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第65章

robert falconer-第65章

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His question was too like one of his grandmother's to be pleasant to

Shargar。



'Dinna speyk to me that gait; Robert; or I'll cut my throat' he

returned。



'Hoots!  I maun ken a' aboot it;' insisted Robert; but with much

modified and partly convicted tone。



'Weel; I never said I wadna tell ye a' aboot it。  The fac' 's

thisan' I'm no' up to the leein' as I used to be; Robert: I hae

tried it ower an' ower; but a lee comes rouch throw my thrapple

(windpipe) noo。  Faith!  I cud hae leed ance wi' onybody; barrin'

the de'il。  I winna lee。  I'm nae leein'。  The fac's jist this: I

cudna bide ahin' ye ony langer。'



'But what; the muckle lang…tailed deevil! am I to do wi' ye?'

returned Robert; in real perplexity; though only pretended

displeasure。



'Gie me something to ate; an' I'll tell ye what to do wi' me;'

answered Shargar。 'I dinna care a scart (scratch) what it is。'



Robert rang the bell and ordered some porridge; and while it was

preparing; Shargar told his storyhow having heard a rumour of

apprenticeship to a tailor; he had the same night dropped from the

gable window to the ground; and with three halfpence in his pocket

had wandered and begged his way to Aberdeen; arriving with one

halfpenny left。



'But what am I to do wi' ye?' said Robert once more; in as much

perplexity as ever。



'Bide till I hae tellt ye; as I said I wad;' answered Shargar。

'Dinna ye think I'm the haveless (careless and therefore helpless)

crater I used to be。  I hae been in Aberdeen three days!  Ay; an' I

hae seen you ilka day in yer reid goon; an' richt braw it is。  Luik

ye here!'



He put his hand in his pocket and pulled out what amounted to two or

three shillings; chiefly in coppers; which he exposed with triumph

on the table。



'Whaur got ye a' that siller; man?' asked Robert。



'Here and there; I kenna whaur; but I hae gien the weicht o' 't for

't a' the samerinnin' here an' rinnin' there; cairryin' boxes till

an' frae the smacks; an' doin' a'thing whether they bade me or no。

Yesterday mornin' I got thrippence by hingin' aboot the Royal afore

the coches startit。  I luikit a' up and doon the street till I saw

somebody hine awa wi' a porkmanty。  Till 'im I ran; an' he was an

auld man; an' maist at the last gasp wi' the weicht o' 't; an' gae

me 't to carry。  An' wha duv ye think gae me a shillin' the verra

first nicht?Wha but my brither Sandy?'



'Lord Rothie?'



'Ay; faith。  I kent him weel eneuch; but little he kent me。  There

he was upo' Black Geordie。  He's turnin' auld noo。'



'Yer brither?'



'Na。 He's young eneuch for ony mischeef; but Black Geordie。  What on

earth gars him gang stravaguin' aboot upo' that deevil?  I doobt

he's a kelpie; or a hell…horse; or something no canny o' that kin';

for faith! brither Sandy's no ower canny himsel'; I'm thinkin'。  But

Geordiethe aulder the waur set (inclined)。  An' sae I'm thinkin'

wi' his maister。'



'Did ye iver see yer father; Shargar?'



'Na。 Nor I dinna want to see 'im。  I'm upo' my mither's side。  But

that's naething to the pint。  A' that I want o' you 's to lat me

come hame at nicht; an' lie upo' the flure here。  I sweir I'll lie

i' the street gin ye dinna lat me。  I'll sleep as soun' 's Peter

MacInnes whan Maccleary's preachin'。  An' I winna ate muckleI hae

a dreidfu' pooer o' aitin'an' a' 'at I gether I'll fess hame to

you; to du wi' 't as ye like。Man; I cairriet a heap o' things the

day till the skipper o' that boat 'at ye gaed intil wi' Maister

Ericson the nicht。  He's a fine chiel' that skipper!'



Robert was astonished at the change that had passed upon Shargar。

His departure had cast him upon his own resources; and allowed the

individuality repressed by every event of his history; even by his

worship of Robert; to begin to develop itself。  Miserable for a few

weeks; he had revived in the fancy that to work hard at school would

give him some chance of rejoining Robert。  Thence; too; he had

watched to please Mrs。 Falconer; and had indeed begun to buy golden

opinions from all sorts of people。  He had a hope in prospect。  But

into the midst fell the whisper of the apprenticeship like a

thunderbolt out of a clear sky。  He fled at once。



'Weel; ye can hae my bed the nicht;' said Robert; 'for I maun sit up

wi' Mr。 Ericson。'



''Deed I'll hae naething o' the kin'。  I'll sleep upo' the flure; or

else upo' the door…stane。  Man; I'm no clean eneuch efter what I've

come throu sin' I drappit frae the window…sill i' the ga'le…room。

But jist len' me yer plaid; an' I'll sleep upo' the rug here as gin

I war i' Paradees。  An' faith; sae I am; Robert。  Ye maun gang to

yer bed some time the nicht forby (besides); or ye winna be fit for

yer wark the morn。  Ye can jist gie me a kick; an' I'll be up afore

ye can gie me anither。'



Their supper arrived from below; and; each on one side of the fire;

they ate the porridge; conversing all the while about old timesfor

the youngest life has its old times; its golden ageand old

adventures;Dooble Sanny; Betty; &c。; &c。  There were but two

subjects which Robert avoidedMiss St。 John and the Bonnie Leddy。

Shargar was at length deposited upon the little bit of hearthrug

which adorned rather than enriched the room; with Robert's plaid of

shepherd tartan around him; and an Ainsworth's dictionary under his

head for a pillow。



'Man; I fin' mysel' jist like a muckle colley (sheep…dog);' he said。

'Whan I close my een; I'm no sure 'at I'm no i' the inside o' yer

auld luckie…daiddie's kilt。  The Lord preserve me frae ever sic a

fricht again as yer grannie an' Betty gae me the nicht they fand me

in 't!  I dinna believe it's in natur' to hae sic a fricht twise in

ae lifetime。  Sae I'll fa' asleep at ance; an' say nae mairbut as

muckle o' my prayers as I can min' upo' noo 'at grannie's no at my

lug。'



'Haud yer impidence; an' yer tongue thegither;' said Robert。 'Min'

'at my grannie's been the best frien' ye ever had。'



''Cep' my ain mither;' returned Shargar; with a sleepy doggedness in

his tone。



During their conference; Ericson had been slumbering。  Robert had

visited him from time to time; but he had not awaked。  As soon as

Shargar was disposed of; he took his candle and sat down by him。  He

grew more uneasy。  Robert guessed that the candle was the cause; and

put it out。  Ericson was quieter。  So Robert sat in the dark。



But the rain had now ceased。  Some upper wind had swept the clouds

from the sky; and the whole world of stars was radiant over the

earth and its griefs。



'O God; where art thou?' he said in his heart; and went to his own

room to look out。



There was no curtain; and the blind had not been drawn down;

therefore the earth looked in at the storm…window。  The sea neither

glimmered nor shone。  It lay across the horizon like a low level

cloud; out of which came a moaning。  Was this moaning all of the

earth; or was there trouble in the starry places too? thought

Robert; as if already he had begun to suspect the truth from

afarthat save in the secret place of the Most High; and in the

heart that is hid with the Son of Man in the bosom of the Father;

there is troublea sacred unresteverywherethe moaning of a tide

setting homewards; even towards the bosom of that Father。









CHAPTER VIII。



A HUMAN PROVIDENCE。



Robert kept himself thoroughly awake the whole night; and it was

well that he had not to attend classes in the morning。  As the gray

of the world's reviving consciousness melted in at the window; the

things around and within him looked and felt ghastly。  Nothing is

liker the gray dawn than the soul of one who has been watching by a

sick bed all the long hours of the dark; except; indeed; it be the

first glimmerings of truth on the mind lost in the dark of a godless

life。



Ericson had waked often; and Robert had administered his medicine

carefully。  But he had been mostly between sleeping and

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