登陆注册
26542400000030

第30章

In no part of Edinburgh did summer come up earlier, or with more lavish bloom, than in old Greyfriars kirkyard.Sheltered on the north and east, it was open to the moist breezes of the southwest, and during all the lengthening afternoons the sun lay down its slope and warmed the rear windows of the overlooking tenements.Before the end of May the caretaker had much ado to keep the growth in order.Vines threatened to engulf the circling street of sepulchers in greenery and bloom, and grass to encroach on the flower plots.

A half century ago there were no rotary lawnmowers to cut off clover heads; and, if there had been, one could not have been used on these dropping terraces, so populous with slabs and so closely set with turfed mounds and oblongs of early flowering annuals and bedding plants.Mr.Brown had to get down on his hands and knees, with gardener's shears, to clip the turfed borders and banks, and take a sickle to the hummocks.Thus he could dig out a root of dandelion with the trowel kept ever in his belt, consider the spreading crocuses and valley lilies, whether to spare them, give a country violet its blossoming time, and leave a screening burdock undisturbed until fledglings were out of their nests in the shrubbery.

Mistress Jeanie often brought out a little old milking stool on balmy mornings, and sat with knitting or mending in one of the narrow aisles, to advise her gude-mon in small matters.Bobby trotted quietly about, sniffing at everything with the liveliest interest, head on this side or that, alertly.His business, learned in his first summer in Greyfriars, was to guard the nests of foolish skylarks, song-thrushes, redbreasts and wrens, that built low in lilac, laburnum, and flowering currant bushes, in crannies of wall and vault, and on the ground.It cannot but be a pleasant thing to be a wee young dog, full of life and good intentions, and to play one's dramatic part in ****** an old garden of souls tuneful with bird song.A cry of alarm from parent or nestling was answered instantly by the tiny, tousled policeman, and there was a prowler the less, or a skulking cat was sent flying over tomb and wall.

His duty done, without noise or waste of energy, Bobby returned to lie in the sun on Auld Jock's grave.Over this beloved mound a coverlet of rustic turf had been spread as soon as the frost was out of the ground, and a bonny briar bush planted at the head.

Then it bore nature's own tribute of flowers, for violets, buttercups, daisies and clover blossoms opened there and, later, a spike or so of wild foxglove and a knot of heather.Robin redbreasts and wrens foraged around Bobby, unafraid; swallows swooped down from their mud villages, under the dizzy dormers and gables, to flush the flies on his muzzle, and whole flocks of little blue titmice fluttered just overhead, in their rovings from holly and laurel to newly tasseled firs and yew trees.

The click of the wicket gate was another sort of alarm altogether.At that the little dog slipped under the fallen table-tomb and lay hidden there until any strange visitor had taken himself away.Except for two more forced returns and ingenious escapes from the sheepfarm on the Pentlands, Bobby had lived in the kirkyard undisturbed for six months.The caretaker had neither the heart to put him out nor the courage to face the minister and the kirk officers with a plea for him to remain.

The little dog's presence there was known, apparently, only to Mr.Traill, to a few of the tenement dwellers, and to the Heriot boys.If his life was clandestine in a way, it was as regular of hour and duty and as well ordered as that of the garrison in the Castle.

When the time-gun boomed, Bobby was let out for his midday meal at Mr.Traill's and for a noisy run about the neighborhood to exercise his lungs and legs.On Wednesdays he haunted the Grassmarket, sniffing at horses, carts and mired boots.Edinburgh had so many shaggy little Skye and Scotch terriers that one more could go about unremarked.Bobby returned to the kirkyard at his own good pleasure.In the evening he was given a supper of porridge and broo, or milk, at the kitchen door of the lodge, and the nights he spent on Auld Jock's grave.The morning drum and bugle woke him to the chase, and all his other hours were spent in close attendance on the labors of the caretaker.The click of the wicket gate was the signal for instant disappearance.

A scramble up the wall from Heriot's Hospital grounds, or the patter of bare feet on the gravel, however, was notice to come out and greet a friend.Bobby was host to the disinherited children of the tenements.Now, at the tap-tap-tapping of Tammy Barr's crutches, he scampered up the slope, and he suited his pace to the crippled boy's in coming down again.Tammy chose a heap of cut grass on which to sit enthroned and play king, a grand new crutch for a scepter, and Bobby for a courtier.At command, the little dog rolled over and over, begged, and walked on his hind legs.He even permitted a pair of thin little arms to come near strangling him, in an excess of affection.Then he wagged his tail and lolled his tongue to show that he was friendly, and trotted away about his business.Tammy took an oat-cake from his pocket to nibble, and began a conversation with Mistress Jeanie.

"I broucht a picnic wi' me."

"Did ye, noo? An' hoo did ye ken aboot picnics, laddie?""Maister Traill was tellin' Ailie an' me.There's ilka thing to mak' a picnic i' the kirkyaird.They couldna mak' my legs gude i'

the infairmary, but I'm gangin' to Heriot's.I'll juist hae to airn ma leevin' wi' ma heid, an' no' remember aboot ma legs, ava.

Is he no' a bonny doggie?"

"Ay, he's bonny.An' ye're a braw laddie no' to fash yersel'

aboot what canna be helped."

The wifie took his ragged jacket and mended it, dropped a tear in an impossible hole, and a ha'penny in the one good pocket.And by and by the pale laddie slept there among the bright graves, in the sun.After another false alarm from the gate she asked her gude-mon, as she had asked many times before:

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 弗雷尔女皇

    弗雷尔女皇

    “我以为重生到这个和地球相似的世界后,我依然会平平碌碌的度过一生,直到一块石板砸在我的头上,我才明白,我将获得无与伦比的力量。那么现在,我将向你们展示我的力量,出来吧!我的英雄,为我而战——寒冰射手艾……希?咦,人呢?”一个以为可以召唤英雄作战的少年在召唤后才发现,这场弗雷尔卓德统治战竟然要召唤师亲自撸起袖子上战场
  • 偏宠萌妻:赖上总裁100次

    偏宠萌妻:赖上总裁100次

    楚佳颜励志就是要做上一个正牌警察,一次抓嫌疑犯,却意外发现自己一直在寻找的仇敌?段氏集团总裁段景陵,俊美冰冷如斯,亦是一个狠绝、高高在上如帝王般的男人!到底只是段氏总裁大BOSS还是自己真正的仇人,试了才知道!费尽心机接近,可是却一步步地被外表高冷内心腹黑的总裁吞吃入腹?她才不要!她宁愿不报仇!高冷总裁却无比邪肆地一笑:哼,你赖了我那么多次,起码生一百个才准走!
  • 最强修仙高手

    最强修仙高手

    当修真者来到都市,以特殊体质吸引无数美女靠近,以嚣张霸道横行践踏恶人尊严,习得无上双修术,修的众女共枕眠,成就都市至尊之路!
  • 赌客信条:你不可不知的行为经济学

    赌客信条:你不可不知的行为经济学

    本书从商业、生活、处事、投资等角度将行为经济学讲得深入浅出。语言生动活泼,通过比喻和设问,把深奥的理论讲述得风生水起,引人人胜。经济学是解释人类抉择行为的学科,而行为经济学则将人类在抉择时的心理进行科学分析。如果读者需要阅读一本前卫、完整、有趣、耐读的行为经济学读物,那么《赌客信条:你不可不知的行为经济学》正是最理想的。
  • 邪皇霸宠盛世神医

    邪皇霸宠盛世神医

    她,隐世家族最小的子女,自幼拥有超强天赋。他,独挡一方的邪皇,只为她折腰。当她遇到他,他们将发生怎样的爱恨情仇。
  • 羽灵

    羽灵

    一念宰人死,二念度人生神魔道轮回,混沌主天地挥袖化万千,气吐铸天道神翼振翅飞,灵火焚大荒邪镰斩九幽,圣柱撑六道龙魂合九千,帝血释神威无双挡浩劫,潜龙战九荒
  • 太阳摩擦地球(千种豆瓣高分原创作品·看小说)

    太阳摩擦地球(千种豆瓣高分原创作品·看小说)

    那时候,轰隆隆的雷雨已经变成哗啦啦的中雨,马晓天在他姥姥的教导之下,正光着屁股在屋檐下洗澡。屋顶被雷雨前的太阳晒得滚烫,像一个巨大的太阳能热水器,把雨水也烘热了,从房檐的低矮处奔淌下来。马晓天洗得舒服,在那里哼哼唧唧,蹦蹦跳跳,小鸡鸡一颤一颤的,甚是活泼。过了一会儿,陈爱兰在做完针线之后也加入了进来,脱去衣衫,站在另一边的屋檐下,洗将起来,她干瘪的乳房在雨水冲刷下像是粗糙的石头,因下垂而显出些许沉重。有伤大雅地说一句,正是这个时候,马晓天才认识到,女人是没有小鸡鸡的,不过,他就这个问题的提问被陈爱兰一边嘿嘿地笑个不停,一边厉声喝止。
  • 穿越之迷案

    穿越之迷案

    在一场场看似巧合却又疑点重重的事件中,谁才是幕后真凶?沐飞羽,林初音两人又曾有着怎样的纠葛?谁是谁的劫难,谁又是谁的依靠?(本小说与宫斗无关,也没有粉红。不喜勿入。)
  • 古陆奇缘

    古陆奇缘

    今生,有太多未能实现的遗憾与梦想。离别时甚至未能与深爱的他告别,虞雪只盼望:来生,能够圆了今生未了的爱、继上今生未尽的缘。未知来生相见否,陌上却逢再少年。这是多少人的梦想,也是虞雪深藏在心底的愿望。重生之后,她这吴国小公主羽千雪,是否能够在这名曰古陆的大地上实现心愿?听过百年哀歌,耗尽千年的守候。穿越之后又几度生死的羽千雪终于明白了一件事,那就是:既然,这现实的世界存不住美好,容不下我对你的爱。那么,我就去梦中的世界等着你好了。到那时,请记住,一定要紧紧牵住我的手,再也不要松开、再也别让我独自离开了。
  • 无限之英雄学院

    无限之英雄学院

    身为普通人的夏超被一纸录取通知书招入了英雄学院,发现这所超凡的学院居然可以将学员们培养成英雄联盟里的英雄!然而学员必须在每月一次的月考中进入各个位面为学院而战,与梦魇空间的轮回者进行浴血厮杀。为了能在学院与梦魇空间的碰撞中更好的活下去,实现自己的愿望,夏超一步步挣扎着走向未知的前方。欢迎喜欢无限和英雄联盟的朋友来看看。PS:有时候我在幻想要是我也能拥有英雄联盟里一些英雄的技能就好了...于是就动手写了这本书。新人新书,求支持。