登陆注册
26240900000031

第31章

Protestant young gentlemen-The Greek letters-Open chimney-Murtagh-Paris and Salamanca-Nothing to do-To whit,to whoo!-The pack of cards-Before Christmas.

WE continued at this place for some months,during which time the soldiers performed their duties,whatever they were;and I,having no duties to perform,was sent to school.I had been to English schools,and to the celebrated one of Edinburgh;but my education,at the present day,would not be what it is-perfect,had I never had the honour of being ALUMNUS in an Irish seminary.

'Captain,'said our kind host,'you would,no doubt,wish that the young gentleman should enjoy every advantage which the town may afford towards helping him on in the path of genteel learning.

It's a great pity that he should waste his time in idleness-doing nothing else than what he says he has been doing for the last fortnight-fishing in the river for trouts which he never catches;and wandering up the glen in the mountain,in search of the hips that grow there.Now,we have a school here,where he can learn the most elegant Latin,and get an insight into the Greek letters,which is desirable;and where,moreover,he will have an opportunity of ****** acquaintance with all the Protestant young gentlemen of the place,the handsome well-dressed young persons whom your honour sees in the church on the Sundays,when your honour goes there in the morning,with the rest of the Protestant military;for it is no Papist school,though there may be a Papist or two there-a few poor farmers'sons from the country,with whom there is no necessity for your honour's child to form any acquaintance at all,at all!'

And to the school I went,where I read the Latin tongue and the Greek letters,with a nice old clergyman,who sat behind a black oaken desk,with a huge Elzevir Flaccus before him,in a long gloomy kind of hall,with a broken stone floor,the roof festooned with cobwebs,the walls considerably dilapidated,and covered over with strange figures and hieroglyphics,evidently produced by the application of burnt stick;and there I made acquaintance with the Protestant young gentlemen of the place,who,with whatever ECLATthey might appear at church on a Sunday,did assuredly not exhibit to much advantage in the schoolroom on the week days,either with respect to clothes or looks.And there I was in the habit of sitting on a large stone,before the roaring fire in the huge open chimney,and entertaining certain of the Protestant young gentlemen of my own age,seated on similar stones,with extraordinary accounts of my own adventures,and those of the corps,with an occasional anecdote extracted from the story-books of Hickathrift and Wight Wallace,pretending to be conning the lesson all the while.

And there I made acquaintance,notwithstanding the hint of the landlord,with the Papist 'gossoons,'as they were called,the farmers'sons from the country;and of these gossoons,of whom there were three,two might be reckoned as nothing at all;in the third,however,I soon discovered that there was something extraordinary.

He was about sixteen years old,and above six feet high,dressed in a gray suit;the coat,from its size,appeared to have been made for him some ten years before.He was remarkably narrow-chested and round-shouldered,owing,perhaps as much to the tightness of his garment as to the hand of nature.His face was long,and his complexion swarthy,relieved,however,by certain freckles,with which the skin was plentifully studded.He had strange wandering eyes,gray,and somewhat unequal in size;they seldom rested on the book,but were generally wandering about the room,from one object to another.Sometimes he would fix them intently on the wall,and then suddenly starting,as if from a reverie,he would commence ****** certain mysterious movements with his thumbs and forefingers,as if he were shuffling something from him.

One morning,as he sat by himself on a bench,engaged in this manner,I went up to him,and said,'Good-day,Murtagh;you do not seem to have much to do?'

'Faith,you may say that,Shorsha dear!-it is seldom much to do that I have.'

'And what are you doing with your hands?'

'Faith,then,if I must tell you,I was e'en dealing with the cards.'

'Do you play much at cards?'

同类推荐
  • 韬晦术

    韬晦术

    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。
  • 潘子求仁录辑要

    潘子求仁录辑要

    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。
  • 丁鹤年集

    丁鹤年集

    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。
  • 福王登极实录

    福王登极实录

    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。
  • 楚辞芳草谱

    楚辞芳草谱

    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
  • 小丫头的御用少爷

    小丫头的御用少爷

    她出生贵族,入学的时候却遇上了三个极品少爷。她是不是桃花运泛滥?少爷们一个个对她温柔似水,霸着她的床不说,还天天偷亲她,看她脸红的样子,还和她装可爱,这都是对她表示友好吗?他们或冠绝古今或倾城绝色,却偏偏恋上迷糊般的她。最纯最笨最迷糊!最呆最傻最娇艳!
  • 人间使者

    人间使者

    死亡不是最可怕的事情,最可怕的是心思,人活着,
  • 交叠的影子

    交叠的影子

    可爱的女主是一个机智的侦探,朋友很多,喜欢帮助别人,可是最后她发现……
  • 水晶公主之觉醒

    水晶公主之觉醒

    上官悠浅一直认为自己是世上最幸福的人,然而在她20岁这年发生了许多让她难以理解的事:最爱的哥哥姐姐看她的眼神充满敬畏?!身边越来越多的复姓人?脑海里那是谁的身影?脑海中闪过那些奇怪的咒语。。。一步步接近真相的她,该相信他们的话么?
  • 玄青云大陆

    玄青云大陆

    我本中庸,想要的生活很简单:倚楼听风雨,淡看江湖路!愿得一人心,白首不分离!但,奈何现实与我不如意!弱者,只能任人宰割,受人欺凌!我要变强!实力!实力!唯有拥有了别人不可匹敌的实力,才能做自己想做的事!
  • 尖兵教头

    尖兵教头

    罗天,曾经的兵中之王,今日的尖兵教练,不,不,他不仅仅是教练,还是教练中的教练,手段残忍,态度坚决,纨绔子弟通通镇压,俊男美女辣手摧花…人称阎罗王。麾下十万……额,十个精兵,各有本领,军中称霸,无人制衡……然谁人知让敌人闻风丧胆的阎罗王竟年仅三十岁,正直壮年,英俊潇洒?军中绿花,红花,黄花……通通不受控制了……阎罗王面对这一切心里默默念叨:来吧,来吧,让你们尝尝本教头的厉害……
  • 读心笔记

    读心笔记

    一对男女从甜蜜恋爱到成为夫妻,最后却阴阳两隔的的前生今世恩怨;一对母子由母亲对儿子的极度疼爱到形同陌路;一对婆媳从纠纷不断到亲如母女,这一切是为了什么?这是一个心理学爱好者因起初的乐于助人,到成为邻里、朋友信任的倾诉对象所留下的惊心记录。
  • 王者之地

    王者之地

    《王者之地》讲述了:成吉思汗率蒙古大军西征时,途经鄂尔多斯。他目睹了这里水草丰美,梅花鹿出没,是一块风水宝地,留恋之际,失手将马鞭掉在地上。部下正要拾起马鞭时,被成吉思汗制止了,他发出由衷的赞叹:“这里是梅花鹿儿栖身之所,戴胜鸟儿育雏之乡,衰落王朝振兴之地,白发老翁享乐之邦。”感慨之余嘱咐左右:“我闭眼之后可葬于此处。成吉思汗贺崩后,这里建筑了万世永存的成吉思汗陵,这里成了大汗灵魂保佑下的王者之地,这里演绎了蒙古儿女崇敬祖先、热爱家乡的一系列传奇故事……
  • 盛世欢宠:小小妻最嚣张

    盛世欢宠:小小妻最嚣张

    初见,他说:跟我回家。再见,他紧握着她的手:你姐姐把你卖给我了。三见,他跪在她面前:嫁给我吧。安若暖第N次强调:叔叔,我们不约,我们真的不约。霍承睿分外委屈地从背后拎出一个小人儿:宝贝儿,你妈妈始乱终弃,我们该怎么办?
  • 剑仙狂神

    剑仙狂神

    荒原仙界,六族争霸。人域之中,九大仙门纷争不断。身怀先天剑体的聂天风,携带无上至宝混沌珠,化成天外神兵意外降临这片大陆。他修为尽毁,却成了冷傲仙子誓言中的伴侣,有着随时都可能将门派覆灭的强大情敌......踩强敌,诛异族,抱美人,探寻父母身世......