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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Here his thoughts became disconnected, and wandered beyond his control. He let them go,âand listened, instead of thinking, to the notes of the nightingale singing in his garden. It was now being answered by others at a distance, with incessant repetitions of a flute-like warble,âand then came the long sobbing trill and cry of love, piercing the night with insistant passion.
âThe Bird of Life is singing on the bough, His two eternal notes of âI and Thouââ O hearken well, for soon the song sings through, And would we hear it, we must hear it Now.âA faint tremor shook him as the lines quoted by Cicely Bourne rang back upon his memory. He rose to go indoors.
âI am a fool!ââhe saidââI must not trouble my head any more about a summer dayâs fancy. It was a kind of âold moonlight in the blood,â as Hafiz says,âan aching sense of loss,âor rather a touch of the spring affecting a decaying tree!â He sighed. âI shall not suffer from it again, because I will not. Brentâs letter has arrived opportunely,âthough I thinkânay, I am sure, he has been misinformed. However, Miss Vancourtâs affairs have nothing to do with me,ânor need I interest myself in what is not my concern. My business is with those who depend on my care,âI must not forget myselfâI must attend to my work.â
He went into the house,âand there was confronted in his own hall by a big burly figure clad in rough corduroys,âthat of Farmer Thorpe, who doffed his cap and pulled his forelock respectfully at the sight of him.
ââEveninâ, Passon!â he saidââI thought as âow Iâd make bold to coom anâ tell ye my red cowâs took the turn anâ doinâ wonderful! Seems a special mussy of thâ Aâmighty, anâ if thereâs anythinâ me anâ my darter can do fur ye, yeâll let us know, Passon, for Iâm darn grateful, anâ feels as âow the beast pulled round arter Iâd spoke tâye about âer. Anâ though as ye told me, âtainât the thing to say no prayers for beasties which is worldly goods, I makes a venture to arsk ye if yeâll step round to the farm to-morrer, jest to please Mattie my darter, anâ take a look at the finest litter oâ pigs as ever was seen in this county, barrinâ none! A litter as clean anâ sweet as daisies in new-mown hay, anâ nowâs the time for ye to look at âem, Passon, anâ choose yer own suckinâ beast for bilinâ or roastinâ which ye please, for bothâs as good as tâother,âanâ there ainât no man about âere what desarves a sweet suckinâ pig moreân you do, anâ that I say anâ swear to. Itâs a real prize litter I do assure you!âanâ Mattie my darter, she be that proud, anâ all ye wants to do is just to coom along anâ choose your own!â
âThank you, Mr. Thorpe!â said Walden with his usual patient courtesyââThank you very much! I will certainly come. Glad to hear the cow is better. And is Miss Thorpe well?â
âSheâs that foine,âârejoined the farmerââthat only the pigs can beat âer! Iâll be tellinâ âer youâll coom to-morrer then?â
âOh yesâby all means! Certainly! Most kind of you, Iâm sure! Good- evening, Thorpe!â
âSame tâye, Passon, anâ thank ye kindly!â Whereat John escaped at last into his own solitary sanctum.
âMy work!â he said, with a faint smile, as he seated himself at his deskââI must do my work! I must attend to the pigs as much as anything else in the parish! My work!â
XVIII
It was the first Sunday in July. Under a sky of pure and cloudless blue the village of St. Rest lay cradled in floral and foliage loveliness, with all the glory of the morning sunshine and the full summer bathing it in floods of living gold. It had reached the perfect height of its annual beauty with the full flowering of its orchards and fields, and with all the wealth of colour which was flung like spray against the dark brown thatched roofs of its clustering cottages by the masses of roses, red and white, that clambered as high as the tops of the chimneys, and turning back from thence, dropped downwards again in a tangle of blossoms, and twined over latticed windows with a gay and gracious air like garlands hung up for some great festival. The stillness of the Seventh Dayâs pause was in the air,âeven the swallows, darting in and out from their prettily contrived nests under the bulging old-fashioned eaves, seemed less busy, less active on their bright pinions, and skimmed to and fro with a gliding ease, suggestive of happy indolence and peace. The doors of the church were set wide open,âand Adam Frost, sexton and verger, was busy inside the building, placing the chairs, as was his usual Sunday custom, in orderly rows for the coming congregation. It was about half-past ten, and the bell-ringers, arriving and ascending into the belfry, were beginning to âtoneâ the bells before pealing the full chime for the eleven oâclock service, when Bainton, arrayed in his Sunday best, strolled with a casual air into the churchyard, looked round approvingly for a minute or two, and then with some apparent hesitation, entered the church porch, lifting his cap reverently as he did so. Once there, he coughed softly to attract Frostâs attention, but that individual was too much engrossed with his work to heed any lesser sound than the grating of the chairs he was arranging. Bainton waited patiently, standing near the carved oaken portal, till by chance the verger turned and saw him, whereupon he beckoned mysteriously with a crookâd forefinger.
âAdam! Hi! A word wiâ ye!â
Adam came down the nave somewhat reluctantly, his countenance showing signs of evident preoccupation and harassment.
âWhat now?â he demanded, in a hoarse whisper-ââCanât ye see Iâm busy?â
âOâ coorse youâre busyâI knows youâre busy,ââreturned Bainton, soothinglyââI ainât goinâ to keep ye back nohow. All I wants to know is, ef itâs true?â
âEf whatâs true?â
âThis âere, wot the folks are all aâ clicketinâ about,âthat Miss Vancourt âas got a party oâ Lunnon fashânables stayinâ at the Manor, anâ that theyâre cominâ to church this marninâ?â
âTrue enough!â said FrostââDonât ye see me a-settinâ chairs for âem near the poopit? Thereâll be whatâs called a âcrushâ I can tell ye!- for there ainât none too much room in the church at the best oâ times for our own poor folk, but when rich folks comes as well, weâll be put to it to seat âem. Mister Primmins, he comes down to me nigh âarf an hour ago, anâ he sez, sez he: âMiss Vancourt âas friends from Lunnon stayinâ with âer, anâ theyâre cominâ to church this marninâ. âOpe youâll find room?â Anâ I sez to âim, âIâll do my best, but there ainât no reserve seats in the âouse oâ God, anâ them as comes fust gits fust served.â Ay, itâs true enough theyâre a cominâ, but âow it got round in the village, I donât know. I ainât sed a wurrd.â
âIll news travels fast,ââsaid Bainton, sententiously, âMister Primmins no doubt called on his young âooman at the âMother Huffâ anâ told âer to put on âer best âat. Sheâs a regâler telephone tube for informationâany bit oâ news runs right through âer as though she was a wire. âAve ye told Passon Waldon as âow Miss Vancourt anâ visitors is a-cominâ to âear âim preach?â
âNo,ââreplied Adam, with some vigourââI ainât told âim nothinâ. Anâ I ainât goinâ to neither!â
Bainton looked into the crown of his cap, and finding his handkerchief there wiped the top of his head with it.
âIt be powerful warm this marninâ, Adam,ââhe saidââPowerful warm it be. So you ainât goinâ to tell Passon nothinâ,âanâ for why, may I ask, if to be so bold.â
âLook âere, Tummas,âârejoined the verger, speaking slowly and emphaticallyââPasson, âe be a rare good man, mâappen no better man anywheres, anâ what heâs goinâ to say to us this blessed Sunday is all settled-like. Heâs been thinkinâ it out all the week. He knows whatâs what. âTainât for us,ââtainât for you nor me, to go puttinâ âim out anâ tellinâ âim oâ the world the flesh anâ the devil all a- cominâ to church. Mebbe heâa been a-prayinâ to the Lord Aâmighty to put the âOly Spirit into âim, anâ mebbe heâs got itâjust THERE.â And Adam touched his breast significantly. âNow if I goes, or you goes and sez to âim:
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