Innocent : her fancy and his fact. Marie Corelli

Innocent : her fancy and his fact - Marie  Corelli


Скачать книгу
red, for that won't suit me nor Mr. Robin neither, come, come!—that it won't!"

      Innocent put one of her little hands furtively under the board and pressed Priscilla's rough knuckles tenderly, but she said nothing. The silence was broken by one of the oldest men present, who rose, tankard in hand.

      "The time for good farming is never past!" he said, in a hearty voice—"And no one will ever beat Farmer Jocelyn at that! Full cups, boys! And the master's health! Long life to him!"

      The response was immediate, every man rising to his feet. None of them were particularly unsteady except Ned Landon, who nearly fell over the table as he got up, though he managed to straighten himself in time.

      "Farmer Jocelyn!"

      "To Briar Farm and the master!"

      "Health and good luck!"

      These salutations were roared loudly round the table, and then the whole company gave vent to a hearty 'Hip-hip-hurrah!' that roused echoes from the vaulted roof and made its flaring lights tremble.

      "One more!" shouted Landon, suddenly, turning his flushed face from side to side upon those immediately near him—"Miss Jocelyn!"

      There followed a deafening volley of cheering,—tankards clinked together and shone in the flickering light and every eye looked towards the girl, who, colouring deeply, shrank from the tumult around her like a leaf shivering in a storm-wind. Robin glanced at her with a half-jealous, half-anxious look, but her face was turned away from him. He lifted his tankard and, bowing towards her, drank the contents. When the toast was fully pledged, Farmer Jocelyn got up, amid much clapping of hands, stamping of feet and thumping on the boards. He waited till quiet was restored, and then, speaking in strong resonant accents, said:

      "Boys, I thank you! You're all boys to me, young and old, for you've worked on the farm so long that I seem to know your faces as well as I know the shape of the land and the trees on the ridges. You've wished me health and long life—and I take it that your wishes are honest—but I've had a long life already and mustn't expect much more of it. However, the farm will go on just the same whether I'm here or elsewhere,—and no man that works well on it will be turned away from it,—that I can promise you! And the advice I've always given to you I give to you again,—stick to the land and the work of the land! There's nothing finer in the world than the fresh air and the scent of the good brown earth that gives you the reward of your labour, always providing it is labour and not 'scamp' service. When I'm gone you'll perhaps remember what I say,—and think it not so badly said either. I thank you for your good wishes and"—here he hesitated—"my little girl here thanks you too. Next time you make the hay—if I'm not with you—I ask you to be as merry as you are to-night and to drink to my memory! For whenever one master of Briar Farm has gone there's always been another in his place!—and there always will be!" He paused,—then lifting a full tankard which had been put beside him, he drank a few drops of its contents—"God bless you all! May you long have the will to work and the health to enjoy the fruits of honest labour!"

      There was another outburst of noisy cheering, followed by a new kind of clamour,

      "A song!"

      "A song!"

      "Who'll begin?"

      "Where's Steevy?"

      "Little Steevy!"

      "Steevy! Wheer be ye got to?" roared one old fellow with very white hair and a very red face—"ye're not so small as ye can hide in yer mother's thimble!"

      A young giant of a man stood up in response to this adjuration, blushing and smiling bashfully.

      "Here I be!"

      "Sing away, lad, sing away!"

      "Wet yer pipe, and whistle!"

      "Tune up, my blackbird!"

      Steevy, thus adjured, straightened himself to his full stature of over six feet and drank off a cupful of ale. Then he began in a remarkably fine and mellow tenor:

      "Would you choose a wife

       For a happy life,

       Leave the town and the country take;

       Where Susan and Doll,

       And Jenny and Moll,

       Follow Harry and John,

       While harvest goes on,

       And merrily, merrily rake!"

      "The lass give me here,

       As brown as my beer,

       That knows how to govern a farm;

       That can milk a cow,

       Or farrow a sow,

       Make butter and cheese,

       And gather green peas,

       And guard the poultry from harm."

      "This, this is the girl,

       Worth rubies and pearl,

       The wife that a home will make!

       We farmers need

       No quality breed,

       But a woman that's won

       While harvest goes on,

       And we merrily, merrily rake!"

      [Footnote: Old Song 1740.]

      A dozen or more stentorian voices joined in the refrain:

      "A woman that's won

       While harvest goes on,

       And we merrily, merrily rake."

      "Bravo!"

      "Good for you, Steevy!"

      "First-class!"

      "Here's to you, my lad!"

      The shouting, laughter and applause continued for many minutes, then came more singing of songs from various rivals to the tuneful Steevy. And presently all joined together in a boisterous chorus which ran thus:

      "A glass is good and a lass is good,

       And a pipe is good in cold weather,

       The world is good and the people are good,

       And we're all good fellows together!"

      In the middle of this performance Farmer Jocelyn rose from his place and left the hall, Innocent accompanying him. Once he looked back on the gay scene presented to him—the disordered supper-table, the easy lounging attitudes of the well-fed men, the flare of the lights which cast a ruddy glow on old and young faces and sparkled over the burnished pewter,—then with a strange yearning pain in his eyes he turned slowly away, leaning on the arm of the girl beside him, and went,—leaving the merry-makers to themselves.

       Table of Contents

      Returning to the room where he had sat alone before supper, he sank heavily into the armchair he had previously occupied. The window was still open, and the scent of roses stole in with every breath of air,—a few stars sparkled in the sky, and a faint line of silver in the east showed where the moon would shortly rise. He looked out in dreamy silence, and for some minutes seemed too much absorbed in thought to notice the presence of Innocent, who had seated herself at a small table near him, on which she had set a lit candle, and was quietly sewing. She had forgotten that she still wore the wreath of wild roses,—the fragile flowers were drooping and dying in her hair, and as she bent over her work and the candlelight illumined her delicate profile, there was something almost sculptural in the shape of the leaves as they encircled her brow, making her look like a young Greek nymph or goddess brought to life out of the poetic dreams of the elder world. She was troubled and anxious, but she tried not to let this seem apparent. She knew from her life's experience of his ways and whims that it was best to wait till the old man


Скачать книгу