<h3 id="id00881" style="margin-top: 3em">CHAPTER XV.</h3>
<h4 id="id00882" style="margin-top: 2em">TAFFY'S APPRENTICESHIP.</h4>
<p id="id00883">They could manage the carpentering now. And Jacky Pascoe, who, in
addition to his other trades, was something of a glazier, had taken
the damaged east window in hand. For six months it had remained
boarded up, darkening the chancel. Mr. Raymond removed the boards
and fixed them up again on the outside, and the Bryanite worked
behind them night after night. He could only be spied upon through
two lancet windows at the west end of the church, and these they
curtained.</p>
<p id="id00884">But what continually bothered them was their ignorance of iron-work.
Staples, rivets, hinges were for ever wanted. At length, one
evening, toward the end of March, the Bryanite laid down his tools.</p>
<p id="id00885">"Tell 'ee what 'tis, Parson. You must send the boy to someone
that'll teach en smithy-work. There's no sense in this cold
hammering."</p>
<p id="id00886">"Wheelwright Hocken holds his shop and cottage from the Squire."</p>
<p id="id00887">"Why not put the boy to Mendarva the Smith, over to Benny Beneath?<br/>
He's a first-rate workman."<br/></p>
<p id="id00888">"That is more than six miles away."</p>
<p id="id00889">"No matter for that. There's Joll's Farm close by; Farmer Joll would
board and lodge en for nine shillings a week, and glad of the chance;
and he could come home for Sundays."</p>
<p id="id00890">Mr. Raymond, as soon as he reached home, sat down and wrote a letter
to Mendarva the Smith and another to Farmer Joll. Within a week the
bargains were struck, and it was settled that Taffy should go at
once.</p>
<p id="id00891">"I may be calling before long, to look you up," said the Bryanite,
"but mind you do no more than nod when you see me."</p>
<p id="id00892">Joll's Farm lay somewhere near Carwithiel, across the moor where
Taffy had gone fishing with George and Honoria. On the Monday
morning when he stepped through the white front gate, with his bag on
his shoulder, and paused for a good look at the building, it seemed
to him a very comfortable farmstead, and vastly superior to the
tumble-down farms around Nannizabuloe. The flagged path, which led
up to the front door between great bunches of purple honesty, was
swept as clean as a dairy.</p>
<p id="id00893">A dark-haired maid opened the door and led him to the great kitchen
at the back. Hams wrapped in paper hung from the rafters, and
strings of onions. The pans over the fire-place were bright as
mirrors, and through the open window he heard the voices of children
at play as well as the clacking of poultry in the town-place.</p>
<p id="id00894">"I'll go and tell the mistress," said the maid; but she paused at the
door. "I suppose you don't remember me, now?"</p>
<p id="id00895">"No," said Taffy truthfully.</p>
<p id="id00896">"My name's Lizzie Pezzack. You was with the young lady, that day,
when she bought my doll. I mind you quite well. But I put my hair
up last Easter, and that makes a difference."</p>
<p id="id00897">"Why, you were only a child!"</p>
<p id="id00898">"I was seventeen last week. And—I say, do you know the Bryanite,
over to St. Ann's—Preacher Jacky Pascoe?"</p>
<p id="id00899">He nodded, remembering the caution given him.</p>
<p id="id00900">"I got salvation off him. Master and mis'-ess they've got salvation
too; but they take it very quiet. They're very fond of one another;
if you please one, you'll please 'em both. They let me walk over to
prayer-meetin' once a week. But I don't go by Mendarva's shop—
that's where you work—though 'tis the shortest way; because there's
a woman buried in the road there, with a stake through her, and I'm
a terrible coward for ghosts."</p>
<p id="id00901">She paused as if expecting him to say something; but Taffy was
staring at a "neck" of corn, elaborately plaited, which hung above
the mantel-shelf. And just then Mrs. Joll entered the kitchen.</p>
<p id="id00902">Taffy—without any reason—had expected to see a middle-aged
housewife. But Mrs. Joll was hardly over thirty; a shapely woman,
with a plain, pleasant face and auburn hair, the wealth of which she
concealed by wearing it drawn straight back from the forehead and
plaited in the severest coil behind. She shook hands.</p>
<p id="id00903">"You'll like a drink of milk before I show you your room?"</p>
<p id="id00904">Taffy was grateful for the milk. While he drank it, the voices of
the children outside rose suddenly to shouts of laughter.</p>
<p id="id00905">"That will be their father come home," said Mrs. Joll, and going to
the side door called to him. "John, put the children down!
Mr. Raymond's son is here."</p>
<p id="id00906">Mr. Joll, who had been galloping round the farmyard with a small girl
of three on his back, and a boy of six tugging at his coat-tails,
pulled up, and wiped his good-natured face.</p>
<p id="id00907">"Kindly welcome," said he, coming forward and shaking hands, while
the two children stared at Taffy.</p>
<p id="id00908">After a minute the boy said, "My name's Bob. Come and play horses,
too."</p>
<p id="id00909">Farmer Joll looked at Taffy with a shyness that was comic.<br/>
"Shall we?"<br/></p>
<p id="id00910">"Mr. Raymond will be tired enough already," his wife suggested.</p>
<p id="id00911">"Not a bit," declared Taffy; and hoisting Bob on his back, he set off
furiously prancing after the farmer.</p>
<p id="id00912">By dinner-time he and the family were fast friends, and after dinner
the farmer took him off to be introduced to Mendarva the Smith.</p>
<p id="id00913">Mendarva's forge stood on a triangle of turf beside the high-road,
where a cart-track branched off to descend to Joll's Farm in the
valley. And Mendarva was a dark giant of a man with a beard like
those you see on the statues of Nineveh. On Sundays he parted his
beard carefully and tied the ends with little bows of scarlet ribbon;
but on week days it curled at will over his mighty chest. He had one
assistant whom he called "the Dane"; a red-haired youth as tall as
himself and straighter from the waist down. Mendarva's knees had
come together with years of poising and swinging his great hammer.</p>
<p id="id00914">"He's little, but he'll grow," said he, after eyeing Taffy up and
down. "Dane, come fore and tell me if we'll make a workman of en."</p>
<p id="id00915">The Dane stepped forward and passed his hands over the boy's
shoulders and down his ribs. "He's slight, but he'll fill out.
Good pair o' shoulders. Give's hold o' your hand, my son."</p>
<p id="id00916">Taffy obeyed; not very well liking to be handled thus like a prize
bullock.</p>
<p id="id00917">"Hand like a lady's. Tidy wrist, though. He'll do, master."</p>
<p id="id00918">So Taffy was passed, given a leathern apron, and set to his first
task of keeping the forge-fire raked and the bellows going, while the
hammers took up the music he was to listen to for a year to come.</p>
<p id="id00919">This music kept the day merry; and beyond the window along the
bright high-road there was usually something worth seeing—
farm-carts, jowters' carts, the doctor and his gig, pedlars and
Johnny-fortnights, the miller's waggons from the valley-bottom below
Joll's Farm, and on Tuesdays and Fridays the market-van going and
returning. Mendarva knew or speculated upon everybody, and with half
the passers-by broke off work and gave the time of day, leaning on
his hammer. But down at the farm all was strangely quiet, in spite
of the children's voices; and at night the quietness positively kept
him awake, listening to the pur-r of the pigeons in their cote
against the house-wall, thinking of his grandmother awake at home and
harkening to the <i>tick-tack</i> of her tall clock. Often when he awoke
to the early summer daybreak and saw through his attic-window the
grey shadows of the sheep still and long on the slope above the
farmstead, his ear was wanting something, asking for something; for
the murmur of the sea never reached this inland valley. And he would
lie and long for the chirruping of the two children in the next room
and the drawing of bolts and clatter of milk-pails below stairs.</p>
<p id="id00920">He had plenty to eat, and that plenty simple and good, and clean
linen to sleep between. The kitchen was his except on Saturday
nights, when Mrs. Joll and Lizzie tubbed the children there, and then
he would carry his books off to the best parlour or stroll around the
farm with Mr. Joll and discuss the stock. There were no loose rails
in Mr. Joll's gates, no farm implements lying out in the weather to
rust. Mr. Joll worked early and late, and his shoulders had a
tell-tale stoop—for he was a man in the prime of life, perhaps some
five years older than his wife.</p>
<p id="id00921">One Saturday evening he unburdened his heart to Taffy. It happened
at the end of the hay-harvest, and the two were leaning over a gate
discussing the yet unthatched rick.</p>
<p id="id00922">"What I say is," declared the farmer quite in-consequently, "a man
must be able to lay his troubles 'pon the Lord. I don't mean his
work, but his troubles; and go home and shut the door and be happy
with his wife and children. Now, I tell you that for months—iss,
years—after Bob was born I kept plaguing myself in the fields,
thinking that some harm might have happened to the child. Why, I
used to make an excuse and creep home, and then if I see'd a blind
pulled down you wouldn't think how my heart'd go thump; and I'd stand
wi' my head on the door-hapse an' say, 'If so be the Lord have
took'n, I must go and comfort Susan—not my will, but Thine, Lord—
but, Lord, don't 'ee be cruel this time!' And then find the cheeld
right as ninepence and the blind only pulled down to keep the sun off
the carpet. After a while my wife guessed what was wrong—I used to
make up such poor twiddling pretences. She said, 'Look here, the
Lord and me'll see after Bob; and if you can't keep to your own work
without poking your nose into ours, then I married for worse and not
for better.' Then it came upon me that by leaving the Lord to look
after my job I'd been treating Him like a farm labourer. It's the
things you can't help he looks after—not the work."</p>
<p id="id00923">A few evenings later there came a knock at the door, and Lizzie, who
went to open it, returned with the Bryanite skipping behind her.</p>
<p id="id00924">"Blessings be upon this here house!" he cried, cutting a sort of
double shuffle on the threshold. He shook hands with the farmer and
his wife, and nodded toward Taffy. "So you've got Parson Raymond's
boy here!"</p>
<p id="id00925">"Yes," said Mrs. Joll; and turned to Taffy. "He've come to pray a
bit: perhaps you would rather be in the parlour?"</p>
<p id="id00926">Taffy asked to be allowed to stay; and presently Mr. Pascoe had them
all down on their knees. He began by invoking God's protection on
the household; but his prayer soon ceased to be a prayer. It broke
into ejaculations of praise—"Friends, I be too happy to ask for
anything—Glory, glory! The blood! The precious blood!
O deliverance! O streams of redemption running!" The farmer and his
wife began to chime in—"Hallelujah!" "Glory!" and Lizzie Pezzack to
sob. Taffy, kneeling before a kitchen chair, peeped between his
palms, and saw her shoulders heaving.</p>
<p id="id00927">The Bryanite sprang to his feet, overturning the settle with a crash.<br/>
"Tid'n no use. I must skip! Who'll dance wi' me?"<br/></p>
<p id="id00928">He held out his hands to Mrs. Joll. She took them, and skipped once
shamefacedly. Lizzie, with flaming cheeks, pushed her aside.
"Leave me try, mis'ess; I shall die if I don't." She caught the
preacher's hands, and the two leapt about the kitchen. "I can dance
higher than mis'ess!" Farmer Joll looked on with a dazed face.
"Hallelujah!" "Amen!" he said at intervals, quite mechanically.
The pair stood under the bacon rack and began to whirl like
dervishes—hands clasped, toes together, bodies leaning back and
almost rigid. They whirled until Taffy's brain whirled with them.</p>
<p id="id00929">With a louder sob Lizzie let go her hold and tottered back into a
chair, laughing hysterically. The Bryanite leaned against the table,
panting.</p>
<p id="id00930">There was a long pause. Mrs. Joll took a napkin from the dresser and
fell to fanning the girl's face, then to slapping it briskly.
"Get up and lay the table," she commanded; "the preacher'll stay to
supper."</p>
<p id="id00931">"Thank 'ee, ma'am, I don't care if I do," said he; and ten minutes
later they were all seated at supper and discussing the fall in wheat
in the most matter-of-fact voices. Only their faces twitched now and
again.</p>
<p id="id00932">"I hear you had the preacher down to Joll's last night," said<br/>
Mendarva the Smith. "What'st think of en?"<br/></p>
<p id="id00933">"I can't make him out," was Taffy's colourless but truthful answer.</p>
<p id="id00934">"He's a bellows of a man. I do hear he's heating up th' old Squire
Moyle's soul to knack an angel out of en. He'll find that a job and
a half. You mark my words, there'll be Dover over in your parish one
o' these days."</p>
<p id="id00935">During work-hours Mendarva bestowed most of his talk on Taffy.<br/>
The Dane seldom opened his lips except to join in the anvil chorus—<br/></p>
<p id="id00936"> "Here goes one—<br/>
Sing, sing, Johnny!<br/>
Here goes two—<br/>
Sing, Johnny, sing!<br/>
Whack'n till he's red,<br/>
Whack'n till he's dead,<br/>
And whop! goes the widow with<br/>
A brand new ring!"<br/></p>
<p id="id00937">And when the boy took a hammer and joined in he fell silent.
Taffy soon observed that a singular friendship knit these two men,
who were both unmarried. Mendarva had been a famous wrestler in his
day, and his great ambition now was to train the other to win the
County belt. Often after work the pair would try a hitch together on
the triangle of turf, with Taffy for stickler, Mendarva illustrating
and explaining, the Dane nodding seriously whenever he understood,
but never answering a word. Afterwards the boy recalled these bouts
very vividly—the clear evening sky, the shoulders of the two big men
shining against the level sun as they gripped and swayed, their long
shadows on the grass under which (as he remembered) the poor
self-murdered woman lay buried.</p>
<p id="id00938">He thought of her at night, sometimes, as he worked alone at the
forge; for Mendarva allowed him the keys and use of the smithy
overtime, in consideration of a small payment for coal. And then he
blew his fire and hammered, with a couple of candles on the bench and
a Homer between them; and beat the long hexameters into his memory.
The incongruity of it never struck him. He was going to be a great
man, and somehow this was going to be the way. These scraps of
iron—these tools of his forging—were to grow into the arms and
shield of Achilles. In its own time would come the magic moment, the
shield find its true circumference and swing to the balance of his
arm, proof and complete.</p>
<p id="id00939" style="margin-left: 4%; margin-right: 4%"> en d etithei thotamoio mega stheuos okeanoio
antuga pad pumatev sakeos puka poietoi. . .</p>
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