Brownsmiths Boy - A Romance in a Garden - Page 45/241

I did not know what to say, so I said nothing.

We did not sit very long over our tea, for there was the cart to load up

with flowers for the morning's market, and soon after I was watching Ike

carefully packing in the great baskets along the bottom of the cart, and

then right over the shafts upon the broad projecting ladder, and also

upon that which was fitted in at the back.

"You keep account, Grant," said Old Brownsmith to me, and I entered the

number of baskets and their contents upon my slate, the old gentleman

going away and leaving me to transact this part of the business myself,

as I believe now, to give me confidence, for he carefully counted all

the baskets and checked them off when he came back.

Ike squinted at me fiercely several times as he helped to hoist in

several baskets, and for some time he did not speak, but at last he

stopped, took off his hat, drew a piece of cabbage leaf from the crown,

and carefully wiped his bald head with it, looking comically at me the

while.

"Green silk," he said gruffly, as he replaced the leaf. "Nature's own

growth. Never send 'em to the wash. Throw 'em away and use another."

I laughed at the idea, and this pleased Ike, who looked at me from top

to toe.

"You couldn't load a cart," he said at last.

"Couldn't I?" I replied. "Why not? It seems easy enough."

"Seems easy! of course it does, youngster. Seems easy to take a spade

and dig all day, but you try, and I'm sorry for your back and jyntes."

"But you've only got to put the baskets in the cart," I argued.

"Only got to put the baskets in the cart!" grumbled Ike. "Hark at him!"

"That's what you've been doing," I continued.

"What I've been doing!" he said. "I'm sorry for the poor horse if you

had the loading up. A cart ain't a wagon."

"Well, I know that," I said, "a wagon has four wheels, and a cart two."

"Send I may live," cried Ike. "Why, he is a clever boy. He knows a

cart's got two wheels and a wagon four."

He said this in a low serious voice, as if talking to himself, and

admiring my wisdom; but of course I could see that it was his way of

laughing at me, and I hastened to add: "Oh, you know what I mean!"

"Yes, I know what you mean, but you don't know what I mean, and if

you're so offle clever you'd best teach me, for I can't teach you."

"But I want you to teach me," I cried. "I've come here to learn. What

is there in particular in loading a cart?"