<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br/> <small>BAD COUNSEL.</small></h2>
<p class="unindent"><span class="smcap">There</span> are very few things that have the power to please us both
in heart and mind, even when they have the will to do it, which
is very seldom. Great events in our lives flash by without a
word, and scarcely seem to give us time to chuckle, or to sob,
till afterwards. But the little turns of time are more indulgent,
and pass us with a sauntering foot, more often dull than lightsome.</p>
<p>For the moment, I was glad to find that my Uncle Cornelius,
in his plain way, had taken a liking to my love. But I gave
him little credit for it, inasmuch as it seemed impossible to me
that he could do otherwise. Such was my petty jealousy that
I did not even want to hear him praise her, except in my own
words. But he, in his solid way, would take his own view of
her character—as if he knew anything about it!</p>
<p>“I don’t care a farthing about all that,” I cried, when he
had spoken of some things, which tell the longest.</p>
<p>“I can see she is very quiet, and full of home affections,”
he persisted, as if I were a boy at school, and he were holding
the spelling book; “she is not extravagant, nor fond of waste;
that I saw by the way she went through a ‘Huling’s Superb,’
with a hole in it. I could scarcely have done it any better
myself. And she was really grieved, which the lady-housekeeper
had not the sense to be, by the freedom—she called it
recklessness—with which I picked those Jeffersons, to find one
in tip-top condition. And then when I offered to make some
tea, the housekeeper who had been stuffing for hours only asked
if the water was boiling. But your sweetheart began to
buckle up, and asked who could touch tea, after such delicious
things.”</p>
<p>“Buckle up, indeed! Uncle Corny, you are outrageous.
She had got no such thing as a buckle near her. Her waist is
done round with a narrow blue ribbon, the colour of the sky, as
her eyes are. And I will thank you not to call her my sweetheart,
if you please. I shall never have such luck. And it
sounds so common. There ought to be a better expression for
it. And such things are not made to be talked of.”</p>
<p>“Very well! You won’t hear me say another word. It
will all come to nothing; that’s one comfort. She goes back<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</SPAN></span>
to London on Friday; and you will very soon console yourself
with Rasp’s young woman. I am told that she has fine black
eyes; and I am not sure that black don’t beat blue ones, after all.”</p>
<p>This was so disgusting that I went away, and worked till
dusk at a heavy piece of trenching; and when it was dusk I
lay in wait for three felonious boys who came from Hampton,
almost every evening, prowling for our apples. I caught all
three, and trounced them well—which is the only proper plan—and
the sound of their wailings, as they went home, restored
my faith in justice. For I had given them their choice—“a
licking or a summons”—and they said very justly, “Oh, a licking,
if you please, sir.” The world has now come to such a pass,
that a father would summon me for assault, if I so discharged
his duty for him; but thirty years ago a bit of common sense
survived.</p>
<p>But in spite of that little satisfaction, I could not get much
sleep that night, for rolling, and pondering, and twisting
in and out, the tangle and the burden of a troubled mind.
Turn it as I might, there was no opening through it for another
view of that perfect creature, with whom my whole life seemed
to flow. Terrible, terrible was the truth that she would leave
us all on Friday, and be swallowed up and no more seen, in
that great earthquake, London. A thousand wild ideas, and
schemes, for stealing yet one more interview, and countless
crazy hopes that she herself might try to compass it, all came
thrilling through my restless brain, but not one would stop
there. None had any shape or substance, such as could be
worked upon, and brought to likelihood of success. This was
Tuesday night; last Saturday night how different everything
had been! Then I had only cared to know, that things in
the ground were doing well, that all the fruit which required
gathering got its due, and looked its best on its way to be
devoured, that every man pocketed his wages in good time to
spend them, and that there was a little hope of the weather
taking up at last. Now there had been three days without rain,
and with touch of autumnal sunshine; heaven began to look
bright again, and the earth (which, like the dwellers therein,
lives only aright in view of it) was beginning to lift her sodden
crust, and fetch once more her storm-trampled breath and issue
anew the genial green in the midrib of mouldy foliage. In a
word, the summer which had failed the year, for want of a
smile to lead it, was breaking out at this last moment, better
late than never.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Possessed as I was with my own troubles, and only a
flickering sunshine, I could not resist the contagious lightness
of cheerful faces all around. The workmen, who do (in spite
of all British reserve, and manly selfishness) take a deep interest
in their employer’s welfare, and stand up for him bravely,
when any one abuses him, except themselves—every man of
them laid heel to spade, or hoisted ladder on shoulder, with new
briskness; because they could say to one another—“The old
buffer, who carries on this place, has fought against long odds
like a man; and now things look as if they was taking a little
turn in his favour.”</p>
<p>On the Wednesday morning glum however was my mind,
and grim my face, and Uncle Corny made some jokes, which
may have seemed very good to him. Our breakfast things
were set as usual, and our breakfast cooked and served by Mrs.
Tabby Tapscott, that sage widow from the village, whom we
were often pleased to laugh at for her Devonshire dialect.
Also for her firm conviction, that nothing in these outlandish
parts, and none of our biggest men, were fit to compare with
the products of the West. There was one point however on
which we gladly confessed the truth that was in her—she
could fry potatoes, not leathery chips, nor the cake of pulpy
fatness, but the crisp yet melting patin of brown gold, so as
none of the East may fry them. She turned them out of the
frying-pan upon a willow-pattern plate, and the man deserved
to wear the willow, who could think of weeping near
them.</p>
<p>Now this good woman, who was a “cure,” as the slang boys
of our village said, took (though I knew it not as yet) a tender
interest in my affairs. For the last day or two, I had observed
that she glanced at me rather strangely, and once or twice behind
my Uncle’s back, she had put her finger on her lips, and
then jerked her thumb over her shoulder, as if to say—“Come
and have a quiet word with me.”</p>
<p>But my frame of mind had appeared to me too noble and
exalted to be shared with her, until it was come to such a pitch
that any aid would be welcome.</p>
<p>This morning, as half of her fine work remained on my
plate neglected, she could no longer contain herself, but pinched
my sleeve and whispered, while my Uncle was going to the
window, “Come out in gearden, I want to spake to ’e.”</p>
<p>“Speak away,” I answered, “there is nothing to stop you,
Mrs. Tapscott;” but she looked at me and muttered that I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</SPAN></span>
was just a fool, and she had a mind to have nought to do with
me.</p>
<p>By the common law of nature, this made me long to hear
what on earth she could have to say, and I gave her the chance,
while she washed up the things, to see where I was, and to
come out if she pleased. She might do exactly as she pleased,
for I did not intend to encourage her. She came out, and
began without asking me.</p>
<p>“I can’t abide to zee ’e look so crule weist and peaky. The
toorn of your nose bain’t the zame as her was, and you don’t
zim at home with your vittels, Measter Kit. Lor’ bless ’e, I
been droo the zame my zen, and I knaws arl about ’en.”</p>
<p>At first I was inclined to walk away; but it would have
been shabby to be rude to her, and a look of good-will and
kindly pity was in her hard-worn eyes and face. “What can
you have to say to me?” I asked.</p>
<p>“You be young, and I be old,” she took my coat to stop
me; “you be peart and nimble, and I be a’most crippled with
rheumatics and rumbago. But the Lord hath made us arl alike,
though He have given us different. I knows as wull what ails
’e now, as if it arl coom droo my own heart. And what you
be zaying to yourzelf is—‘How be I to goo on with it’?”</p>
<p>This was a wonderfully accurate description of my present
state of mind. I looked at Mrs. Tapscott, with the admiration
she deserved, and said—“Well then, how be I to goo on with
it?”</p>
<p>“I’ve athought ’un out,” she made answer bravely; “what
you be bound to do, Measter Kit, is never to let she goo back
to Lunnon, wi’out zettling zummat.”</p>
<p>Here was the whole of it in a nutshell. But how was I to
settle anything?</p>
<p>“Oh, Tabby, dear Tabby!” I cried, with some loss of
dignity, but much gain of truth; “how can I even get the
chance of saying a word to her again? This is Wednesday,
and she goes back on Friday, and perhaps she never comes
again, and there are millions of people between us. Everybody
knows what Miss Coldpepper is, as proud as Punch, and as stiff
as starch. If I even dared to go near the house, she’d just tell
the gamekeeper to shoot me.”</p>
<p>“Wull, a young man as have vallen in love must take his
chance of shot-guns. But if so be you latts her goo awai wi’out
so much as anoother ward, you desarves to have no tongue in the
head of ’e.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“How easy it is to talk!” I replied, making ready to leave
her, and think by myself. “But how hard and impossible,
Tabby, to find any chance of doing anything. I must make up
my mind not to see her any more; but to think of her always,
as long as I live.”</p>
<p>“Boddledicks!” cried Mrs. Tapscott, her favourite interjection
of contempt—what it meant we knew not, and probably
not she. “Boddledicks, where be the brains of they men? I
could tull ’e what to do in half a zecond, lad, to vetch old
Coldpepper, and the young leddy too, and every mortial ’ooman
in thic there ouze, to hum eartr’e, the zame as if they zighted
’e a burning to the muckpit, with all their Zunday vainery
under thee arm.”</p>
<p>I looked at Tabby Tapscott with some surprise; for she
was giving greater force to her description by using leg and
arm as if she bore a share in all of it. And the vigour of her
countenance made me smile. But the old woman laughed
with a superior air. “Tak’th a bit o’ time, for volks with
slow brains to vollew my maind up—don’t her now? Goo up
to ’ouze, young man, and stale old Ragless.”</p>
<p>“Steal old Regulus!” I cried in great amazement, “why,
what good on earth would that do me? And if it would do any
good, how am I to manage it? I have not been brought up to
that profession.”</p>
<p>“I zeed a man to Barrinarbor, vaive and vorty year agone,
the most wonnerful cliver chap, I ever zee. He coom a-coortin’
of me, the taime as I wor ruckoned the purtiest maid in arl the
parish of Westdown. But I wadn’t have none of ’un, because
a’ wor so tricksy. Howsomever I didn’t zay ‘noo’ to wance,
for a’ wor the most wonnerful chap I ever zee. The Lord had
been and given he every zort o’ counsel. A’ could churm a
harse out of any vield or linhay, a’ could mak’ the coos hurn
to ’un, when the calves was zuckin’, a’ could vetch any dog
a’ took a vancy to from atwane his owner’s legs or from’s own
zupper. And a’ zhowed me a trick or two I han’t vorgotten
yet. I could tull ’e purty smart how to vetch old Ragless, and
kape ’un so long as you was mainded.”</p>
<p>Now I might have paid little attention to this, and indeed
had begun to reject the suggestion of a stratagem far below
the dignity of love, till suddenly a queer dream came to my
remembrance, a dream of last Sunday night, the very night
after that little adventure at the timber bridge. In that
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