beyond the hills; I this one, where a slow full river
flowed from the sounding mill under our garden wall,
through long meadows. In Winter the wild ducks
made letters of the alphabet flying. On the other
side of the copses bounding our home, there was a
park containing trees old as the History of England,
John Thresher said, and the thought of their venerable
age enclosed me comfortably. He could not tell
me whether he meant as old as the book of English
History; he fancied he did, for the furrow-track follows
the plough close upon; but no one exactly could swear
when that (the book) was put together. At my
suggestion, he fixed the trees to the date of the
Heptarchy, a period of heavy ploughing. Thus
begirt by Saxon times, I regarded Riversley as a place
of extreme baldness, a Greenland, untrodden by my
Alfred and my Harold. These heroes lived in
the circle of Dipwell, confidently awaiting the arrival
of my father. He sent me once a glorious letter.
Mrs. Waddy took one of John Thresher’s pigeons
to London, and in the evening we beheld the bird cut
the sky like an arrow, bringing round his neck a letter
warm from him I loved. Planet communicating
with planet would be not more wonderful to men than
words of his to me, travelling in such a manner.
I went to sleep, and awoke imagining the bird bursting
out of heaven.
Meanwhile there was an attempt to set me moving again.
A strange young man was noticed in the neighbourhood
of the farm, and he accosted me at Leckham fair.
’I say, don’t we know one another?
How about your grandfather the squire, and your aunt,
and Mr. Bannerbridge? I’ve got news for
you.’
Not unwilling to hear him, I took his hand, leaving
my companion, the miller’s little girl, Mabel
Sweetwinter, at a toy-stand, while Bob, her brother
and our guardian, was shying sticks in a fine attitude.
’Yes, and your father, too,’ said the
young man; ’come along and see him; you can
run?’ I showed him how fast. We were pursued
by Bob, who fought for me, and won me, and my allegiance
instantly returned to him. He carried me almost
the whole of the way back to Dipwell. Women must
feel for the lucky heroes who win them, something
of what I felt for mine; I kissed his bloody face,
refusing to let him wipe it. John Thresher said
to me at night, ’Ay, now you’ve got a
notion of boxing; and will you believe it, Master
Harry, there’s people fools enough to want to
tread that ther’ first-rate pastime under foot?
I speak truth, and my word for ’t, they’d
better go in petticoats. Let clergymen preach
as in duty bound; you and I’ll uphold a manful
sport, we will, and a cheer for Bob!’