They wanted to know whether we had made a runaway match
of it. The fun of passing a boys’-school
and hearing the usher threaten to punish one fellow
for straying from ranks, entertained me immensely.
I laughed at them just as the stupid people we met
laughed at me, which was unpleasant for the time;
but I knew there was not a single boy who would not
have changed places with me, only give him the chance,
though my companion was a gipsy girl, and she certainly
did look odd company for a gentleman’s son in
a tea-garden and public-house parlour. At nightfall,
however, I was glad of her and she of me, and we walked
hand in hand. I narrated tales of Roman history.
It was very well for her so say, ’I’ll
mother you,’ as we lay down to sleep; I discovered
that she would never have hooted over churchyard graves
in the night. She confessed she believed the
devil went about in the night. Our bed was a cart
under a shed, our bed-clothes fern-leaves and armfuls
of straw. The shafts of the cart were down, so
we lay between upright and level, and awakening in
the early light I found our four legs hanging over
the seat in front. ’How you have been kicking!’
said I. She accused me of the same. Next minute
she pointed over the side of the cart, and I saw the
tramp’s horse and his tents beneath a broad
roadside oak-tree. Her face was comical, just
like a boy’s who thinks he has escaped and is
caught. ‘Let’s run,’ she said.
Preferring positive independence, I followed her, and
then she told me that she had overheard the tramp
last night swearing I was as good as a fistful of
half-crowns lost to him if he missed me. The image
of Rippenger’s school overshadowed me at this
communication. With some melancholy I said:
‘You’ll join your friends, won’t
you?’
She snapped her fingers: ‘Mumpers!’
and walked on carelessly.
We were now on the great heaths. They brought
the memory of my father vividly; the smell of the
air half inclined me to turn my steps toward London,
I grew so full of longing for him. Nevertheless
I resolved to have one gaze at Riversley, my aunt
Dorothy, and Sewis, the old grey-brown butler, and
the lamb that had grown a sheep; wonderful contrasts
to my grand kings of England career. My first
clear recollection of Riversley was here, like an
outline of a hill seen miles away. I might have
shed a tear or two out of love for my father, had not
the thought that I was a very queer boy displaced his
image. I could not but be a very queer boy, such
a lot of things happened to me. Suppose I joined
the gipsies? My companion wished me to. She
had brothers, horse-dealers, beautiful fiddlers.
Suppose I learnt the fiddle? Suppose I learnt
their language and went about with them and became
king of the gipsies? My companion shook her head;
she could not encourage this ambitious idea because
she had never heard of a king of the gipsies or a
queen either. ‘We fool people,’ she
said, and offended me, for our school believed in