Brownsmiths Boy - A Romance in a Garden - Page 162/241

In about an hour he finished his morning work in the vinery, and I went

out with him in the garden, where he left me to tidy up a great bed of

geraniums with a basket and a pair of scissors.

"I've got to see to the men now," he said. "By-and-by we'll go and have

a turn at the cucumbers."

The bed I was employed upon was right away from the house in a sort of

nook where the lawn ran up amongst some great Portugal laurels. It was

a mass of green and scarlet, surrounded by shortly cropped grass, and I

was very busy in the hot sunshine, enjoying my task, and now and then

watching the thrushes that kept hopping out on to the lawn and then back

under the shelter of the evergreens, when I suddenly saw a shadow, and,

turning sharply, found that my friend of the peach-house had come softly

up over the grass with another lad very much like him, but a little

taller, and probably a couple of years older.

"Hullo, pauper!" said the first.

I felt my cheeks tingle, and my tongue wanted to say something very

sharp, but I kept my teeth closed for a moment and then said: "Good morning, sir!"

He took no notice of this, but turned to his brother and whispered

something, when they both laughed together; and as I bent down over my

work I felt as if I must have looked very much like one of the scarlet

geraniums whose dead blossom stems I was taking out.

Of course, a boy with a well-balanced brain and plenty of sound, honest,

English stuff in him ought to be able to treat with contempt the jeering

and laughter of those who are teasing him; but somehow I'm afraid that

there are very few boys who can bear being laughed at with equanimity.

I know, to be frank, I could not, for as those two lads stared at me and

then looked at each other and whispered, and then laughed heartily--

well, no; not heartily, but in a forced way, I felt my face burn and my

fingers tingle. My mouth seemed to get a little dry, too, and the

thought came upon me in the midst of my sensations that I wanted to get

up and fight.

The circumstances were rather exceptional, for I was suffering from two

sore places. One started from my shoulder and went down my back, where

there must have been the mark of the cane; the other was a mental sore,

caused by the word pauper, which seemed to rankle and sting more than

the cut from the cane.

Of course I ought to have treated it as beneath my notice, but whoever

reads this will have found out before now that I was very far from

perfect; and as those two lads evidently saw my annoyance, and went on

trying to increase it, I bent over my work in a vicious way, and kept on

taking out the dead leaves and stems as if they were some of the enemies

Mr Solomon had been talking about in the pits.