Brownsmiths Boy - A Romance in a Garden - Page 3/241

Where there were no gooseberries or currants, the rows of rhubarb plants

used to send up their red stems and great green leaves; and in other

places there would be great patches of wallflowers, from which wafts of

delicious scent would come in at the open window. In the spring there

would be great rows of red and yellow tulips, and later on sweet-william

and rockets, and purple and yellow pansies in great beds.

I used to wonder that such a boy was allowed to go loose in such a

garden as that, among those flowers and strawberry beds, and, above all,

apples, and pears, and plums, for in the autumn time the trees trained

up against the high red-brick wall were covered with purple and yellow

plums, and the rosy apples peeped from among the green leaves, and the

pears would hang down till it seemed as if the branches must break.

But that boy went about just as he liked, and it often seemed very hard

that such a shaggy-looking wild fellow in rags should have the run of

such a beautiful garden, while I had none.

There was a little single opera-glass on the chimney-piece which I used

to take down and focus, so that I could see the fruit that was ripe, and

the fruit that was green, and the beauty of the flowers. I used to

watch the birds building through that glass, and could almost see the

eggs in one little mossy cup of a chaffinch's nest; but I could not

quite. I did see the tips of the young birds' beaks, though, when they

were hatched and the old ones came to feed them.

It was by means of that glass that I could see how the boy fastened up

his trousers with one strap and a piece of string, for he had no braces,

and there were no brace buttons. Those corduroy trousers had been made

for somebody else, I should say for a man, and pieces of the legs had

been cut off, and the upper part came well over his back and chest. He

had no waistcoat, but he wore a jacket that must have belonged to a man.

It was a jacket that was fustian behind, and had fustian sleeves, but

the front was of purple plush with red and yellow flowers, softened down

with dirt; and the sleeves of this jacket were tucked up very high,

while the bottom came down to his knees.

He did not wear a hat, but the crown of an old straw bonnet, the top of

which had come unsewed, and rose and fell like the lid of a round box

with one hinge, and when the lid blew open you could see his shaggy

hair, which seemed as if it had never been brushed since it first came

up out of his skin.