Master Skylark eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 278 pages of information about Master Skylark.

Master Skylark eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 278 pages of information about Master Skylark.

“But, good Master Carew—­”

“Nor call me good—­I am not good.”

“But, Master Carew,” faltered Nick, with a sinking sensation around his heart, “when will ye leave me go home?”

The master-player did not reply, but strode on rapidly, gnawing his mustache.

CHAPTER XVIII

MASTER HEYWOOD PROTESTS

It was a cold, raw day.  All morning long the sun had shone through the choking fog as the candle-flame through the dingy yellow horn of an old stable-lantern.  But at noon a wind sprang up that drove the mist through London streets in streaks and strings mixed with smoke and the reek of steaming roofs.  Now and then the blue gleamed through in ragged patches overhead; so that all the town turned out on pleasure bent, not minding if it rained stewed turnips, so they saw the sky.

But the fog still sifted through the streets, and all was damp and sticky to the touch, so Cicely was left behind to loneliness and disappointment.

Nick and the master-player came down Ludgate Hill to Blackfriars landing in a stream of merrymakers, high and low, rich and poor, faring forth to London’s greatest thoroughfare, the Thames; and as the river and the noble mansions along the Strand came into view, Nick’s heart beat fast.  It was a sight to stir the pulse.

Far down the stream, the grim old Tower loomed above the drifting mist; and, higher up, old London Bridge, lined with tall houses, stretched from shore to shore.  There were towers on it with domes and gilded vanes, and the river foamed and roared under it, strangled by the piers.  From the dock at St. Mary Averies by the Bridge to Barge-house stairs, the landing-stages all along the river-bank were thronged with boats; and to and fro across the stream, wherries, punts, barges, and water-craft of every kind were plying busily.  In middle stream sail-boats tugged along with creaking sweeps, or brown-sailed trading-vessels slipped away to sea, with costly freight for Muscovy, Turkey, and the Levant.  And amid the countless water-craft a multitude of stately swans swept here and there like snow-flakes on the dusky river.

Nick sniffed at the air, for it was full of strange odors—­the smell of breweries, of pitchy oakum, Norway tar, spices from hot countries, resinous woods, and chilly whiffs from the water; and as they came out along the wharf, there were brown-faced, hard-eyed sailors there, who had been to the New World—­wild fellows with silver rings in their ears and a swaggering stagger in their petticoated legs.  Some of them held short, crooked brown tubes between their lips, and puffed great clouds of pale brown smoke from their noses in a most amazing way.

Broad-beamed Dutchmen, too, were there, and swarthy Spanish renegades, with sturdy craftsmen of the City guilds and stalwart yeomen of the guard in the Queen’s rich livery.

But ere Nick had fairly begun to stare, confused by such a rout, Carew had hailed a wherry, and they were half-way over to the Southwark side.

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Project Gutenberg
Master Skylark from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.