If Harold had known all the consequences
of his neglect, perhaps he would have been more sorry
for it than as yet he had chosen to be.
The long walk and the warm beer and
fire sent Paul to his hay-nest so heavy with sleep,
that he never stirred till next morning he was wakened
by Tom Boldre, the shuffler, kicking him severely,
and swearing at him for a lazy fellow, who stayed
out at night and left him to do his work.
Paul stumbled to his feet, quite confused
by the pain, and feeling for his shoes in the dark
loft. The shuffler scarcely gave him an instant
to put them on, but hunted him down-stairs, telling
him the farmer was there, and he would catch it.
It would do nobody any good to hear
the violent way in which Mr. Shepherd abused the boy.
He was a passionate man, and no good labourers liked
to work with him because of his tongue. With
such grown men as he had, he was obliged to keep himself
under some restraint, but this only incited him to
make up for it towards the poor friendless boy.
It was really nearly eight o’clock,
and Paul’s work had been neglected, which was
enough to cause displeasure; and besides, Boldre had
heard Paul coming home past eleven, and the farmer
insisted on knowing what he had been doing.
Under all his rags, Paul was a very
proud boy, and thus asked, he would not tell, but
stood with his legs twisted, looking very sulky.
‘No use asking him,’ cried
Mrs. Shepherd’s shrill voice at the back door;
’why, don’t ye hear that Mrs. Barker’s
hen-roost has been robbed by Dick Royston and two
or three more on ’em?’
‘I never robbed!’ cried Paul indignantly.
‘None of your jaw,’ said
the farmer angrily. ’If you don’t
tell me this moment where you’ve been, off you
go this instant. Drinking at the Tankard, I’ll
warrant.’
‘No such thing, Sir,’
said Paul. ’I went to Elbury after some
medicine for a sick person.’
Somehow he had a feeling about the
house opposite, which would not let him come out with
the name in such a scene.
‘That’s all stuff,’
broke in Mrs. Shepherd, ’I don’t believe
one word of it! Send him off; take my advice,
Farmer, let him go where he comes from; Ellen King
told me he was out of prison.’
Paul flushed crimson at this, and
shook all over. He had all but turned to go,
caring for nothing more at Friarswood; but just then,
John Farden, one of the labourers, who was carrying
out some manure, called out, ’No, no, Ma’am.
Sure enough he did go to Elbury to Dr. Blunt’s.
I was on the road myself, and I hears him.
“Good-night,” says I. “Good-night,”
says he. “Where be’est going?”
says I. “To doctor’s,” says
he, “arter some stuff for Alfred King.”
‘Yes,’ said Paul, speaking
more to Farden than to his master, ’and then
Mrs. King gave me some supper, and that was what made
me so late.’
‘She ought to be ashamed of
herself, then,’ said Mrs. Shepherd spitefully,
’having a vagabond scamp like that drinking beer
at her house at that time of night. How one
is deceived in folks!’
‘Well, what are you doing here?’
cried the farmer, turning on Paul angrily; ‘d’ye
mean to waste any more of the day?’
So Paul was not turned off, and had
to go straight to his work. It was well he had
had so good a supper, for he had not a moment to snatch
a bit of breakfast. It so happened that his
work was to go with John Farden, who was carrying
out the manure in the cart. Paul had to hold
the horse, while John forked it out into little heaps
in the field. John was a great big powerful
man, with a foolish face, not a good workman, nor a
good character, or he would not have been at that farm.
He had either never been taught anything, or had
forgotten it all; he never went near church; he had
married a disreputable wife, and had two or three unruly
children, who were likely to be the plagues of their
parents and the parish, but not a whit did John heed;
he did not seem to have much more sense than to work
just enough to get food, lodging, beer, and tobacco,
to sleep all night, and doze all Sunday. There
was not any malice nor dishonesty in him; but it was
terrible that a man with an immortal soul should live
so nearly the life of the brute beasts that have no
understanding, and should never wake to the sense of
God or of eternity.
He was not a man of many words, and
nothing passed for a long time but shouts of hoy,
and whoa, and the like, to the horse. Paul went
heavily on, scarce knowing what he was about; there
was a stunned jaded feel about him, as if he were
hunted and driven about, a mere outcast, despised
by every one, even by the Kings, whose kindness had
been his only ray of brightness. Not that his
senses or spirits were alive enough even to be conscious
of pain or vexation; it was only a dull dreary heedlessness
what became of him next; and, quick clever boy as he
had been in the Union, he did not seem to have a bit
more sense, thought, or feeling, than John Farden.
John Farden was the first to break
the silence: ‘I wouldn’t bide,’
said he.
Paul looked up, and muttered, ‘I have nowhere
to go.’
‘Farmer uses thee shameful,’ repeated
John. ‘Why don’t thee cut?’
Paul saw the smoke of Mrs. King’s
chimney. That had always seemed like a friend
to him, but it came across him that they too thought
him a runaway from prison, and he felt as if his only
bond of fellowship was gone. But there was something
else, too; and he made answer, ’I’ll bide
for the Confirmation.’
‘Eh?’ said John, ‘what good’ll
that do ye?’
‘Help me to be a good lad,’
said Paul, who knew John Farden would not enter into
any other explanation.
‘Why, what’ll they do to ye?’
‘The Bishop will put his hand
on me and bless me,’ said Paul; and as he said
the words there was hope and refreshment coming back.
He was a child of God, if no other owned him.
‘Whoy,’ said Farden, much
as he might have spoken to his horse, ’rum sort
of a head thou’st got! Thee’ll never
go up to Bishop such a guy!’
‘Can’t help it,’
said Paul rather sullenly; ’it ain’t the
clothes that God looks at.’
John scanned him all over, with his
face looking more foolish than ever in the puzzle
he felt.
‘Well,’ he said, ‘and what wilt
get by it?’
‘God’s grace to do right,
I hope,’ said Paul; then he added, out of his
sad heart, ’It’s bad enough here, to be
sure. It would be a bad look-out if one hoped
for nothing afterwards.’
Somehow John’s mind didn’t
take in the notion of afterwards, and he did not go
on talking to Paul. Perhaps there was a dread
in his poor dull mind of getting frightened out of
the deadly stupefied sleep it was bound in.
But that bit of talk had done Paul
great good, by rousing him to the thought of what
he had to hope for. There was the Confirmation
nigh at hand, and then on beyond there was rest; and
the words came into his mind, ’There the wicked
cease from troubling, and there the weary are at rest.’
Poor, poor boy! He was very
young to have such yearnings towards the grave, and
well-nigh to wish he lay as near to it as Alfred King,
so he might have those loving tender hands near him,
those kind voices round him. Paul had gone through
a great deal in these few months; and, used to good
shelter and regular meals, he was less inured to bodily
hardship than many a cottage boy. His utter
neglect of his person was telling on him; he was less
healthy and strong than he had been, and though high
spirits, merriment, and the pleasure of freedom and
independence, had made all light to him in the summer,
yet now the cold weather, with his insufficient food
and scanty clothing, was dulling him and deadening
him, and hard work and unkind usage seemed to be grinding
his very senses down. To be sure, when twelve
o’clock came, he went up into the loft, ate
his bit of dry bread, and said his prayers, as he had
not been able to do in the morning, and that made
him feel less forlorn and downcast for a little while;
but then as he sat, he grew cold, and numb, and sleepy,
and seemed to have no life in him, but to be moving
like a horse in a mill, when Boldre called him down,
and told him not to be idling there.
The theft in Mrs. Barker’s poultry-yard
was never traced home to any one, but the world did
not the less believe Dick Royston and Jesse Rolt to
have been concerned in it. Indeed, they had been
drinking up some of their gains when Harold met them
at the shooting-gallery: and Mrs. Shepherd would
not put it out of her head that Paul Blackthorn was
in the secret, and that if he did really go for the
medicine as he said, it was only as an excuse for
carrying the chickens to some receiver of stolen goods.
She had no notion of any person doing anything out
of pure love and pity. Moreover, it is much
easier to put a suspicion into people’s heads
than out again; and if Paul’s whole history and
each day’s doings had been proved to her in
a court of justice, she would still have chiefly remembered
that she had always thought ill of him, and that Ellen
King had said he was a runaway convict, and so she
would have believed him to the end.
Ellen had long ago forgotten that
she had said anything of the kind; and though she
still held her nose rather high when Paul was near,
she would have answered for his honesty as readily
as for that of her own brothers. But hers had
not been the charity that thinketh no evil, and her
idle words had been like thistle-down, lightly sent
forth, but when they had lighted, bearing thorns and
prickles.
Those thorns were galling poor Paul.
Nobody could guess what his glimpses of that happy,
peaceful, loving family were to him. They seemed
to him like a softer, better kind of world, and he
looked at their fair faces and fresh, well-ordered
garments with a sort of reverence; a kind look or
greeting from Mrs. King, a mere civil answer from Ellen,
those two sights of the white spirit-looking Alfred,
were like the rays of light that shone into his dark
hay-loft. Sometimes he heard them singing their
hymns and psalms on a Sunday evening, and then the
tears would come into his eyes as he leant over the
gate to listen. And, as if it was because Ellen
kept at the greatest distance from him, he set more
store by her words and looks than those of any one
else, was always glad when she served him in the shop,
and used to watch her on Sunday, looking as fresh
as a flower in her neat plain dress.
And now to hear that she not only
thought meanly of him, which he knew well enough,
but thought him a thief, a runaway, and an impostor
coming about with false tales, was like a weight upon
his sunken spirits, and seemed to take away all the
little heart hard usage had left him, made him feel
as if suspicious eyes were on him whenever he went
for his bit of bread, and took away all his peace
in looking at the cottage.
He did once take courage to say to
Harold, ’Did your sister really say I had run
away from gaol?’
‘Oh, nobody minds what our Ellen says,’
was the answer.
‘But did she say so?’
’I don’t know, I dare
say she did. She’s so fine, that she thinks
no one that comes up-stairs in dirty shoes worth speaking
to. I’m sure she’s the plague of
my life - always at me.’
That was not much comfort for Paul.
He had other friends, to be sure. All the boys
in the place liked him, and were very angry with the
way the farmer treated him, and greatly to their credit,
they admired his superior learning instead of being
jealous of it. Mrs. Hayward, the sexton’s
wife, the same who had bound up his hand when he cut
it at harvest, even asked him to come in and help
her boys in the evenings with what they had to prepare
for Mr. Cope. He was not sorry to do so sometimes.
The cottage was a slatternly sort of place, where
he did not feel ashamed of himself, and the Haywards
were mild good sort of folks, from whom he was sure
never to hear either a bad or an unkind word; though
he did not care for them, nor feel refreshed and helped
by being with them as he did with the Kings.
John Farden, too, was good-natured
to him, and once or twice hindered Boldre from striking
or abusing him; he offered him a pipe once, but Paul
could not smoke, and another time brought him out a
pint of beer into the field. Mrs. Shepherd spied
him drinking it from her upper window, and believed
all the more that he got money somehow, and spent it
in drink.
So the time wore on till the Confirmation,
all seeming like one dull heavy dream of bondage;
and as the weather became colder, the poor boy seemed
to have no power of thinking of anything, but of so
getting through his work as to avoid violence, to
keep himself from perishing with cold, and not to
hurt his chilblains more than he could help.
All his quick intellect and good instruction
seemed to have perished away, and the last time he
went to Mr. Cope’s, he sat as if he were stupid
or asleep, and when a question came to him, sat with
his mouth open like silly Bill Pridden.
Mr. Cope knew him too well not to
feel, as he wrote the ticket, that there were very
few of whom he could so entirely from his heart say
‘Examined and APPROVED,’ as the poor lonely
outcast foundling, Paul Blackthorn, who could not
even tell whether he were fifteen, sixteen, or seventeen,
but could just make sure that he had once been caned
by old Mr. Haynes, who went away from the Union twelve
years ago.
‘Do you think you can keep the
ticket safe if I give it you now, Paul?’ asked
Mr. Cope, recollecting that the cows might sup upon
it like his Prayer-book.
Paul put his hands down to the bottom
of his pockets. They were all one hole, and
that sad lost foolish look came over his wan face again,
and startled Mr. Cope.
The boys grinned, but Charles Hayward
stepped forward. ’Please, Sir, let me
take care of it for him.’
Mr. Cope and Paul both agreed, and
Mr. Cope kept Charles for a moment to say, as he gave
him a shilling, ’Look here, Charles, do you think
you can manage to get that poor fellow a tolerable
breakfast on Saturday before he goes? And if
you could make him look a little more decent?’
Charles pulled his forelock and looked
knowing. In fact, there was a little plot among
these good-natured boys, and Harold King was in it
too, though he was not of the Confirmation party,
and said and thought he was very glad of it.
He did not want to bind himself to be so very good.
Silly boy; as if Baptism had not bound him already!
Mrs. Hayward put her head out as Paul
passed her cottage, and called out, ’I say,
you Paul, you come in to-morrow evening with our Charlie
and Jim, and I’ll wash you when I washes them.’
Good Mrs. Hayward made a mistake that
the more delicate-minded Mrs. King would never have
made. Perhaps if a pail of warm water and some
soap had been set before Paul, he might actually have
washed himself; but he was much too big and too shamefaced
a lad to fancy sharing a family scrubbing by a woman,
whatever she might do to her own sons. But considering
the size of the Hayward cottage, and the way in which
the family lived, this sort of notion was not likely
to come into the head of the good-natured mother.
So she and her boys were much vexed
when Paul did not make his appearance, and she made
a face of great disgust when Charles said, ‘Never
mind, Mother, my white frock will hide no end of dirt.’
‘I shall have to wash it over
again before you can wear it, I know,’ said
Mrs. Hayward. ’Not as I grudges the trouble;
he’s a poor lost orphant, that it’s a
shame to see so treated.’
Mrs. Hayward did not know that she
was bestowing the cup of cold water, as well as being
literally ready to wash the feet of the poor disciple.
A clean body is a type and token of
a pure mind; and though the lads of Friarswood did
not quite perceive this, there was a feeling about
them of there being something unnatural and improper,
and a disgrace to Friarswood, in any one going up
to the Bishop in such a condition as Paul. Especially,
as Charles Hayward said, when he was the pick of the
whole lot. Perhaps Charles was right, for surely
Paul was single-hearted in his hope of walking straight
to his one home, Heaven, and he had been doing no
other than bearing his cross, when he so patiently
took the being ‘buffeted’ when he did
well, and faithfully served his froward master.
But Paul was not to escape the outward
cleansing, and from one of the very last people from
whom it would have been expected. He had just
pulled his bed of hay down over him, and was trying
to curl himself up so as to stop his teeth from chattering,
with Cæsar on his feet, when the dog growled, and
a great voice lowered to a gruff whisper, said, ’Come
along, young un!’
‘I’m coming,’ cried Paul.
Though it was not Boldre’s voice,
it had startled him terribly; he was so much used
to ill-treatment, that he expected a savage blow every
moment.
But the great hand that closed on
him, though rough, was not unkind.
‘Poor lad, how he quakes!’
said John Farden’s voice. ’Don’t
ye be afeard, it’s only me.’
‘Nobody got at the horses?’ cried Paul.
’No, no; only I ain’t
going to have you going up to yon big parson all one
muck-heap! Come on, and make no noise about it.’
Paul did not very well know what was
going to befall him, but he did not feel unsafe with
John Farden, and besides, his lank frame was in the
grasp of that big hand like a mouse in the power of
a mastiff. So he let himself be hauled down
the ladder, into an empty stall, where, behold, there
was a dark lantern (which had been at bad work in its
time), a pail, a brush, a bit of soap, and a ragged
towel.
John laid hold of him much as Alfred
in his page days used to do of Lady Jane’s little
dog when it had to be washed, but Puck had the advantage
in keeping on his shaggy coat all the time, and in
being more gently handled, whereas Farden scrubbed
with such hearty good-will, that Paul thought his
very skin would come off. But he had undergone
the like in the workhouse, and he knew how to accommodate
himself to it; and when his rough bath was over, though
he was very sore, and stiff, and chilly, he really
felt relieved, and more respectable than he had done
for many months, only rather sorry he must put on
his filthy old rags again; and he gave honest John
more thanks than might have been expected.
The Confirmation was to be at eleven
o’clock, at Elbury, and John had undertaken
his morning’s work, so that Mr. Shepherd grudgingly
consented to spare him, knowing that all the other
farmers of course did the same, and that there would
be a cry of shame if he did not.
Paul had just found his way down the
ladder in the morning, with thoughts going through
his mind that to him this would be the coming of the
Comforter, and he was sure he wanted comfort; and that
for some hours of this day at least, he should be
at peace from rude words and blows, when he heard
a great confusion of merry voices and suppressed laughing,
and saw the heads of some of the lads bobbing about
near Mrs. King’s garden.
Was it time already to set off, he
wondered, looking up to the sun; but then those boys
seemed to be in an uproarious state such as did not
suit his present mood, nor did he think Mr. Cope would
consider it befitting. He would have let them
go by, feeling himself such a scare-crow as they might
think a blot upon them; but he remembered that Charles
Hayward had his ticket, and as he looked at himself,
he doubted whether he should be let into a strange
church.
‘Paul! Paul Blackthorn!’
called Harold, with a voice all aglee.
‘Well!’ said Paul, ‘what do you
want of me?’
‘Come on, and you’ll see.’
’I don’t want a row.
Is Charlie Hayward there? Just ask him for my
card, and don’t make a work.’
‘He’ll give it you if
you’ll come for it,’ said Harold; and seeing
there was no other chance, Paul slowly came.
Harold led him to the stable, where just within the
door stood a knot of stout hearty boys, snorting with
fun, hiding their heads on each other’s shoulders,
and bending their buskined knees with merriment.
‘Now then!’ cried Charles
Hayward, and he had got hold of the only button that
held Paul’s coat together.
Paul was bursting out with something,
but George Grant’s arms were round his waist,
and his hands were fumbling at his fastenings.
They were each one much stronger than he was now,
and they drowned his voice with shouts of laughter,
while as fast as one garment was pulled off, another
was put on.
‘Mind, you needn’t make
such a work, it bain’t presents,’ said
George Grant, ’only we won’t have them
asking up at Elbury if we’ve saved the guy to
bring in.’
‘It is a present, though, old
Betty Bushel’s shirt,’ said Charles Hayward.
’She said she’d throw it at his head if
he brought it back again; but the frock’s mine.’
‘And the corduroys is mine,’
said George Grant. ’My! they be a sight
too big in the band! Run in, Harold, and see
if your mother can lend us a pin.’
‘And the waistcoat is my summer
one,’ said Fred Bunting. ’He’s
too big too; why, Paul, you’re no better than
a natomy!’
‘Never mind, my white frock
will hide it all,’ said Charles, ’and here’s
Ned’s cap for you. Oh! and it’s poor
Alfred’s boots.’
Paul could not make up his mind to
walk all the way in the boots, but to satisfy the
boys he engaged to put them on as soon as they were
getting to Elbury.
‘My! he looks quite respectable,’
cried Charles, running back a little way to look at
him.
‘I wonder if Mr. Cope will know
him?’ exclaimed Harold, jumping leap-frog fashion
on George Grant’s back.
‘The maids will take him for
some strange gentleman,’ exclaimed Jem Hayward;
‘and why, bless me, he’s washed, I do declare!’
as a streak of light from the door fell on Paul’s
visage.
‘No, you don’t mean it,’
broke out Charles. ’Let’s look! yes,
I protest, why, the old grime between his eyes is
gone after all. How did you manage that, Paul?’
Paul rather uneasily mumbled something
about John Farden, and the boys clapped their hands,
and shouted, so that Alfred, who well knew what was
going on, raised himself on his pillow and laughed.
It was rather blunt treatment for feelings if they
were tender, but these were rough warm-hearted village
boys, and it was all their good-nature.
‘And where’s the grub?’
asked Charles importantly, looking about.
‘Oh, not far off,’ said
Harold; and in another moment, he and Charles had
brought in a black coffee-pot, a large mug, some brown
sugar, a hunch of bread, some butter, and a great
big smoking sausage.
Paul looked at it, as if he were not
quite sure what to do with it. One boy proceeded
to turn in an inordinate quantity of sugar, another
to pour in the brown coffee that sent out a refreshing
steam enough to make any one hungry. George
Grant spread the butter, cut the sausage in half, put
it on the bread, and thrust it towards Paul.
‘Eat it - s - s,’
said Charles, patting Paul on the back. ’Mr.
Cope said you was to, and you must obey your minister.’
‘Not all for me?’ said
Paul, not able to help a pull at the coffee, the mug
warming his fingers the while.
‘Oh yes, we’ve all had
our breakfastisses,’ said George Grant; ’we
are only come to make you eat yours like a good boy,
as Mr. Cope said you should.’
They stood round, looking rather as
they would have done had Paul been an elephant taking
his meal in a show; but not one would hear of helping
him off with a crumb out of Mr. Cope’s shilling.
George Grant was a big hungry lad, and his breakfast
among nine at home had not been much to speak of;
but savoury as was the sausage, and perfumy as was
the coffee, he would have scorned to take a fragment
from that stranger, beg him to do so as Paul might;
and what could not be eaten at that time, with a good
pint of the coffee, was put aside in a safe nook in
the stable to be warmed up for supper.
That morning’s work was not
a bad preparation for Confirmation after all.
Harold had stayed so long, that he
had to jump on the pony and ride his fastest to be
in time at the post. He was very little ashamed
of not being among those lads, and felt as if he had
the more time to enjoy himself; but there were those
who felt very sad for him - Alfred, who would
have given so much to receive the blessing; and Ellen,
whose confirmation was very lonely and melancholy
without either of her brothers; besides his mother,
to whom his sad carelessness was such constant grief
and heart-ache.
Ellen was called for by the carriage
from the Grange, and sat up behind with the kitchen-maid,
who was likewise to be confirmed. Little Miss
Jane sat inside in her white dress and veil, looking
like a snowdrop, Alfred thought, as his mother lifted
him up to the window to see her, as the carriage stood
still while Ellen climbed to her seat.
In the course of the morning, Mrs.
King made time to read over the Confirmation Service
with Alfred, to think of the blessing she was receiving,
and to pray that it might rest upon her through life.
And they entreated, too, that Harold might learn
to care for it, and be brought to a better mind.
‘O Mother,’ said Alfred,
after lying thinking for sometime, ’if I thought
Harold would take up for good and be a better boy to
you than I have been, I should not mind anything so
much.’
And there was Harold all the time
wondering whether he should be able to get out in
the evening to have a lark with Dick and Jesse.
Ellen was set down by-and-by.
Her colour was very deep, but she looked gentle and
happy, and the first thing she did was to bend over
Alfred, kiss him, and say how she wished he had been
there.
Then, when she had been into her own
room, she came back and told them about the beautiful
large Elbury Church, and the great numbers of young
girls and boys on the two sides of the aisle, and of
the Bishop seated in the chair by the altar, and the
chanted service, with the organ sounding so beautiful.
And then how her heart had beat, and
she hardly dared to speak her vow, and how she trembled
when her turn came to go up to the rail, but she said
it was so comfortable to see Mr. Cope in his surplice,
looking so young among the other clergymen, and coming
a little forward, as if to count out and encourage
his own flock. She was less frightened when she
had met his kind eye, and was able to kneel down with
a more quiet mind to receive the gift which had come
down on the Day of Pentecost.
Alfred wanted to know whether she
had seen Paul, but Ellen had been kneeling down and
not thinking of other people, when the Friarswood boys
went up. Only she had passed him on the way home,
and seen that though he was lagging the last of the
boys, he did not look dull and worn, as he had been
doing lately.
Ellen had been asked to go to the
Grange after church to-morrow evening, and drink tea
there, in celebration of the Confirmation which the
two young foster-sisters had shared.
Harold went to fetch her home at night,
and they both came into the house fresh and glowing
with the brisk frosty air, and also with what they
had to tell.
’O mother, what do you think?
Paul Blackthorn is to go to the Grange to-morrow.
My Lady wants to see him, and perhaps she will make
Mr. Pound find some work for him about the farm.’
Harold jumped up and snapped his fingers
towards the farm. ’There’s for old
Skinflint!’ said he; ’not a chap in the
place but will halloo for joy!’
‘Well, I am glad!’ said
Mrs. King; ’I didn’t think that poor lad
would have held out much longer, winter weather and
all. But how did my Lady come to hear of it?’
’Oh, it seems she noticed him
going to church in all his rags, and Mr. Cope told
her who he was; so Miss Jane came and asked me all
about him, and I told her what a fine scholar he is,
and how shamefully the farmer and Boldre treat him,
and how good he was to Alfred about the ointment,
and how steady he is. And I told her about the
boys dressing him up yesterday, and how he wouldn’t
take a gift. She listened just as if it was
a story, and she ran away to her grandmamma, and presently
came back to say that the boy was to come up to-morrow
after his work, for Lady Jane to speak to him.’
‘Well, at least, he has been
washed once,’ said Mrs. King; ’but he’s
so queer; I hope he will have no fancies, and will
behave himself.’
‘I’ll tackle him,’
declared Harold decidedly. ’I’ve
a great mind to go out this moment and tell him.’
Mrs. King prevented this; she persuaded
Harold that Mrs. Shepherd would fly out at them if
she heard any noise in the yard, and that it would
be better for every one to let Paul alone till the
morning.
Morning came, and as soon as Harold
was dressed, he rushed to the farm-yard, but he could
not find Paul anywhere, and concluded that he had been
sent out with the cows, and would be back by breakfast-time.
As soon as he had brought home the
post-bag, he dashed across the road again, but came
back in a few moments, looking beside himself.
‘He’s gone!’ he said, and threw
himself back in a chair.
‘Gone!’ cried Mrs. King and Ellen with
one voice, quite aghast.
‘Gone!’ repeated Harold.
’The farmer hunted him off this morning!
Missus will have it that he’s been stealing
her eggs, and that there was a lantern in the stable
on Friday night; so they told him to be off with him,
and he’s gone!’
‘Poor, poor boy! just when my
Lady would have been the making of him!’ cried
Ellen.
‘But where - which way is he gone?’
asked Mrs. King.
‘I might ride after him, and
overtake him,’ cried Harold, starting up, ’but
I never thought to ask! And Mrs. Shepherd was
ready to pitch into me, so I got away as soon as I
could. Do you run over and ask, Ellen; you always
were a favourite.’
They were in such an eager state,
that Ellen at once sprang up, and hastily throwing
on her bonnet, ran across the road, and tapped at Mrs.
Shepherd’s open door, exclaiming breathlessly,
’O Ma’am, I beg your pardon, but will
you tell me where Paul Blackthorn is gone?’
‘Paul Blackthorn! how should
I know?’ said Mrs. Shepherd crossly. ’I’m
not to be looking after thieves and vagabonds.
He’s a come-by-chance, and he’s a go-by-chance,
and a good riddance too!’
‘Oh but, Ma’am, my Lady wanted to speak
to him.’
This only made Mrs. Shepherd the more set against
the poor boy.
‘Ay, ay, I know - coming
over the gentry; and a good thing he’s gone!’
said she. ’The place isn’t to be
harbouring thieves and vagrants, or who’s to
pay the rates? My eggs are gone, I tell you,
and who should take ’em but that lad, I’d
like to know?’
’Them was two rotten nest-eggs
as I throwed away when I was cleaning the stable.’
‘Who told you to put in your
word, John Farden?’ screamed Mrs. Shepherd,
turning on him. ’Ye’d best mind what
ye’re about, or ye’ll be after him soon.’
‘No loss neither,’ muttered
John, stopping to pick up his shovel.
‘And you didn’t see which
way he was gone?’ asked Ellen, looking from the
labourer to the farmer’s wife.
‘Farmer sent un off or ever
I come,’ replied John, ‘or I’d ha’
gied un a breakfast.’
‘I’m sure I can’t
tell,’ said Mrs. Shepherd, with a toss of her
head. ’And as to you, Ellen King, I’m
surprised at you, running after a scamp like that,
that you told me yourself was out of a prison.’
‘Oh but, Mrs. Shepherd -
‘You ought to be ashamed of
yourself,’ interrupted Mrs. Shepherd; ’and
I wonder your mother allows it. But there’s
nothing like girls now-a-days.’
Ellen thought John Farden grinned;
and feeling as if nothing so shocking could ever happen
to her again, she flew back, she hardly knew how, to
her home, clapped the door after, and dropping into
a chair as Harold had done, burst into such a fit
of crying, that she could not speak, and only shook
her head in answer to Harold’s questions as to
how Paul was gone.
‘Oh, no one knew!’ she
choked out among her sobs; ’and Mrs. Shepherd - such
things!’
Harold stamped his foot, and Mrs.
King tried to soothe her. In the midst, she
recollected that she could not bear her brothers to
guess at the worst part of the ‘such things;’
and recovering herself a moment, she said, ’No,
no, they’ve driven him off! He’s
gone, and - and, oh! Mother, Mrs. Shepherd
will have it he’s a thief, and - and
she says I said so.’
That was bad enough, and Ellen wept
bitterly again; while her mother and Harold both cried
out with surprise.
’Yes - but - I
did say I dare said he was out of a reformatory - and
that she should remember it! Now I’ve
taken away his character, and he’s a poor lost
boy!’
Oh, idle words! idle words!