您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Little Minister, The
Chapter XXVI - Scene at the Spittal
James Matthew Barrie
下载:Little Minister, The.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ Within an hour after I had left him, Waster Lunny walked into the
       school-house and handed me his snuff-mull, which I declined
       politely. It was with this ceremony that we usually opened our
       conversations.
       "I've seen the post," he said, and he tells me there has been a
       queer ploy at the Spittal. It's a wonder the marriage hasna been
       turned into a burial, and all because o' that Highland stirk,
       Lauchlan Campbell.
       Waster Lunny was a man who had to retrace his steps in telling a
       story if he tried short cuts, and so my custom was to wait
       patiently while he delved through the ploughed fields that always
       lay between him and his destination.
       "As you ken, Rintoul's so little o' a Scotchman that he's no
       muckle better than an Englisher. That maun be the reason he hadna
       mair sense than to tramp on a Highlandman's ancestors, as he tried
       to tramp on Lauchlan's this day."
       "If Lord Rintoul insulted the piper," I suggested, giving the
       farmer a helping hand cautiously, "it would be through
       inadvertence. Rintoul only bought the Spittal a year ago, and
       until then, I daresay, he had seldom been on our side of the
       Border."
       This was a foolish, interruption, for it set Walter Lunny off in a
       new direction.
       "That's what Elspeth says. Says she, 'When the earl has grand
       estates in England, what for does he come to a barren place like
       the Spittal to be married! It's gey like,' she says, 'as if he
       wanted the marriage to be got by quietly; a thing,' says she,
       'that no woman can stand. Furthermore,' Elspeth says, 'how has the
       marriage been postponed twice?' We ken what the servants at the
       Spittal says to that, namely, that the young lady is no keen to
       take him, but Elspeth winna listen to sic arguments. She says
       either the earl had grown timid (as mony a man does) when the
       wedding-day drew near, or else his sister that keeps his house is
       mad at the thocht o' losing her place; but as for the young
       leddy's being sweer, says Elspeth, 'an earl's an earl however auld
       he is, and a lassie's a lassie however young she is, and weel she
       kens you're never sure o' a man's no changing his mind about you
       till you're tied to him by law, after which it doesna so muckle
       matter whether he changes his mind about you or no.' Ay, there's a
       quirk in it some gait, dominie; but it's a deep water Elspeth
       canna bottom."
       "It is," I agreed; "but you were to tell me what Birse told you of
       the disturbance at the Spittal."
       "Ay, weel." he answered, "the post puts the wite o't on her little
       leddyship, as they call her, though she winna be a leddyship till
       the morn. All I can say is that if the earl was saft enough to do
       sic a thing out of fondness for her, it's time he was married on
       her, so that he may come to his senses again. That's what I say;
       but Elspeth conters me, of course, and says she, 'If the young
       leddy was so careless o' insulting other folks' ancestors, it
       proves she has nane o' her ain; for them that has china plates
       themsel's is the maist careful no to break the china plates of
       others.'"
       "But what was the insult? Was Lauchlan dismissed?" "Na, faags! It
       was waur than that. Dominie, you're dull in the uptake compared to
       Elspeth. I hadna telled her half the story afore she jaloused the
       rest. However, to begin again; there's great feasting and
       rejoicings gaen on at the Spittal the now, and also a banquet,
       which the post says is twa dinners in one. Weel, there's a curran
       Ogilvys among the guests, and it was them that egged on her little
       leddyship to make the daring proposal to the earl. What was the
       proposal? It was no less than that the twa pipers should be
       ordered to play 'The Bonny House o' Airlie.' Dominie, I wonder you
       can tak it so calm when you ken that's the Ogilvy's sang, and that
       it's aimed at the clan o' Campbell."
       "Pooh!" I said. "The Ogilvys and the Campbells used to be mortal
       enemies, but the feud has been long forgotten."
       "Ay, I've heard tell," Waster Lunny said sceptically, "that Airlie
       and Argyle shakes hands now like Christians; but I'm thinking
       that's just afore the Queen. Dinna speak now, for I'm in the thick
       o't. Her little leddyship was all hinging in gold and jewels, the
       which winna be her ain till the morn; and she leans ower to the
       earl and whispers to him to get the pipers to play 'The Bonny
       House.' He wasna willing, for says he, 'There's Ogilvys at the
       table, and ane o' the pipers is a Campbell, and we'll better let
       sleeping dogs lie.' However, the Ogilvys lauched at his caution;
       and he was so infatuated wi' her little leddyship that he gae in,
       and he cried out to the pipers to strike up 'The Bonny House.'"
       Waster Lunny pulled his chair nearer me and rested his hand on my
       knees.
       "Dominie," he said in a voice that fell now and again into a
       whisper, "them looking on swears that when Lauchlan Campbell heard
       these monstrous orders his face became ugly and black, so that
       they kent in a jiffy what he would do. It's said a' body jumped
       back frae him in a sudden dread, except poor Angus, the other
       piper, wha was busy tuning up for 'The Bonny House.' Weel, Angus
       had got no farther in the tune than the first skirl when Lauchlan
       louped at him, and ripped up the startled crittur's pipes wi' his
       dirk. The pipes gae a roar o' agony like a stuck swine, and fell
       gasping on the floor. What happened next was that Lauchlan wi' his
       dirk handy for onybody that micht try to stop him, marched once
       round the table, playing 'The Campbells are Coming,' and then
       straucht out o' the Spittal, his chest far afore him, and his head
       so weel back that he could see what was going on ahint. Frae the
       Spittal to here he never stopped that fearsome tune, and I'se
       warrant he's blawing away at it at this moment through the streets
       o' Thrums."
       Waster Lunny was not in his usual spirits, or he would have
       repeated his story before he left me, for he had usually as much
       difficulty in coming to an end as in finding a beginning. The
       drought was to him as serious a matter as death in the house, and
       as little to be forgotten for a lengthened period.
       "There's to be a prayer-meeting for rain in the Auld Licit kirk
       the night," he told me as I escorted him as far as my side of the
       Quharity, now almost a dead stream, pitiable to see, "and I'm
       gaen; though I'm sweer to leave thae puir cattle o' mine. You
       should see how they look at me when I gie them mair o' that rotten
       grass to eat. It's eneuch to mak a man greet, for what richt hae I
       to keep kye when I canna meat them?"
       Waster Lunny has said to me more than once that the great surprise
       of his life was when Elspeth was willing to take him. Many a time,
       however, I have seen that in him which might have made any
       weaver's daughter proud of such a man, and I saw it again when we
       came to the river side.
       "I'm no ane o' thae farmers," he said, truthfully, "that's aye
       girding at the weather, and Elspeth and me kens that we hae been
       dealt wi' bountifully since we took this farm wi' gey anxious
       hearts. That woman, dominie, is eneuch to put a brave face on a
       coward, and it's no langer syne than yestreen when I was sitting
       in the dumps, looking at the aurora borealis, which I canna but
       regard as a messenger o' woe, that she put her hand on my shoulder
       and she says, 'Waster Lunny, twenty year syne we began life
       thegither wi' nothing but the claethes on our back, and an it
       please God we can begin it again, for I hae you and you hae me,
       and I'm no cast down if you're no.' Dominie, is there mony sic
       women in the warld as that?"
       "Many a one," I said.
       "Ay, man, it shamed me, for I hae a kind o' delight in angering
       Elspeth, just to see what she'll say. I could hae ta'en her on my
       knee at that minute, but the bairns was there, and so it wouldna
       hae dune. But I cheered her up, for, after all, the drought canna
       put us so far back as we was twenty years syne, unless it's true
       what my father said, that the aurora borealis is the devil's
       rainbow. I saw it sax times in July month, and it made me shut my
       een. You was out admiring it, dominie, but I can never forget that
       it was seen in the year twelve just afore the great storm. I was
       only a laddie then, but I mind how that awful wind stripped a' the
       standing corn in the glen in less time than we've been here at the
       water's edge. It was called the deil's besom. My father's hinmost
       words to me was, 'It's time eneuch to greet, laddie, when you see
       the aurora borealis.' I mind he was so complete ruined in an hour
       that he had to apply for relief frae the poor's rates. Think o'
       that, and him a proud man. He would tak' nothing till one winter
       day when we was a' starving, and syne I gaed wi' him to speir
       for't, and he telled me to grip his hand ticht, so that the
       cauldness o' mine micht gie him courage. They were doling out the
       charity in the Town's House, and I had never been in't afore. I
       canna look at it now without thinking o' that day when me and my
       father gaed up the stair thegither. Mr. Duthie was presiding at
       the time, and he wasna muckle older than Mr. Dishart is now. I
       mind he speired for proof that we was needing, and my father
       couldna speak. He just pointed at me. 'But you have a good coat on
       your back yoursel',' Mr. Duthie said, for there were mony waiting,
       sair needing. 'It was lended him to come here,' I cried, and
       without a word my father opened the coat, and they saw he had
       nothing on aneath, and his skin blue wi' cauld. Dominie, Mr.
       Duthie handed him one shilling and saxpence, and my father's
       fingers closed greedily on't for a minute, and syne it fell to the
       ground. They put it back in his hand, and it slipped out again,
       and Mr. Duthie gave it back to him, saying, 'Are you so cauld as
       that?' But, oh, man, it wasna cauld that did it, but shame o'
       being on the rates. The blood a' ran to my father's head, and syne
       left it as quick, and he flung down the siller and walked out o'
       the Town House wi' me running after him. We warstled through that
       winter, God kens how, and it's near a pleasure to me to think o't
       now, for, rain or no rain, I can never be reduced to sic straits
       again."
       The farmer crossed the water without using the stilts which were
       no longer necessary, and I little thought, as I returned to the
       school-house, what terrible things were to happen before he could
       offer me his snuff-mull again. Serious as his talk had been it was
       neither of drought nor of the incident at the Spittal that I sat
       down to think. My anxiety about Gavin came back to me until I was
       like a man imprisoned between walls of his own building. It may be
       that my presentiments of that afternoon look gloomier now than
       they were, because I cannot return to them save over a night of
       agony, black enough to darken any time connected with it. Perhaps
       my spirits only fell as the wind rose, for wind ever takes me back
       to Harvie, and when I think of Harvie my thoughts are of the
       saddest. I know that I sat for some hours, now seeing Gavin pay
       the penalty of marrying the Egyptian, and again drifting back to
       my days with Margaret, until the wind took to playing tricks with
       me, so that I heard Adam Dishart enter our home by the sea every
       time the school-house door shook.
       I became used to the illusion after starting several times, and
       thus when the door did open, about seven o'clock, it was only the
       wind rushing to my fire like a shivering dog that made me turn my
       head. Then I saw the Egyptian staring at me, and though her sudden
       appearance on my threshold was a strange thing, I forgot it in the
       whiteness of her face. She was looking at me like one who has
       asked a question of life or death, and stopped her heart for the
       reply.
       "What is it?" I cried, and for a moment I believe I was glad she
       did not answer. She seemed to have told me already as much as I
       could bear.
       "He has not heard," she said aloud in an expressionless voice,
       and, turning, would have slipped away without another word.
       "Is any one dead?" I asked, seizing her hands and letting them
       fall, they were so clammy. She nodded, and trying to speak could
       not.
       "He is dead," she said at last in a whisper. "Mr. Dishart is
       dead," and she sat down quietly.
       At that I covered my face, crying, "God help Margaret!" and then
       she rose, saying fiercely, so that I drew back from her, "There is
       no Margaret; he only cared for me."
       "She is his mother," I said hoarsely, and then she smiled to me,
       so that I thought her a harmless mad thing. "He was killed by a
       piper called Lauchlan Campbell," she said, looking up at me
       suddenly. "It was my fault."
       "Poor Margaret!" I wailed.
       "And poor Babbie," she entreated pathetically; "will no one say,
       'Poor Babbie'?" _
用户中心

本站图书检索

本书目录

Chapter I - The Love-Light
Chapter II - Runs Alongside the Making of a Minister
Chapter III - The Night-Watchers
Chapter IV - First Coming of the Egyptian Woman
Chapter V - A Warlike Chapter, Culminating in the Flouting of the Minister by the Woman
Chapter VI - In which the Soldiers Meet the Amazons of Thrums
Chapter VII - Has the Folly of Looking into a Woman's Eyes by Way of Text
Chapter VIII - 3 A.M.--Monstrous Audacity of the Woman
Chapter IX - The Woman Considered in Absence--Adventures of a Military Cloak
Chapter X - First Sermon against Women
Chapter XI - Tells in a Whisper of Man's Fall during the Curling Season
Chapter XII - Tragedy of a Mud House
Chapter XIII - Second Coming of the Egyptian Woman
Chapter XIV - The Minister Dances to the Woman's Piping
Chapter XV - The Minister Bewitched--Second Sermon against Women
Chapter XVI - Continued Misbehavior of the Egyptian Woman
Chapter XVII - Intrusion of Haggart into these Pages against the Author's Wish
Chapter XVIII - Caddam--Love Leading to a Rupture
Chapter XIX - Circumstances Leading to the First Sermon in Approval of Women
Chapter XX - End of the State of Indecision
Chapter XXI - Night--Margaret--Flashing of a Lantern
Chapter XXII - Lovers
Chapter XXIII - Contains a Birth, Which is Sufficient for One Chapter
Chapter XXIV - The New World, and the Women who may not Dwell therein
Chapter XXV - Beginning of the Twenty-four Hours
Chapter XXVI - Scene at the Spittal
Chapter XXVII - First Journey of the Dominie to Thrums during the Twenty-four Hours
Chapter XXVIII - The Hill before Darkness Fell--Scene of the Impending Catastrophe
Chapter XXIX - Story of the Egyptian
Chapter XXX - The Meeting for Rain
Chapter XXXI - Various Bodies Converging on the Hill
Chapter XXXII - Leading Swiftly to the Appalling Marriage
Chapter XXXIII - While the Ten o'Clock Bell was Ringing
Chapter XXXIV - The Great Rain
Chapter XXXV - The Glen at Break of Day
Chapter XXXVI - Story of the Dominie
Chapter XXXVII - Second Journey of the Dominie to Thrums during the Twenty-four Hours
Chapter XXXVIII - Thrums during the Twenty-four Hours--Defence of the Manse
Chapter XXXIX - How Babbie Spent the Night of August Fourth
Chapter XL - Babbie and Margaret--Defence of the Manse continued
Chapter XLI - Rintoui and Babbie--Break-down of the Defence of the Manse
Chapter XLII - Margaret, the Precentor, and God between
Chapter XLIII - Rain--Mist--The Jaws
Chapter XLIV - End of the Twenty-four Hours
Chapter XLV - Talk of a Little Maid since Grown Tall