The world was full of sunshine, the blithe song of birds, and the
sweet, pure breath of waking flowers as I rose next morning, and,
coming to the stream, threw myself down beside it and plunged my
hands and arms and head into the limpid water whose contact
seemed to fill me with a wondrous gladness in keeping with the
world about me.
In a little while I rose, with the water dripping from me, and
having made shift to dry myself upon my neckcloth, nothing else
being available, returned to the cottage.
Above my head I could hear a gentle sound rising and falling with
a rhythmic measure, that told me Donald still slept; so, clapping
on my hat and coat, I started out to my first day's work at the
forge, breakfastless, for the good and sufficient reason that
there was none to be had, but full of the glad pure beauty of the
morning. And I bethought me of the old Psalmist's deathless
words:
"Though sorrow endure for a night, yet joy cometh in the morning"
(brave, true words which shall go ringing down the ages to bear
hope and consolation to many a wearied, troubled soul); for now,
as I climbed the steep path where bats had hovered last night,
and turned to look back at the pit which had seemed a place of
horror--behold! it was become a very paradise of quivering green,
spangled with myriad jewels where the dew yet clung.
Indeed, if any man would experience the full ecstasy of being
alive--the joi de vivre as the French have it--let him go out
into the early morning, when the sun is young, and look about him
with a seeing eye.
So, in a little while, with the golden song of a blackbird in my
ears, I turned village-wards, very hungry, yet, nevertheless,
content.
Long before I reached the smithy I could hear the ring of Black
George's hammer, though the village was not yet astir, and it was
with some trepidation as to my reception that I approached the
open doorway.
There he stood, busy at his anvil, goodly to look upon in his
bare-armed might, and with the sun shining in his yellow hair, a
veritable son of Anak. He might have been some hero, or demigod
come back from that dim age when angels wooed the daughters of
men, rather than a village blacksmith, and a very sulky one at
that; for though he must have been aware of my presence, he never
glanced up or gave the slightest sign of welcome, or the reverse.
Now, as I watched, I noticed a certain slowness--a heaviness in
all his movements--together with a listless, slipshod air which,
I judged, was very foreign to him; moreover, as he worked, I
thought he hung his head lower than was quite necessary.
"George!" George went on hammering. "George!" said I again. He
raised the hammer for another stroke, hesitated, then lifted his
head with a jerk, and immediately I knew why he had avoided my eye.
"What do 'ee want wi' me?"
"I have come for two reasons," said I; "one is to begin work--"
"Then ye'd best go away again," he broke in; "ye'll get no work
here."
"And the second," I went on, "is to offer you my hand. Will you
take it, George, and let bygones be bygones?"
"No," he burst out vehemently. "No, I tell 'ee. Ye think to
come 'ere an' crow o'er me, because ye beat me, by a trick, and
because ye heerd--her--" His voice broke, and, dropping his
hammer, he turned his back upon me. "Called me 'coward'! she
did," he went on after a little while. "You heerd her--they all
heerd her! I've been a danged fule!" he said, more as if
speaking his thoughts aloud than addressing me, "but a man can't
help lovin' a lass--like Prue, and when 'e loves 'e can't 'elp
hopin'. I've hoped these three years an' more, and last night
--she called me--coward." Something bright and glistening
splashed down upon the anvil, and there ensued a silence broken
only by the piping of the birds and the stirring of the leaves
outside.
"A fule I be!" said Black George at last, shaking his head, "no
kind o' man for the likes o' her; too big I be--and rough. And
yet--if she'd only given me the chance!"
Again there fell a silence wherein, mingled with the bird-chorus,
came the tap, tapping of a stick upon the hard road, and the
sound of approaching footsteps; whereupon George seized the
handle of the bellows and fell to blowing the fire vigorously;
yet once I saw him draw the back of his hand across his eyes with
a quick, furtive gesture. A moment after, the Ancient appeared,
a quaint, befrocked figure, framed in the yawning doorway and
backed by the glory of the morning. He stood awhile to lean upon
his stick and peer about, his old eyes still dazzled by the
sunlight he had just left, owing to which he failed to see me
where I sat in the shadow of the forge.
"Marnin', Jarge!" said he, with his quick, bright nod. The
smith's scowl was blacker and his deep voice gruffer than usual
as he returned the greeting; but the old man seemed to heed it
not at all, but, taking his snuff-box from the lining of his
tall, broad-brimmed hat (its usual abiding place), he opened it,
with his most important air.
"Jarge," said he, "I'm thinkin' ye'd better tak' Job back to
strike for ye again if you'm goin' to mend t' owd screen."
"What d'ye mean?" growled Black George.
"Because," continued the old man, gathering a pinch of snuff with
great deliberation, "because, Jarge, the young feller as beat ye
at the throwin'--'im as was to 'ave worked for ye at 'is own
price--be dead."
"What!" cried Black George, starting.
"Dead!" nodded the old man, "a corp' 'e be--eh! such a fine,
promisin' young chap, an' now--a corp'." Here the Ancient nodded
solemnly again, three times, and inhaled his pinch of snuff with
great apparent zest and enjoyment.
"Why--" began the amazed George, "what--" and broke off to stare,
open-mouthed.
"Last night, as ever was," continued the old man, "'e went down
to th' 'aunted cottage--'t weren't no manner o' use tryin' to
turn 'im, no, not if I'd gone down to 'im on my marrer-bones--'e
were that set on it; so off he goes, 'bout sundown, to sleep in
th' 'aunted cottage--I knows, Jarge, 'cause I follered un, an'
seen for myself; so now I'm a-goin' down to find 'is corp'--"
He had reached thus far, when his eye, accustomed to the shadows,
chancing to meet mine, he uttered a gasp, and stood staring at me
with dropped jaw.
"Peter!" he stammered at last. "Peter--be that you, Peter?"
"To be sure it is," said I.
"Bean't ye--dead, then?"
"I never felt more full of life."
"But ye slep' in th' 'aunted cottage last night."
"Yes."
"But--but--the ghost, Peter?"
"Is a wandering Scotsman."
"Why then I can't go down and find ye corp' arter all?"
"I fear not, Ancient."
The old man slowly closed his snuff-box, shaking his head as he
did so.
"Ah, well! I won't blame ye, Peter," said he magnanunously, "it
bean't your fault, lad, no--but what's come to the ghost!"
"The ghost," I answered, "is nothing more dreadful than a
wandering Scotsman!"
"Scotsman!" exclaimed the Ancient sharply. "Scotsman!"
"Yes, Ancient."
"You'm mazed, Peter--ah! mazed ye be! What, aren't I heerd un
moanin' an' groanin' to 'isself--ah! an' twitterin' to?"
"As to that," said I, "those shrieks and howls he made with his
bagpipe, very easy for a skilled player such as he."
Some one was drawing water from a well across the road, for I
heard the rattle of the bucket, and the creak of the winch, in
the pause which now ensued, during which the Ancient, propped
upon his stick, surveyed me with an expression that was not
exactly anger, nor contempt, nor sorrow, and yet something of all
three. At length he sighed, and shook his head at me mournfully.
"Peter," said he, "Peter, I didn't think as you'd try to tak'
'vantage of a old man wi' a tale the like o' that such a very,
very old man, Peter--such a old, old man!"
"But I assure you, it's the truth," said I earnestly.
"Peter, I seen Scotchmen afore now," said he, with a reproachful
look, "ah! that I 'ave, many's the time, an' Scotchmen don't go
about wi' tails, nor yet wi' 'orns on their 'eads--leastways I've
never seen one as did. An', Peter, I know what a bagpipe is;
I've heerd 'em often an' often--squeak they do, yes, but a squeak
bean't a scream, Peter, nor yet a groan--no." Having delivered
himself of which, the Ancient shook his head at me again, and,
turning his back, hobbled away.
When I turned to look at George, it was to find him regarding me
with a very strange expression.
"Sir," said he ponderously, "did you sleep in th' 'aunted cottage
last night?"
"Yes, though, as I have tried to explain, and unsuccessfully it
seems, it is haunted by nothing more alarming than a Scots
Piper."
"Sir," said George, in the same slow, heavy way, "I--couldn't go
a-nigh the place myself--'specially arter dark--I'd be--ah! I'd be
afeard to! I did go once, and then not alone, and I ran away.
Sir, you'm a better man nor me; you done what I durstn't do.
Sir, if so be as you 'm in the same mind about it--I should like
to--to shake your hand."
So there, across the anvil which was to link our lives together
thenceforth, Black George and I clasped hands, looking into each
other's eyes.
"George," said I at last, "I've had no breakfast."
"Nor I!" said George.
"And I'm mightily hungry!"
"So am I," said George.
"Then come, and let us eat," and I turned to the door.
"Why, so we will--but not at--'The Bull'--she be theer. Come to
my cottage--it be close by--that is, if you care to, sir?"
"With all my heart!" said I, "and my name is Peter."
"What do you say to 'am and eggs--Peter?"
"Ham and eggs will be most excellent!" said I.