登陆注册
38540200000007

第7章

So they tried to be busily occupied with the children, and not to hear Mrs Barton's directions to Mary. "Run, Mary dear, just round the corner, and get some fresh eggs at Tipping's (you may get one a-piece, that will be fivepence), and see if he has any nice ham cut, that he would let us have a pound of." "Say two pounds, missis, and don't be stingy," chimed in the husband. "Well, a pound and a half, Mary. And get it Cumberland ham, for Wilson comes from there-away, and it will have a sort of relish of home with it he'll like,--and Mary" (seeing the lassie fain to be off), "you must get a pennyworth of milk and a loaf of bread--mind you get it fresh and new--and, and--that's all, Mary." "No, it's not all," said her husband. "Thou must get six-pennyworth of rum, to warm the tea; thou'll get it at the 'Grapes.' And thou just go to Alice Wilson; he says she lives just right round the corner, under 14 Barber Street" (this was addressed to his wife); "and tell her to come and take her tea with us; she'll like to see her brother, I'll be bound, let alone Jane and the twins." "If she comes she must bring a tea-cup and saucer, for we have but half-a-dozen, and here's six of us," said Mrs Barton. "Pooh, pooh, Jem and Mary can drink out of one, surely." But Mary secretly determined to take care that Alice brought her tea-cup and saucer, if the alternative was to be her sharing any thing with Jem. Alice Wilson had but just come in. She had been out all day in the fields, gathering wild herbs for drinks and medicine, for in addition to her invaluable qualities as a sick nurse and her worldly occupations as a washerwoman, she added a considerable knowledge of hedge and field simples; and on fine days, when no more profitable occupation offered itself, he used to ramble off into the lanes and meadows as far as her legs could carry her. This evening she had returned loaded with nettles, and her first object was to light a candle and see to hang them up in bunches in every available place in her cellar room. It was the perfection of cleanliness; in one corner stood the modest-looking bed, with a check curtain at the head, the whitewashed wall filling up the place where the corresponding one should have been. The floor was bricked, and scrupulously clean, although so damp that it seemed as if the last washing would never dry up. As the cellar window looked into an area in the street, down which boys might throw stones, it was protected by an outside shutter, and was oddly festooned with all manner of hedge-row, ditch, and field plants, which we are accustomed to call valueless, but which have a powerful effect either for good or for evil, and are consequently much used among the poor. The room was strewed, hung, and darkened with these bunches, which emitted no very fragrant odour in their process of drying. In one corner was a sort of broad hanging shelf, made of old planks, where some old hoards of Alice's were kept. Her little bit of crockery-ware was ranged on the mantelpiece, where also stood her candlestick and box of matches. A small cupboard contained at the bottom coals, and at the top her bread and basin of oatmeal, her frying-pan, tea-pot, and a small tin saucepan, which served as a kettle, as well as for cooking the delicate little messes of broth which Alice was sometimes able to manufacture for a sick neighbour. After her walk she felt chilly and weary, and was busy trying to light her fire with the damp coals, and half-green sticks, when Mary knocked. "Come in," said Alice, remembering, however, that she had barred the door for the night, and hastening to make it possible for any one to come in. "Is that you, Mary Barton?" exclaimed she, as the light from the candle streamed on the girl's face. "How you are grown since I used to see you at my brother's! Come in, lass, come in." "Please," said Mary, almost breathless, "mother says you're to come to tea, and bring your cup and saucer, for George and Jane Wilson is with us, and the twins, and Jem. And you're to make haste, please." "I'm sure it's very neighbourly and kind in your mother, and I'll come, with many thanks. Stay, Mary, has your mother got any nettles for spring drink? If she hasn't I'll take her some. "No, I don't think she has." Mary ran off like a hare to fulfil what, to a girl of thirteen, fond of power, was the more interesting part of her errand--the money-spending part. And well and ably did she perform her business, returning home with a little bottle of rum, and the eggs in one hand, while her other was filled with some excellent red-and-white, smoke-flavoured, Cumberland ham, wrapped up in paper. She was at home, and frying ham, before Alice had chosen her nettles, put out her candle, locked her door, and walked in a very foot-sore manner as far as John Barton's. What an aspect of comfort did his house-place present, after her humble cellar! She did not think of comparing; but for all that she felt the delicious glow of the fire, the bright light that revelled in every corner of the room, the savoury smells, the comfortable sounds of a boiling kettle, and the hissing, frizzling ham. With a little old-fashioned curtsey she shut the door, and replied with a loving heart to the boisterous and surprised greeting of her brother. And now all preparations being made, the party sat down; Mrs Wilson in the post of honour, the rocking chair, on the right hand side of the fire, nursing her baby, while its father, in an opposite arm-chair, tried vainly to quieten the other with bread soaked in milk. Mrs Barton knew manners too well to do anything but sit at the tea-table and make tea, though in her heart she longed to be able to superintend the frying of the ham, and cast many an anxious look at Mary as she broke the eggs and turned the ham, with a very comfortable portion of confidence in her own culinary powers. Jem stood awkwardly leaning against the dresser, replying rather gruffly to his aunt's speeches, which gave him, he thought, the air of being a little boy; whereas he considered himself as a young man, and not so very young neither, as in two months he would be eighteen.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 进化末日

    进化末日

    一次宇宙云飘过地球的时候,被宇宙云中的放射性物质照耀过的地球生物全部进入了异常进化,人类作为万物之灵,却由于自己建造的辉煌建筑而错过了这次机会。只有一少部分人由于种种原因,成了其中的幸运儿,胡博宇就是其中一个。远离家乡的胡博宇踏上归程,却阴差阳错救了一些人,带着他们寻找可以避难的所在,一路上,有爱情,有背叛,有阴谋,有机遇,只有变强,才能保护自己在乎的人,胡博宇遭遇了难以想象的磨难,总算找到了自己的父母和亲人,但面对的却是人性的自私,一小部分人把持着人类的幸存者,妄想建立一个由他们统治的世界.而自然界的生物,在经受逐渐拥有反抗能力的人类压迫下,最终也进化出了智能,成为全新的生命,各自成立了原始联盟,彼此征战不休。这一切,到底是真正的末日,还是新世界的开始。
  • 与你的梦想一起奔跑

    与你的梦想一起奔跑

    本书是一位投身酒店业的创业者的艰辛历程,他从大山中走出,卖过服装、承包过餐厅、开过酒店,而梦想又带领着他走向更广阔的天地。
  • 先天极武

    先天极武

    报完仇的叶枫在无良老道三个愿望的诱惑下被忽悠到异界棺材中,两本经书,一块玉佩,让他在魂武界中崛起。危机四伏的魂武界,刚从棺材中爬出的叶枫如何起家,走向巅峰。
  • 南山书意盟

    南山书意盟

    武安王府作为南下一带强硬的一股势力,其历代君主居住的王府盘踞于高高的秦川城的潘山之顶犹如一条大金龙盘在云空。楚雄向往常一样站在秦川的城墙上望着远方,若有所思,夜幕以至,随心自然。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 宣城雪后还望郡中寄

    宣城雪后还望郡中寄

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 秦公子的快乐生活

    秦公子的快乐生活

    这是一个在和地球相似度99.9999%的平行宇宙中,突然得到了人生投资的秦公子开发游戏的枯燥生活。
  • 名门千金:厉少心头宝

    名门千金:厉少心头宝

    安小诺是圈子里出了名的人美戏好,却半温不火了五六年。当她决定息影退圈之际,却忽然被人扒出前男友——厉家大少,厉明川。一夜爆红。她四处奔波,为破解传闻费尽口舌之际。某前男友却再发表声明:“前男友?造谣。”安小诺刚松下一口气,某前男友又发一条声明:“事实是,合法夫妻。”安小诺一口老血卡喉咙里:“我们已经离婚了!”厉明川找出小红本本,“我的字典里只有丧偶,没有离婚。”
  • 虐杀男主

    虐杀男主

    君墨音三观什么的都正常就是脑子不正常,她想要完成的事情谁也阻挡不了。这不当恨死男主的系统和脑回路不正常的少女又会掀起怎样的风波?系统:“少女,虐杀很赞要不要试试?包吃包住哦~”君墨音:“。。。。。。。走!”本文无cp,不定时更新
  • 不可思议的流行风尚(青少年探索发现丛书)

    不可思议的流行风尚(青少年探索发现丛书)

    本丛书是青少年探究历史,了解自身,探索大自然的一套不可多得的知识图典。本书精选人类历史上最不可思议的流行风尚,以独特的视角,趣味横生的语言,绘声绘色地讲述了某些历史时期,某些地区曾经流行百年甚至千年的怪异风尚,这些现象在当时别的地区的人们眼中简直就是奇闻怪谈,在我们现代人看来,更是不可思议、荒诞离奋……