Roughing It in the Bush eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 662 pages of information about Roughing It in the Bush.

Roughing It in the Bush eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 662 pages of information about Roughing It in the Bush.

The house before which Emilia and I were standing had once been a tolerably comfortable log dwelling.  It was larger than such buildings generally are, and was surrounded by dilapidated barns and stables, which were not cheered by a solitary head of cattle.  A black pine-forest stretched away to the north of the house, and terminated in a dismal, tangled cedar-swamp, the entrance to the house not having been constructed to face the road.

The spirit that had borne me up during the journey died within me.  I was fearful that my visit would be deemed an impertinent intrusion.  I knew not in what manner to introduce myself, and my embarrassment had been greatly increased by Mrs. S—–­ declaring that I must break the ice, for she had not courage to go in.  I remonstrated, but she was firm.  To hold any longer parley was impossible.  We were standing on the top of a bleak hill, with the thermometer many degrees below zero, and exposed to the fiercest biting of the bitter, cutting blast.  With a heavy sigh, I knocked slowly but decidedly at the crazy door.  I saw the curly head of a boy glance for a moment against the broken window.  There was a stir within, but no one answered our summons.  Emilia was rubbing her hands together, and beating a rapid tattoo with her feet upon the hard and glittering snow, to keep them from freezing.

Again I appealed to the inhospitable door, with a vehemence which seemed to say, “We are freezing, good people; in mercy let us in!”

Again there was a stir, and a whispered sound of voices, as if in consultation, from within; and after waiting a few minutes longer—­which, cold as we were, seemed an age—­the door was cautiously opened by a handsome, dark-eyed lad of twelve years of age, who was evidently the owner of the curly head that had been sent to reconnoitre us through the window.  Carefully closing the door after him, he stepped out upon the snow, and asked us coldly but respectfully what we wanted.  I told him that we were two ladies, who had walked all the way from Douro to see his mamma, and that we wished very much to speak to her.  The lad answered us, with the ease and courtesy of a gentleman, that he did not know whether his mamma could be seen by strangers, but he would go in and see.  So saying he abruptly left us, leaving behind him an ugly skeleton of a dog, who, after expressing his disapprobation at our presence in the most disagreeable and unequivocal manner, pounced like a famished wolf upon the sack of good things which lay at Emilia’s feet; and our united efforts could scarcely keep him off.

“A cold, doubtful reception this!” said my friend, turning her back to the wind, and hiding her face in her muff.  “This is worse than Hannah’s liberality, and the long, weary walk.”

I thought so too, and began to apprehend that our walk had been in vain, when the lad again appeared, and said that we might walk in, for his mother was dressed.

Emilia, true to her determination, went no farther than the passage.  In vain were all my entreating looks and mute appeals to her benevolence and friendship; I was forced to enter alone the apartment that contained the distressed family.

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Roughing It in the Bush from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.