登陆注册
14824900000008

第8章

So when they stopped the express for Gavin Balchrystie, every man on the line felt that it was an honour to the dead. John Platt sent a "gurring" thrill through the train as he put his brakes hard down and whistled for the guard. He, thinking that the Merrick Viaduct was down at least, twirled his brake to such purpose that the rear car progressed along the metals by a series of convulsive bounds. Then they softly ran back, and there lay Gavin fallen forward on his knees, as though he had been trying to rise, or had knelt down to pray. Let him have "the benefit of the doubt" in this world. In the next, if all tales be true, there is no such thing.

So Janet Balchrystie dwelt alone in the white "but an' ben" at the back of the Long Wood of Barbrax. The factor gave her notice, but the laird, who was not accounted by his neighbours to be very wise, because he did needlessly kind things, told the factor to let the lassie bide, and delivered to herself with his own handwriting to the effect that Janet Balchrystie, in consideration of her lonely condition, was to be allowed the house for her lifetime, a cow's grass, and thirty pound sterling in the year as a charge on the estate. He drove down the cow himself, and having stalled it in the byre, he informed her of the fact over the yard dyke by word of mouth, for he never could be induced to enter her door. He was accounted to be "gey an' queer," save by those who had tried making a bargain with him. But his farmers liked him, knowing him to be an easy man with those who had been really unfortunate, for he knew to what the year's crops of each had amounted, to a single chalder and head of nowt.

Deep in her heart Janet Balchrystie cherished a great ambition. When the earliest blackbird awoke and began to sing, while it was yet gray twilight, Janet would be up and at her work. She had an ambition to be a great poet. No less than this would serve her. But not even her father had known, and no other had any chance of knowing. In the black leather chest, which had been her mother's, upstairs, there was a slowly growing pile of manuscript, and the editor of the local paper received every other week a poem, longer or shorter, for his Poet's Corner, in an envelope with the New Dalry postmark. He was an obliging editor, and generally gave the closely written manuscript to the senior office boy, who had passed the sixth standard, to cut down, tinker the rhymes, and lope any superfluity of feet. The senior office boy "just spread himself," as he said, and delighted to do the job in style. But there was a woman fading into a gray old-maidishness which had hardly ever been girlhood, who did not at all approve of these corrections. She endured them because over the signature of "Heather Bell" it was a joy to see in the rich, close luxury of type her own poetry, even though it might be a trifle tattered and tossed about by hands ruthless and alien--those, in fact, of the senior office boy.

Janet walked every other week to the post-office at New Dalry to post her letters to the editor, but neither the great man nor yet the senior office boy had any conception that the verses of their "esteemed correspondent" were written by a woman too early old who dwelt alone at the back of Barbrax Long Wood.

One day Janet took a sudden but long-meditated journey. She went down by rail from the little station of The Huts to the large town of Drum, thirty miles to the east. Here, with the most perfect courage and dignity of bearing, she interviewed a printer and arranged for the publication of her poems in their own original form, no longer staled and clapper-clawed by the pencil of the senior office boy. When the proof-sheets came to Janet, she had no way of indicating the corrections but by again writing the whole poem out in a neat print hand on the edge of the proof, and underscoring the words which were to be altered. This, when you think of it, is a very good way, when the happiest part of your life is to be spent in such concrete pleasures of hope, as Janet's were over the crackly sheets of the printer of Drum. Finally the book was produced, a small rather thickish octavo, on sufficiently wretched gray paper which had suffered from want of thorough washing in the original paper-mill. It was bound in a peculiarly deadly blue, of a rectified Reckitt tint, which gave you dazzles in the eye at any distance under ten paces.

Janet had selected this as the most appropriate of colours. She had also many years ago decided upon the title, so that Reckitt had printed upon it, back and side, "The Heather Lintie," while inside there was the acknowledgment of authorship, which Janet felt to be a solemn duty to the world: "Poems by Janet Balchrystie, Barbrax Cottage, by New Dalry." First she had thought of withholding her name and style; but, on the whole, after the most prolonged consideration, she felt that she was not justified in bringing about such a controversy as divided Scotland concerning that "Great Unknown" who wrote the Waverley Novels.

Almost every second or third day Janet trod that long lochside road to New Dalry for her proof-sheets, and returned them on the morrow corrected in her own way. Sometimes she got a lift from some farmer or carter, for she had worn herself with anxiety to the shadow of what she had once been, and her dry bleached hair became gray and grayer with the fervour of her devotion to letters.

By April the book was published, and at the end of this month, laid aside by sickness of the vague kind called locally "a decline," she took to her bed, rising only to lay a few sticks upon the fire from her store gathered in the autumn, or to brew herself a cup of tea. She waited for the tokens of her book's conquests in the great world of thought and men. She had waited so long for her recognition, and now it was coming. She felt that it would not be long before she was recognised as one of the singers of the world. Indeed, had she but known it, her recognition was already on its way.

同类推荐
  • 四品学法

    四品学法

    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。
  • 所闻录

    所闻录

    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。
  • 佛入涅槃密迹金刚力士哀恋经

    佛入涅槃密迹金刚力士哀恋经

    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。
  • 紫庭内秘诀修行法

    紫庭内秘诀修行法

    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。
  • 老学究语

    老学究语

    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。
热门推荐
  • 黑道少爷,丫头记性不太好

    黑道少爷,丫头记性不太好

    他们从小就见过,并且他对她一见钟情,而她却只把他当做哥哥。在相遇,他恼怒,她竟然不认识他了,连名字都不记得。她是他的,只是时间问题。男生的接近,他会把他们赶走。女生的示爱,他会残酷的拒绝。终于骗她结了婚,有了宝宝,她似乎也开始依赖他了,可是却被迫分开。。。
  • 古书奇缘

    古书奇缘

    昏迷中的女婴躺在在一片大火燃烧之后的灰烬里。没有人知道发生了什么,方圆百里寸草成灰。较远的居民回忆,一场突如其来的通天大火整整烧了三天三夜,无人得以靠近。一座山,一个拥有美丽传说的国度凭空消失。她是这场大火唯一的幸存者。天生无泪,无父无母。初相识,她救他于危难。得知他的慷慨大义,只好将那一份悸动藏于心底。:自己大概是个理智但不怎么聪明的人,所以也不会太快乐。再相逢,她换另一种身份。二人共担风雨,一起揭开种种谜团。本应苦尽甘来的两人,却因各自所背负的使命彼此两两相望。后相遇,他已是记忆丧失,心智全无。她又将这份巨痛强压心底,只那淡然的一句:这是他的城,我要替他守着。命中注定相遇的一双璧人,在相逢之后彼此身上所负的命轮也相继转动。随之传说中因那场大火整个销声匿迹的上古力量的重现,各国、武林人士几股势力暗潮涌动,人人势在必得。与此同时,守护上古力量的七萃之士,早已隐匿江湖的奇人隐士,与之相关的人物相继出现。一生一泪为挚爱。是江湖儿女的爱恨情长还是救民于水火的民族大义。他、她该如何抉择?
  • 平蜀记

    平蜀记

    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。
  • 至道冰神

    至道冰神

    无敌从来只是一个称号,没有人能真正意义上的无敌。双拳难敌四手,再厉害的人始终会败在人海战术之上。一个被赶下台的天尊,死里逃生,意外融合九幽寒冰神玉,丹田扩充十倍,修神诀,练神技,他只想问:还有谁!!!还想用人海战术压倒我么?笑话!剑尘要向世人诠释,什么叫真正的无敌。一样的道路不一样的心境,剑尘誓要斩尽小人,拿回属于他的一切。
  • 历史地理学方法论的探索与实践

    历史地理学方法论的探索与实践

    本书以专题形式分别探讨了中国历史地理学的历史、现状和发展趋势,中国古代、近现代历史地理学思想,历史地理学的研究对象、学科属性和研究意义,历史地理学的学科体系,黑格尔地理环境理论的辩证分析,历史社会地理学与区域社会史的若干理论等。
  • 逆命天平

    逆命天平

    我叫龙傲天,我是命运之子。但我意外地唤醒了逆命天平,它逼我走上了逆命的道路。真是一个不幸的故事......
  • 星河原罪

    星河原罪

    一个联邦通缉犯,却成了拯救联邦的英雄!一个混吃等死的后勤兵,却成了超级战士!浮萍虽无根,亦可撼动星辰浩海!
  • 苌楚斋续笔

    苌楚斋续笔

    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。
  • Pioneers of the Old South

    Pioneers of the Old South

    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。
  • 红尘情仇

    红尘情仇

    冷秋生在深圳打工邂逅李晓月,两人生死相恋,不料她染病而亡,他痛不欲生,回到老家仙桃,与方芳结婚,过着平淡的生活。不料风云突变,他在梦中大喊晓月,方芳醋意大发,家庭战争爆发。他理亏求和,但从此李晓月成了方芳心中挥之不去的阴魂,也成了夫妻冲突的导火线。后来方芳出走河南,被人面兽心的李建文凌辱。离婚后,冷秋生远走厦门,遇到高立梅,同是天涯沦落人,两人正在筹备婚礼时,他得知方芳病重,经过激烈的思想斗争,决定回家照顾方芳。儿子上大学的当晚,冷秋生准备回厦门与高立梅结婚,儿子冷文给冷秋生一封信令他热泪纵横。冷秋生决定与方芳复婚,可是方芳已留信出走,他决定走遍千山万水寻找方芳。