Brownsmiths Boy - A Romance in a Garden - Page 1/241

I always felt as if I should like to punch that boy's head, and then

directly after I used to feel as if I shouldn't care to touch him,

because he looked so dirty and ragged.

It was not dirty dirt, if you know what I mean by that, but dirt that he

gathered up in his work--bits of hay and straw, and dust off a shed

floor; mud over his boots and on his toes, for you could see that the

big boots he wore seemed to be like a kind of coarse rough shell with a

great open mouth in front, and his toes used to seem as if they lived in

there as hermit-crabs do in whelk shells. They used to play about in

there and waggle this side and that side when he was standing still

looking at you; and I used to think that some day they would come a

little way out and wait for prey like the different molluscs I had read

about in my books.

But you should have seen his hands! I've seen them so coated with dirt

that it hung on them in knobs, and at such times he used to hold them up

to me with the thumbs and fingers spread out wide, and then down he

would go again and continue his work, which, when he was in this state,

would be pulling up the weeds from among the onions in the long beds.

I didn't want him to do it, but he used to see me at the window looking

out; and I being one lonely boy in the big pond of life, and he being

another lonely boy in the same big pond, and both floating about like

bits of stick, he seemed as if he wanted to gravitate towards me as bits

of stick do to each other, and in his uncouth way he would do all sorts

of things to attract my attention.

Sometimes it seemed as if it was to frighten me, at others to show how

clever he was; but of course I know now that it was all out of the

superabundant energy he had in him, and the natural longing of a boy for

a companion.

I'll just tell you what he'd do. After showing me his muddy fingers,

and crawling along and digging them as hard as he could into the soil to

tear out the weeds, all at once he would kick his heels up in the air

like a donkey. Then he would go on weeding again, look to see if I was

watching him, and leave his basket and run down between two onion beds

on all-fours like a dog, run back, and go on with his work.