The Romance of the Coast eBook

James Runciman
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 198 pages of information about The Romance of the Coast.

The Romance of the Coast eBook

James Runciman
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 198 pages of information about The Romance of the Coast.

The mastiff civilly let us pass, and I went into the low room of the cottage.  One side was entirely taken up with books, and amongst the books were five editions of Dante.  The fire blazed on the clean hearth, and everything looked neat and well-kept.  A narrow trestle bed stood in the corner, and a table and chair completed the furniture of the room.

I said, “You will find it horrible here when the winter comes on.  The wind comes down from Chibburn Hollow, and when I was a boy I used to like to sit on the leeward side of the hills only to hear it scream.”

“The wind will serve me for company.”

I began to doubt my companion’s sanity a little, and I said, “I am afraid talking has disturbed you.  I must say good-bye.”

I did not read that day, and the strange face with its bitter mouth and keen eyes was in my memory for a week after.  I set myself to inquire how this man, who could talk with such evident intelligence, came to have chosen the moor for an abiding-place, and it happened that by chance I learned his whole history.

I was walking across the moor with my friend the district local preacher, when a sudden whim prompted me to ask him to meet the strange creature whom I had seen.  We went to the cottage, and were received by the deep baying of the dog.  The stooping figure came out into the sunlight, and my friend the preacher said, “Bless my soul!  Henry Desborough!  What in the name of mercy has brought you here?”

Not a sign of emotion crossed the face of the Failure.

He said, “You ought to know, Musgrave.  I was always a creature of whims.”

“That is exactly what I do not know,” said Musgrave.

“You are thinking of the times before I was twenty-five.  Several centuries have passed over me since then.”

Musgrave seemed unable to carry on the talk.  He only said, “I take it very unkindly that you did not let me know you were here.  I will come back and see you alone the next time.  You have given me a sad heart for this day.”

I knew now that there was a history in the case, and I learned it all from the man most concerned.

A long time ago a concert had been given in a small town somewhere down the coast.  An imposing musician had been brought from London especially to train the choir, and the rustic mind was awed by preparations.  On the night of the concert Desborough, who was the son of a man of independent means, strolled in and took a seat on one of the front benches.  Chairs had been pressed into the service from all over the town, and the platform, with its decorations, was a fine imaginative effort.  The Squire was there, and Sir John, the county member, brought his wife and her diamonds.  After the imposing musician had conducted one or two glees, there was a little rustle of preparation, and a girl stepped forth to sing.  To the tradesmen of the town she was simply Polly Blanchflower, but to the thinking of one young man, who sat within a few yards of her, she ought to have been throned among stars.  He had mixed little in company, and from the first time that the girl’s eyes fell upon him he was a changed man.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Romance of the Coast from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.