登陆注册
4617300000095

第95章

Sampson inspected the basket. "Why, they are only fish," said he; _"I was in hopes they were pashints._" He accepted the gudgeons, and inquired how Maxley got poisoned. It came out that Mrs. Maxley, seeing her husband set apart a portion of his Welsh rabbit, had "grizzled," and asked what that was for; and being told "for the mouse," and to "mind her own business,"had grizzled still more, and furtively conveyed a portion back into the pan for her master's own use. She had been quaking dismally all the afternoon at what she had done, but finding Maxley--hard but just--did not attack her for an involuntary fault, she now brazened it out, and said, "Men didn't ought to have poison in the house unbeknown to their wives. Jem had got no more than he worked for," &c. But, like a woman, she vowed vengeance on the mouse: whereupon Maxley threatened her with the marital correction of neck-twisting if she laid a finger on it.

"My eyes be open now to what a poor creature do feel as dies poisoned.

Let her a be: there's room in our place for her and we."Next day he met Alfred, and thanked him with warmth, almost with emotion.

"There ain't many in Barkington as ever done me a good turn, Master Alfred; you be one on 'em: you comes after the Captain in my book now."Alfred suggested that his claims were humble compared with Sampson's.

"No, no," said Maxley, going down to his whisper, and looking, monstrous wise: "Doctor didn't go out of his business for me: you did."The sage miser's gratitude had not time to die a natural death before circumstances occurred to test it. On the morning of that eventful day which concluded my last chapter, he received a letter from Canada. His wife was out with eggs; so he caught little Rose Sutton, that had more than once spelled an epistle for him; and she read it out in a loud and reckless whine: "'At -- noon -- this -- very -- daie -- Muster --Hardie's a-g-e-n-t, aguent -- d-i-s dis, h-o-n -- honour_ed_ --dis-honour_ed_--a--bill; and sayed.'" Here she made a full stop. Then on to the next verse.

"'There -- were no -- more -- asses.'"

"Mercy on us! but it can't be asses, wench: drive your spe-ad into't again.""'A-s-s-e-t-s. Assets.'""Ah! Go an! go an!"

"'Now -- Fatther -- if -- you -- leave -- a s-h-i-l-l-i-n-g, shilling --at --Hardie's -- after -- this -- b-l-a-m-e, ble-am -- your -- self --not-- me -- for -- this -- is -- the -- waie -- the r-o-g-u-e-s, rogews -- all-- bre-ak -- they -- go -- at -- a-- d-i-s-t-a-n-c-e, distance --first-- and -- then -- at -- h-o-m-e, whuoame. -- Dear -- fatther' --Lawk o' daisy, what ails you, Daddy Maxley? You be as white as a Sunday smock. Be you poisoned again, if _you_ please?""Worse than that--worse!" groaned Maxhey, trembling all over.

"Hush!--hold your tongue! Give me that letter! Don't you never tell nobody nothing of what you have been a reading to me, and I'll--I'll--It's only Jem's fun: he is allus running his rigs--that's a good wench now, and I'll give ye a halfpenny.""La, Daddy," said the child, opening her eyes, "I never heeds what I_re-ads:_ I be wrapped up in the spelling. Dear heart, what a sight of long words folks puts in a letter, more than ever drops out of their mouths; which their fingers be longer than their tongues, I do suppose."Maxley hailed thus information characteristically. "Then we'll say no more about the halfpenny."At this, Rose raised a lamentable cry, and pearly tears gushed forth.

"There, there!" said Maxley, deprecatingly; "here's two apples for ye; ye can't get them for less: and a halfpenny or a haporth is all one to you, but it is a great odds to me. And apples they rot; halfpence don't."It was now nine o'clock. The bank did not open till ten; but Maxley went and hung about the door, to be the first applicant.

As he stood there trembling with fear lest the bank should not open at all, he thought hard, and the result was a double resolution: he would have his money out to the last shilling; and, this done, would button up his pockets and padlock his tongue. It was not his business to take care of his neighbours; nor to blow the Hardies, if they paid him his money on demand. "So not a word to my missus, nor yet to the town-crier," said he.

Ten o'clock struck, and the bank shutters remained up. Five minutes more, and the watcher was in agony. Three minutes more, and up came a boy of sixteen whistling, and took down the shutters with an indifference that amazed him. "Bless your handsome face!" said Maxley with a sigh of relief.

He now summoned up all his firmness, and, having recourse to an art in which these shrewd rustics are supreme, made his face quite inexpressive, and so walked into the bank the every-day Maxley externally, but within a volcano ready to burst if there should be the slightest hesitation to pay him his money.

"Good morning, Mr. Maxley," said young Skinner.

"Good morning, sir."

"What can we do for you?"

"Oh, I'll wait my turn, sir."

"Well, it is your turn now, if you like.""How much have you got of mine, if you please, sir?""Your balance? I'll see. Nine hundred and four pounds.""Well, sir, then, if _you_ please, I'll draa _that._"("It has come!" thought Skinner.) "What, going to desert us?" he stammered.

"No," said the other, trembling inwardly, but not moving a facial muscle:

"it is only for a day or two, sir."

"Ah! I see, going to make a purchase. By-the-bye, I believe Mr. Hardie means to offer you some grounds he is buying outside the town: will that suit your book?""I dare say it will, sir.""Then perhaps you will wait till our governor comes in?""I have no objection.""He won't be long. Fine weather for the gardens, Mr. Maxley.""Moderate, sir. I'll take my money if you please. Counting it out, that will help pass the time till Muster Hardie comes. You han't made away with it?""What d'ye mean, sir?""Hardies bain't turned thieves, be they?""Are you mad or intoxicated, Mr. Maxley?"'Neither, sir; but I wants my own, and I wool have it too: so count out on this here counter, or I'll cry the town round that there door.""Henry, score James Maxley's name off the books," said Skinner with cool dignity. But when he had said this, he was at his wits' end: there were not nine hundred pounds of hard cash in the bank, nor anything like it.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • Beacon Lights of History-III

    Beacon Lights of History-III

    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。
  • 昊天皇敕

    昊天皇敕

    铿锵嘹亮的歌声刚从大槐树上的喇叭里飞出来,响彻在蛮岭东坡上空时,旺就来到了庙院坪子里。他专心打扮过自己,穿了一身城里人常穿的蓝色中山服,叠过的衣线笔直而清晰,脸也洗得很彻底,连头发都是湿漉漉的。跟闲常土样子比,像换了个人似的。今天是清明,更重要的是,今天是圪垛村拆庙动工仪式的日子。和往年一样,一到这个节气,岭上的山桃花业已盛开,满眼烂漫,村里的杏花也开了,一村子的醇香。但对旺来说,今年的清明节来得过快,时间好像从他身体上轧过来,咣当一下就掉进了这一天的晨光里。显然,拆庙运动更受人关切,坪子里已经聚集了很多人。
  • 浴火凰妃:废材小姐要逆天

    浴火凰妃:废材小姐要逆天

    当慕容家被虐致死的六小姐遇上重生的现代特工慕容薰仪,别人打我一分我比奉还十倍!拒皇子,斗小妹,掌家主!就是要告诉他们出来混迟早是要还的!
  • 绝世炼丹师

    绝世炼丹师

    陈潇自幼无父无母,在师门丹门长大,他是一名炼丹师,主要是以炼丹为主,攻击武器也是丹药。炼丹师,有很十二个等级:分别是最低级的一级炼丹师,最高级的是十二级炼丹师。每一个炼丹师的真气修为,功法修炼不一样,炼制的丹药也不一样。分别有金木水火土五个属性的丹药,但是在这古往今来,在这片大路上的炼丹师们最多只能有两个属性的丹药修炼。像丹皇一样的顶级炼丹师也最多只有两个属性的丹药修炼,但是主角能不能兼通五种属性的丹药炼制呢?
  • 中国原生文明启示录(中):文明爆炸

    中国原生文明启示录(中):文明爆炸

    《中国原生文明启示录》是长篇史诗性力作《大秦帝国》作者孙皓晖最新史论作品。首次提出中国原生文明的概念,重新书写中国前3000文明史,细致梳理了秦帝国之前中国历史的七大历史性跨越,总结出中国民族五大生存经验。
  • 鹰王传奇

    鹰王传奇

    青少年爱读的中国民间故事读本之的《鹰王传奇》共分四辑,具体内容包括:狐杀、义犬奇龙、鹰王传奇、台湾老板和深山猎人、复仇女侠、无影杀手、义海横刀、盗侠方胆豪等。
  • 怪杰任驰骋 一运成风斤

    怪杰任驰骋 一运成风斤

    小时候就知道亳州这个地方,不单单因为那是我故里的一座城市,还有她丰厚的历史文化底蕴。那里曾经香车宝马,商贾云集;那里有一代圣君商汤指点江山的影迹;那里是集政治家、军事家、文学家于一身的一代枭雄曹操习兵演武痛饮狂歌的地方,他的“月明星稀,乌鹊南飞,绕树三匝,何枝可依”的诗句至今尚在古城萦绕,留存的地下运兵道、习练水兵的涡水浅滩也还令今人瞩目;那里流传着“天资文藻、博闻强识”的魏文帝曹丕和出口成章、七步成诗的曹植的逸事;更有在中国军事上震古烁今的张良、曹仁、曹洪、夏侯渊、许褚……也知道亳州地理位置优越,更兼水陆之便,在经济上曾无比辉煌。
  • 佛说鹦鹉经

    佛说鹦鹉经

    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。
  • 小妹妹

    小妹妹

    马洛受雇于堪萨斯州来的小妹妹奎斯特小姐,寻找她失踪的哥哥奥林。根据小妹妹提供的地址,马洛开始调查。令人胆寒的是,马洛走到哪里,哪就有被碎冰锥扎死的人等着了。好不容易查到奥林受雇于斯蒂尔格瑞夫医生。但毫不例外的是,医生马上就被人谋害了。最后奥林终于现身时,又死在了马洛的眼皮底下。谁是这出戏的导演呢?小妹妹吗?聪明的马洛或许知道。
  • 阴差阳错,总裁的首席新妻

    阴差阳错,总裁的首席新妻

    她本是手腕高深精明能干的江州第一千金,沈家下任家主,却在遭遇阴谋陷害后,一觉醒来失去所有记忆,只恍惚记得半个名字。他是一出生便被赋予厚望的明家大少,儿时的意外让他对任何女人都毫无感觉,洁身自好二十多年,他曾以为自己这辈子是要孤独终老了。一场精心谋划的暗杀,一次举手之劳的帮助,让本该背道而驰的两人开始有了交集。他们互生戒备,他们日渐熟悉,他们心生喜欢,他们毫不犹豫在一起。阴谋,算计,误会,陷阱,却慢慢向他们袭来......“爱,就一定要在一起吗?”她带着无尽的疲惫,缓缓开口问道。“如果相爱,却不在一起,这还算爱吗?”他语气坚定,口吻之间是绝不容她逃走的决心。--情节虚构,请勿模仿