The Amateur Poacher eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 195 pages of information about The Amateur Poacher.

The Amateur Poacher eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 195 pages of information about The Amateur Poacher.

In the middle of our expedition there came the well-known whistle, echoing about the chimneys, with which it was the custom to recall us to dinner.  How else could you make people hear who might be cutting a knobbed stick in the copse half a mile away or bathing in the lake?  We had to jump down with a run; and then came the difficulty; for black dusty cobwebs, the growth of fifty years, clothed us from head to foot.  There was no brushing or picking them off, with that loud whistle repeated every two minutes.

The fact where we had been was patent to all; and so the chairs got burned—­but one, which was rickety.  After which a story crept out, of a disjointed skeleton lying in a corner under the thatch.  Though just a little suspicious that this might be a ruse to frighten us from a second attempt, we yet could not deny the possibility of its being true.  Sometimes in the dusk, when I sat poring over ‘Koenigsmark, the Robber,’ by the little window in the cheese-room, a skull seemed to peer down the trapdoor.  But then I had the flintlock by me for protection.

There were giants in the days when that gun was made; for surely no modern mortal could have held that mass of metal steady to his shoulder.  The linen-press and a chest on the top of it formed, however, a very good gun-carriage; and, thus mounted, aim could be taken out of the window at the old mare feeding in the meadow below by the brook, and a ‘bead’ could be drawn upon Molly, the dairymaid, kissing the fogger behind the hedge, little dreaming that the deadly tube was levelled at them.  At least this practice and drill had one useful effect—­the eye got accustomed to the flash from the pan, instead of blinking the discharge, which ruins the shooting.  Almost everybody and everything on the place got shot dead in this way without knowing it.

It was not so easy as might be supposed to find proper flints.  The best time to look for them was after a heavy storm of rain had washed a shallow channel beside the road, when you might select some hardy splinters which had lain hidden under the dust.  How we were found out is not quite clear:  perhaps the powder left a smell of sulphur for any one who chanced to go up in the garret.

But, however that may be, one day, as we came in unexpectedly from a voyage in the punt, something was discovered burning among the logs on the kitchen hearth; and, though a desperate rescue was attempted, nothing was left but the barrel of our precious gun and some crooked iron representing the remains of the lock.  There are things that are never entirely forgotten, though the impression may become fainter as years go by.  The sense of the cruel injustice of that act will never quite depart.

But they could not burn the barrel, and we almost succeeded in fitting it to a stock of elder.  Elder has a thick pith running down the centre:  by removing that the gouge and chisel had not much work to do to make a groove for the old bell-mouthed barrel to lie in.  The matchlock, for as such it was intended, was nearly finished when our hopes were dashed to the ground by a piece of unnatural cunning.  One morning the breechpiece that screwed in was missing.  This was fatal.  A barrel without a breechpiece is like a cup without a bottom.  It was all over.

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The Amateur Poacher from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.