The Amateur Gentleman - Page 14/395

Oh, Spirit of Youth, to whose fearless eyes all things are matters

to wonder at; oh, brave, strong Spirit of Youth, to whom dangers are

but trifles to smile at, and death itself but an adventure; to thee,

since failure is unknown, all things are possible, and thou mayest,

peradventure, make the world thy football, juggle with the stars,

and even become a Fine Gentleman despite thy country homespun--and

yet-But as for young Barnabas, striding blithely upon his way, he might

verily have been the Spirit of Youth itself--head high, eyes a-dance,

his heart light as his step, his gaze ever upon the distance ahead,

for he was upon the road at last, and every step carried him nearer

the fulfilment of his dream.

"At Tonbridge he would take the coach," he thought, or perhaps hire

a chaise and ride to London like a gentleman. A gentleman! and here

he was whistling away like any ploughboy. Happily the road was

deserted at this early hour, but Barnabas shook his head at himself

reproachfully, and whistled no more--for a time.

But now, having reached the summit of the hill, he paused and turned

to look back. Below him lay the old inn, blinking in its many

casements in the level rays of the newly risen sun; and now, all at

once, as he gazed down at it from this eminence, it seemed, somehow,

to have shrunk, to have grown more weather-beaten and worn--truly

never had it looked so small and mean as it did at this moment.

Indeed, he had been wont to regard the "Coursing Hound" as the very

embodiment of what an English inn should be--but now! Barnabas

sighed--which was a new thing for him. "Was the change really in the

old inn, or in himself?" he wondered. Hereupon he sighed again, and

turning, went on down the hill. But now, as he went, his step lagged

and his head drooped. "Was the change in the inn, or could it be

that money can so quickly alter one?" he wondered. And straightway

the coins in his pocket chinked and jingled "yes, yes!" wherefore

Barnabas sighed for the third time, and his head drooped lower yet.

Well then, since he was rich, he would buy his father a better

inn--the best in all England. A better inn! and the "Coursing Hound"

had been his home as long as he could remember. A better inn! Here

Barnabas sighed for the fourth time, and his step was heavier than

ever as he went on down the hill.