The Herd Boy and His Hermit. Charlotte M. Yonge

The Herd Boy and His Hermit - Charlotte M. Yonge


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       Charlotte M. Yonge

      The Herd Boy and His Hermit

      Published by Good Press, 2021

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066200732

       CHAPTER I. — IN THE MOSS

       CHAPTER II. — THE SNOW-STORM

       CHAPTER III. — OVER THE MOOR

       CHAPTER IV. — A SPORTING PRIORESS

       CHAPTER V. — MOTHER AND SON

       CHAPTER VI. — A CAUTIOUS STEPFATHER

       CHAPTER VII. — ON DERWENT BANKS

       CHAPTER VIII. — THE HERMIT

       CHAPTER IX. — HENRY OF WINDSOR

       CHAPTER X. — THE SCHOLAR OF THE MOUNTAINS

       CHAPTER XI. — THE RED ROSE

       CHAPTER XII. — A PRUDENT RECEPTION

       CHAPTER XIII. — FELLOW TRAVELLERS

       CHAPTER XIV. — THE JOURNEY

       CHAPTER XV. — BLETSO

       CHAPTER XVI. — THE HERMIT IN THE TOWER

       CHAPTER XVII. — A CAPTIVE KING

       CHAPTER XVIII. — AT THE MINORESSES’

       CHAPTER XIX. — A STRANGE EASTER EVE

       CHAPTER XX. — BARNET

       CHAPTER XXI. — TEWKESBURY

       CHAPTER XXII. — THE NUT-BROWN MAID

       CHAPTER XXIII. — BROUGHAM CASTLE

       Table of Contents

       I can conduct you, lady, to a low

       But loyal cottage where you may be safe

       Till further quest.—MILTON.

      On a moorland slope where sheep and goats were dispersed among the rocks, there lay a young lad on his back, in a stout canvas cassock over his leathern coat, and stout leathern leggings over wooden shoes. Twilight was fast coming on; only a gleam of purple light rested on the top of the eastern hills, but was gradually fading away, though the sky to the westward still preserved a little pale golden light by the help of the descending crescent moon.

      ‘Go away, horned moon,’ murmured the boy. ‘I want to see my stars come out before Hob comes to call me home, and the goats are getting up already. Moon, moon, thou mayst go quicker. Thou wilt have longer time to-morrow—and be higher in the sky, as well as bigger, and thou mightst let me see my star to-night! Ah! there is one high in the sunset, pale and fair, but not mine! That’s the evening star—one of the wanderers. Is it the same as comes in the morning betimes, when we do not have it at night? Like that it shines with steady light and twinkles not. I would that I knew! There! there’s mine, my own star, far up, only paling while the sun glaring blazes in the sky; mine own, he that from afar drives the stars in Charles’s Wain. There they come, the good old twinkling team of three, and the four of the Wain! Old Billy Goat knows them too! Up he gets, and all in his wake “Ha-ha-ha” he calls, and the Nannies answer. Ay, and the sheep are rising up too! How white they look in the moonshine! Piers—deaf as he is—waking at their music. Ba, they call the lambs! Nay, that’s no call of sheep or goat! ‘Tis some child crying, all astray! Ha! Hilloa, where beest thou? Tarry till I come! Move not, or thou mayst be in the bogs and mosses! Come, Watch’—to a great unwieldy collie puppy—‘let us find her.’

      A feeble piteous sound answered him, and following the direction of the reply, he strode along, between the rocks and thorn-bushes that guarded the slope of the hill, to a valley covered with thick moss, veiling treacherously marshy ground in which it was easy to sink.

      The cry came from the further side, where a mountain stream had force enough to struggle through the swamp. There were stepping-stones across the brook, which the boy knew, and he made his way from one to the other, calling out cheerily to the little figure that he began to discern in the fading light, and who answered him with tones evidently girlish, ‘O come, come, shepherd! Here I am! I am lost and lorn! They will reward thee! Oh, come fast!’

      ‘All in good time, lassie! Haste is no good here! I must look to my footing.’

      Presently he was by the side of the wanderer, and could see that it was a maiden of ten or twelve years old, who somehow, even in the darkness, had not the air of one of the few inhabitants of that wild mountain district.

      ‘Lost art thou, maiden,’ he said, as he stood beside her; ‘where is thine home?’

      ‘I am at Greystone Priory,’ replied the girl. ‘I went out hawking to-day with the Mother Prioress and the rest. My pony fell with me when we were riding after a heron. No one saw me or heard me, and my pony galloped home. I saw none of them, and I have been wandering miles and miles! Oh take me back, good lad; the Mother Prioress will give thee—’

      ‘’Tis too far to take thee back to-night,’ he said. ‘Thou must come with me to Hob Hogward, where Doll will give thee supper and bed, and we will have thee home in the morning.’

      ‘I never lay in a hogward’s house,’ she said primly.

      ‘Belike, but there be worse spots to be harboured in. Here, I must carry thee over the burn, it gets wider below! Nay, ‘tis no use trying to leap it in the dark, thou wouldst only sink in. There!’

      And as he raised her in his arms, the touch of her garment was delicate, and she on her side felt that his speech, gestures


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