He said
his father fell down 'all of a sudden like' in the middle of the field, and
they couldn't make him speak, and would I please to come and see him. So I had
to go, though I couldn't do anything for the poor fellow. They had sent for Dr.
Burrows, and I am afraid he will find it a bad case of sunstroke. The old
people say they never remember such a heat before."
The
pony jogged steadily along the burning turnpike road, taking revenge for the
hurrying on the way to the station. The hedges were white with the limestone
dust, and the vapor of heat palpitated over the fields. Lucian showed his Confessions to his father, and began to
talk of the beautiful bits he had already found. Mr. Taylor knew the book well—had
read it many years before. Indeed he was almost as difficult to surprise as
that character in Daudet, who had one formula for all
the chances of life, and when he saw the drowned Academician dragged out of the
river, merely observed "J'ai vu tout ça." Mr. Taylor the parson, as his parishioners
called him, had read the fine books and loved the hills and woods, and now knew
no more of pleasant or sensational surprises. Indeed the living was much
depreciated in value, and his own private means were
reduced almost to vanishing point, and under such circumstances the great style
loses many of its finer savors. He was very fond of Lucian, and cheered by his
return, but in the evening he would be a sad man again, with his head resting
on one hand, and eyes reproaching sorry fortune.
Nobody
called out "Here's your master with Master Lucian; you can get tea
ready," when the pony jogged up to the front door. His mother had been
dead a year, and a cousin kept house. She was a respectable person called
Deacon, of middle age, and ordinary standards; and, consequently, there was
cold mutton on the table. There was a cake, but nothing of flour, baked in
ovens, would rise at Miss Deacon's evocation. Still, the meal was laid in the
beloved "parlor," with the view of hills and valleys and climbing
woods from the open window, and the old furniture was
still pleasant to see, and the old books in the shelves had many memories. One
of the most respected of the armchairs had become weak in the castors and had
to be artfully propped up, but Lucian found it very comfortable after the hard
forms. When tea was over he went out and strolled in the garden and orchards,
and looked over the stile down into the brake, where foxgloves and bracken and
broom mingled with the hazel undergrowth, where he knew of secret glades and
untracked recesses, deep in the woven green, the cabinets for many years of his
lonely meditations. Every path about his home, every field and hedgerow had
dear and friendly memories for him; and the odor of the meadowsweet was better
than the incense steaming in the sunshine. He loitered, and hung over the stile
till the far-off woods began to turn purple, till the white mists were
wreathing in the valley.
Day
after day, through all that August, morning and evening were wrapped in haze;
day after day the earth shimmered in the heat, and the air was strange,
unfamiliar. As he wandered in the lanes and sauntered by the cool sweet verge
of the woods, he saw and felt that nothing was common or accustomed, for the
sunlight transfigured the meadows and changed all the form of the earth. Under
the violent Provençal sun, the elms and beeches
looked exotic trees, and in the early morning, when the mists were thick, the
hills had put on an unearthly shape.
The
one adventure of the holidays was the visit to the Roman fort, to that
fantastic hill about whose steep bastions and haggard oaks he had seen the
flames of sunset writhing nearly three years before. Ever since that Saturday
evening in January, the lonely valley had been a desirable place to him; he had
watched the green battlements in summer and winter weather, had seen the heaped
mounds rising dimly amidst the drifting rain, had marked the violent height
swim up from the ice-white mists of summer evenings, had watched the fairy bulwarks
glimmer and vanish in hovering April twilight. In the hedge of the lane there
was a gate on which he used to lean and look down south to where the hill
surged up so suddenly, its summit defined on summer evenings not only by the
rounded ramparts but by the ring of dense green foliage that marked the circle
of oak trees. Higher up the lane, on the way he had come that Saturday
afternoon, one could see the white walls of Morgan's farm on the hillside to
the north, and on the south there was the stile with the view of old Mrs.
Gibbon's cottage smoke; but down in the hollow, looking over the gate, there
was no hint of human work, except those green and antique battlements, on which
the oaks stood in circle, guarding the inner wood.
The
ring of the fort drew him with stronger fascination during that hot August
weather. Standing, or as his headmaster would have said, "mooning" by
the gate, and looking into that enclosed and secret valley, it seemed to his
fancy as if there were a halo about the hill, an aureole that played like flame
around it. One afternoon as he gazed from his station by the gate the sheer
sides and the swelling bulwarks were more than ever things of enchantment; the
green oak ring stood out against the sky as still and bright as in a picture,
and Lucian, in spite of his respect for the law of trespass, slid over the
gate. The farmers and their men were busy on the uplands with the harvest, and
the adventure was irresistible. At first he stole along by the brook in the
shadow of the alders, where the grass and the flowers of wet meadows grew
richly; but as he drew nearer to the fort, and its height now rose sheer above
him, he left all shelter, and began desperately to mount. There was not a
breath of wind; the sunlight shone down on the bare hillside; the loud chirp of
the grasshoppers was the only sound.
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