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Little Minister, The
Chapter IV - First Coming of the Egyptian Woman
James Matthew Barrie
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       _ A learned man says in a book, otherwise beautiful with truth, that
       villages are family groups. To him Thrums would only be a village,
       though town is the word we have ever used, and this is not true of
       it. Doubtless we have interests in common, from which a place so
       near (but the road is heavy) as Tilliedrum is shut out, and we
       have an individuality of our own too, as if, like our red houses,
       we came from a quarry that supplies no other place. But we are not
       one family. In the old days, those of us who were of the Tenements
       seldom wandered to the Croft head, and if we did go there we saw
       men to whom we could not always give a name. To flit from the
       Tanage brae to Haggart's road was to change one's friends. A kirk-
       wynd weaver might kill his swine and Tillyloss not know of it
       until boys ran westward hitting each other with the bladders. Only
       the voice of the dulsemen could be heard all over Thrums at once.
       Thus even in a small place but a few outstanding persons are known
       to everybody.
       In eight days Gavin's figure was more familiar in Thrums than many
       that had grown bent in it. He had already been twice to the
       cemetery, for a minister only reaches his new charge in time to
       attend a funeral. Though short of stature he cast a great shadow.
       He was so full of his duties, Jean said, that though he pulled to
       the door as he left the manse, he had passed the currant bushes
       before it snecked. He darted through courts, and invented ways
       into awkward houses. If you did not look up quickly he was round
       the corner. His visiting exhausted him only less than his zeal in
       the pulpit, from which, according to report, he staggered damp
       with perspiration to the vestry, where Hendry Munn wrung him like
       a wet cloth. A deaf lady, celebrated for giving out her washing,
       compelled him to hold her trumpet until she had peered into all
       his crannies, with the Shorter Catechism for a lantern. Janet
       Dundas told him, in answer to his knock, that she could not abide
       him, but she changed her mind when he said her garden was quite a
       show. The wives who expected a visit scrubbed their floors for
       him, cleaned out their presses for him, put diamond socks on their
       bairns for him, rubbed their hearthstones blue for him, and even
       tidied up the garret for him, and triumphed over the neighbours
       whose houses he passed by. For Gavin blundered occasionally by
       inadvertence, as when he gave dear old Betty Davie occasion to say
       bitterly--
       "Ou ay, you can sail by my door and gang to Easie's, but I'm
       thinking you would stop at mine too if I had a brass handle on't."
       So passed the first four weeks, and then came the fateful night of
       the seventeenth of October, and with it the strange woman. Family
       worship at the manse was over and Gavin was talking to his mother,
       who never crossed the threshold save to go to church (though her
       activity at home was among the marvels Jean sometimes slipped down
       to the Tenements to announce). when Wearyworld the policeman came
       to the door "with Rob Dow's compliments, and if you're no wi' me
       by ten o'clock I'm to break out again." Gavin knew what this
       meant, and at once set off for Rob's.
       "You'll let me gang a bit wi' you," the policeman entreated, "for
       till Rob sent me on this errand not a soul has spoken to me the
       day; ay, mony a ane hae I spoken to, but not a man, woman, nor
       bairn would fling me a word."
       "I often meant to ask you," Gavin said as they went along the
       Tenements, which smelled at that hour of roasted potatoes, "why
       you are so unpopular."
       "It's because I'm police. I'm the first ane that has ever been in
       Thrums, and the very folk that appointed me at a crown a week
       looks upon me as a disgraced man for accepting. It's Gospel that
       my ain wife is short wi' me when I've on my uniform, though weel
       she kens that I would rather hae stuck to the loom if I hadna
       ha'en sic a queer richt leg. Nobody feels the shame o' my position
       as I do mysel', but this is a town without pity."
       "It should be a consolation to you that you are discharging useful
       duties."
       "But I'm no. I'm doing harm. There's Charles Dickson says that the
       very sicht o' my uniform rouses his dander so muckle that it makes
       him break windows, though a peaceably-disposed man till I was
       appointed. And what's the use o' their haeing a policeman when
       they winna come to the lock-up after I lay hands on them?"
       "Do they say they won't come?"
       "Say? Catch them saying onything! They just gie me a wap into the
       gutters. If they would speak I wouldna complain, for I'm nat'rally
       the sociablest man in Thrums."
       "Rob, however, had spoken to you."
       "Because he had need o' me. That was ay Rob's way, converted or no
       converted. When he was blind drunk he would order me to see him
       safe hame, but would he crack wi' me? Na, na."
       Wearyworld, who was so called because of his forlorn way of
       muttering, "It's a weary warld, and nobody bides in't," as he went
       his melancholy rounds, sighed like one about to cry, and Gavin
       changed the subject.
       "Is the watch for the soldiers still kept up?" he asked.
       "It is, but the watchers winna let me in aside them. I'll let you
       see that for yoursel' at me head o' the Roods, for they watch
       there in the auld windmill."
       Most of the Thrums lights were already out, and that in the
       windmill disappeared as footsteps were heard.
       "You're desperate characters," the policeman cried, but got no
       answer. He changed his tactics.
       "A fine nicht for the time o' year," he cried. No answer.
       "But I wouldna wonder," he shouted, "though we had rain afore
       morning." No answer.
       "Surely you could gie me a word frae ahint the door. You're doing
       an onlawful thing, but I dinna ken wha you are."
       "You'll swear to that?" some one asked gruffly.
       "I swear to it, Peter."
       Wearyworld tried another six remarks in vain.
       "Ay," he said to the minister, "that's what it is to be an
       onpopular man. And now I'll hae to turn back, for the very anes
       that winna let me join them would be the first to complain if I
       gaed out o' bounds."
       Gavin found Dow at New Zealand, a hamlet of mud houses, whose
       tenants could be seen on any Sabbath morning washing themselves in
       the burn that trickled hard by. Rob's son, Micah, was asleep at
       the door, but he brightened when he saw who was shaking him.
       "My father put me out," he explained, "because he's daft for the
       drink, and was fleid he would curse me. He hasna cursed me," Micah
       added, proudly, "for an aught days come Sabbath. Hearken to him at
       his loom. He daurna take his feet off the treadles for fear o'
       running straucht to the drink."
       Gavin went in. The loom, and two stools, the one four-footed and
       the other a buffet, were Rob's most conspicuous furniture. A
       shaving-strap hung on the wall. The fire was out, but the trunk of
       a tree, charred at one end, showed how he heated his house. He
       made a fire of peat, and on it placed one end of a tree trunk that
       might be six feet long. As the tree burned away it was pushed
       further into the fireplace, and a roaring fire could always be got
       by kicking pieces of the smouldering wood and blowing them into
       flame with the bellows. When Rob saw the minister he groaned
       relief and left his loom. He had been weaving, his teeth clenched,
       his eyes on fire, for seven hours.
       "I wasna fleid," little Micah said to the neighbours afterwards,
       "to gang in wi' the minister. He's a fine man that. He didna ca'
       my father names. Na, he said, 'You're a brave fellow, Rob,' and he
       took my father's hand, he did. My father was shaking after his
       fecht wi' the drink, and, says he. 'Mr. Dishart,' he says, 'if
       you'll let me break out nows and nans, I could, bide straucht
       atween times, but I canna keep sober if I hinna a drink to look
       forrit to.' Ay, my father prigged sair to get one fou day in the
       month, and he said, 'Syne if I die sudden, there's thirty chances
       to one that I gang to heaven, so it's worth risking.' But Mr.
       Dishart wouldna hear o't, and he cries, 'No, by God,' he cries,
       'we'll wrestle wi' the devil till we throttle him,' and down him
       and my father gaed on their knees.
       "The minister prayed a lang time till my father said his hunger
       for the drink was gone, 'but', he says, 'it swells up in me o' a
       sudden aye, and it may be back afore you're hame.' 'Then come to
       me at once,' says Mr. Dishart; but my father says, 'Na, for it
       would haul me into the public-house as if it had me at the end o'
       a rope, but I'll send the laddie."
       "You saw my father crying the minister back? It was to gie him twa
       pound, and, says my father, 'God helping me,' he says, 'I'll droon
       mysel in the dam rather than let the drink master me, but in case
       it should get haud o' me and I should die drunk, it would be a
       michty gratification to me to ken that you had the siller to bury
       me respectable without ony help frae the poor's rates.' The
       minister wasna for taking it at first, but he took it when he saw
       how earnest my father was. Ay, he's a noble man. After he gaed awa
       my father made me learn the names o' the apostles frae Luke sixth,
       and he says to me, 'Miss out Bartholomew,' he says, 'for he did
       little, and put Gavin Dishart in his place.'"
       Feeling as old as he sometimes tried to look, Gavin turned
       homeward. Margaret was already listening for him. You may be sure
       she knew his step. I think our steps vary as much as the human
       face. My book-shelves were made by a blind man who could identify
       by their steps nearly all who passed his window. Yet he has
       admitted to me that he could not tell wherein my steps differed
       from others; and this I believe, though rejecting his boast that
       he could distinguish a minister's step from a doctor's, and even
       tell to which denomination the minister belonged.
       I have sometimes asked myself what would have been Gavin's future
       had he gone straight home that night from Dow's. He would
       doubtless have seen the Egyptian before morning broke, but she
       would not have come upon him like a witch. There are, I dare say,
       many lovers who would never have been drawn to each other had they
       met for the first time, as, say, they met the second time. But
       such dreaming is to no purpose. Gavin met Sanders Webster, the
       mole-catcher, and was persuaded by him to go home by Caddam Wood.
       Gavin took the path to Caddam, because Sanders told him the Wild
       Lindsays were there, a gypsy family that threatened the farmers by
       day and danced devilishly, it was said, at night. The little
       minister knew them by repute as a race of giants, and that not
       many persons would have cared to face them alone at midnight; but
       he was feeling as one wound up to heavy duties, and meant to
       admonish them severely.
       Sanders, an old man who lived with his sister Nanny on the edge of
       the wood, went with him, and for a time both were silent. But
       Sanders had something to say.
       "Was you ever at the Spittal, Mr. Dishart?" he asked.
       "Lord Rintoul's house at the top of Glen Quharity? No."
       "Hae you ever looked on a lord?"
       "No."
       "Or on an auld lord's young leddyship? I have."
       "What is she?"
       "You surely ken that Rintoul's auld, and is to be married on a
       young leddyship. She's no' a leddyship yet, but they're to be
       married soon, so I may say I've seen a leddyship. Ay, an
       impressive sicht. It was yestreen."
       "Is there a great difference in their ages?"
       "As muckle as atween auld Peter Spens and his wife, wha was
       saxteen when he was saxty, and she was playing at dumps in the
       street when her man was waiting for her to make his porridge. Ay,
       sic a differ doesna suit wi' common folk, but of course earls can
       please themsels. Rintoul's so fond o' the leddyship 'at is to be,
       that when she was at the school in Edinbury he wrote to her ilka
       day. Kaytherine Crummie telled me that, and she says aince you're
       used to it, writing letters is as easy as skinning moles. I dinna
       ken what they can write sic a heap about, but I daur say he gies
       her his views on the Chartist agitation and the potato disease,
       and she'll write back about the romantic sichts o' Edinbury and
       the sermons o' the grand preachers she hears. Sal, though, thae
       grand folk has no religion to speak o', for they're a' English
       kirk. You're no' speiring what her leddyship said to me?"
       "What did she say?"
       "Weel, you see, there was a dancing ball on, and Kaytherine
       Crummie took me to a window whaur I could stand on a flower-pot
       and watch the critturs whirling round in the ball like teetotums.
       What's mair, she pointed out the leddyship that's to be to me, and
       I just glowered at her, for thinks I, 'Take your fill, Sanders,
       and whaur there's lords and leddyships, dinna waste a minute on
       colonels and honourable misses and sic like dirt.' Ay, but what
       wi' my een blinking at the blaze o' candles, I lost sicht o' her
       till all at aince somebody says at my lug, 'Well, my man, and who
       is the prettiest lady in the room?' Mr. Dishart, it was her
       leddyship. She looked like a star."
       "And what did you do?"
       "The first thing I did was to fall aff the flower-pot; but syne I
       came to, and says I, wi' a polite smirk, 'I'm thinking your
       leddyship,' says I, 'as you're the bonniest yourself.'"
       "I see you are a cute man, Sanders.'"
       "Ay, but that's no' a'. She lauched in a pleased way and tapped me
       wi' her fan, and says she, 'Why do you think me the prettiest?' I
       dinna deny but what that staggered me, but I thocht a minute, and
       took a look at the other dancers again, and syne I says, michty
       sly like, 'The other leddies,' I says, 'has sic sma' feet.'"
       Sanders stopped here and looked doubtingly at Gavin.
       "I canna make up my mind," he said, "whether she liked that, for
       she rapped my knuckles wi' her fan fell sair, and aff she gaed.
       Ay, I consulted Tammas Haggart about it, and he says, 'The flirty
       crittur,' he says. What would you say, Mr. Dishart?"
       Gavin managed to escape without giving an answer, for here their
       roads separated. He did not find the Wild Lindsays, however.
       Children of whim, of prodigious strength while in the open, but
       destined to wither quickly in the hot air of towns, they had gone
       from Caddam, leaving nothing of themselves behind but a black mark
       burned by their fires into the ground. Thus they branded the earth
       through many counties until some hour when the spirit of wandering
       again fell on them, and they forsook their hearths with as little
       compunction as the bird leaves its nest.
       Gavin had walked quickly, and he now stood silently in the wood,
       his hat in his hand. In the moonlight the grass seemed tipped with
       hoar frost. Most of the beeches were already bare, but the shoots,
       clustering round them, like children at their mother's skirts,
       still retained their leaves red and brown. Among the pines these
       leaves were as incongruous as a wedding-dress at a funeral. Gavin
       was standing on grass, but there were patches of heather within
       sight, and broom, and the leaf of the blaeberry. Where the beeches
       had drawn up the earth with them as they grew, their roots ran
       this way and that, slippery to the feet and looking like
       disinterred bones. A squirrel appeared suddenly on the charred
       ground, looked doubtfully at Gavin to see if he was growing there,
       and then glided up a tree, where it sat eyeing him, and forgetting
       to conceal its shadow. Caddam was very still. At long intervals
       came from far away the whack of an axe on wood. Gavin was in a
       world by himself, and this might be someone breaking into it.
       The mystery of woods by moonlight thrilled the little minister.
       His eyes rested on the shining roots, and he remembered what had
       been told him of the legend of Caddam, how once on a time it was a
       mighty wood, and a maiden most beautiful stood on its confines,
       panting and afraid, for a wicked man pursued her; how he drew
       near, and she ran a little way into the wood, and he followed her,
       and she still ran, and still he followed, until both were for ever
       lost, and the bones of her pursuer lie beneath a beech, but the
       lady may still be heard singing in the woods if the night be fine,
       for then she is a glad spirit, but weeping when there is wild
       wind, for then she is but a mortal seeking a way out of the wood.
       The squirrel slid down the fir and was gone. The axe's blows
       ceased. Nothing that moved was in sight. The wind that has its
       nest in trees was circling around with many voices, that never
       rose above a whisper, and were often but the echo of a sigh. Gavin
       was in the Caddam of past days, where the beautiful maiden wanders
       ever, waiting for him who is so pure that he may find her. He will
       wander over the tree-tops looking for her, with the moon for his
       lamp, and some night he will hear her singing. The little minister
       drew a deep breath, and his foot snapped a brittle twig. Then he
       remembered who and where he was, and stooped to pick up his staff.
       But he did not pick it up, for as his fingers were closing on it
       the lady began to sing.
       For perhaps a minute Gavin stood stock still, like an intruder.
       Then he ran towards the singing, which seemed to come from Windy
       ghoul, a straight road through Caddam that farmers use in summer,
       but leave in the back end of the year to leaves and pools. In
       Windyghoul there is either no wind or so much that it rushes down
       the sieve like an army, entering with a shriek of terror, and
       escaping with a derisive howl. The moon was crossing the avenue.
       But Gavin only saw the singer.
       She was still fifty yards away, sometimes singing gleefully, and
       again letting her body sway lightly as she came dancing up
       Windyghoul. Soon she was within a few feet of the little minister,
       to whom singing, except when out of tune, was a suspicious thing,
       and dancing a device of the devil. His arm went out wrathfully,
       and his intention was to pronounce sentence on this woman.
       But she passed, unconscious of his presence, and he had not moved
       nor spoken. Though really of the average height, she was a little
       thing to the eyes of Gavin, who always felt tall and stout except
       when he looked down. The grace of her swaying figure was a new _
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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