Boy Woodburn eBook

Alfred Ollivant (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about Boy Woodburn.

Boy Woodburn eBook

Alfred Ollivant (writer)
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about Boy Woodburn.

Boy swung round.

The cause of the merriment was sufficiently obvious.

A lop-eared Belgian rabbit was hopping across the floor, entirely self-complacent and smug.  As the sound of singing, which had covered him like a garment, died away in smothered titters, he sat up on his hind-legs and stared about him.

The girl descended from the platform, caught the rabbit by the ears and suspended him.

Tame as a cow, he made no resistance.

“Who’s is this hare?” she asked.

“Mrs. Woodburn’s, Miss,” answered Jerry brightly.  “That’s Abe Lincoln.  Queen Victoria’s his wife.  They lives together in a nutch.”

“How did he come in?”

“Through the window,” said the muffled voice of Albert from the back.  “Flow’d.”

The rabbit, which had been hanging placidly suspended, was now seized with spasms and began to twitch and contort violently.

The reason was not far to seek.  A red-eyed ferret, tied by a string to the foot of a chair, was making strenuous efforts to get at him.

“Who’s is that ferret?” asked Boy.

“That genelman’s,” replied the voice from the back.

The girl looked up and saw Silver standing in the door.

Coldly she dismissed the class.

“That’ll do,” she said.  “You can all go now.”  The lads shuffled away, rejoicing.  “There’ll be no sing-song this evening,” continued their cruel mistress.  “Jerry, put that rabbit back in the hutch you took it from.  Stanley, I don’t want to see that ferret of yours at Bible Class again.”

The lads trooped out, injured and innocent.

Albert was left in his shirt-sleeves and without a collar.

“What is it?” asked the girl.

“Can I ’ave me things, Miss?”

His face was stiff and impenetrable.

She handed him the long drab coat on the platform.

“And me ’at, Miss.”

“Is this yours?”

“Yes, Miss.”

She passed him the picture-hat.  Albert received it with immobile face.

“And me pig-tail.”

“You don’t deserve it,” said Boy.

Silver approached.

“Put ’em on, will you?” he said.

Albert obeyed without demur and without a symptom of emotion.  In a moment he had become a coarse caricature of his young mistress, ludicrously alike and yet worlds away.

“Not so bad,” commented the young man.  “You could act, Albert?”

“Yes, sir,” said Albert, in whom diffidence was not a defect.

The lad made for the door in his hat and pig-tail, and as though to manifest his quality gave a little coquettish flirt to the skirt of his coat as he went out.

“You’ll be wanted this morning, Albert, you and Brand,” the girl called after him.

“Yes, Miss.”

“Mare’s Back.  Twelve-thirty.  Make-Way-There and Lollypop, trial horses.  Stanley and Jerry know.  Silvertail for me.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Boy Woodburn from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.