Farina eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 142 pages of information about Farina.

Farina eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 142 pages of information about Farina.

They took the body by head and feet, and laid him at the door of his father’s house.  Here the colour came to his cheek, and they wiped off the streaks of blood that stained him.  Guy proved he could be tender with a fallen foe, and Farina with an ill-fated rival.  It was who could suggest the soundest remedies, or easiest postures.  One lent a kerchief and nursed him; another ran to the city fountain and fetched him water.  Meantime the moon had dropped, and morning, grey and beamless, looked on the house-peaks and along the streets with steadier eye.  They now both discerned a body of men, far down, fronting Gottlieb’s house, and drawn up in some degree of order.  All their charity forsook them at once.

‘Possess thyself of the truncheon,’ said Guy:  ’You see it can damage.  More work before breakfast, and a fine account I must give of myself to my hostess of the Three Holy Kings!’

Farina recovered the destructive little instrument.

‘I am ready,’ said he.  ’But hark! there’s little work for us there, I fancy.  Those be lads of Cologne, no grunters of the wild.  ’Tis the White Rose Club.  Always too late for service.’

Voices singing a hunting glee, popular in that age, swelled up the clear morning air; and gradually the words became distinct.

                         The Kaiser went a-hunting,
                              A-hunting, tra-ra: 
                    With his bugle-horn at springing morn,
                    The Kaiser trampled bud and thorn: 
                                        Tra-ra!

               And the dew shakes green as the horsemen rear,
               And a thousand feathers they flutter with fear;
               And a pang drives quick to the heart of the deer;
                    For the Kaiser’s out a-hunting,
                                   Tra-ra! 
                         Ta, ta, ta, ta,
                         Tra-ra, tra-ra,
                         Ta-ta, tra-ra, tra-ra!

the owner of the truncheon awoke to these reviving tones, and uttered a faint responsive ‘Tra-ra!’

‘Hark again!’ said Farina, in reply to the commendation of the Goshawk, whose face was dimpled over with the harmony.

                    The wild boar lay a-grunting,
                         A-grunting, tra-ra! 
               And, boom! comes the Kaiser to hunt up me? 
               Or, queak! the small birdie that hops on the tree? 
                                   Tra-ra! 
               O birdie, and boar, and deer, lie tame! 
               For a maiden in bloom, or a full-blown dame,
               Are the daintiest prey, and the windingest game,
                    When Kaisers go a-hunting,
                                   Tra-ra! 
                         Ha, ha, ha, ha,
                              Tra-ra, tra-ra,
                         Ha-ha, tra-ra, tra-ra!

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Farina from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.