登陆注册
5561100000022

第22章

The early afternoon found Margaret and Iola on their way to the Mill. It was with great difficulty that Margaret had been persuaded to leave her home for so long a time. The stern conscience law under which she regulated her life made her suspect those things which gave her peculiar pleasure, and among these was a visit to the Mill and the Mill people. It was in vain that Dick set before her, with the completeness amounting to demonstration, the reasons why she should make that visit. "Ben needs you," he argued. "And Iola will not come unless with you. Barney and I, weary with our day's work, absolutely require the cheer and refreshment of your presence. Mother wants you. I want you. We all want you. You must come." It was Mrs. Boyle's quiet invitation and her anxious entreaty and command that she should throw off the burden at times, that finally weighed with her.

The hours of that afternoon, spent partly in rowing about in the old flat-bottomed boat seeking water lilies in the pond, and partly in the shade of the big willows overlooking the dam, were full of restful delight to Margaret. It was one of those rare summer evenings that fall in harvest weather when, after the burning heat of the day, the cool air is beginning to blow across the fields with long shadows. When their work was done the boys hurried to join the little group under the big willows. They were all there.

Ben was set there in the big armchair, Mrs. Boyle with her knitting, for there were no idle hours for her, Margaret with a book which she pretended to read, old Charley smoking in silent content, Iola lazily strumming her guitar and occasionally singing in her low, rich voice some of her old Mammy's songs or plantation hymns. Of these latter, however, Mrs. Boyle was none too sure. To her they bordered dangerously on sacrilege; nor did she ever quite fully abandon herself to delight in the guitar. It continued to be a "foreign" and "feckless" sort of instrument. But in spite of her there were times when the old lady paused in her knitting and sat with sombre eyes looking far across the pond and into the shady isles of the woods on the other side while Iola sang some of her quaint Southern "baby songs."

Under Dick's tuition the girl learned some of the Highland laments and love songs of the North, to which his mother had hushed him to sleep through his baby years. To Barney these songs took place with the Psalms of David, if, indeed, they were not more sacred, and it was with a shock at first that he heard the Southern girl with her "foreign instrument" try over these songs that none but his mother had ever sung to him. Listening to Iola's soft, thrilling voice carrying these old Highland airs, he was conscious of a strange incongruity. They undoubtedly took on a new beauty, but they lost something as well.

"No one sings them like your mother, Barney," said Margaret after Dick had been drilling Iola on some of their finer shadings and cadences, "and they are quite different with the guitar, too. They are not the same a bit. They make me see different things and feel different things when your mother sings."

"Different how?" said Dick.

"I can't tell, but somehow they give me a different taste in my mouth, just the difference between eating your mother's scones with rich creamy milk and eating fruit cake and honey with tea to drink."

"I know," said Barney gravely. "They lose the Scotch with the guitar. They are sweet and beautiful, wonderful, but they are a different kind altogether. To me it's the difference between a wood violet and a garden rose."

"Listen to the poetry of him. Come, mother," cried Dick, "sing us one now."

"Me sing!" cried the mother aghast. "After yon!" nodding toward Iola. "You would not be shaming your mother, Richard."

"Shaming you, indeed!" cried Margaret, indignantly.

"Do, Mrs. Boyle," entreated Iola. "I have never heard you sing.

Indeed, I did not know you could sing."

Something in her voice grated upon Barney's ear, but he spoke no word.

同类推荐
  • 茶酒论

    茶酒论

    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。
  • 小品方

    小品方

    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。
  • 大方广如来秘密藏经

    大方广如来秘密藏经

    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。
  • 龙门心法

    龙门心法

    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。
  • 支动

    支动

    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
  • 神女重生:傲娇千金

    神女重生:傲娇千金

    她是九天仙琴,私化两代人的恩怨被贬下凡,由灵顽踏错时空,随着水晶链穿越时空。他是九天仙童,却贪婪凡间情爱难修正果,追随这她的步伐.来到人间。她与他在人间的降生,一次又一次地擦肩而过;一次又一次地阴谋再次浮现,身为傲娇王爷的他,是否能突破前世的束缚结成连理……
  • 异世炼狱修罗

    异世炼狱修罗

    杀手修罗重异世重生,化身成龙.修罗完本大鬼新书仙擎,小小书童以一只灵虫,玩转修仙世界!一步步走上封仙之路.巨灵神,以力破仙!
  • The First and Last

    The First and Last

    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。
  • 羽皇残刀

    羽皇残刀

    剧情简述:这是一个关于“刀”的故事,也是一个有关于你或是我的故事。想爽的话直接看第三卷。
  • 唯爱暖时光

    唯爱暖时光

    童话里都是骗人的。她以为自己捡到了宝,哪知却是个让人无比头疼的麻烦精。他那两张面孔,一张天真无邪,一张复杂难懂。双子座的典型楼歆也不知自己是幸还是不幸——替人跑个腿把自己跑进了警察局,吃个饭把自己吃上了餐厅的黑名单,就连参加个Party,家里都能凭空多出一个不速之客……哎,等等,这个人……不就是让自己倒了一串霉的“始作俑者”吗?!可是,怎么感觉他现在有点……蠢萌蠢萌的?“我是谁?你是谁?你认识我吗?我是干什么的?”“……”天哪,这个失忆了就变成话痨的“巨婴”到底是谁家的!
  • 圣经学规纂论学

    圣经学规纂论学

    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。
  • 纯情大明星

    纯情大明星

    一觉醒来,顾独发现一切都变了,按照历史发展的轨迹本该出现的经典歌曲,还有电影电视剧,居然都没出现。最最重要的是,自己竟然成了一个渣男,娱乐圈公认的渣男。“喂,你说清楚谁是渣男”一本不一样的都市娱乐明星文,讲述了一个末路反派绝地逆袭的求生故事。VIP群:851014380书友群:871335981
  • 阵仙

    阵仙

    古籍有云,天下修士,剑仙第一。今日方利崛起,当改之,剑仙之上,尚有阵仙!两仪微尘大阵、九曲黄河大阵、诛仙剑阵……方利缓缓而行,一步一步揭开上古大阵的面纱。
  • 秋雨

    秋雨

    本书是安徽省作家何立杰的一本原创短篇小说集,收录了《秋雨》《远处的灯火》《梅辛的尊严》《一只喜欢串门的狗》等五十余篇短篇小说,展示了淮河两岸的淳朴的风土人情,具有独特的文学魅力。
  • 我在寻找自己

    我在寻找自己

    市井小民乍然来到陌生的世界,手握强大力量,他是为圣悲天怜人,还是为魔生杀予夺?