Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.

Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 10,116 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith.
to be submitted to by a man cut away by the roots from the home of his labour and old associations.  Above his bowed head there was a board proclaiming that Queen Anne’s Farm, and all belonging thereunto, was for sale.  His prospect in the vague wilderness of the future, was to seek for acceptance as a common labourer on some kind gentleman’s property.  The phrase “kind gentleman” was adopted by his deliberate irony of the fate which cast him out.  Robert was stamping fretfully for Rhoda to come.  At times, Mrs. Sumfit showed her head from the window of her bed-room, crying, “D’rectly!” and disappearing.

The still aspect of the house on the shining May afternoon was otherwise undisturbed.  Besides Rhoda, Master Gammon was being waited for; on whom would devolve the driving of the cart back from the station.  Robert heaped his vexed exclamations upon this old man.  The farmer restrained his voice in Master Gammon’s defence, thinking of the comparison he could make between him and Robert:  for Master Gammon had never run away from the farm and kept absent, leaving it to take care of itself.  Gammon, slow as he might be, was faithful, and it was not he who had made it necessary for the farm to be sold.  Gammon was obstinate, but it was not he who, after taking a lead, and making the farm dependent on his lead, had absconded with the brains and energy of the establishment.  Such reflections passed through the farmer’s mind.

Rhoda and Mrs. Sumfit came together down the trim pathway; and Robert now had a clear charge against Master Gammon.  He recommended an immediate departure.

“The horse ’ll bring himself home quite as well and as fast as Gammon will,” he said.

“But for the shakin’ and the joltin’, which tells o’ sovereigns and silver,” Mrs. Sumfit was observing to Rhoda, “you might carry the box—­and who would have guessed how stout it was, and me to hit it with a poker and not break it, I couldn’t, nor get a single one through the slit;—­the sight I was, with a poker in my hand!  I do declare I felt azactly like a housebreaker;—­and no soul to notice what you carries.  Where you hear the gold, my dear, go so”—­Mrs. Sumfit performed a methodical “Ahem!” and noised the sole of her shoe on the gravel “so, and folks ’ll think it’s a mistake they made.”

“What’s that?”—­the farmer pointed at a projection under Rhoda’s shawl.

“It is a present, father, for my sister,” said Rhoda.

“What is it?” the farmer questioned again.

Mrs. Sumfit fawned before him penitently—­“Ah!  William, she’s poor, and she do want a little to spend, or she will be so nipped and like a frost-bitten body, she will.  And, perhaps, dear, haven’t money in her sight for next day’s dinner, which is—­oh, such a panic for a young wife! for it ain’t her hunger, dear William—­her husband, she thinks of.  And her cookery at a stand-still!  Thinks she, ’he will charge it on the kitchen;’ so unreasonable’s men.  Yes,” she added, in answer to the rigid dejection of his look, “I said true to you.  I know I said, ’Not a penny can I get, William,’ when you asked me for loans; and how could I get it?  I can’t get it now.  See here, dear!”

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Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.