登陆注册
4708300000046

第46章

The Three Tranters Inn, a many-gabled, mediaeval building, constructed almost entirely of timber, plaster, and thatch, stood close to the line of the roadside, almost opposite the churchyard, and was connected with a row of cottages on the left by thatched outbuildings. It was an uncommonly characteristic and handsome specimen of the genuine roadside inn of bygone times; and standing on one of the great highways in this part of England, had in its time been the scene of as much of what is now looked upon as the romantic and genial experience of stage-coach travelling as any halting-place in the country. The railway had absorbed the whole stream of traffic which formerly flowed through the village and along by the ancient door of the inn, reducing the empty-handed landlord, who used only to farm a few fields at the back of the house, to the necessity of eking out his attenuated income by increasing the extent of his agricultural business if he would still maintain his social standing. Next to the general stillness pervading the spot, the long line of outbuildings adjoining the house was the most striking and saddening witness to the passed-away fortunes of the Three Tranters Inn. It was the bulk of the original stabling, and where once the hoofs of two-score horses had daily rattled over the stony yard, to and from the stalls within, thick grass now grew, whilst the line of roofs--once so straight--over the decayed stalls, had sunk into vast hollows till they seemed like the cheeks of toothless age.

On a green plot at the other end of the building grew two or three large, wide-spreading elm-trees, from which the sign was suspended--representing the three men called tranters (irregular carriers), standing side by side, and exactly alike to a hair's-breadth, the grain of the wood and joints of the boards being visible through the thin paint depicting their forms, which were still further disfigured by red stains running downwards from the rusty nails above.

Under the trees now stood a cider-mill and press, and upon the spot sheltered by the boughs were gathered Mr. Springrove himself, his men, the parish clerk, two or three other men, grinders and supernumeraries, a woman with an infant in her arms, a flock of pigeons, and some little boys with straws in their mouths, endeavouring, whenever the men's backs were turned, to get a sip of the sweet juice issuing from the vat.

Edward Springrove the elder, the landlord, now more particularly a farmer, and for two months in the year a cider-maker, was an employer of labour of the old school, who worked himself among his men. He was now engaged in packing the pomace into horsehair bags with a rammer, and Gad Weedy, his man, was occupied in shovelling up more from a tub at his side. The shovel shone like silver from the action of the juice, and ever and anon, in its motion to and fro, caught the rays of the declining sun and reflected them in bristling stars of light.

Mr. Springrove had been too young a man when the pristine days of the Three Tranters had departed for ever to have much of the host left in him now. He was a poet with a rough skin: one whose sturdiness was more the result of external circumstances than of intrinsic nature. Too kindly constituted to be very provident, he was yet not imprudent. He had a quiet humorousness of disposition, not out of keeping with a frequent melancholy, the general expression of his countenance being one of abstraction. Like Walt Whitman he felt as his years increased--'I foresee too much; it means more than I thought.'

On the present occasion he wore gaiters and a leathern apron, and worked with his shirt-sleeves rolled up beyond his elbows, disclosing solid and fleshy rather than muscular arms. They were stained by the cider, and two or three brown apple-pips from the pomace he was handling were to be seen sticking on them here and there.

The other prominent figure was that of Richard Crickett, the parish clerk, a kind of Bowdlerized rake, who ate only as much as a woman, and had the rheumatism in his left hand. The remainder of the group, brown-faced peasants, wore smock-frocks embroidered on the shoulders with hearts and diamonds, and were girt round their middle with a strap, another being worn round the right wrist.

'And have you seen the steward, Mr. Springrove?' said the clerk.

'Just a glimpse of him; but 'twas just enough to show me that he's not here for long.'

'Why mid that be?'

'He'll never stand the vagaries of the female figure holden the reins--not he.'

'She d' pay en well,' said a grinder; 'and money's money.'

'Ah--'tis: very much so,' the clerk replied.

'Yes, yes, naibour Crickett,' said Springrove, 'but she'll vlee in a passion--all the fat will be in the fire--and there's an end o't. . . . Yes, she is a one,' continued the farmer, resting, raising his eyes, and reading the features of a distant apple.

'She is,' said Gad, resting too (it is wonderful how prompt a journeyman is in following his master's initiative to rest) and reflectively regarding the ground in front of him.

'True: a one is she,' the clerk chimed in, shaking his head ominously.

'She has such a temper,' said the farmer, 'and is so wilful too.

You may as well try to stop a footpath as stop her when she has taken anything into her head. I'd as soon grind little green crabs all day as live wi' her.'

''Tis a temper she hev, 'tis,' the clerk replied, 'though I be a servant of the Church that say it. But she isn't goen to flee in a passion this time.'

The audience waited for the continuation of the speech, as if they knew from experience the exact distance off it lay in the future.

The clerk swallowed nothing as if it were a great deal, and then went on, 'There's some'at between 'em: mark my words, naibours--there's some'at between 'em.'

'D'ye mean it?'

'I d' know it. He came last Saturday, didn't he?'

''A did, truly,' said Gad Weedy, at the same time taking an apple from the hopper of the mill, eating a piece, and flinging back the remainder to be ground up for cider.

同类推荐
  • 三才定位图

    三才定位图

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Ebb-Tide

    The Ebb-Tide

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 房中曲

    房中曲

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛国记

    佛国记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 元始天尊说甘露升天神咒妙经

    元始天尊说甘露升天神咒妙经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 贴身妖孽保镖

    贴身妖孽保镖

    妖孽兵王背负秘密任务,潜入都市保护美女总裁。从此,都市风云都因他而动,醒掌天下权!“我就是太岁,敢在我头上动土的人,下一秒我就会让他跪在地上吃土!”——楚良
  • 敦煌本《太玄真一本际经》思想研究

    敦煌本《太玄真一本际经》思想研究

    《敦煌本太玄真一本际经思想研究》《太玄真一本际经》简称《本际经》,为隋唐早期道教经典,也是一部最重要的敦煌道经。全经以祈请和解说的方式,叙述了元始天尊、太上道君、太上老君对诸天真、仙人说法,宣扬重玄体道,“开演真一本际法门”。旨在教化“三乘”导入“一乘”,并阐释了道教真理观的一切诸法之根本。内容涉及“道体无本”的“道体论”;“道性自然”的“道性论”;“十二法印”与“三洞”分类法及“重玄”之道相结合的“判教论”;因果报应、功德行业、科仪戒律、修行次第、炼养方法等的“修道论”。
  • 曜夜·七环杯

    曜夜·七环杯

    七环灵杯,古波斯神话中,象征七天七星七海之灵杯,传说掌此杯者,可知过去、现在、未来。灵杯创世,神与之共生,阴阳二分,一为现世,一为异界。现世是科技的世界,异界则是魔法的时代。风平浪静之下,却有危机在悄然酝酿……
  • 殿下,先逃为敬

    殿下,先逃为敬

    第一世,她是无名无姓的小小狐狸,被他救下,从此寸步不离。她日日夜夜想化成人形,不出现化形之后便犯了打错,他用生命护她周全。“你不要死,你若死了,日后我该怎么办!”“阿韵,此次…我恐怕再也不能…护你了,你一定要好好…修炼,日后好好地…活着。”第二世,“疏香,这是我最后一次喊你师傅,以后我便再也不会叫你师傅了……”“你……”第三世‘阿韵,我是琼羽,但你不必知道,你恨我也好,你所希望的一切我都会替你达成所愿……’
  • 动力之王

    动力之王

    被大宇宙的意志给踢回了过去的陈耕,故事再次开始。………………………………新书《现代手艺人》已经上传,还请兄弟们多多支持,点击、收藏、推荐……兄弟们千万别客气。兄弟们,千年新建了一个书友裙,裙号是263,739,462。欢迎大家来侃大山
  • Can I Sit on Your Lap While You're Pooping?

    Can I Sit on Your Lap While You're Pooping?

    As a single dad, Matthew Carroll didn't always have someone to share in his frequent laughter and incredulity at the various things his daughter, Morgan, said. Hoping to docu?ment some of her best commentary, Carroll took to recording her choicest quotes on his iPhone when she was between the ages of three and five. He then compiled them chronologically in a small homemade volume for friends and family who, compelled by the hilarious and touching content, encouraged him to share it with a larger audience. Can I Sit on Your Lap While You're Pooping? is the record of the hilarious, crazy, and touching pronouncements of a little girl, but it's also the irresistible documentation of the love between a parent and child.
  • 腹黑太子天降萌妃

    腹黑太子天降萌妃

    她“从天而降”,不慎砸落他头顶上,因此跟他结下不解之缘,牵绊一生。他是夏国太子,素有仙人之姿,聪明绝顶,年纪轻轻就带兵亲临战场,威慑天下。他不苟言笑,手段狠绝,是百姓心中的战神,却在战场上收留了她,对她无微不至,疼爱有加。据说,太子不但收留了那女子,还对她视若珍宝,甚至为了她,拒绝纳妃。而事实上……“谁要再说太子疼我,我就灭了他。”因为犯错而被惩罚的某女孩忍不住怒骂。想她原是金牌影后,竟穿越成了个小孩子,还被这腹黑的男人吃的死死的,太丢人了。话音刚落,头顶就响起一道慵懒的声音,“哦?你的意思是本宫还不够疼你?”某女闻言,立刻蹭着太子的衣衫,口是心非,“谁说的?我灭了他,瑾哥哥最疼轻儿了。”片段一:某日,正在书房看书的夏瑾寒见下人带着鼻青脸肿的小丫头进来,脸色立刻变得铁青,问,“怎么回事?”太监战战兢兢的回答,“回殿下,轻儿小姐跟琳郡主打架了。”“输了还是赢了?”“赢了,嘻嘻。”小丫头抬起头,有些激动,又有些害怕的看着他。闻言,前一刻还满脸冰冷的男人一把将那小东西抱起来,在她脸上亲了一口,“很好,没给本宫丢人,这是奖励。”片段二:某日,宫宴上皇后光明正大的将几名不错的千金小姐送到太子面前,让他选一个适合的回去做太子妃。某女孩见状,眼中闪过一抹狡黠,娇小的身影往人群中一站,道,“皇后娘娘,轻儿觉得这位姐姐不错,温婉贤淑,大方得体,长得又漂亮……”话没说完,某太子一把揪起她的衣领,将她带离现场,而后狠狠的瞪着她,“你再说一次?”
  • 家国书

    家国书

    本书以时代剧变、风云际会的中华民族近、现代百年历史为背景,以人才辈出的马、沙、翁、沈四大家族人物为对象,描绘了四大家族儿女在伴随共和国成长的历史进程中演绎的各自精彩的人生篇章,生动而艺术地反映了新中国成立60年以来的伟大历程和巨大成就。
  • 甲斐的野望

    甲斐的野望

    公元1557年,已经36岁的武田信玄喜得一子取名武田源八郎信谦,一位穿越而来不存在于正史中的人,他将会给武田家带来希望还是毁灭?
  • 青春计划书:青春的十大优势心态设计

    青春计划书:青春的十大优势心态设计

    世界上的每个人都是独一无二的,既然存在于这个世界上,就一定要找到属于自己的一席之地,身为青少年的我们也许还未找到,不要放弃、不要悲观、更不要自暴自弃,这个时候必须有一个坚定的信念——肯定能找到属于自己的那片绿洲,这就是心态。