The Hill of Dreams eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 233 pages of information about The Hill of Dreams.

The Hill of Dreams eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 233 pages of information about The Hill of Dreams.
it.  Miss Deacon did her best to make him look smart; his ties were all so disgraceful that she had to supply the want with a narrow ribbon of a sky-blue tint; and she brushed him so long and so violently that he quite understood why a horse sometimes bites and sometimes kicks the groom.  He set out between two and three in a gloomy frame of mind; he knew too well what spending the afternoon with honest manly boys meant.  He found the reality more lurid than his anticipation.  The boys were in the field, and the first remark he heard when he got in sight of the group was: 

“Hullo, Lucian, how much for the tie?” “Fine tie,” another, a stranger, observed.  “You bagged it from the kitten, didn’t you?”

Then they made up a game of cricket, and he was put in first.  He was l.b.w. in his second over, so they all said, and had to field for the rest of the afternoon.  Arthur Dixon, who was about his own age, forgetting all the laws of hospitality, told him he was a beastly muff when he missed a catch, rather a difficult catch.  He missed several catches, and it seemed as if he were always panting after balls, which, as Edward Dixon said, any fool, even a baby, could have stopped.  At last the game broke up, solely from Lucian’s lack of skill, as everybody declared.  Edward Dixon, who was thirteen, and had a swollen red face and a projecting eye, wanted to fight him for spoiling the game, and the others agreed that he funked the fight in a rather dirty manner.  The strange boy, who was called De Carti, and was understood to be faintly related to Lord De Carti of M’Carthytown, said openly that the fellows at his place wouldn’t stand such a sneak for five minutes.  So the afternoon passed off very pleasantly indeed, till it was time to go into the vicarage for weak tea, homemade cake, and unripe plums.  He got away at last.  As he went out at the gate, he heard De Carti’s final observation: 

“We like to dress well at our place.  His governor must be beastly poor to let him go about like that.  D’y’ see his trousers are all ragged at heel?  Is old Taylor a gentleman?”

It had been a very gentlemanly afternoon, but there was a certain relief when the vicarage was far behind, and the evening smoke of the little town, once the glorious capital of Siluria, hung haze-like over the ragged roofs and mingled with the river mist.  He looked down from the height of the road on the huddled houses, saw the points of light start out suddenly from the cottages on the hillside beyond, and gazed at the long lovely valley fading in the twilight, till the darkness came and all that remained was the somber ridge of the forest.  The way was pleasant through the solemn scented lane, with glimpses of dim country, the vague mystery of night overshadowing the woods and meadows.  A warm wind blew gusts of odor from the meadowsweet by the brook, now and then bee and beetle span homeward through the air, booming a deep note as from a great organ far away,

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The Hill of Dreams from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.