The Devil's Garden eBook

W. B. Maxwell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 454 pages of information about The Devil's Garden.

The Devil's Garden eBook

W. B. Maxwell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 454 pages of information about The Devil's Garden.

Dale loved the quiet and the freedom from interruption of these Sunday mornings; he enjoyed the luxury of being able to smoke in the office while he made up his books, and reveled in the lolling ease of the old porter’s chair as he read Saturday’s Courier and the last number of Answers.  To-day he was peculiarly conscious of the soothing Sunday hush that had fallen widely on the land.  All the doors and windows stood open, so that the soft air flowed like water through and through the house, making it an undivided part of the one great generous flooding atmosphere, and giving sensations of vast space and free activities as well as those produced by guarded comfort and motionless repose.  The only sounds that reached him were the droning of bees in a border of spring flowers, the pawing of a horse in the stables, the pipe of young voices in the orchard; and all three sounds were pleasant to his ear.  How could they be otherwise; since they spoke of three such pleasant things as awakening life, rewarded toil, and contented fatherhood?

When presently he went up-stairs to change his coat, he stood by a window and looked down at the peaceful little realm that fate had given to him.  The sunlight was glittering on the red tiles of the clustered roofs, the brown thatch of the ricks, and the white cobblestones of a corner of the yard; and the blossom of pears and apples was pink and white, as if a light shower of colored snow had just fallen on the still leafless trees.  Beneath the orchard branches he could see his children and Norah playing among the daffodils that grew wild in the grass; the light all about them was faintly blue and unceasingly tremulous and he stood watching, listening, smiling, thinking.

He observed the gracefulness and slimness of his daughter’s stockinged legs, and thought what a real little man his son seemed already, so sturdy on his pins.  In his blue overalls he looked like a miniature ploughman in a smock-frock.  Dale laughed when Billy scampered away resolutely, and Norah had to run to catch him.

“Le’ me go,” roared Bill.

“Na, na,” said Norah, “you mustn’t go brevetin’ about so far.  Bide wi’ sister and me, an’ chain the daffies.”

And Dale noticed the musical note in Norah’s voice, almost like a wild bird singing.  It was a pleasure to him to see the little maid making herself so useful; and it corroborated what Mavis had told him about her being splendid in taking care of the chicks, as well as keeping them happy and amused.

He put on his black coat, fetched out a pair of brown dogskin gloves, and then, failing to find the silk hat, came to the top of the staircase and shouted for Mary.

“My hat, Mary.  Where in the name of reason is my hat?”

His shouts broke the Sunday silence, filled the house with noise, went rolling through the open windows in swift vibrations.  Norah Veale under the blossoming apple tree caught up the cry as though she had been an echo, and ran with the children after her.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Devil's Garden from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.