第 112 节
作者:温暖寒冬      更新:2024-04-09 19:50      字数:9180
  advantage。”
  “Oh;”     said   Mr。    Poyser;     with   a   good…natured       blankness       of
  imagination as to the nature of the arrangement。
  “If   I’m   called    upon    to  speak;    sir;”   said   Mrs。   Poyser;     after
  glancing at her husband with pity at his softness; “you know better
  than   me;   but   I   don’t   see   what   the   Chase   Farm   is     t’  us—we’ve
  cumber enough wi’ our own farm。 Not but what I’m glad to hear o’
  anybody   respectable   coming   into   the   parish;   there’s   some   as   ha’
  been brought in as hasn’t been looked on i’ that character。”
  “You’re     likely   to  find   Mr。   Thurle     an   excellent    neighbour;      I
  assure      you—such         a   one    as    you    will    feel   glad    to    have
  accommodated by the little plan I’m   going  to  mention;  especially
  as I hope you will find it as much to your own advantage as his。”
  “Indeed;   sir;   if   it’s   anything   t’   our   advantage;   it’ll   be   the   first
  offer o’ the sort I’ve heared on。 It’s them as take advantage that get
  advantage   i’   this   world; I   think。   Folks   have   to   wait   long   enough
  afore it’s brought to ’em。”
  “The   fact   is;   Poyser;”   said   the   squire;   ignoring   Mrs。   Poyser’s
  theory   of   worldly   prosperity;   “there   is   too   much   dairy   land;   and
  too    little  plough     land;    on   the   Chase     Farm     to   suit   Thurle’s
  purpose—indeed; he will only take the farm on condition of some
  change in it: his wife; it appears; is not a clever dairy…woman; like
  yours。 Now; the plan I’m thinking of is to effect a little exchange。 If
  you   were   to   have   the   Hollow   Pastures;   you   might   increase   your
  dairy; which must be so profitable under your wife’s management;
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  and  I   should   request  you;   Mrs。   Poyser;   to   supply   my   house   with
  milk; cream; and butter at the market prices。 On the other hand;
  Poyser; you might  let  Thurle   have   the   Lower  and   Upper Ridges;
  which really; with our wet seasons; would be a good riddance for
  you。 There is much less risk in dairy land than corn land。”
  Mr。 Poyser was leaning forward; with his elbows on his knees;
  his   head    on   one   side;   and   his   mouth     screwed     up—apparently
  absorbed in making the tips of his fingers meet so as to represent
  with perfect accuracy the ribs of a ship。 He was much too acute a
  man      not   to  see   through     the   whole     business;     and   to   foresee
  perfectly   what   would       be   his  wife’s   view   of  the  subject;    but   he
  disliked   giving   unpleasant   answers。   Unless   it   was   on   a   point   of
  farming practice; he would rather give up than have a quarrel; any
  day;   and; after   all;   it   mattered   more   to   his   wife   than   to   him。   So;
  after a few moments’ silence; he looked up at her and said mildly;
  “What dost say?”
  Mrs。 Poyser had had her  eyes   fixed   on   her  husband   with  cold
  severity   during   his   silence;   but   now   she   turned   away   her   head
  with a toss; looked icily at the opposite roof of the cow…shed; and
  spearing   her   knitting   together   with   the   loose   pin;   held   it   firmly
  between her clasped hands。
  “Say? Why; I say you may do as you like about giving up any o’
  your corn land afore your lease is up; which it won’t be for a year
  come   next   Michaelmas;   but   I’ll   not   consent   to   take   more   dairy
  work into my hands; either for love or money; and there’s nayther
  love    nor   money     here;    as  I  can   see;  on’y   other    folks’s   love   o’
  theirselves; and the money as is to go into other folks’s pockets。 I
  know there’s them as is born t’ own the land; and them as is born
  to  sweat  on’t”—here   Mrs。   Poyser   paused   to   gasp   a   little—“and   I
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  know it’s christened folks’s duty to submit to their betters as fur as
  flesh  and blood   ’ull bear  it; but  I’ll   not   make   a   martyr   o’   myself;
  and wear myself to skin and bone; and worret myself as if I was a
  churn wi’ butter a…coming in’t; for no landlord   in  England;   not  if
  he was King George himself。”
  “No;   no;   my   dear   Mrs。   Poyser;   certainly  not;”   said   the   squire;
  still   confident   in   his   own   powers   of   persuasion;   “you   must   not
  overwork   yourself;   but   don’t   you   think   your   work   will   rather   be
  lessened      than    increased     in   this  way?     There    is  so   much     milk
  required at the Abbey that you will have little   increase   of  cheese
  and butter making from the addition to your dairy; and   I believe
  selling   the   milk   is   the   most   profitable   way   of   disposing   of   dairy
  produce; is it not?”
  “Aye; that’s true;” said Mr。 Poyser; unable to repress an opinion
  on a question of farming profits; and forgetting that it was not in
  this case a purely abstract question。
  “I   daresay;”   said   Mrs。   Poyser   bitterly;   turning   her   head   half…
  way towards her husband and looking at the vacant arm…chair—“I
  daresay   it’s   true   for   men   as   sit   i’   th’   chimney…corner   and   make
  believe   as   everything’s   cut   wi’   ins   an’   outs   to   fit   int’   everything
  else。 If you could make a pudding wi’ thinking o’ the batter; it ’ud
  be   easy   getting   dinner。   How   do   I   know   whether   the   milk   ’ull   be
  wanted constant? What’s to make me sure as the house won’t be
  put o’ board wage afore we’re many months older; and then I may
  have     to  lie  awake     o’  nights    wi’  twenty     gallons    o’  milk   on   my
  mind—and Dingall ’ull take no more butter; let alone paying for it;
  and we must fat pigs till we’re obliged to beg the butcher on our
  knees to buy ’em; and lose half of ’em wi’ the measles。 And there’s
  the fetching and carrying; as ’ud be welly half a day’s work   for  a
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  man   an’   hoss—that’s   to   be   took   out   o’   the   profits;   I   reckon?   But
  there’s folks ’ud hold a sieve under the pump and expect to carry
  away the water。”
  “That difficulty—about the fetching and carrying—you will not
  have; Mrs。 Poyser;” said the squire; who thought that this entrance
  into  particulars  indicated a   distant   inclination   to   compromise   on
  Mrs。 Poyser’s part。 “Bethell will do that regularly with the cart and
  pony。”
  “Oh;   sir; begging   your   pardon;   I’ve   never   been   used   t’   having
  gentlefolks’s servants coming about my back places; a…making love
  to both the gells at once and keeping ’em with their hands on their
  hips listening to all manner  o’   gossip   when   they  should be   down
  on their knees a…scouring。 If we’re to go to ruin; it shanna be   wi’
  having our back kitchen turned into a public。”
  “Well; Poyser;” said the squire; shifting his tactics and looking
  as   if   he   thought   Mrs。   Poyser   had   suddenly   withdrawn   from   the
  proceedings   and   left   the   room;   “you   can   turn   the   Hollows   into
  feeding…land。       I  can    easily   make     another     arrangement        about
  supplying      my    house。   And    I  shall  not   forget   your   readiness     to
  accommodate   your   landlord   as   well   as   a   neighbour。   I   know   you
  will be glad to have your lease renewed for three years; when the
  present one expires; otherwise; I daresay Thurle; who is a man of
  some capital; would be glad to take both the farms; as they could
  be worked so well together。 But  I   don’t  want  to  part  with  an   old
  tenant like you。”
  To be thrust out of the discussion in this way would have been
  enough to complete Mrs。 Poyser’s exasperation; even without the
  final threat。 Her husband; really alarmed at the possibility of their
  leaving   the   old   place   where   he   had   been   bred   and   born—for   he
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  believed the old squire had small spite enough for anythin