登陆注册
5434900000102

第102章 CHAPTER XXII.(1)

Next morning Mrs. Little gave her son the benefit of her night's reflections.

"You must let me have some money--all you can spare from your business; and whilst I am doing something with it for you, you must go to London, and do exactly what I tell you to do."

"Exactly? Then please write it down."

"A very good plan. Can you go by the express this morning?"

"Why, yes, I could; only then I must run down to the works this minute and speak to the foreman."

"Well, dear, when you come back, your instructions shall be written, and your bag packed."

"I say, mother, you are going into it in earnest. All the better for me."

At twelve he started for London, with a beautiful set of carving-tools in his bag, and his mother's instructions in his pocket: those instructions sent him to a fashionable tailor that very afternoon.

With some difficulty he prevailed on this worthy to make him a dress-suit in twenty-four hours. Next day he introduced himself to the London trade, showed his carving-tools, and, after a hard day's work, succeeded in obtaining several orders.

Then he bought some white ties and gloves and an opera hat, and had his hair cut in Bond Street.

At seven he got his clothes at the tailor's, and at eight he was in the stalls of the opera. His mother had sent him there, to note the dress and public deportment of gentlemen and ladies, and use his own judgment. He found his attention terribly distracted by the music and the raptures it caused him; but still he made some observations; and, consequently, next day he bought some fashionable shirts and sleeve studs and ribbon ties; ordered a morning suit of the same tailor, to be sent to him at Hillsborough; and after canvassing for customers all day, telegraphed his mother, and reached Hillsborough at eleven P.M.

At first sight of him Mrs. Little exclaimed:

"Oh! What have you done with your beautiful hair?"

He laughed, and said this was the fashion.

"But it is like a private soldier."

"Exactly. Part of the Volunteer movement, perhaps."

"Are you sure it is the fashion, dear?"

"Quite sure. All the swells in the opera were bullet-headed just like this."

"Oh, if it is the fashion!" said Mrs. Little; and her mind succumbed under that potent word.

She asked him about the dresses of the ladies in the opera.

His description was very lame. He said he didn't know he was expected to make notes of them.

"Well, but you might be sure I should like to know. Were there no ladies dressed as you would like to see your mother dressed?"

"Good heavens, no! I couldn't fancy you in a lot of colors; and your beautiful head deformed into the shape of a gourd, with a beast of a chignon stuck out behind, made of dead hair."

"No matter. Mr. Henry; I wish I had been with you at the opera. I should have seen something or other that would have become me. She gave a little sigh.

He was not to come home to dinner that day, but stay at the works, till she sent for him.

At six o'clock, Jael Dence came for him in a fly, and told him he was to go home with her.

"All right," said he; "but how did you come there?"

"She bade me come and see her again--that day I brought the bust.

So I went to see her, and I found her so busy, and doing more than she was fit, poor thing, so I made bold to give her a hand. That was yesterday; and I shall come every day--if 'tis only for an hour--till the curtains are all up."

"The curtains! what curtains?"

"Ask no questions, and you will hear no lies."

Henry remonstrated; Jael recommended patience; and at last they reached a little villa half way up Heath Hill. "You are at home now," said Jael, dryly. The new villa looked very gay that evening, for gas and fires were burning in every room.

The dining-room and drawing room were both on the ground-floor; had each one enormous window with plate glass, and were rooms of very fair size, divided by large folding-doors. These were now open, and Henry found his mother seated in the dining-room, with two workwomen, making curtains, and in the drawing-room were two more, sewing a carpet.

The carpet was down in the dining-room. The tea-table was set, and gave an air of comfort and housewifely foresight, in the midst of all the surrounding confusion.

Young Little stared. Mrs. Little smiled.

"Sit down, and never mind us: give him his tea, my good Jael."

Henry sat down, and, while Jael was making the tea, ventured on a feeble expostulation. "It's all very fine, mother, but I don't like to see you make a slave of yourself."

"Slaving!" said Jael, with a lofty air of pity. "Why, she is working for her own." Rural logic!

"Oh," said Mrs. Little to her, "these clever creatures we look up to so are rather stupid in some things. Slave! Why, I am a general leading my Amazons to victory." And she waved her needle gracefully in the air.

"Well, but why not let the shop do them, where you bought the curtains?'

"Because, my dear, the shop would do them very badly, very dearly, and very slowly. Do you remember reading to me about Caesar, and what he said--'that a general should not say to his troops "GO and attack the enemy," "but COME and attack the enemy"?' Well, that applies to needle-work. I say to these ladies, 'COME sew these curtains with me;' and the consequence is, we have done in three days what no shop in Hillsborough would have done for us in a fortnight; but, as for slaves, the only one has been my good Jael there. She insisted on moving all the heavy boxes herself. She dismissed the porter; she said he had no pith in his arms--that was your expression, I think?"

"Ay, ma'am; that was my word: and I never spoke a truer; the useless body. Why, ma'am, the girls in Cairnhope are most of them well-grown hussies, and used to work in the fields, and carry full sacks of grain up steps. Many's the time I have RUN with a sack of barley on my back: so let us hear no more about your bits of boxes. I wish my mind was as strong."

"Heaven forbid!" said Mrs. Little, with comic fervor. Henry laughed. But Jael only stared, rather stupidly. By-and-by she said she must go now.

"Henry shall take you home, dear."

"Nay, I can go by myself."

同类推荐
  • 华严念佛三昧论

    华严念佛三昧论

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Staccato Notes of a Vanished Summer

    Staccato Notes of a Vanished Summer

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 鹦鹉洲

    鹦鹉洲

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说贫穷老公经

    佛说贫穷老公经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 拙轩集

    拙轩集

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 转型发展与提升人民幸福感的哲学思考

    转型发展与提升人民幸福感的哲学思考

    本书从多方面联系我国经济转型发展对如何提升人民幸福感的问题进行了深讨。主要包括从辩证法角度对幸福感及其类型进行了哲学分析,联系传统经济发展模式分析了国民幸福感欠缺的原因,指出了论述了转型发展须树立以人为本的幸福观,并以大量故事生动阐述了诚信、忧患、知足、敬业、感恩等追求幸福应有的价值观和心态,还结合我国企业实际论述了如何提升员工幸福感,结合生态文明建设论述了如何提升人民的绿色幸福感等问题。
  • 路漫漫,偏南

    路漫漫,偏南

    一场阴谋,一轮因果。整整二十年,她是影子,是替补的存在。直到漫天火光将一切吞噬成灰,她幸存,生命变成一场带着负罪感的漫无期限的放逐,她假以恨的名义,再次向他走去。她说:“陆时顷,你终究是我的重重业障......”路的尽头,他说:“若来,我在等你。”
  • 海洋馆漫游:航海家档案馆

    海洋馆漫游:航海家档案馆

    放眼全球,世界上最发达的国家都是海洋大国,经济最活跃的地区都在沿海地区。在当今国际社会,开发海洋、拓展生存和发展空间,已成为世界沿海各国的发展方向和潮流。海洋是一个富饶而未充分开发的自然资源宝库。海洋自然资源包括海域(海洋空间)资源、海洋生物资源、海洋能源、海洋矿产资源、海洋旅游资源、海水资源等。这一切都等待着我们去发现、去开采。青少年认真学习海洋知识,不仅能为未来开发海洋及早储备知识,还能海洋研究事业做出应有的贡献。
  • 赋四相诗 礼部尚书

    赋四相诗 礼部尚书

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 当疾风遇上火之意志

    当疾风遇上火之意志

    穿越火影世界,成为宇智波一族的天才。当狂暴的疾风遇到有火之意志的木叶时,是让火之意志更加燃烧还是疾风吹灭了这火呢?
  • 大佬每天都在还债

    大佬每天都在还债

    宋欢颜被自己的亲堂妹给抢走了未婚夫。然后,酒吧买醉……一觉醒来,身边躺着的是她前未婚夫的弟弟。“昨天晚上的事情,就当你给你哥哥还债吧。”宋欢颜说。“什么债?”云简琛问。宋欢颜:“感情债。”云简琛:“……”宋欢颜:“听没听过一句话?兄债弟偿。”云简琛:“……”
  • 弄扁舟

    弄扁舟

    姚尤,一位因母亲催婚而陷入自我否定的伪极简主义者。谢云逸,一位谈过两次恋爱最后放弃感情的伪理性主义者。两位在世不称意的人,因缘际会之下,看对了眼,走在一起,共弄扁舟。---------------------温馨日常文
  • 做内心强大的自己

    做内心强大的自己

    拥有5亿读者的心灵导师卡耐基,带给我们正能量的心灵励志经典。在这部历经百年验证,全球公认最励志的伟大作品中,卡耐基用大量生动而真实的故事,为我们讲解了如何做“做内心强大的自己”。曾经心灵脆弱的我们,面对不简单的世界、不轻松的生活,不顺畅的人生,也曾迷茫、也曾失落、也曾彷徨。但是,我们最终挺了过来,因为岁月让我们的内心得到升华,时间让我们的内心变得强大。已经度过的那些风险与苦厄,已经摆脱的那些落魄与羞辱、已经化解的那些打击与嘲讽,让我们深刻地体会到,唯有做内心强大的自己,我们的生命才可以怒放,人生才变得强悍,世界才会与我们温暖相拥,生活才会给我们想要的一切。《做内心强大的自己》是卡耐基终其一生的灵魂之作,以“做内心强大的自己”为主要宗旨,从正心态、增心智、控心绪、强心魂、补心气、清心乱等方面给我们详细讲述了修炼强大内心的过程。
  • 夫君本宫乏了

    夫君本宫乏了

    他是她最厌恶的人,她前世识人不清,知道临死前才发现他却是最爱她的人,天道轮回,娘娘归来,看她如何为她报仇!手刃仇人!
  • 健商保证智慧(下)

    健商保证智慧(下)

    “健商”是健康商数的简称。它反映人的健康才智,是评估个人健康的全新方法。健商作为一种保持人身心健康的崭新理念,开启了一个激动人心、生机勃勃的全新领域,它将数千年人类智慧的结晶、现代医学的恩赐和最新的生命科学技术结合在一起,从而大大满足了个人健康的需求。