Children of the Mist eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 685 pages of information about Children of the Mist.

Children of the Mist eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 685 pages of information about Children of the Mist.
beasts and you’re not the cleverest man I’ve bested in my time.  You beat me—­I know it—­but it would have been better for you if you hadn’t been born.  There’s the truth for your country ears, you damned young hound.  I’ll fight fair and I’ll fight to the finish.  Sport—­that’s what it is.  The birds and the beasts and the fish have their close time; but there won’t be any close time for you, not while I can think and work against you.  So now you know.  D’ you hear me?”

“Ess,” said Will, meeting the other’s fierce eyes; “I hear ‘e, an’ so might the dead in Chagford buryin’-ground.  You hollers loud enough.  I ban’t ’feared of nothing a hatch-mouthed,[7] crooked-minded man, same as you be, can do.  An’ if I’m a hound, you ‘m a dirty red fox, an’ everybody knaws who comes out top when they meet.  Steal my gal, would ‘e?  Gaw your ways, an’ mend your ways, an’ swallow your bile.  I doan’t care a flicker o’ wildfire for ’e!”

[7] Hatch-mouthed = foul mouthed; profane.

John Grimbal heard only the beginning of this speech, for he turned his back on Will and rode away while the younger man still shouted after him.  Blanchard was in a rage, and would have liked to make a third trial of strength with his enemy on the spot, but the rider vanished and Will quickly cooled as he went down the hill to Chagford.  The remembrance of this interview, for all his scorn, chilled him when he reflected on John Grimbal’s threats.  He feared nothing indeed, but here was another cloud, and a black one, blown violently back from below the horizon of his life to the very zenith.  Malignity of this type was strange to him and differed widely from the petty bickerings, jealousies, and strifes of ordinary country existence.  It discouraged him to feel in his hour of universal contentment that a strong, bitter foe would now be at hand, forever watching to bring ruin on him at the first opportunity.  As he walked home he asked himself how he should feel and act in Grimbal’s shoes, and tried to look at the position from his enemy’s standpoint.  Of course he told himself that he would have accepted defeat with right philosophy.  It was a just fix for a man to find himself in,—­a proper punishment for a mean act.  Arguing thus, from the right side of the hedge, he forgot what wiser men have forgotten, that there is no disputing about man’s affection for woman, there is no transposition of the standpoint, there is no looking through another’s eyes upon a girl.  Many have loved, and many have rendered vivid pictures of the emotion, touched with insight of genius and universally proclaimed true to nature from general experience; but no two men love alike, and neither you nor another man can better say how a third feels under the yoke, estimate his thrall, or foretell his actions, despite your own experience, than can one sufferer from gout, though it has torn him half a hundred times, gauge the qualities of another’s torment under the same disease.  Will could not guess what John Grimbal had felt for Phoebe; he knew nothing of the other’s disposition, because, young in knowledge of the world and a boy still, despite his age, it was beyond him to appreciate even remotely the mind of a man fifteen years older than himself—­a man of very different temper and one whose life had been such as we have just described.

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Children of the Mist from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.