Master Skylark eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 278 pages of information about Master Skylark.

Master Skylark eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 278 pages of information about Master Skylark.

It was a pretty sight to see:  her big eyes wide and earnest, her cheeks a little flushed, her short hair curling, and her crimson gown fluttering about her as she danced the quaint running step forward and back across the grass, balancing archly, with her hands upon her hips and a little smile upon her lips, in the swaying motion of the coupee, courtesying gracefully as one tiny slippered foot peeped out from her rustling skirt, tapping on the turf, now in front and now behind.  Nick sang like a blackbird in the hedge.  And how those country lads and lasses stared to see such winsome, dainty grace!  “La me!” gaped one, “’tis fairy folk—­she doth na even touch the ground!” “The pretty dear!” the mothers said.  “Doll, why canst thou na do the like, thou lummox?” “Tut,” sighed the buxom Doll, “I have na wingses on my feet!”

Then Cicely, breathless, bowed, and ran to Nick’s side asking, “Was it all right, Nick?”

“Right?” said he, and stroked her hair; “’twas better than thou didst ever dance it for M’sieu.”

“For why?” said she, and flushed, with a quick light in her eyes; “for why—­because this time I danced for thee.”

The country folk, enchanted, called for more and more.

Nick sang another song, and he and Cicely danced the galliard together, while the piper piped and the fiddler fiddled away like mad; and the moon went down, and the cottage doors grew ruddy with the light inside.  Then Dame Pettiford gave them milk and oat-cakes in a bowl, a bit of honey in the comb, and a cup of strawberries; and Cicely fell fast asleep with the last of the strawberries in her hand.

So they came up out of the south through Shipston-on-Stour, in the main-traveled way, and with every mile Nick felt home growing nearer.  Streams sprang up in the meadow-lands, with sedgy islands, and lines of silvery willows bordering their banks.  Flocks and herds cropped beneath tofts of ash and elm and beech.  Snug homes peeped out of hazel copses by the road.  The passing carts had a familiar look, and at Alderminster Nick saw a man he thought he recognized.

Before he knew that he was there they topped Edge Hill.

There lay Stratford! as he had left it lying; not one stick or stack or stone but he could put his finger on and say, “This place I know!” Green pastures, grassy levels, streams, groves, mills, the old grange and the manor-house, the road that forked in three, and the hills of Arden beyond it all.  There was the tower of the guildhall chapel above the clustering, dun-thatched roofs among the green and blossom-white; to left the spire of Holy Trinity sprang up beside the shining Avon.  Bull Lane he made out dimly, and a red-tiled roof among the trees.  “There, Cicely,” he said, “there—­there!” and laughed a queer little shaky laugh next door to crying for joy.

Wat Raven was sweeping old Clopton bridge.  “Hullo, there, Wat!  I be come home again!” Nick cried.  Wat stared at him, but knew him not at all.

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Project Gutenberg
Master Skylark from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.