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<h2> CHAPTER XIV </h2>
<h3> Elsie Duff </h3>
<p>How all the boys and girls stared at me, as timidly, yet with a sense of
importance derived from the distinction of having been so ill, I entered
the parish school one morning, about ten o'clock! For as I said before, I
had gone to school for some months before I was taken ill. It was a very
different affair from Dame Shand's tyrannical little kingdom. Here were
boys of all ages, and girls likewise, ruled over by an energetic young
man, with a touch of genius, manifested chiefly in an enthusiasm for
teaching. He had spoken to me kindly the first day I went, and had so
secured my attachment that it never wavered, not even when, once,
supposing me guilty of a certain breach of orders committed by my next
neighbour, he called me up, and, with more severity than usual, ordered me
to hold up my hand. The lash stung me dreadfully, but I was able to smile
in his face notwithstanding. I could not have done that had I been guilty.
He dropped his hand, already lifted for the second blow, and sent me back
to my seat. I suppose either his heart interfered, or he saw that I was
not in need of more punishment. The greatest good he did me, one for which
I shall be ever grateful, was the rousing in me of a love for English
literature, especially poetry. But I cannot linger upon this at present,
tempting although it be. I have led a busy life in the world since, but it
has been one of my greatest comforts when the work of the day was over—dry
work if it had not been that I had it to do—to return to my books,
and live in the company of those who were greater than myself, and had had
a higher work in life than mine. The master used to say that a man was fit
company for any man whom he could understand, and therefore I hope often
that some day, in some future condition of existence, I may look upon the
faces of Milton and Bacon and Shakspere, whose writings have given me so
much strength and hope throughout my life here.</p>
<p>The moment he saw me, the master came up to me and took me by the hand,
saying he was glad to see me able to come to school again.</p>
<p>"You must not try to do too much at first," he added.</p>
<p>This set me on my mettle, and I worked hard and with some success. But
before the morning was over I grew very tired, and fell fast asleep with
my head on the desk. I was informed afterwards that the master had
interfered when one of my class-fellows was trying to wake me, and told
him to let me sleep.</p>
<p>When one o'clock came, I was roused by the noise of dismissal for the two
hours for dinner. I staggered out, still stupid with sleep, and whom
should I find watching for me by the door-post but Turkey!</p>
<p>"Turkey!" I exclaimed; "you here!"</p>
<p>"Yes, Ranald," he said; "I've put the cows up for an hour or two, for it
was very hot; and Kirsty said I might come and carry you home."</p>
<p>So saying he stooped before me, and took me on his strong back. As soon as
I was well settled, he turned his head, and said:</p>
<p>"Ranald, I should like to go and have a look at my mother. Will you come?
There's plenty of time."</p>
<p>"Yes, please, Turkey," I answered. "I've never seen your mother."</p>
<p>He set off at a slow easy trot, and bore me through street and lane until
we arrived at a two-storey house, in the roof of which his mother lived.
She was a widow, and had only Turkey. What a curious place her little
garret was! The roof sloped down on one side to the very floor, and there
was a little window in it, from which I could see away to the manse, a
mile off, and far beyond it. Her bed stood in one corner, with a check
curtain hung from a rafter in front of it. In another was a chest, which
contained all their spare clothes, including Turkey's best garments, which
he went home to put on every Sunday morning. In the little grate
smouldered a fire of oak-bark, from which all the astringent virtue had
been extracted in the pits at the lanyard, and which was given to the poor
for nothing.</p>
<p>Turkey's mother was sitting near the little window, spinning. She was a
spare, thin, sad-looking woman, with loving eyes and slow speech.</p>
<p>"Johnnie!" she exclaimed, "what brings you here? and who's this you've
brought with you?"</p>
<p>Instead of stopping her work as she spoke, she made her wheel go faster
than before; and I gazed with admiration at her deft fingering of the
wool, from which the thread flowed in a continuous line, as if it had been
something plastic, towards the revolving spool.</p>
<p>"It's Ranald Bannerman," said Turkey quietly. "I'm his horse. I'm taking
him home from the school. This is the first time he's been there since he
was ill."</p>
<p>Hearing this, she relaxed her labour, and the hooks which had been
revolving so fast that they were invisible in a mist of motion, began to
dawn into form, until at length they revealed their shape, and at last
stood quite still. She rose, and said:</p>
<p>"Come, Master Ranald, and sit down. You'll be tired of riding such a rough
horse as that."</p>
<p>"No, indeed," I said; "Turkey is not a rough horse; he's the best horse in
the world."</p>
<p>"He always calls me Turkey, mother, because of my nose," said Turkey,
laughing.</p>
<p>"And what brings you here?" asked his mother. "This is not on the road to
the manse."</p>
<p>"I wanted to see if you were better, mother."</p>
<p>"But what becomes of the cows?"</p>
<p>"Oh! they're all safe enough. They know I'm here."</p>
<p>"Well, sit down and rest you both," she said, resuming her own place at
the wheel. "I'm glad to see you, Johnnie, so be your work is not
neglected. I must go on with mine."</p>
<p>Thereupon Turkey, who had stood waiting his mother's will, deposited me
upon her bed, and sat down beside me.</p>
<p>"And how's your papa, the good man?" she said to me.</p>
<p>I told her he was quite well.</p>
<p>"All the better that you're restored from the grave, I don't doubt," she
said.</p>
<p>I had never known before that I had been in any danger.</p>
<p>"It's been a sore time for him and you too," she added. "You must be a
good son to him, Ranald, for he was in a great way about you, they tell
me."</p>
<p>Turkey said nothing, and I was too much surprised to know what to say; for
as often as my father had come into my room, he had always looked
cheerful, and I had had no idea that he was uneasy about me.</p>
<p>After a little more talk, Turkey rose, and said we must be going.</p>
<p>"Well, Ranald," said his mother, "you must come and see me any time when
you're tired at the school, and you can lie down and rest yourself a bit.
Be a good lad, Johnnie, and mind your work."</p>
<p>"Yes, mother, I'll try," answered Turkey cheerfully, as he hoisted me once
more upon his back. "Good day, mother," he added, and left the room.</p>
<p>I mention this little incident because it led to other things afterwards.
I rode home upon Turkey's back; and with my father's leave, instead of
returning to school that day, spent the afternoon in the fields with
Turkey.</p>
<p>In the middle of the field where the cattle were that day, there was a
large circular mound. I have often thought since that it must have been a
barrow, with dead men's bones in the heart of it, but no such suspicion
had then crossed my mind. Its sides were rather steep, and covered with
lovely grass. On the side farthest from the manse, and without one human
dwelling in sight, Turkey and I lay that afternoon, in a bliss enhanced to
me, I am afraid, by the contrasted thought of the close, hot, dusty
schoolroom, where my class-fellows were talking, laughing, and wrangling,
or perhaps trying to work in spite of the difficulties of after-dinner
disinclination. A fitful little breeze, as if itself subject to the
influence of the heat, would wake up for a few moments, wave a few heads
of horse-daisies, waft a few strains of odour from the blossoms of the
white clover, and then die away fatigued with the effort. Turkey took out
his Jews' harp, and discoursed soothing if not eloquent strains.</p>
<p>At our feet, a few yards from the mound, ran a babbling brook, which
divided our farm from the next. Those of my readers whose ears are open to
the music of Nature, must have observed how different are the songs sung
by different brooks. Some are a mere tinkling, others are sweet as silver
bells, with a tone besides which no bell ever had. Some sing in a
careless, defiant tone. This one sung in a veiled voice, a contralto
muffled in the hollows of overhanging banks, with a low, deep, musical
gurgle in some of the stony eddies, in which a straw would float for days
and nights till a flood came, borne round and round in a funnel-hearted
whirlpool. The brook was deep for its size, and had a good deal to say in
a solemn tone for such a small stream. We lay on the side of the hillock,
I say, and Turkey's Jews' harp mingled its sounds with those of the brook.
After a while he laid it aside, and we were both silent for a time.</p>
<p>At length Turkey spoke.</p>
<p>"You've seen my mother, Ranald."</p>
<p>"Yes, Turkey."</p>
<p>"She's all I've got to look after."</p>
<p>"I haven't got any mother to look after, Turkey."</p>
<p>"No. You've a father to look after you. I must do it, you know. My father
wasn't over good to my mother. He used to get drunk sometimes, and then he
was very rough with her. I must make it up to her as well as I can. She's
not well off, Ranald."</p>
<p>"Isn't she, Turkey?"</p>
<p>"No. She works very hard at her spinning, and no one spins better than my
mother. How could they? But it's very poor pay, you know, and she'll be
getting old by and by."</p>
<p>"Not to-morrow, Turkey."</p>
<p>"No, not to-morrow, nor the day after," said Turkey, looking up with some
surprise to see what I meant by the remark.</p>
<p>He then discovered that my eyes had led my thoughts astray, and that what
he had been saying about his mother had got no farther than into my ears.
For on the opposite side of the stream, on the grass, like a shepherdess
in an old picture, sat a young girl, about my own age, in the midst of a
crowded colony of daisies and white clover, knitting so that her needles
went as fast as Kirsty's, and were nearly as invisible as the thing with
the hooked teeth in it that looked so dangerous and ran itself out of
sight upon Turkey's mother's spinning-wheel. A little way from her was a
fine cow feeding, with a long iron chain dragging after her. The girl was
too far off for me to see her face very distinctly; but something in her
shape, her posture, and the hang of her head, I do not know what, had
attracted me.</p>
<p>"Oh! there's Elsie Duff," said Turkey, himself forgetting his mother in
the sight—"with her granny's cow! I didn't know she was coming here
to-day."</p>
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<p>"How is it," I asked, "that she is feeding her on old James Joss's land?"</p>
<p>"Oh! they're very good to Elsie, you see. Nobody cares much about her
grandmother; but Elsie's not her grandmother, and although the cow belongs
to the old woman, yet for Elsie's sake, this one here and that one there
gives her a bite for it—that's a day's feed generally. If you look
at the cow, you'll see she's not like one that feeds by the roadsides.
She's as plump as needful, and has a good udderful of milk besides."</p>
<p>"I'll run down and tell her she may bring the cow into this field
to-morrow," I said, rising.</p>
<p>"I would if it were <i>mine</i>" said Turkey, in a marked tone, which I
understood.</p>
<p>"Oh! I see, Turkey," I said. "You mean I ought to ask my father."</p>
<p>"Yes, to be sure, I do mean that," answered Turkey.</p>
<p>"Then it's as good as done," I returned. "I will ask him to-night."</p>
<p>"She's a good girl, Elsie," was all Turkey's reply.</p>
<p>How it happened I cannot now remember, but I know that, after all, I did
not ask my father, and Granny Gregson's cow had no bite either off the
glebe or the farm. And Turkey's reflections concerning the mother he had
to take care of having been interrupted, the end to which they were moving
remained for the present unuttered.</p>
<p>I soon grew quite strong again, and had neither plea nor desire for
exemption from school labours. My father also had begun to take me in hand
as well as my brother Tom; and what with arithmetic and Latin together,
not to mention geography and history, I had quite enough to do, and quite
as much also as was good for me.</p>
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