按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
with apes and palm…trees; each with its name over…written; and here and there; 〃Here is gold;〃 and again; 〃Much gold and silver;〃 inserted most probably; as the words were in English; by the hands of Mr。 Oxenham himself。 Lingeringly and longingly the boy turned it round and round; and thought the owner of it more fortunate than Khan or Kaiser。 Oh; if he could but possess that horn; what needed he on earth beside to make him blest!
〃I say; will you sell this?〃
〃Yea; marry; or my own soul; if I can get the worth of it。〃
〃I want the horn;I don't want your soul; it's somewhat of a stale sole; for aught I know; and there are plenty of fresh ones in the bay。〃
And therewith; after much fumbling; he pulled out a tester (the only one he had); and asked if that would buy it?
〃That! no; nor twenty of them。〃
The boy thought over what a good knight…errant would do in such case; and then answered; 〃Tell you what: I'll fight you for it。〃
〃Thank 'ee; sir!
〃Break the jackanapes's head for him; Yeo;〃 said Oxenham。
〃Call me jackanapes again; and I break yours; sir。〃 And the boy lifted his fist fiercely。
Oxenham looked at him a minute smilingly。 〃Tut! tut! my man; hit one of your own size; if you will; and spare little folk like me!〃
〃If I have a boy's age; sir; I have a man's fist。 I shall be fifteen years old this month; and know how to answer any one who insults me。〃
〃Fifteen; my young cockerel? you look liker twenty;〃 said Oxenham; with an admiring glance at the lad's broad limbs; keen blue eyes; curling golden locks; and round honest face。 〃Fifteen? If I had half…a…dozen such lads as you; I would make knights of them before I died。 Eh; Yeo?〃
〃He'll do;〃 said Yeo; 〃he will make a brave gamecock in a year or two; if he dares ruffle up so early at a tough old hen…master like the captain。〃
At which there was a general laugh; in which Oxenham joined as loudly as any; and then bade the lad tell him why he was so keen after the horn。
〃Because;〃 said he; looking up boldly; 〃I want to go to sea。 I want to see the Indies。 I want to fight the Spaniards。 Though I am a gentleman's son; I'd a deal liever be a cabin…boy on board your ship。〃 And the lad; having hurried out his say fiercely enough; dropped his head again。
〃And you shall;〃 cried Oxenham; with a great oath; 〃and take a galloon; and dine off carbonadoed Dons。 Whose son are you; my gallant fellow?〃
〃Mr。 Leigh's; of Burrough Court。〃
〃Bless his soul! I know him as well as I do the Eddystone; and his kitchen too。 Who sups with him to…night?〃
〃Sir Richard Grenville。〃
〃Dick Grenville? I did not know he was in town。 Go home and tell your father John Oxenham will come and keep him company。 There; off with you! I'll make all straight with the good gentleman; and you shall have your venture with me; and as for the horn; let him have the horn; Yeo; and I'll give you a noble for it。〃
〃Not a penny; noble captain。 If young master will take a poor mariner's gift; there it is; for the sake of his love to the calling; and Heaven send him luck therein。〃 And the good fellow; with the impulsive generosity of a true sailor; thrust the horn into the boy's hands; and walked away to escape thanks。
〃And now;〃 quoth Oxenham; 〃my merry men all; make up your minds what mannered men you be minded to be before you take your bounties。 I want none of your rascally lurching longshore vermin; who get five pounds out of this captain; and ten out of that; and let him sail without them after all; while they are stowed away under women's mufflers; and in tavern cellars。 If any man is of that humor; he had better to cut himself up; and salt himself down in a barrel for pork; before he meets me again; for by this light; let me catch him; be it seven years hence; and if I do not cut his throat upon the streets; it's a pity! But if any man will be true brother to me; true brother to him I'll be; come wreck or prize; storm or calm; salt water or fresh; victuals or none; share and fare alike; and here's my hand upon it; for every man and all! and so
〃Westward ho! with a rumbelow; And hurra for the Spanish Main; O!〃
After which oration Mr。 Oxenham swaggered into the tavern; followed by his new men; and the boy took his way homewards; nursing his precious horn; trembling between hope and fear; and blushing with maidenly shame; and a half…sense of wrong…doing at having revealed suddenly to a stranger the darling wish which he had hidden from his father and mother ever since he was ten years old。
Now this young gentleman; Amyas Leigh; though come of as good blood as any in Devon; and having lived all his life in what we should even now call the very best society; and being (on account of the valor; courtesy; and truly noble qualities which he showed forth in his most eventful life) chosen by me as the hero and centre of this story; was not; saving for his good looks; by any means what would be called now…a…days an 〃interesting〃 youth; still less a 〃highly educated〃 one; for; with the exception of a little Latin; which had been driven into him by repeated blows; as if it had been a nail; he knew no books whatsoever; save his Bible; his Prayer…book; the old 〃Mort d'Arthur〃 of Caxton's edition; which lay in the great bay window in the hall; and the translation of 〃Las Casas' History of the West Indies;〃 which lay beside it; lately done into English under the title of 〃The Cruelties of the Spaniards。〃 He devoutly believed in fairies; whom he called pixies; and held that they changed babies; and made the mushroom rings on the downs to dance in。 When he had warts or burns; he went to the white witch at Northam to charm them away; he thought that the sun moved round the earth; and that the moon had some kindred with a Cheshire cheese。 He held that the swallows slept all the winter at the bottom of the horse…pond; talked; like Raleigh; Grenville; and other low persons; with a broad Devonshire accent; and was in many other respects so very ignorant a youth; that any pert monitor in a national school might have had a hearty laugh at him。 Nevertheless; this ignorant young savage; vacant of the glorious gains of the nineteenth century; children's literature and science made easy; and; worst of all; of those improved views of English history now current among our railway essayists; which consist in believing all persons; male and female; before the year 1688; and nearly all after it; to have been either hypocrites or fools; had learnt certain things which he would hardly have been taught just now in any school in England; for his training had been that of the old Persians; 〃to speak the truth and to draw the bow;〃 both of which savage virtues he had acquired to perfection; as well as the equally savage ones of enduring pain cheerfully; and of believing it to be the finest thing in the world to be a gentleman; by which word he had been taught to understand the careful habit of causing needless pain to no human being; poor or rich; and of taking pride in giving up his own pleasure for the sake of those who were weaker than himself。 Moreover; having been entrusted for the last year with the breaking of a colt; and the care of a cast of young ha