Hilda Wade, a Woman with Tenacity of Purpose eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 350 pages of information about Hilda Wade, a Woman with Tenacity of Purpose.

Hilda Wade, a Woman with Tenacity of Purpose eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 350 pages of information about Hilda Wade, a Woman with Tenacity of Purpose.

I still lodged at Tant Mettie’s, as everybody called Mrs. Klaas; she was courtesy aunt to the community at large, while Oom Jan Willem was its courtesy uncle.  They were simple, homely folk, who lived up to their religious principles on an unvaried diet of stewed ox-beef and bread; they suffered much from chronic dyspepsia, due in part, at least, no doubt, to the monotony of their food, their life, their interests.  One could hardly believe one was still in the nineteenth century; these people had the calm, the local seclusion of the prehistoric epoch.  For them, Europe did not exist; they knew it merely as a place where settlers came from.  What the Czar intended, what the Kaiser designed, never disturbed their rest.  A sick ox, a rattling tile on the roof, meant more to their lives than war in Europe.  The one break in the sameness of their daily routine was family prayers; the one weekly event, going to church at Salisbury.  Still, they had a single enthusiasm.  Like everybody else for fifty miles around, they believed profoundly in the “future of Rhodesia.”  When I gazed about me at the raw new land—­the weary flat of red soil and brown grasses—­I felt at least that, with a present like that, it had need of a future.

I am not by disposition a pioneer; I belong instinctively to the old civilisations.  In the midst of rudimentary towns and incipient fields, I yearn for grey houses, a Norman church, an English thatched cottage.

However, for Hilda’s sake, I braved it out, and continued to learn the A B C of agriculture on an unmade farm with great assiduity from Oom Jan Willem.

We had been stopping some months at Klaas’s together when business compelled me one day to ride in to Salisbury.  I had ordered some goods for my farm from England which had at last arrived.  I had now to arrange for their conveyance from the town to my plot of land—­a portentous matter.  Just as I was on the point of leaving Klaas’s, and was tightening the saddle-girth on my sturdy little pony, Oom Jan Willem himself sidled up to me with a mysterious air, his broad face all wrinkled with anticipatory pleasure.  He placed a sixpence in my palm, glancing about him on every side as he did so, like a conspirator.

“What am I to buy with it?” I asked, much puzzled, and suspecting tobacco.  Tant Mettie declared he smoked too much for a church elder.

He put his finger to his lips, nodded, and peered round.  “Lollipops for Sannie,” he whispered low, at last, with a guilty smile.  “But”—­he glanced about him again—­“give them to me, please, when Tant Mettie isn’t looking.”  His nod was all mystery.

“You may rely on my discretion,” I replied, throwing the time-honoured prejudices of the profession to the winds, and well pleased to aid and abet the simple-minded soul in his nefarious designs against little Sannie’s digestive apparatus.  He patted me on the back.  “Peppermint lollipops, mind!” he went on, in the same solemn undertone.  “Sannie likes them best—­peppermint.”

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Hilda Wade, a Woman with Tenacity of Purpose from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.