第 71 节
作者:温暖寒冬      更新:2024-04-09 19:50      字数:9220
  “No; I’ve put it away in the right…hand parlour; but let it be till I
  can fetch it and show it you。 I’d be   glad  now  if  you’d   go  into  the
  garden and tell Hetty to send Totty in。 The child ’ull run in if she’s
  told;   an’   I   know   Hetty’s   lettin’   her   eat   too   many   currants。   I’ll   be
  much  obliged   to   you;   Mr。   Bede;   if   you’ll   go   and   send   her   in;   an’
  there’s     the  York    and    Lankester      roses   beautiful     in  the   garden
  now—you’ll   like   to   see   ’em。   But   you’d   like   a   drink   o’   whey   first;
  p’r’aps;   I   know   you’re   fond   o’   whey;   as   most   folks   is   when   they
  hanna got to crush it out。”
  “Thank you; Mrs。 Poyser;” said Adam; “a drink o’ whey’s allays
  a treat to me。 I’d rather have it than beer any day。”
  “Aye; aye;” said Mrs。 Poyser; reaching a small white basin that
  stood on the shelf; and dipping it into the whey…tub; “the smell o’
  bread’s sweet t’ everybody but the baker。 The Miss Irwines allays
  say; ‘Oh; Mrs。 Poyser; I envy you your dairy; and I envy you your
  chickens; and what a beautiful thing a farm…house is; to be sure!’
  An’ I say; ‘Yes; a farm…house is a fine thing for them as look on; an’
  George Eliot                                                          ElecBook Classics
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  don’t know the liftin’; an’ the stannin’; an’ the worritin’ o’ th’ inside
  as belongs to ’t。’”
  “Why; Mrs。 Poyser; you wouldn’t like to live anywhere else but
  in a farm…house; so well as you manage it;” said Adam; taking the
  basin; “and there can be nothing to look at  pleasanter  nor a   fine
  milch cow; standing up to ’ts knees in pasture; and the new milk
  frothing in the pail; and the fresh butter ready for market; and the
  calves; and the poultry。 Here’s to your health; and may you allays
  have strength to look after your own dairy; and set a pattern t’ all
  the farmers’ wives in the country。”
  Mrs。 Poyser was not to be caught in the weakness of smiling at
  a compliment; but a quiet complacency over…spread her face like a
  stealing sunbeam; and gave a milder glance than usual to her blue…
  grey eyes; as she looked at Adam drinking the whey。 Ah! I think I
  taste    that  whey     now—with       a  flavour   so   delicate   that   one   can
  hardly   distinguish   it   from     an   odour;   and   with   that   soft   gliding
  warmth that fills one’s imagination with a still; happy dreaminess。
  And the light music of the dropping whey is in my ears; mingling
  with  the   twittering  of  a   bird   outside   the   wire   network   window—
  the   window   overlooking   the   garden;   and   shaded   by   tall   gueldre
  roses。
  “Have a little more; Mr。 Bede?” said Mrs。 Poyser; as Adam set
  down the basin。
  “No;   thank   you;   I’ll   go   into   the   garden   now;   and   send   in   the
  little lass。”
  “Aye; do; and tell her to come to her mother in the dairy。”
  Adam walked round by the rick…yard; at present empty of ricks;
  to  the   little   wooden   gate   leading  into  the   garden—once   the   well…
  tended      kitchen…garden        of  a   manor…house;       now;     but   for   the
  George Eliot                                                         ElecBook Classics
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  Adam Bede                                       287
  handsome brick wall with stone coping that ran along one side of
  it;   a   true   farmhouse        garden;     with    hardy     perennial      flowers;
  unpruned fruit…trees; and kitchen vegetables   growing  together  in
  careless;   half…neglected   abundance。   In   that   leafy;   flowery;   bushy
  time; to look for any one in this garden was like playing at “hide…
  and…seek。” There were the tall hollyhocks beginning to flower and
  dazzle the eye with  their  pink;   white;   and   yellow;   there   were   the
  syringas   and   gueldre   roses;   all   large   and   disorderly   for   want   of
  trimming;   there   were   leafy   walls   of   scarlet   beans   and   late   peas;
  there was a row of bushy filberts in one direction; and in another a
  huge   apple…tree   making   a   barren   circle   under   its   low…spreading
  boughs。 But what signified a barren patch or two? The garden was
  so  large。   There   was always   a   superfluity   of   broad   beans—it   took
  nine or ten of Adam’s strides to get to the end of the uncut grass
  walk   that   ran   by   the   side   of   them;   and   as   for   other   vegetables;
  there was so much more room than was necessary for them that in
  the  rotation   of   crops   a   large   flourishing  bed   of   groundsel   was   of
  yearly   occurrence   on   one   spot   or   other。   The   very        rose…trees    at
  which Adam stopped to pluck one looked as if they grew wild; they
  were   all   huddled   together   in   bushy   masses;   now   flaunting   with
  wide…open       petals;   almost   all   of  them    of  the   streaked     pink…and…
  white kind; which doubtless dated from the union of the houses of
  York and Lancaster。 Adam was wise enough to choose a compact
  Provence       rose   that   peeped     out   half…smothered        by  its  flaunting
  scentless      neighbours;      and    held   it  in  his  hand—he        thought     he
  should   be     more   at   ease    holding   something   in       his  hand—as       he
  walked   on   to   the   far   end   of   the   garden;   where   he   remembered
  there   was   the   largest   row   of   currant…trees;   not   far   off   from   the
  great yew…tree arbour。
  George Eliot                                                           ElecBook Classics
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  Adam Bede                                       288
  But   he   had   not   gone   many   steps   beyond   the   roses;   when   he
  heard   the   shaking   of   a   bough;   and   a   boy’s   voice   saying;   “Now;
  then; Totty; hold out your pinny—there’s a duck。”
  The   voice   came   from   the   boughs   of   a   tall   cherry…tree;   where
  Adam had no difficulty in discerning a small blue…pinafored figure
  perched   in   a   commodious   position   where   the   fruit   was   thickest。
  Doubtless Totty was below; behind the screen of peas。 Yes—with
  her   bonnet   hanging   down   her   back;   and   her   fat   face;   dreadfully
  smeared with red juice; turned up towards the cherry…tree; while
  she   held     her   little   round  hole    of   a   mouth   and   her   red…stained
  pinafore to receive the promised downfall。 I am sorry to say; more
  than   half   the   cherries   that   fell   were   hard   and   yellow   instead   of
  juicy and red; but Totty spent no time in useless regrets; and she
  was   already   sucking   the   third   juiciest   when   Adam   said;   “There
  now; Totty; you’ve got your cherries。 Run into the house with ’em
  to    Mother—she         wants     you—she’s       in   the   dairy。    Run    in   this
  minute—there’s a good little girl。”
  He lifted her up in his strong arms and kissed her as he spoke; a
  ceremony        which     Totty   regarded      as  a  tiresome      interruption     to
  cherry…eating;   and   when         he   set   her   down   she    trotted   off   quite
  silently towards the house; sucking her cherries as she went along。
  “Tommy; my lad; take care you’re not shot for a little thieving
  bird;” said Adam; as he walked on towards the currant…trees。
  He   could   see   there   was   a   large   basket   at   the   end   of   the   row:
  Hetty  would   not  be   far  off;  and  Adam   already  felt  as   if   she   were
  looking at him。 Yet when he turned   the  corner she  was standing
  with     her   back    towards     him;    and    stooping     to  gather    the   low…
  hanging       fruit。  Strange      that   she   had    not    heard    him    coming!
  Perhaps   it   was   because   she   was   making   the   leaves   rustle。   She
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  Adam Bede                                     289
  started   when   she   became   conscious         that   some   one   was   near—
  started so violently that she dropped the basin with the currants in
  it; and then; when she saw it was Adam; she turned from pale to
  deep red。 That blush made   his   heart  beat  with  a   new  happiness。
  Hetty had never blushed at seeing him before。
  “I frightened you;” he said; with a delicious sense that it didn’t
  signify what he said; since Hetty seemed to feel as much as he did;
  “let me pick the currants up。”
  That w