I sezââIs that a fact? He smiled and said it was. So I thanked him and comed away. But Iâve been thinkinâ it over since, anâ I sez to myselfâef we ainât to pray for keepinâ anâ âavinâ our worldly goods, wot âave we got to pray for?â
âOh Mr. Thorpe!â ejaculated Mrs. Buggins, almost tearfullyââIt is not this world but the next, that we must think of! We must pray for our souls!â
âWell, marm, I ainât got a âsoulâ wot I knows onâanâ as for the next world, if there ainât no cattle farminâ there, I reckon Iâll be out oâ work. Do you count on keepinâ a bar in the âeavenly country?â
A loud guffaw went the round of the room, and Mrs. Buggins gasped with horror.
âOh, Roger!â she murmured, addressing her portly spouse, who at once took up the argument.
âYou goes too furâyou goes too fur, Mister Thorpe!â he said severelyââThere ainât no keepinâ bars nor farminâ carried on in the next world, nor marrying nor givinâ in marriage. We be all as the angels there.â
âA nice angel youâll make too, Mr. Buggins!â said Farmer Thorpe, as he sent his tankard to be refilled,ââLord! We wonât know you!â
Again the laugh went round, and Mrs. Buggins precipitately retired to her âinner parlourâ there to recover from the shock occasioned to her religious feelings by the irreverent remarks of her too matter- of-fact customer. Meanwhile Dan Ridley, the tailor, had again reverted to the subject of Miss Vancourt.
âThereâs one thing about her cominâ to church,ââhe said; âIf so be as she did come it âud do us all good, for sheâs real pleasant to look at. Iâve seen her a many times in the village.â
âAh, so have I!â chorussed two or three more men.
âSheâs been in to see Adam Frostâs children anâ she gave Baby Hippolyta a bag oâ sweeties,ââsaid Bainton. âAnâ sheâs called at the schoolhouse, but Miss Eden, she wornât in anâ Susie Prescott saw her, anâ Susie was that struck that she âadnât a wurrd to say, so she tells us, anâ Miss Vancourt she went to old Josey Letherbarrowâs straight away anâ there she stayed iver so long. She ainât called at our house yet.â
âWhich âouse might you be a-meaninâ, Tummas?â queried Farmer Thorpe, with a slow grinââYour own or your measterâs?â
âWhen we speaks in the plural we means not one, but two,âârejoined Bainton with dignity. âAnâ when I sez âourâ I means myself anâ Passon, which Miss Vancourt ainât as yet left her card on Passon. He went up in a great âurry one afternoon when he knowed she was out,â he knowed it, âcos I told âim as âow Iâd seen her gallopinâ by on that mare of hers which, they calls Cleopatra-anâ away âe run like a March âare, anâ he ups to the Manor and down again, anâ sez he, laughinâ like: âIâve done my dooty by the ladyâ sez heââIâve left my card!â That was three days ago, anâ there ainât been no return oâ the perliteness up to the presentââ
Here he broke off and began to drink his ale, as a small dapper man entered the bar-room with a brisk step and called for âa glass of home-brewed,â looking round on those assembled with a condescending smile. All of them knew him as Jim Bennett, Miss Vancourtâs groom.
âWell, mates!â he said with a sprightly air of familiarityââAll well and hearty?â
âAs yourself, Mr. Bennett,ââreplied Roger Buggins, acting as spokesman for the rest, and personally serving him with the foaming draught he had ordered. âWhich, we likewise trusts your lady is well?â
âMy lady enjoys the hest of health, thank you!â said Bennett, with polite gravity. And tossing off the contents of his glass, he signified by an eloquent gesture and accompanying wink, that he was âgood for another.â
âWe was just a-sayinâ as you come in, Mr. Bennett,â observed Dan Ridley, âthat weâd none of us seen your lady at church yet on Sundays, Mebbe she ainât of our âpersuasionâ as they sez, or mehbe she goes into Riversford, preferrinâ âIgh services---â
Bennett smiled a superior smile, and leaning easily against the bar, crossed his legs and surveyed the company generally with a compassionate air.
âI suppose itâs quite a business down here,âgoinâ to church, eh?â he queriedââSort of excitement likeâonly bit of fun youâve gotâ helps to keep you all alive! Thatâs the country way, but Lord bless you!âin town weâre not taking any!â
Bainton looked up,âand Mr. Netlips loosened his collar and lifted his head, as though preparing himself for another flow of âcohesionâ eloquence. Farmer Thorpe turned his bull-neck slowly round, and brought his eyes to bear on the speaker.
âHow dâye make that out, Mr. Bennett?â he demanded. âDoanât ye sarve the Aâmighty same in town as in country?â
âNot a bit of it!â replied Bennett airilyââYouâre a long way behind the times, Mr. Thorpe!âyou are indeed, begginâ your pardon for sayinâ so! The âbestâ people have given up the Almighty altogether, owing to recent scientific discoveries. Theyâve taken to the Almighty Dollar instead which no science can do away with. And Sundays arenât used any more for church-going, except among the middle-class population,âtheyâre just Bridge days with OUR setâ Bridge lunches, Bridge suppers,âevery Sundayâs chock full of engagements to âBridge,â right through the âseason.ââ
âThatâs cards, ainât it?â enquired Dan Ridley.
âJust so! Harmless cards!â rejoined BennettââOnly you can chuck away a few thousands or so on âem if you like!â
Mr. Netlips here pushed aside his emptied ale-glass and raised his fat head unctuously out of his stiff shirt-collar.
âAre we to understand,â he began ponderously, âthat Miss Vancourt is addicted to this fashion of procrastinating the Lordâs Day?â
Bennett straightened his dapper figure suddenly.
âNow donât you put yourself out, Mr. Netlips, donât, thatâs a good feller!â he said in sarcastically soothing tonesââThereâs no elections going on just at presentâwhen there is you can bring your best leg foremost, and rant away for all youâre worth! My lady donât gamble, if thatâs what you mean,âthough sheâs always with the swagger set, and likely so to remain. But you keep up your spirits!- your groceries âull be paid for all right!-she donât run up no billsâso donât you fear, cards or no cards! And as for procrastinating the Lordâs Day, whatever that may be, I could name to you the folks what does worse than play Bridge on Sundays. And who are they? Why the clergymen theirselves! And how does they do worse? Why by tellinâ lies as fast as they can stick! They says weâre all going to heaven if weâre good,âand they donât know nothing about it,âand weâre all going to hell if weâre bad, and they donât know nothing about that neither! I tell you, as I told you at first, in town weâve got beyond all that stuffâweâre just not taking any!â
He paused, and there was a deep silence, while he drank off his second glass of ale. The thoughts of every man present were apparently too deep for words.
âYouâre a smart chap!â said Bainton at last, breaking the mystic spell and rising to take his leaveââAnâ I donât want to argify with ye, for Iâspect youâre about right in what you sez about Sunday ways in townâbut I tell ye what, young feller!âyouâve got to âave a deal oâ patience anâ a deal oâ pity for they poor starveling sinners wot gits boxed up in cities anâ never ainât got no room to look at the sky, or see the wide fields with all the daisies blowinâ open to the sun. No wonder theyâre so took up wiâ their scinetific muddlins over worms anâ microbes anâ sich-like, as to âave forgot what the Almighty is doinâ in the workinâ oâ the Universe,âbut itâs onny jest like poor prisiners in a cell wot walks up anâ down, up anâ down, countinâ the stones in the wall with scinetific multiplication-like, anâ âsplaininâ to their poor lonely selves as how many stones makes a square foot, anâ so many square feet makes a square yard, anâ on they goes a-walkinâ their misâable little round anâ countinâ their misâable little sums, anâ all the time just outside the prison the flowers is all bloominâ wild anâ the birds singinâ, anâ the blue sky over it all with God smilinâ behind it. Thatâs âow âtis, Mr. Bennett!â and Bainton looked into the lining of his cap as was his wont before he put it on his headââI believe all you say right enough, anâ it donât put me out nohowâIâve seen too much oâ natur to be shook off my âold on the Almightyâfor thereâs no worm wot ainât sure of a rose or some kind oâ flower anâ fruit somewhere, though mâappen the poor blind thing donât know where to find it. Itâs case oâ leadinâ on, anâ guidinâ beyond our knowledge, Mr. Bennett,âanâ thatâs wot Passon Walden tells us. HE donât bother us wiâ no âhowsâ nor âwhysâ nor âwhereforesââhe says we can FEEL God with us in our daily work, anâ so we can, if weâve a mind to! Daily work and common things shows Him to us,âwhy look there!ââ here he pulled from his pocket a small paper-bag, and opening it, showed some dry loose seedââThere ainât nothinâ commoner than that! Thatâs pansy seedâa special stock too,âwell now, if you didnât know how common it is, wouldnât it seem a miracle as wonderful as any in the Testymen, that out oâ that handful oâ dust like, the finest flowers of purple anâ yellow will come?âay! some oâ them two to three inches across, anâ every petal like velvet anâ silk! If so be you donât bâlieve in a God, Mr. Bennett, owinâ to town opinions, you try the gardeninâ business! Thatâll make a man of ye! I allus sez if Adam had stuck to the gardeninâ business anâ left the tailorinâ trade alone weâd have all been in Eden now!â
His eyes twinkled, as glancing round the company, he saw that his words had made an impression and awakened a responsive smileââGood- night tâye!â And touching Bennett on the shoulder in passing, he added: âYou come anâ see me, my lad, when you feels like goinâ a bit in the scinetific line! Mebbe I can tell ye a
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