Tom Brown at Oxford - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
"Good day, Simon; it's a pleasure to see a garden looking so gay as yours."
Simon looked up from his work, and, when he saw who it was, touched his battered old hat, and answered,--
"Mornin' sir! Ees, you finds me allus in blume"
"Indeed I do, Simon; but how do you manage it? I should like to tell my father's gardener."
"'Tis no use to tell un if a haven't found out for hisself. 'Tis nothing but lookin' a bit forrard and farm-yard stuff as does it."
"Well, there's plenty of farm-yard stuff at home, and yet, somehow, we never look half so bright as you do."
"May be as your gardener just takes and hits it auver the top o'
the ground, and lets it lie. That's no kind o' good, that beant--'tis the roots as wants the stuff; and you med jist as well take and put a round o' beef agin my back bwone as. .h.i.t the stuff auver the ground, and never see as it gets to the roots o'
the plants."
"No, I don't think it can be that," said Tom laughing; "our gardener seems always to be digging his manure in, but somehow he can't make it come out in flowers as you do."
"Ther' be mwore waays o' killin' a cat besides choking on un wi'
crame," said Simon, chuckling in his turn.
"That's true Simon," said Tom; "the fact is, a gardener must know his business as well as you to be always in bloom, eh?"
"That's about it, sir," said Simon, on whom the flattery was beginning to tell.
Tom saw this, and thought he might now feel his way a little further with the old man.
"I'm over on a sad errand," he said; "I've been to poor Widow Winburn's funeral--she was an old friend of yours, I think?"
"Ees; I minds her long afore she wur married," said Simon, turning to his pots again.
"She wasn't an old woman, after all," said Tom.
"Sixty-two year old c.u.m Michaelmas," said Simon.
"Well, she ought to have been a strong woman for another ten years at least; why, you must be older than she by some years, Simon, and you can do a good day's work yet with any man."
Simon went on with his potting without replying except by a carefully measured grunt, sufficient to show that he had heard the remark, and was not much impressed by it.
Tom saw that he must change his attack; so, after watching Simon for a minute, he began again.
"I wonder why it is that the men of your time of life are so much stronger than the young ones in const.i.tution. Now, I don't believe there are three young men in Englebourn who would have got over that fall you had at Farmer Groves' so quick as you have; most young men would have been crippled for life by it."
"Zo 'em would, the young wosbirds. I dwont make no account on 'em," said Simon.
"And you don't feel any the worse for it, Simon?"
"Narra mossel," replied Simon; but presently he seemed to recollect something, and added, "I wun't saay but what I feels it at times when I've got to stoop about much."
"Ah, I'm sorry to hear that, Simon. Then you oughtn't to have so much stooping to do; potting, and that sort of thing, is the work for you, I should think, and just giving an eye to everything about the place. Anybody could do the digging and setting out cabbages, and your time is only wasted at it."--Tom had now found the old man's weak point.
"Ees, sir, and so I tells miss," he said, "but wi' nothin' but a bit o' gla.s.s no bigger'n a cowc.u.mber frame, 'tis all as a man can do to keep a few plants alive droo' the winter."
"Of course," said Tom, looking round at the very respectable greenhouse which Simon had contemptuously likened to a cuc.u.mber-frame, "you ought to have at least another house as big as this for forcing."
"Master ain't pleased, he ain't," said Simon, "if he dwon't get his things, his spring wegetables, and his strawberries, as early as though we'd a got forcin' pits and gla.s.s like other folk. 'Tis a year and mwore since he promised as I sh'd hev gla.s.s along that ther' wall, but 'tis no nigher comin' as I can see. I be to spake to miss about it now, and, when I spakes to her, 'tis, 'oh, Simon, we must wait till the 'spensary's 'stablished,' or 'oh, Simon, last winter wur a werry tryin wun, and the sick club's terrible bad off for funds,'--and so we gwoes on, and med gwo on for aught as I can see, so long as there's a body sick or bad off in all the parish. And that'll be all us. For, what wi' wisitin'
on 'em, and sendin' on 'em dinners, and a'al the doctor's stuff as is served out o' the 'spensary--wy, 'tis enough to keep 'em bad a'al ther' lives. Ther ain't no credit in gettin' well. Ther'
wur no sich a caddle about sick folk when I wur a bwoy."
Simon had never been known to make such a long speech before, and Tom argued well for his negotiation.
"Well, Simon," he said, "I've been talking to my cousin, and I think she will do what you want now. The dispensary is set up, and the people are very healthy. How much gla.s.s should you want, now, along that wall?"
"A matter o' twenty fit or so," said Simon.
"I think that can be managed," said Tom; "I'll speak to my cousin about it; and then you would have plenty to do in the houses, and you'd want a regular man under you."
"Ees; 'twould take two on us reg'lar to kep things as they should be."
"And you ought to have somebody who knows what he is about. Can you think of anyone who would do, Simon?"
"Ther's a young chap as works for Squire Wurley. I've heard as he wants to better hisself."
"But he isn't an Englebourn man. Isn't there anyone in the parish?"
"Ne'er a one as I knows on."
"What do you think of Harry Winburn--he seems a good hand with flowers?" The words had scarcely pa.s.sed his lips when Tom saw that he had made a mistake. Old Simon retired into himself at once, and a cunning, distrustful look came over his face. There was no doing anything with him. Even the new forcing house had lost its attractions for him, and Tom, after some further ineffectual attempts to bring him round, returned to the house somewhat crestfallen.
"Well, how have you succeeded?" said Katie, looking up from her work, as he came in and sat down near her table. Tom shook his head.
"I'm afraid I've made a regular hash of it," he said. "I thought at first I had quite come round the old savage by praising the garden, and promising that you would let him have a new house."
"You don't mean to say you did that?" said Katie, stopping her work.
"Indeed, but I did, though. I was drawn on, you know. I saw it was the right card to play; so I couldn't help it."
"Oh, Tom! how could you do so? We don't want another house the least in the world; it is only Simon's vanity. He wants to beat the gardener at the grange at the flower shows. Every penny will have to come out of what papa allows me for the parish."
"Don't be afraid, Katie; you won't have to spend a penny. Of course I reserved a condition. The new house was to be put up if he would take Harry as an under-gardener.
"What did he say to that?"
"Well, he said nothing. I never came across such an old Turk. How you have spoiled him! If he isn't pleased, he won't take the trouble to answer you a word. I was very near telling him a piece of my mind. But he _looked_ all the more. I believe he would poison Harry if he came here. What can have made him hate him so?"
"He is jealous of him. Mary and I were so foolish as to praise poor Betty's flowers before Simon, and he has never forgiven it.
I think, too, that he suspects, somehow, that we talked about getting Harry here. I ought to have told you, but I quite forgot it."
"Well, it can't be helped. I don't think I can do any good in that quarter; so now I shall be off to the Grange to see what I can do there."