Brownsmiths Boy - A Romance in a Garden - Page 100/241

I could almost have fancied that there was some truth in Ike's

declaration about old Basket or Bonyparty, as he called him, for

certainly he seemed to quicken his pace as we drew nearer; and so it was

that, as we turned into the busy market, and the horse made its way to

one particular spot at the south-east corner, Ike triumphantly pointed

to the church clock we had just passed.

"What did I tell yer?" he exclaimed with a grim smile of satisfaction on

his countenance; "he picked up them lost ten minutes, and here we are--

just four."

What a scene it seemed to me. The whole place packed with laden cart,

wagon, and light van. Noise, confusion, and shouting, pleasant smells

and evil smells--flowers and crushed cabbage; here it was peas and mint,

there it was strawberries; then a whole wagon announced through the

sides of its piled-up baskets that the load was cauliflowers.

For a time I could do nothing but gape and stare around at the bustling

crowd and the number of men busily carrying great baskets on the top of

porters' knots. Women, too, in caps, ready to put the same great pad

round forehead and make it rest upon their shoulders, and bear off great

boxes of fruit or baskets of vegetable.

Here I saw a complete stack of bushel baskets being regularly built up

from the unloading of a wagon, to know by the scent they were early

peas; a little farther on, some men seemed to be making a bastion for

the defence of the market by means of gabions, which, to add to the

fancy, were not filled with sand, but with large round gravel of a pale

whitish-yellow, only a closer inspection showed that the contents were

new potatoes.

The strawberries took my attention, though, most, for I felt quite a

feeling of sorrow for Old Brownsmith as I saw what seemed to me to be

such a glut of the rich red fruit that I was sure those which we had

brought up would not sell.

How delicious they smelt in the old-fashioned pottles which we never see

now--long narrow cones, with a cross-handle, over which, when filled, or

supposed to be filled, for a big strawberry would block up the narrow

part of the cone at times, a few leaves were placed, and then a piece of

white paper was tied over with a bit of bast. Nowadays deep and shallow

punnets are the order of the day, and a good thing too.

Flowers! There seemed to me enough to last London for a month; and I

was going, after a look round, to tell Ike that I was afraid we should

have to take our load back, when I felt a heavy thump on the back of my

head, which knocked off my cap.