登陆注册
37382700000048

第48章 TRAVELS OF THE COVERED CART(2)

We came to our stages at all sorts of odd hours, and they were in all kinds of odd places.I may say at once that my first experience was my best.Nowhere again were we so well entertained as at Burchell Fenn's.And this, I suppose, was natural, and indeed inevitable, in so long and secret a journey.The first stop, we lay six hours in a barn standing by itself in a poor, marshy orchard, and packed with hay; to make it more attractive, we were told it had been the scene of an abominable murder, and was now haunted.But the day was beginning to break, and our fatigue was too extreme for visionary terrors.The second or third, we alighted on a barren heath about midnight, built a fire to warm us under the shelter of some thorns, supped like beggars on bread and a piece of cold bacon, and slept like gipsies with our feet to the fire.In the meanwhile, King was gone with the cart, I know not where, to get a change of horses, and it was late in the dark morning when he returned and we were able to resume our journey.

In the middle of another night, we came to a stop by an ancient, whitewashed cottage of two stories; a privet hedge surrounded it;

the frosty moon shone blankly on the upper windows; but through those of the kitchen the firelight was seen glinting on the roof and reflected from the dishes on the wall.Here, after much hammering on the door, King managed to arouse an old crone from the chimney-corner chair, where she had been dozing in the watch; and we were had in, and entertained with a dish of hot tea.This old lady was an aunt of Burchell Fenn's - and an unwilling partner in his dangerous trade.Though the house stood solitary, and the hour was an unlikely one for any passenger upon the road, King and she conversed in whispers only.There was something dismal, something of the sick-room, in this perpetual, guarded sibilation.The apprehensions of our hostess insensibly communicated themselves to every one present.We ate like mice in a cat's ear; if one of us jingled a teaspoon, all would start; and when the hour came to take the road again, we drew a long breath of relief, and climbed to our places in the covered cart with a positive sense of escape.The most of our meals, however, were taken boldly at hedgerow alehouses, usually at untimely hours of the day, when the clients were in the field or the farmyard at labour.I shall have to tell presently of our last experience of the sort, and how unfortunately it miscarried; but as that was the signal for my separation from my fellow-travellers, I must first finish with them.

I had never any occasion to waver in my first judgment of the Colonel.The old gentleman seemed to me, and still seems in the retrospect, the salt of the earth.I had occasion to see him in the extremes of hardship, hunger and cold; he was dying, and he looked it; and yet I cannot remember any hasty, harsh, or impatient word to have fallen from his lips.On the contrary, he ever showed himself careful to please; and even if he rambled in his talk, rambled always gently - like a humane, half-witted old hero, true to his colours to the last.I would not dare to say how often he awoke suddenly from a lethargy, and told us again, as though we had never heard it, the story of how he had earned the cross, how it had been given him by the hand of the Emperor, and of the innocent - and, indeed, foolish - sayings of his daughter when he returned with it on his bosom.He had another anecdote which he was very apt to give, by way of a rebuke, when the Major wearied us beyond endurance with dispraises of the English.This was an account of the BRAVES GENS with whom he had been boarding.True enough, he was a man so ****** and grateful by nature, that the most common civilities were able to touch him to the heart, and would remain written in his memory; but from a thousand inconsiderable but conclusive indications, I gathered that this family had really loved him, and loaded him with kindness.They made a fire in his bedroom, which the sons and daughters tended with their own hands;

同类推荐
  • 天元五歌

    天元五歌

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 神农书

    神农书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说遍照般若波罗蜜经

    佛说遍照般若波罗蜜经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 如来方便善巧咒经

    如来方便善巧咒经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 鲊话

    鲊话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 世界最强从跑跑卡丁车开始

    世界最强从跑跑卡丁车开始

    张扬:我不想一辈子让人看不起,我倒霉了二十多年,就是要等一个机会!我要争一口气,告诉那些看不起我的人,你们的狗眼全都瞎了。系统:我给你这个机会。
  • 宋词三百首全解

    宋词三百首全解

    本书收录了宋代有代表性的词作品三百首,每一首都包括注释、语译、赏析三部分内容。
  • 白泽任务刷不停

    白泽任务刷不停

    “交易已成,凌迟已晚。”尹郗看着白泽那狡黠的笑容后知后觉的知道自己已经上了当,对于这一大堆的任务清单默默承受。一本无字天书却记载了天下苦情,一片不起眼的落叶却撑起了一片天。【女强】
  • 天灾国度

    天灾国度

    动荡的年代,混乱的大陆。本杰明:我们的游戏《天灾国度》是全世界最先进最顶尖的的虚拟游戏,同时本游戏坚决反肝反氪!没有任何的充值通道!(严肃脸)众玩家:嘘~~~!!!几名玩家气愤的脱下鞋子向本杰明扔去,后者熟练的躲过,同时飞快的记住几名玩家的名字,并熟练的打开系统,踢出几名玩家。本杰明:本游戏热烈欢迎玩家们反馈信息,请大家积极反馈,以促进本游戏完善。(微笑脸)众玩家惊诧地望向几名玩家消失的地方。本杰明:(?˙―˙?)?众玩家:…………(注:本书不圣母!不种马)
  • 民国佣兵

    民国佣兵

    穿越民国,作为小人物,如何在历史的洪流中尽自己的那一份力。且看小人物在乱世的特公小分队。
  • 火爆男神:活宝萌妻叼回家

    火爆男神:活宝萌妻叼回家

    她死皮赖脸追了他整个青春,他却对她不屑一顾。痛彻心扉后,她决定了,“商言厚,我不要你了!”商言厚嗤之以鼻,不过是个花痴女罢了。但是她走的第一个月,他开始觉得不对劲。走的第二个月,他开始狂躁了。她走的第三个月,额,她还走得了吗?看着面前步步紧逼的人,她高冷抬下巴,“要我留在你身边?你以为你是谁啊!”他扬了扬手中的户口本,邪魅一笑,“今天过后,你就知道我是你的谁!”她挣扎着“商言厚,你懂什么是婚姻,什么是爱?”他霸道覆上她的唇,呢喃道,“没关系,我不懂,你教我。”
  • 主爵

    主爵

    他本是一国皇子,天资聪颖,武学奇才,但又偏偏不爱政治权术,不喜争强好胜。只爱那遥遥江湖,行侠仗义,锄强扶弱......他和她本就有婚约,可二人均不满这种政治婚姻,可冥冥中注定两人有缘,他们却于江湖相遇,一起出生入死,相互扶持,蛮荒,鬼蜮,地心宫.......可命运总爱作弄,匹夫无罪,怀璧其罪,一件至宝给他带来的却是毁灭般的灾难......他要寻回深爱的女子,他要报仇,他要成为最强的......
  • 逐鹿末年

    逐鹿末年

    所有的故事都从董卓进京开始。黑暗之后,汉失其鹿,天下逐之……诸侯混战,猛将对决,谋士过招,刺客暗行。谁又能杀死谁?
  • 灵魂啸天

    灵魂啸天

    人生,是一条弯弯曲曲的路,丰富而独特,且以灵魂为导引,伴随着人的成长……一步一个脚印,唯有走过,才能感受到脚印背后的真正感受:酸甜苦辣……未知的路,由走的人,完成,并感受。而我——只是一个记录者,无法预测未来,也无法改变未来。他们的命,掌握在他们自己的手中;他们的生活,也将由他们自己完成。
  • 师傅念你好久了

    师傅念你好久了

    “王爷……媒婆来了……”她坐在铜镜前,看着铜镜里的自己惨淡一笑,素手拿起桌上的红纸放在唇前轻抿。眼泪已经悄然地划过她的脸庞。他站在门口,手上握着剑,原本红润的手已经泛白,话语里面已经听不出任何情感,“嗯。”转身离去。 —— “半世红尘陷已深,浮沉云中情意绵。膝下稚童未成形,嫁做人妇战火起。”