
- 504 pages
- English
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A Rough Shaking
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Yes, you can access A Rough Shaking by George MacDonald in PDF and/or ePUB format. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Publisher
Peffer PressYear
2015Print ISBN
9781443704090eBook ISBN
9781473374447Chapter I. How I Came to know Clare Skymer
It was a day when everything around seemed almost perfect: everything does, now and then, come nearly right for a moment or two, preparatory to coming all right for good at the last. It was the third week in June. The great furnace was glowing and shining in full force, driving the ship of our life at her best speed through the ocean of space. For on deck, and between decks, and aloft, there is so much more going on at one time than at another, that I may well say she was then going at her best speed, for there is quality as well as rate in motion. The trees were all well clothed, most of them in their very best. Their garments were soaking up the light and the heat, and the wind was going about among them, telling now one and now another, that all was well, and getting through an immense amount of comfort-work in a single minute. It said a word or two to myself as often as it passed me, and made me happier than any boy I know just at present, for I was an old man, and ought to be more easily made happy than any mere beginner.
I was walking through the thin edge of a little wood of big trees, with a slope of green on my left stretching away into the sunny distance, and the shadows of the trees on my right lying below my feet. The earth and the grass and the trees and the air were together weaving a harmony, and the birds were leading the big orchestraāwhich was indeed on the largest scale. For the instruments were so different, that some of them only were meant for sound; the part of others was in odour, of others yet in shine, and of still others in motion; while the birds turned it all as nearly into words as they could. Presently, to complete the score, I heard the tones of a manās voice, both strong and sweet. It was talking to some one in a way I could not understand. I do not mean I could not understand the words: I was too far off even to hear them; but I could not understand how the voice came to be so modulated. It was deep, soft, and musical, with something like coaxing in it, and something of tenderness, and the intent of it puzzled me. For I could not conjecture from it the age, or sex, or relation, or kind of the person to whom the words were spoken. You can tell by the voice when a man is talking to himself; it ought to be evident when he is talking to a woman; and you can, surely, tell when he is talking to a child; you could tell if he were speaking to him who made him; and you would be pretty certain if he was holding communication with his dog: it made me feel strange that I could not tell the kind of ear open to the gentle manly voice saying things which the very sound of them made me long to hear. I confess to hurrying my pace a little, but I trust with no improper curiosity, to seeāI cannot say the interlocutors, for I had heard, and still heard, only one voice.
About a minuteās walk brought me to the corner of the wood where it stopped abruptly, giving way to a field of beautiful grass; and then I saw something it does not need to be old to be delighted withal: the boy that would not have taken pleasure in it, I should count half-way to the gallows. Up to the edge of the wood came, I say, a large fieldāacres on acres of the sweetest grass; and dividing it from both wood and path stood a fence of three bars, which at the moment separated two as genuine lovers as ever wall of āstones with lime and hair knit upā could have sundered. On one side of the fence stood a man whose face I could not see, and on the other one of the loveliest horses I had ever set eyes upon. I am no better than a middling fair horseman, but, for this horseās sake, I may be allowed to mention that my friends will all have me look at any horse they think of buying. He was over sixteen hands, with well rounded barrel, clean limbs, small head, and broad muzzle; hollows above his eyes of hazy blue, and delicacy of feature, revealed him quite an old horse. His ears pointed forward and downward, as if they wanted on their own account to get a hold of the man the nose was so busily caressing. Neither, I presume, had heard my approach; for all true-love-endearments are shy, and the man had his arm round the horseās neck, and was caressing his face, talking to him much as Philip Sidneyās lady, whose lips āseemed at once to kiss and speak,ā murmured to her pet sparrow, only here the voice was a musical baritone. That there was something between them more than an ordinary person would be likely to understand appeared patent.
Whether or not I made an involuntary sound I cannot tell: I was so taken with the sight, bearing to me an aspect of something eternal, that I do not know how I carried myself; but the horse gave a little start, half lifted his head, saw me, threw it up, uttered a shrill neigh of warning, stepped hack a pace, and stood motionless, waiting apparently for an order from his masterāif indeed I ought not rather to call them friends than master and servant.
The man looked round, saw me, turned toward me, and showing no sign that my appearance was unexpected, lifted his hat with a courtesy most Englishmen would reserve for a lady, and advanced a step, almost as if to welcome a guest. I may have owed something of this reception to the fact that he saw before him a man advanced in years, for my beard is very gray, and that by no means prematurely. I saw before me one nearly, if not quite as old as myself. His hair and beard, both rather long, were quite white. His face was wonderfully handsome, with the stillness of a summer sea upon it. Its features were very marked and regular and fine, for the habit of the man was rather spare. What with his white hair and beard, and a certain radiance in his pale complexion, which, I learned afterward, no sun had ever more than browned a little, he reminded me for a moment as he turned, of Cato on the shore of Danteās purgatorial island.
āI fear,ā I said, āI have intruded!ā There was no path where I had come along.
The man laughedāand his laugh was more friendly than an invitation to dinner.
āThe land is mine,ā he answered; āno one can say you intrude.ā
āThank you heartily. I live not very far off, and know the country pretty well, but have got into a part of which I am ignorant.ā
āYou are welcome to go where you will on my property,ā he answered. āI could not close a field without some sense of having thrown a fellow-being into a dungeon. Whatever be the rights of land, space can belong to the individual only āas it were,ā to use a Shakspere-phrase. All the best things have to be shared. The house plainly was designed for a family.ā
While he spoke I scarce heeded his words for looking at the man, so much he interested me. His face was of the palest health, with a faint light from within. He looked about sixty years of age. His forehead was square, and his head rather small, but beautifully modelled; his eyes were of a light hazel, friendly as those of a celestial dog. Though slender in build, he looked strong, and every movement denoted activity.
I was not ready with an answer to what he said. He turned from me, and as if to introduce a companion and so render the interview easier, he called, in tone as gentle as if he spoke to a child, but with that peculiar intonation that had let me understand it was not to a child he was speaking, āMemnon! come;ā and turned again to me. His movement and words directed my attention again to the horse, who had stood motionless. At once, but without sign of haste, the animal walked up to the rails, rose gently on his hind legs, came over without touching, walked up to his mas...
Table of contents
- A ROUGH SHAKING
- George MacDonald
- Chapter I. How I Came to know Clare Skymer
- Chapter II. With his parents
- Chapter III. Without his parents
- Chapter IV. The new family
- Chapter V. His new home
- Chapter VI. What did draw out his first smile
- Chapter VII. Clare and his brothers
- Chapter VIII. Clare and his human brothers
- Chapter IX. Clare the defender
- Chapter X . The black aunt
- Chapter XI. Clare on the farm
- Chapter XII. Clare becomes a guardian of the poor
- Chapter XIII. Clare the vagabond
- Chapter XIV. Their first helper
- Chapter XV. Their first host
- Chapter XVI. On the tramp
- Chapter XVII. The bakerās cart
- Chapter XVIII. Beating the town
- Chapter XIX. The blacksmith and his forge
- Chapter XX. Tommy reconnoitres
- Chapter XXI. Tommy is found and found out
- Chapter XXII. The smith in a rage
- Chapter XXIII. Treasure trove
- Chapter XXIV. Justifiable burglary
- Chapter XXV. A new quest
- Chapter XXVI. A new entrance
- Chapter XXVII. The baby has her breakfast
- Chapter XXVIII. Treachery
- Chapter XXIX. The baker
- Chapter XXX. The draper
- Chapter XXXI. An addition to the family
- Chapter XXXII. Shop and baby
- Chapter XXXIII. A bad penny
- Chapter XXXIV. How things went for a time
- Chapter XXXV. Clare disregards the interests of his employers
- Chapter XXXVI. The policeman
- Chapter XXXVII. The magistrate
- Chapter XXXVIII . The workhouse
- Chapter XXXIX. Away
- Chapter XL. Maly
- Chapter XLI. The caravans
- Chapter XLII. Nimrod
- Chapter XLIII. Across country
- Chapter XLIV. A third mother
- Chapter XLV. The menagerie
- Chapter XLVI . The angel of the wild beasts
- Chapter XLVII. Glum Gunn
- Chapter XLVIII. The puma
- Chapter XLIX. Glum Gunnās revenge
- Chapter L. Clare seeks help
- Chapter LI. Clare a true master
- Chapter LII. Miss Tempest
- Chapter LIII. The gardener
- Chapter LIV. The Kitchen
- Chapter LV. The wheel rests for a time
- Chapter LVI. Strategy
- Chapter LVII. Ann Shotover
- Chapter LVIII. Child-talk
- Chapter LIX. Loversā walks
- Chapter LX. The shoe-black
- Chapter LXI. A walk with consequences
- Chapter LXII. The cage of the puma
- Chapter LXIII. The dome of the angels
- Chapter LXIV. The panther
- Chapter LXV. At home
- Chapter LXVI. The end of Clare Skymerās boyhood