<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.</SPAN><br/> <span class="small1">FOR A LITTLE CHANGE OF AIR.</span></h2>
<p>On the very next day, I received such a visit as never had come
to my house before. For while I was trimming my hooks, and
wondering how to get out of all this trouble with my conscience
sound and my pocket improved; suddenly I heard a voice not
to be found anywhere.</p>
<p>"I 'ants to yalk, I tell 'a, Yatkin. Put me down derekkerly.
I 'ants to see old Davy."</p>
<p>"And old Davy wants to see you, you beauty," I cried, as
she jumped like a little wild kid, and took all my house with
a glance, and then me.</p>
<p>"Does 'a know, I yikes this house, and I yikes 'a, and I
yikes Yatkin, and ickle Bunny, and evelybody?"</p>
<p>She pointed all round for everybody, with all ten fingers
spread everyway. Then Watkin came after her, like her slave,
with a foolish grin on his countenance, in spite of the undertaking
business.</p>
<p>"If you please, sir, Mr Llewellyn," he said, "we was forced
to bring her over; she have been crying so dreadful, and shivering
about the black pit-hole so. And when the black things
came into the house, she was going clean out of her little mind,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90">[Pg 90]</SPAN></span>
ever so many times almost. No use it was at all to tell her
ever so much a-yard they was. 'I don't yike back, and I 'on't
have back. Yite I yikes, and boo I yikes; and my dear papa
be so very angy, when I tells him all about it.' She went on
like that, and she did so cry, mother said she must change the
air a bit."</p>
<p>All the time he was telling me this, she watched him with
her head on one side and her lips kept ready in the most comic
manner, as much as to say, "Now you tell any stories at my
expense, and you may look out." But Watkin was truth
itself, and she nodded, and said "Ness," at the end of his
speech.</p>
<p>"And, if you please, sir, Mr Llewellyn, whatever is a
'belung,' sir? All the way she have been asking for 'belung,
belung, belung.' And I cannot tell for the life of me whatever
is 'belung.'"</p>
<p>"Boy, never ask what is unbecoming," I replied, in a manner
which made him blush, according to my intention. For the
word might be English for all I knew, and have something of
high life in it. However, I found, by-and-by, that it meant
what she was able to call "Ummibella," when promoted a year
in the dictionary.</p>
<p>But now anybody should only have seen her, who wanted a
little rousing up. My cottage, of course, is not much to boast
of, compared with castles, and so on; nevertheless there is
something about it pleasant and good, like its owner. You
might see ever so many houses, and think them larger, and
grander, and so on, with more opportunity for sitting down,
and less for knocking your head perhaps; and after all you
would come back to mine. Not for the sake of the meat in
the cupboard—because I seldom had any, and far inferior men
had more; but because—well, it does not matter. I never
could make you understand, unless you came to see it.</p>
<p>Only I felt that I had found a wonderful creature to make
me out, and enter almost into my own views (of which the world
is not capable) every time I took this child up and down the
staircase. She would have jumps, and she made me talk in a
manner that quite surprised myself; and such a fine feeling
grew up between us, that it was a happy thing for the whole
of us, not to have Bunny in the way just then. Mother Jones
was giving her apple-party; as she always did when the red
streaks came upon her "Early Margarets." But I always think
the White Juneating is a far superior apple: and I have a tree
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91">[Pg 91]</SPAN></span>
of it. My little garden is nothing grand, any more than the
rest of my premises, or even myself, if it comes to that; still
you might go for a long day's walk, and find very few indeed
to beat it, unless you were contradictory. For ten doors at
least, both west and east, this was admitted silently; as was
proved by their sending to me for a cabbage, an artichoke, or
an onion, or anything choice for a Sunday dinner. It may suit
these very people now to shake their heads and to run me down,
but they should not forget what I did for them, when it comes
to pronouncing fair judgment.</p>
<p>Poor Bardie appeared as full of bright spirit, and as brave as
ever, and when she tumbled from jumping two steps, what did
she do but climb back and jump three, which even Bunny was
afraid to do. But I soon perceived that this was only a sort of
a flash in the pan, as it were. The happy change from the
gloom of Sker House, from the silent corners and creaking
stairs, and long-faced people keeping watch, and howling every
now and then—also the sight of me again (whom she looked
upon as her chief protector), and the general air of tidiness belonging
to my dwelling—these things called forth all at once
the play and joyful spring of her nature. But when she began
to get tired of this, and to long for a little coaxing, even the
stupidest gaffer could see that she was not the child she had
been. Her little face seemed pinched and pale, and prematurely
grave and odd; while in the grey eyes tears shone ready at any
echo of thought to fall. Also her forehead, broad and white,
which marked her so from common children, looked as if too
much of puzzling and of wondering had been done there. Even
the gloss of her rich brown poll was faded, with none to care
for it; while the dainty feet and hands, so sensitive as to a
speck of dirt, were enough to bring the tears of pity into a
careful mother's eyes.</p>
<p>"Gardy la! 'Ook 'e see, 'hot degustin' naily pailies! And
poor Bardie nuffin to kean 'em with!"</p>
<p>While I was setting this grief to rest (for which she kissed
me beautifully), many thoughts came through my mind about
this little creature. She and I were of one accord, upon so
many important points; and when she differed from me,
perhaps she was in the right almost: which is a thing that I
never knew happen in a whole village of grown-up people.
And by the time I had brushed her hair and tied up the bows
of her frock afresh, and when she began to dance again, and to
play every kind of trick with me, I said to myself, "I must
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92">[Pg 92]</SPAN></span>
have this child. Whatever may come of it, I will risk—when
the price of butcher's-meat comes down."</p>
<p>This I said in real earnest; but the price of butcher's-meat
went up, and I never have known it come down again.</p>
<p>While I was thinking, our Bunny came in, full of apples,
raw and roasted, and of the things the children said. But at
the very first sight of Bardie, everything else was gone from
her. All the other children were fit only to make dirt-pies of.
This confirmed and held me steadfast in the opinions which I
had formed without any female assistance.</p>
<p>In spite of all her own concerns (of which she was full enough,
goodness knows), Bunny came up, and pulled at her, by reason
of something down her back, which wanted putting to rights a
little—a plait, or a tuck, or some manner of gear; only I
thought it a clever thing, and the little one approved of it.
And then, our Bunny being in her best, these children took
notice of one another, to settle which of them was nearer to the
proper style of clothes. And each admired the other for anything
which she had not got herself.</p>
<p>"Come, you baby-chits," said I, being pleased at their
womanly ways, so early; "all of us want some food, I think.
Can we eat our dresses?" The children, of course, understood
me not; nevertheless, what I said was sense.</p>
<p>And if, to satisfy womankind—for which I have deepest
regard and respect—I am forced to enter into questions higher
than reason of men can climb—of washing, and ironing, and
quilling, and gaufreing, and setting up, and styles of transparent
reefing, and all our other endeavours to fetch this child up
to her station—the best thing I can do will be to have mother
Jones in to write it for me; if only she can be forced to spell.</p>
<p>However, that is beyond all hope; and even I find it hard
sometimes to be sure of the royal manner. Only I go by the
Bible always, for every word that I can find; being taught
(ever since I could read at all) that his Majesty, James I., confirmed
it.</p>
<p>Now this is not all the thing which I wanted to put before
you clearly; because I grow like a tombstone often, only fit to
make you laugh, when I stand on my right to be serious. My
great desire is to tell you what I did, and how I did it, as to
the managing of these children, even for a day or two, so as to
keep them from crying, or scorching, or spoiling their clothes,
or getting wet, or having too much victuals or too little. Of
course I consulted that good mother Jones five or six times
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93">[Pg 93]</SPAN></span>
every day; and she never was weary of giving advice, though
she said every time that it must be the last. And a lucky
thing it was for me in all this responsibility to have turned
enough of money, through skilful catch and sale of fish, to
allow of my staying at home a little, and not only washing and
mending of clothes, but treating the whole of the household
to the delicacies of the season. However, it is not my habit to
think myself anything wonderful; that I leave to the rest of
the world: and no doubt any good and clever man might have
done a great part of what I did. Only if anything should befall
us, out of the reach of a sailor's skill and the depth of
Bunny's experience, mother Jones promised to come straight in,
the very moment I knocked at the wall; and her husband slept
with such musical sound that none could be lonely in any
house near, and so did all of her ten children who could crack
a lollipop.</p>
<p>Upon the whole, we passed so smoothly over the first evening,
with the two children as hard at play as if they were paid
fifty pounds for it, that having some twenty-five shillings in
hand after payment of all creditors, and only ten weeks to my
pension-day, with my boat unknown to anybody, and a very
good prospect of fish running up from the Mumbles at the next
full moon, I set the little one on my lap, after a good bout of
laughing at her very queer ins and outs—for all things seem to
be all alive with, as well as to, her.</p>
<p>"Will you stay with me, my dear?" I said, as bold as King
George and the Dragon; "would you like to live with old
Davy and Bunny, and have ever so many frocks washed, soon
as ever he can buy them?" For nothing satisfied her better
than to see her one gown washed. She laid her head on one
side a little, so that I felt it hot to my bosom, being excused of
my waistcoat; and I knew that she had overworked herself.</p>
<p>"Ness," she said, after thinking a bit. "Ness, I live with
'a, old Davy, till my dear mama come for me. Does 'e know,
old Davy, 'hot I thinks?"</p>
<p>"No, my pretty; I only know that you are always thinking."
And so she was; no doubt of it.</p>
<p>"I tell 'a, old Davy, 'hot I thinks. No—I can't tell 'a; only
sompfin. 'Et me go for more pay with Bunny."</p>
<p>"No, my dear, just stop a minute. Bunny has got no breath
left in her; she is such a great fat Bunny. What you mean
to say is, that you don't know how papa and mama could ever
think of leaving you such a long, long time away."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94">[Pg 94]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She shook her curly pate as if each frizzle were a puzzle;
and her sweet white forehead seemed a mainsail full of memory;
and then gay presence was in her eyes, and all the play which
I had stopped broke upon her mind again.</p>
<p>"Tinker, tailor, soldier, sailor," she began, with her beautiful
fingers crawling, like white carnelian compasses, up the well-made
buttons of my new smock-guernsey; for though I had
begged my hot waistcoat off, I never was lax of dress in her
presence as I would be in Bunny's—or, in short, with anybody
except this little lady. I myself taught her that "tinker, tailor,"
and had a right to have it done to me. And she finished it off
with such emphasis upon button No. 7, which happened to be
the last of them, "gentleman, ploughboy, fief," looking straight
into my eyes, and both of us laughing at the fine idea that I
could possibly be called a thief! But fearing to grow perhaps
foolish about her, as she did these charming things to me, I
carried her up to bed with Bunny, and sung them both away to
sleep with a melancholy dirge of sea.</p>
<p>Into whatever state of life it may please God to call me—though
I fear there cannot be many more at this age of writing—it
always will be, as it always has been, my first principle
and practice to do my very utmost (which is far less than it
was, since the doctor stopped my hornpipes) to be pleasant and
good company. And it is this leading motive which has kept
me from describing—as I might have done, to make you tingle
and be angry afterwards—the state of Sker House, and of Evan
Thomas, and Moxy his wife, and all their friends, about those
five poor rabbiters. Also other darkish matters, such as the
plight of those obstinate black men when they came ashore at
last, three together, and sometimes four, as if they had fought
in the water. And, after all, what luck they had in obtaining
proper obsequies, inasmuch as, by order of Crowner Bowles,
a great hole in the sand was dug in a little sheltered valley,
and kept open till it was fairly thought that the sea must have
finished with them; and then, after being carefully searched
for anything of value, they were rolled in all together and kept
down with stones, like the parish mangle, and covered with a
handsome mound of sand. And not only this, but in spite of
expense and the murmuring of the vestry, a board well tarred
(to show their colour) was set up in the midst of it, and their
number "35" chalked up; and so they were stopped of their
mischief awhile, after shamefully robbing their poor importer.</p>
<p>But if this was conducted handsomely, how much more so
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95">[Pg 95]</SPAN></span>
were the funerals of the five young white men! The sense of
the neighbourhood, and the stir, and the presence of the Coroner
(who stopped a whole week for sea air and freshness, after
seeing so many good things come in, and perceiving so many
ways home that night, that he made up his mind to none of
them); also the feeling (which no one expressed, but all would
have been disappointed of) that honest black Evan, after knocking
so many men down in both parishes and the extra-parochial
manor, was designed, by this downright blow from above, to
repent and to entertain every one; and most of all, the fact
that five of a highly respectable family were to be buried at
once, to the saving of four future funerals, all of which must
have been fine ones,—these universal sympathies compelled the
house and the people therein to exert themselves to the uttermost.</p>
<p>Enough that it gave satisfaction, not universal, but general;
and even that last is a hard thing to do in such great outbursts
of sympathy. Though Moudlin church is more handy for Sker,
and the noble Portreeve of Kenfig stood upon his right to it,
still there were stronger reasons why old Newton should have
the preference. And Sker being outside either parish, Crowner
Bowles, on receipt of a guinea, swore down the Portreeve to his
very vamps. For Moxy Thomas was a Newton woman, and
loved every scrape of a shoe there; and her uncle, the clerk,
would have ended his days if the fees had gone over to Kenfig.
Our parson, as well, was a very fine man, and a match for the
whole of the service; while the little fellow at Moudlin always
coughed at a word of three syllables.</p>
<p>There was one woman in our village who was always right.
She had been disappointed, three times over, in her early and
middle days; and the effect of this on her character was so
lasting and so wholesome, that she never spoke without knowing
something. When from this capital female I heard that
our churchyard had won the victory, and when I foresaw the
demented condition of glory impending upon our village (not
only from five magnificent palls, each with its proper attendance
of black, and each with fine hymns and good howling, but
yet more than that from the hot strength of triumph achieved
over vaunting Kenfig), then it came into my mind to steal away
with Bardie.</p>
<p>A stern and sad sacrifice of myself, I assured myself that it
was, and would be; for few even of our oldest men could
enjoy a funeral more than I did, with its sad reflections and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96">[Pg 96]</SPAN></span>
junketings. And I might have been head-man of all that day,
entitled not only to drop the mould, but to make the speech
afterwards at the Inn.</p>
<p>But I abandoned all these rights, and braved once more the
opinions of neighbours (which any man may do once too often);
and when the advance of sound came towards us, borne upon
the western wind from the end of Newton Wayn, slowly hanging
through the air, as if the air loved death of man—the
solemn singing of the people who must go that way themselves,
and told it in their melody; and when the Clevice rock rung
softly with the tolling bell, as well as with the rolling dirges,
we slipped away at the back of it—that is to say, pretty Bardie
and I. For Bunny was purer of Newton birth than to leave
such a sight without tearing away. And desiring some little
to hear all about it, I left her with three very good young
women, smelling strongly of southernwood, who were beginning
to weep already, and promised to tell me the whole of it.</p>
<p>As we left this dismal business, Bardie danced along beside
me, like an ostrich-feather blown at. In among the sandhills
soon I got her, where she could see nothing, and the thatch of
rushes deadened every pulse of the funeral bell. And then a
strange idea took me, all things being strange just now, that it
might prove a rich wise thing to go for a quiet cruise with
Bardie. In that boat, and on the waves, she might remember
things recovered by the chance of semblance. Therefore, knowing
that all living creatures five miles either way of us were
sure to be in Newton churchyard nearly all the afternoon, and
then in the public-houses, I scrupled not to launch my boat and
go to sea with the little one. For if we steered a proper
course no funeral could see us. And so I shipped her gingerly.
The glory of her mind was such that overboard she must have
jumped, except for my Sunday neck-tie with a half-hitch knot
around her. And the more I rowed the more she laughed, and
looked at the sun with her eyes screwed up, and at the water
with all wide open. "'Hare is 'a going, old Davy?" she said,
slipping from under my Sunday splice, and coming to me
wonderfully, and laying her tiny hands on mine, which beat me
always, as she had found out; "is 'a going to my dear papa,
and mama, and ickle bother?"</p>
<p>"No, my pretty, you must wait for them to come. We are
going to catch some fish, and salt them, that they may keep
with a very fine smell, till your dear papa brings your mama and
all the family with him; and then what a supper we will have!"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97">[Pg 97]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"'Ill 'a," she said; "and poor Bardie too?"</p>
<p class="pmb3">But the distance of the supper-time was a very sad disappointment
to her, and her bright eyes filled with haze. And
then she said "Ness" very quietly, because she was growing
to understand that she could not have her own way now. I
lay on my oars and watched her carefully, while she was shaking
her head and wondering, with her little white shoulders
above the thwart, and her innocent and intelligent eyes full of
the spreading sky and sea. It was not often one had the
chance, through the ever-flitting change, to learn the calm and
true expression of that poor young creature's face. Even now
I could not tell, except that her playful eyes were lonely, and
her tender lips were trembling, and a heartful of simple love
could find no outlet, and lost itself. These little things, when
thinking thus, or having thought flow through them, never
ought to be disturbed, because their brains are tender. The
unknown stream will soon run out, and then they are fit again
for play, which is the proper work of man. We open the
world, and we close the world, with nothing more than this;
and while our manhood is too grand (for a score and a half of
years, perhaps), to take things but in earnest, the justice of our
birth is on us,—we are fortune's plaything.</p>
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