The Money Moon. Jeffery Farnol
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Название: The Money Moon

Автор: Jeffery Farnol

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Языкознание

Серия:

isbn: 4064066245030

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ strolled along the road, breathing an air fragrant with honey-suckle from the hedges, and full of the song of birds; pausing, now and then, to listen to the blythe carol of a sky-lark, or the rich; sweet notes of a black-bird, and feeling that it was indeed, good to be alive; so that, what with all this—the springy turf beneath his feet, and the blue expanse over-head, he began to whistle for very joy of it, until, remembering the Haunting Shadow of the Might Have Been, he checked himself, and sighed instead. Presently, turning from the road, he climbed a stile, and followed a narrow path that led away across the meadows, and, as he went, there met him a gentle wind laden with the sweet, warm scent of ripening hops, and fruit.

      On he went, and on—heedless of his direction until the sun grew low, and he grew hungry; wherefore, looking about, he presently espied a nook sheltered from the sun's level rays by a steep bank where flowers bloomed, and ferns grew. Here he sat down, unslinging his knap-sack, and here it was, also, that he first encountered Small Porges.

       Table of Contents

       How Small Porges in looking for a fortune for another, found an Uncle for Himself instead

      The meeting of George Bellew and Small Porges, (as he afterward came to be called), was sudden, precipitate, and wholly unexpected; and it befell on this wise:

      Bellew had opened his knap-sack, had fished thence cheese, clasp-knife, and a crusty loaf of bread, and, having exerted himself so far, had fallen a thinking or a dreaming, in his characteristic attitude, i.e.:—on the flat of his back, when he was aware of a crash in the hedge above, and then, of something that hurtled past him, all arms and legs, that rolled over two or three times, and eventually brought up in a sitting posture; and, lifting a lazy head, Bellew observed that it was a boy. He was a very diminutive boy with a round head covered with coppery curls, a boy who stared at Bellew out of a pair of very round, blue eyes, while he tenderly cherished a knee, and an elbow. He had been on the brink of tears for a moment, but meeting Bellew's quizzical gaze, he manfully repressed the weakness, and, lifting the small, and somewhat weather-beaten cap that found a precarious perch at the back of his curly head, he gravely wished Bellew "Good afternoon!"

      "Well met, my Lord Chesterfield!" nodded Bellew, returning the salute, "are you hurt?"

      "Just a bit—on the elbow; but my name's George."

      "Why—so is mine!" said Bellew.

      "Though they call me 'Georgy-Porgy.'"

      "Of course they do," nodded Bellew, "they used to call me the same, once upon a time—

      Georgy Porgy, pudding and pie

       Kissed the girls, and made them cry,

      though I never did anything of the kind—one doesn't do that sort of thing when one is young—and wise, that comes later, and brings its own care, and—er—heart-break." Here Bellew sighed, and hacked a piece from the loaf with the clasp-knife. "Are you hungry, Georgy Porgy?" he enquired, glancing up at the boy who had risen, and was removing some of the soil and dust from his small person with his cap.

      "Yes I am."

      "Then here is bread, and cheese, and bottled stout—so fall to, good comrade."

      "Thank you, but I've got a piece of bread an' jam in my bundle—"

      "Bundle?"

      "I dropped it as I came through the hedge, I'll get it," and as he spoke, he turned, and, climbing up the bank, presently came back with a very small bundle that dangled from the end of a very long stick, and seating himself beside Bellew, he proceeded to open it. There, sure enough, was the bread and jam in question, seemingly a little the worse for wear and tear, for Bellew observed various articles adhering to it, amongst other things, a battered penknife, and a top. These, however, were readily removed, and Georgy Porgy fell to with excellent appetite.

      "And pray," enquired Bellew, after they had munched silently together, some while, "pray where might you be going?"

      "I don't know yet," answered Georgy Porgy with a shake of his curls.

      "Good again!" exclaimed Bellew, "neither do I."

      "Though I've been thinking of Africa," continued his diminutive companion, turning the remain of the bread and jam over and over thoughtfully.

      "Africa!" repeated Bellew, staring, "that's quite a goodish step from here."

      "Yes," sighed Georgy Porgy, "but, you see, there's gold there, oh, lots of it! they dig it out of the ground with shovels, you know. Old Adam told me all 'bout it; an' it's gold I'm looking for, you see, I'm trying to find a fortune."

      "I—er—beg your pardon—?" said Bellew.

      "Money, you know," explained Georgy Porgy with a patient sigh, "pounds, an' shillings, an' bank-notes—in a sack if I can get them."

      "And what does such a very small Georgy Porgy want so much money for?"

      "Well, it's for my Auntie, you know, so she won't have to sell her house, an' go away from Dapplemere. She was telling me, last night, when I was in bed—she always comes to tuck me up, you know, an' she told me she was 'fraid we'd have to sell Dapplemere an' go to live somewhere else. So I asked why, an' she said ''cause she hadn't any money,' an' 'Oh Georgy!' she said, 'oh Georgy, if we could only find enough money to pay off the—the—'"

      "Mortgage?" suggested Bellew, at a venture.

      "Yes—that's it, but how did you know?"

      "Never mind how, go on with your tale, Georgy Porgy."

      "'If—we could only find enough money, or somebody would leave us a fortune,' she said—an' she was crying too, 'cause I felt a tear fall on me, you know. So this morning I got up, awful' early, an' made myself a bundle on a stick—like Dick Whittington had when he left home, an' I started off to find a fortune."

      "I see," nodded Bellew.

      "But I haven't found anything—yet," said Georgy Porgy, with a long sigh, "I s'pose money takes a lot of looking for, doesn't it?"

      "Sometimes," Bellew answered. "And do you live alone with your Auntie then, Georgy Porgy?"

      "Yes;—most boys live with their mothers, but that's where I'm different, I don't need one 'cause I've got my Auntie Anthea."

      "Anthea!" repeated Bellew, thoughtfully. Hereupon they fell silent, Bellew watching the smoke curl up from his pipe into the warm, still air, and Georgy Porgy watching him with very thoughtful eyes, and a somewhat troubled brow, as if turning over some weighty matter in his mind; at last, he spoke:

      "Please," said he, with a sudden diffidence, "where do you live?"

      "Live," repeated Bellew, smiling, "under my hat—here, there, and everywhere, which means—nowhere in particular."

      "But I—I mean—where is your home?"

      "My home," said Bellew, exhaling a great cloud of smoke, "my home lies beyond the 'bounding billow."

      "That СКАЧАТЬ