Samson Mountain went home in an ill-temper,
and, as was usual with him when in that condition,
did everything he had to do with a sulky and noisy
emphasis, bursting open doors with unnecessary violence,
slamming them with needless force behind him, and
clamping heavily from room to room. His wife,
who was submissive at the surface, but unconquerable
at bottom, knew these signs, and accepted them with
outer show of meekness. Samson tramped into the
sitting-room, and there found his wife alone.
He flung to the door behind him with a crash which
would have been startling if it had been unexpected,
and fell heavily into a roomy arm-chair by the fireside.
Mrs. Mountain took no notice of this, but went on
placidly with her sewing. Samson threw his heavily-booted
feet noisily into the fender, and still Mrs. Mountain
went on placidly, without so much as looking at him.
Stung by this disregard of his obvious ill-humour,
Samson made a lunge with his foot at the fire-irons,
and brought them down with a bang.
‘Lawk a daisy me, Samson,’
said his wife mildly. ’What’s the
matter with the man?’
‘Matter!’ growled Samson.
’It’s a thing as ud get a saint to set
his back up. I was down i’ the bridge leasowe
bare an hour ago, and who should I see but that young
imp of a Reddy along wi’ that old viper of a
Bubb. Thee know’st the chap-that
Ichabod.’
‘I know him, Samson,’
answered Mrs. Mountain. ’He’s the
most impudent of all of ’em.’
‘They stood atop o’ the
bridge,’ pursued Samson, ’and I could hear
’em talkin’. Th’ ode rip was
tellin’ the young un that outworn lie about the
brook. I’d got a shot i’ the barrel,
and I’d more than half a mind to ha’ peppered
him. I’d ha’ done it if it had been
worth while.’
‘There’s no end to their
malice and oncharitable-ness,’ said Mrs. Mountain.
‘I heard the young imp say he’d
fowt our Joe and licked him,’ pursued Samson.
’If ever it should come to my knowledge as a
truth I’d put Master Joe in such fettle he wouldn’t
sit down for the best side a month o’ Sundays.’
’They ‘m giving the child
such airs,’ said his wife, ’it’s
enough to turn the bread o’ life which nourishes.’
Mrs. Mountain had an object in view,
and, after her own fashion, had held it long in view
in silence. The moment seemed to her propitious,
and she determined to approach it.
‘Young toad!’ said Samson,
rising to kick at the coals with his heavy-heeled
boot, and plunging backward into the chair again.
‘To hear him talk-that
fine an’ mincin’-you’d
think he was one o’ my lord’s grandchildren
or a son o’ the squire’s at least,’
said Mrs. Mountain, approaching her theme with circuitous
caution.
‘Ay!’ Samson assented
’It’s enough to turn your stomach to listen
to him.’
’If they go on as they’re
goings pursued his wife, circling a little nearer,
‘we shall live to see fine things.’
‘We shall, indeed,’ said
Samson, a little mollified to find his wife so unusually
warm in the quarrel. ’There’s no such
a thing as contentment to be found amongst ’em.
They settle up to be looked upon as gentlefolks.’
’Yes; fine things we shall live
to see, no doubt, if we don’t tek care.
But thanks be, Samson, it’s left in our own hands.’
‘What be’st hoverin’
at?’ demanded Samson, turning upon her with his
surly red face.
‘Things ain’t what they
used to be when you an’ me was younger,’
said Mrs. Mountain. ’The plain ode-fashioned
Barfield talk as you and me was bred up to, Samson,
ain’t good enough nowadays for the very kitchen
wenches and the labourers on the farm. Everybody’s
gettin’ that new-fangled!’
‘Barfield’s good enough
for me, and good enough for mine,’ said Samson,
with sulky wrath.
’It’s good enough for
we, to be sure, but whether it’s good enough
for ourn is another churnin’ o’ butter
altogether,’ his wife answered. ’It
ud seem as if ivery generation talked different from
one another. My mother, as was a very well-spoken
woman for her day, used to call a cup o’ tay
a dish o’ tay, and that’s a thing as only
the very ignorant ud stoop to nowadays.’
Samson growled, and wallowed discontentedly in the
big arm-chair. ‘A mother’s got her
natural feelings, Samson,’ Mrs. Mountain continued,
with an air and tone of mildest resignation. ’I
don’t scruple to allow as it’ll hurt me
if I should live to see our Joe looked down upon by
a Reddy.’
‘Looked down upon!’ cried
Samson. ’Where’s the Reddy as can
count acre for acre agen us, or guinea for guinea?’
‘The Reddy’s is fairly
well-to-do, Samson,’ said Mrs. Mountain; ’very
nigh as well-to-do as we be.’
‘Pooh!’ returned Samson.
‘Oh, but they be, though,’
his wife insisted. ’Pretty near. There’s
nothing so much between us as’d prevent ’em
from taking airs with us if they could find out anything
to do it for.’
‘If they could!’ Samson
assented. ’Abel Eeddy was a bragger and
a boaster from his cradle days.’
‘That’s where it is,’
cried Mrs. Mountain, in a tone which implied that
Samson had made a discovery of the first importance,
and that this discovery unexpectedly confirmed her
own argument. ’Let ’em have the least
little bit of a chance for a brag, and where be you?’
’You might trust ’em to
tek advantage on it if they had it,’ said
her husband.
‘Of course you might,’
said she, with warmth, ’and that’s why
I’m fearful on it.’
‘Fearful o’ what?’ demanded Samson.
‘O’ these here scornful
fine-gentleman ways as’ll be a thorn in our
Joe’s side as long as he lives, poor little chap,
unless we put him in the way to combat again ’em.’
‘Ah!’ Samson growled,
suddenly enlightened. ’I see now what thee
beest drivin’ at. Now, you take a straight
sayin’ from me, Mary Ann. I’ll have
no fine-mouthed, false-natur’d corruption i’
my household. If the Reddys choose to breed up
that young imp of theirn to drawl fine and to talk
smooth above his station-let ’em.’
‘Well, Samson,’ returned
Mrs. Mountain, who knew by long experience when her
husband was malleable, ’you know best, and you’re
the master here, as it’s on’y fit and
becomin’ an’ in the rightful nature o’
things as you should be.’
The first effect of the oil of flattery
seemed to be to harden him.
‘I be, and I mean to be,’
he answered, with added surliness. ’If the
speech and the clothes and the vittles as have been
good enough for me ain’t good enough for any
young upstart as may follow after me, it is
a pity.’
Mary Ann kept silence and looked meek.
Samson growled and bullied a little, and wore the
airs of a dictator. By and by a serving-maid came
in and began to arrange the table for tea, and a little
later a boy and a girl stole noiselessly into the
room.
‘Joe,’ said Samson sternly,
‘come here!’ The boy approached him with
evident dread. ’What’s this I hear
about thee and that young villin of a Reddy?’
‘I don’t know, father,’ the boy
answered.
‘I heard him makin’ a
boast this afternoon,’ said Samson, rolling
bullyingly in his arm-chair, ’as you and him
had fowt last holidays, and as he gi’en you
a hiding.’
Joe said nothing, but looked as if
he expected the experience to be repeated.
‘Now, what ha’ you got
to say to that?’ demanded his father.
‘Why,’ began Joe, edging
back a little, ‘he’s bigger nor I be, an’
six months o’der.’
‘Do you mean to tell me,’
cried Samson, reaching out a hand and seizing the
little fellow by the jacket, ’do you mean to
tell me as you allowed to have enough to that young
villin?’
‘No,’ Joe protested.
‘That I niver did. It was the squire as
parted us.’
‘You remember this,’ said
his father, shaking him to emphasise the promise.
’If ever you agree to tek a hiding from
a Reddy you’ve got one to follow on from me.
D’ye hear?’
‘Yes, father.’
‘Tek heed as well as hear. D’ye
hear?’
‘Yes, father.’
’And here’s another thing,
mind you. It’s brought to me as you and
him shook hands and took on to be friends with one
another. Is that trew?’ Joe looked guilty,
but made no answer. ‘Is it trew?’
Still Joe returned no answer, and his father changing
the hand with which he held him, for his own greater
convenience, knocked him off his feet, restored him
to his balance, knocked him off his feet again, and
again settled him. ‘Now,’ said Samson,
‘is it trew?’
The boy tried to recoil from the uplifted
threatening hand, and cried out ‘No!’
‘Now,’ said Samson, rising
with a grim satisfaction, ’that’s a lie.
There’s nothin’ i’ the world as I
abhor from like a lie I’ll teach thee to tell
me lies. Goo into the brewus and tek thy
shirt off; March!’
The little girl clung to her mother’s
skirts crying and trembling. The mother herself
was trembling, and had turned pale.
‘Hush, hush, my pretty,’
she said, caressing the child, and averting her eyes
from Joe.
‘March!’ said Samson,
and Joe slunk out of the room, hardening his heart
as well as might be for endurance. But when he
was once out of sight of the huge bullying figure
and threatening eye and hand, the sight of his cap
lying upon a chair in the hall supplied him with an
inspiration. He seized the cap, slipped out at
the front door, and ran.
The early winter night was falling
fast by this time. Half a dozen stars twinkled
intermittently in the black-blue waste of sky, and
when the lad paused to listen for possible sounds
of pursuit the hollow moaning of the wind and the
clang of bare wintry poles mingled with the noise of
his own suppressed breathing.
The runaway fancied himself bound
(as all British runaway boys seem bound) for sea,
and he set out without delay to walk to Liverpool.
He got as far as the brook which formed the limit
to his father’s farm, and lingering before he
set foot upon the bridge, began to cry a little, and
to bemoan his chances and the dear ones left behind.
His father came in for none of Joe’s regrets.
It was in the nature of things to the boy’s
mind that his father should administer to him periodical
thrashings, whether he had earned them or not.
It was the one social relationship which existed between
them. It was only quite of late that Joe had begun
to discern injustice in his father’s bullyings.
Children take things as they come, and to the mind
of a child-in a modified sense, of course-whatever
is, is right. That a thing exists is its own best
justification. There is no reason to seek reasons
for it. But Joe Mountain, having nearly outgrown
this state of juvenile acquiescence, had begun to
make inquiry of himself, and, as a result, had familiarised
himself with many mental pictures in which he figured
as an adventurer rich in adventures. In his day
the youth of England were less instructed than they
are now, but the immortal Defoe existed, and Lemuel
Gulliver was as real as he is to-day. Perhaps
the Board schools may have made that great mariner
a little less real than he used to be. Joe believed
in him with all his heart, had never had the shadow
of a doubt about him, and meant to sail straight from
Liverpool to Lilliput. He would defer his voyage
to Brobdingnagia until he had grown bigger, and should
be something of a match for its inhabitants.
But it was cold, it was darkening
fast, it was past his ordinary tea-time. Liverpool
and Lilliput were far away, pretty nearly equidistant
to the juvenile mind, and but for Samson’s shadow
the tea-table would have looked alluring. To
be sure of tea, and a bed to sleep in afterwards,
it seemed almost worth while to go back to the brewhouse
and obey the paternal command to take his shirt off.
To do the child justice, it was less the fear of the
thrashing than the hot sense of rebellion at unfairness
which kept him from returning. His father had
beaten him into that untrue cry of ‘No,’
and had meant to force him to it, and then to beat
him anew for it. Joe knew that better than Samson,
for Samson, like the rest of us, liked to stand well
with himself, and kept self-opinion in blinkers.
Joe set foot on the bridge. He
had crossed the boundary brook hundreds of times in
his brief life, and it had generally come into his
mind, with a boyish sense of adventure, that when
he did so he was putting foot into the enemy’s
country. But the feeling had never been so strong
as now. The Mountain Farm was home, and beyond
it lay the wide, wide world, looking wide indeed,
and bleak and cold. What with hot rebellion at
injustice and cold fear of the vast and friendless
expanse, Joe’s tears multiplied, and leaning
his arms upon the low coping of the bridge, with his
head between them and his nose touching the frozen
stone, he began to cry unrestrainedly.
Suddenly he heard a footstep, and
it struck a new terror into his soul. Freebooters,
footpads, kidnappers, et hoc genus omne, roamed
those fields by night, in course of nature. To
the snug security of the home fireside and bed their
images came with a delightful thrill of fear, but
to be here alone and in the midst of them was altogether
another thing. He crept crouching across the
bridge, and stowed himself into the smallest possible
compass between the end of the stonework and the neighbouring
hedgerow, and there waited trembling. His pulses
beat so fast and made such a noise in his ears that
he was ready to take the sound of footsteps for the
tread of a whole ogreish army, when he heard a voice.
‘Hode on a minute, while I shift the sack.’
The sack? It was easy-it
was inevitable-to know that the sack contained
a goblin supper.
‘I shall be late for tea, Ichabod,’
said another voice, ’and then I shall get a
blowing-up for coming.’
Let him who sighs in
sadness here,
Rejoice, and know a
friend is near.
Joe sprang from his hiding-place,
and startled Master Richard and Ichabod more than
a little.
‘That thee, Dick?’
He knew it well enough, but it was
quite delightful to be able to ask it with certainty.
‘Hillo,’ said Master Richard,
recognising his sworn friend. ’What are
you doing? Are you trapping anything?’
‘No,’ the hereditary enemy
answered. He had been crying, the poor little
chap, until he had been frightened into quiet, and
now on a sudden he was as brave and as glad again
as ever he had been in his life. Once more adventures
loomed ahead for the adventurous, and he shone within
and grew warm with the sweet reflux of courage as he
whispered, ’I’m running away from home!’
Once again, the feat was glorious.
‘No?’ said Master Richard,
smitten with envy and admiration. ’Are you?
Really?’
‘Yes,’ Joe answered.
‘I’m agooin’ to Liverpool, to begin
wi’.’
This was exquisitely large and vague,
and Master Richard began to yearn for a share in the
high enterprise upon which his friend had entered.
He had half a mind to run away from home himself,
though, to be sure, there was nothing else to run
away from. In Joe’s case there was a difference.
‘Where are you going to stay
to-night?’ asked Master Richard. The question
sounded practical, but at bottom it was nothing of
the sort. It was part of the romance of the thing,
and yet it threw cold water on Joe’s newly-lighted
courage, and put it out again.
‘I don’t know,’ said Joe, somewhat
forlornly.
‘I say,’ interjected Ichabod, ‘is
that young Mountain, Master Richard?’
‘Yes,’ said Master Richard.
‘Thee know’st thy feyther
is again thy speakin’ to him, and his feyther
is again his speakin’ to thee.’
‘You mind your own business,
Ichabod,’ said the young autocrat, who was a
little spoiled perhaps, and had been accustomed to
have his own way in quite a princely fashion.
‘I’m mindin’ it,’
returned Ichabod. ‘It’s a part o’
my business to keep thee out o’ mischief.’
‘Ah!’ piped Master Richard,
’you needn’t mind that part of your business
to-night.’
‘All right,’ said Ichabod,
reshouldering the sack he had meanwhile balanced on
the coping of the bridge. ’See as thee beesn’t
late for tay-time.’
With that, having discharged his conscience,
he went on again, and the two boys stayed behind.
‘What are you running away for?’ asked
Eichard.
’Why, feyther said it was brought
to him as you and me had shook hands and had took
on to be friends with one another, and he told me to
go into the brewus and take my shirt off.’
‘Take your shirt off?’
inquired the other. In Joe’s lifetime, short
as it was, he had had opportunity to grow familiar
with this fatherly formula, but it was strange to
Master Richard. ‘What for?’
‘What for! Why, to get a hidin’,
to be sure.’
‘Look here!’ said Richard,
having digested this, ’you come and stop in
one of our barns. Have you had your tea?’
‘No,’ returned Joe, ‘I
shouldn’t ha’ minded so much if I had.’
‘I’ll bring something out to you,’
said the protector.
So the two lads set out together,
and to evade Ichabod, struck off at a run across the
fields, Joe pantingly setting forth, in answer to his
comrade’s questions, how he was going to be a
sailor or a pirate, ’or summat,’ or to
have a desert island like Crusoe. Of course, it
was all admirable to both of them, and, of course,
it was all a great deal more real than the fields
they ran over.
The runaway was safely deposited in
a roomy barn, and left there alone, when once again
a life of adventures began to assume a darkish complexion.
It was cold, it was anxious, it seemed to drag interminably,
and it was abominably lonely. If it were to be
all like this, even the prospect of an occasional
taking off of one’s shirt in the brewhouse looked
less oppressive than it had done.
The hidden Joe, bound for piracy on
the high seas, or a Crusoe’s island somewhere,
gave a wonderful zest to Master Richard’s meal
But an hour, which seemed like a year to the less
fortunate of the two, went by before a raid upon the
well-furnished larder of Perry Hall could be effected.
When the opportunity came, Master Richard, with no
remonstrance from conscience, laid hands upon a loaf
and a dish of delicious little cakes of fried pork
fat, from which the lard had that day been ‘rendered,’
and thus supplied, stole out to his hereditary enemy
and fed him. The hereditary enemy complained of
cold, and his host groped the dark place for sacks,
and, having found them, brought them to him.
‘I say,’ said Joe, when
he had tasted the provender, ’them’s scratchings.
That’s gay and fine. I never had as many
as I should like afore. Mother says they’re
too rich, but that’s all rubbish.’
He made oily feast in the dark, with
the sacks heaped about him. With Master Richard
to help him, he began to swim in adventure, and the
pair were so fascinated and absorbed that one of the
farm-servants went bawling ‘Master Richard’
about the outlying buildings for two or three minutes
before they heard him. When at last the call reached
their ears they had to wait until it died away again
before the surreptitious host dare leave the barn,
lest his being seen should draw attention to the place.
Then Joe, who had been hunting wild
beasts of all sorts with the greatest possible gusto,
began in turn to be hunted by them. The rattlesnake,
hitherto unknown to Castle Barfield, became a common
object; the lion and the polar bear met on common ground
in the menagerie of Joe’s imagination.
Whatever poor blessings and hopes he had, and whatever
schoolboy wealth he owned, he would have surrendered
all of them to be in the brewhouse of the Mountain
Farm, even though he were there to take his shirt
off But the empty, impassable, awful night stood between
him and any refuge, and he must need stay where he
was, and sweat with terror under his sacks, through
all the prodigious tracts of time which lay between
the evening and the morning. He was to have been
up and afoot for Liverpool before dawn, but tired nature
chose the time he had fixed for starting to send him
to sleep, and when Master Richard stole into the barn
with intent to disperse the sacks and clear away any
sign of Joe’s occupancy, he found him slumbering
soundly, with a tear-stained cheek resting on a dirty
brown hand.
There had been the wildest sort of
hubbub and disorder at the Mountain Farm all night.
Mrs. Mountain had wept and wrung her hands, and rocking
herself to and fro, had poured forth doleful prophecy.
Samson, who had begun with bluster, had fallen into
anxiety, and had himself traced the course of the
brook for a full mile by lanthorn-light. The farm
hands had been sent abroad, and had tracked every
road without result. Of course the one place
where nobody so much as thought of making inquiry
was the house of the hereditary foe, but pretty early,
in the course of the morning, the news of Joe Mountain’s
disappearance, and something of the reasons for it,
reached Perry Hall. Everybody at Perry Hall knew
already what a terrible personage Samson Mountain was,
and his behaviour on this occasion was the theme of
scathing comment.
Master Richard was guilty at heart,
but exultant. Being a boy of lively imagination,
he took to a secrecy so profound, and became so strikingly
stealthy, as to excite observation and remark.
He was watched and tracked to the barn, and then the
discovery came about as a matter of course. The
Reddys made much of Joe-they had no quarrel
with an innocent persecuted child-but their
kindness and commiseration were simply darts to throw
at Samson.
It was noon when Reddy put the trembling
adventurer into his trap, and with his own hands drove
him home. The two enemies met and glowered at
each other.
‘I’ve found your lad and
brought him home,’ said Reddy; ’though
I doubt it’s a cruel kindness to him.’
Samson, with all the gall in his nature
burning at his heart, lifted Joe from the trap and
set him on the ground in silence. Reddy, in silence,
turned his horse’s head, touched him with the
whip, and drove away. Joe was welcomed home by
a thrashing, which he remembers in old age.
The episode bore fruit in several
ways. To begin with, Master Joe was packed off
to a distant school, far from that to which young Reddy
was sent. But the boys found each other out in
the holidays, and became firm friends on the sly,
and Joe was so loyal and admiring that he never ceased
to talk to his one confidante of the courage, the friendliness,
the generosity, the agility, and skill of his secret
hero. The confidante was his sister Julia, to
whom the young hereditary enemy became a synonym for
whatever is lovely and of good report. She used
to look at him in church-she had little
other opportunity of observing him-and
would think in her childish innocent mind how handsome
and noble he looked. He did not speak like the
Barfield boys, or look like them, or walk like them.
He was a young prince, heir to vast estates, and a
royal title in fairyland. If story-books were
few and far between, the sentimental foolish widow,
Jenny Busker, was a mine of narrative, and a single
fairy tale is enough to open all other fairy lore to
a child’s imagination. If the little girl
worshipped the boy, he, in his turn, looked kindly
down on her. He had fought for her once at odds
of two to one, and he gave her a smile now and then.
It happened that in this wise began the curious, half-laughable,
and half-pathetic little history which buried the
hatreds of the Castle Barfield Capulet and Montague
for ever.