The Broad Highway - Page 151/374

It is not my intention to chronicle all those minor happenings

that befell me, now or afterward, lest this history prove

wearisome to the reader (on the which head I begin to entertain

grave doubts already). Suffice it then that as the days grew

into weeks, and the weeks into months, by perseverance I became

reasonably expert at my trade, so that, some two months after my

meeting with Black George, I could shoe a horse with any smith in

the country.

But, more than this, the people with whom I associated day by

day--honest, loyal, and simple-hearted as they were, contented

with their lot, and receiving all things so unquestioningly and

thankfully, filled my life, and brought a great calm to a mind

that had, hitherto, been somewhat self-centred and troubled by

pessimistic doubts and fantastic dreams culled from musty pages.

What book is there to compare with the great Book of Life--whose

pages are forever a-turning, wherein are marvels and wonders

undreamed; things to weep over, and some few to laugh at, if one

but has eyes in one's head to see withal?

To walk through the whispering cornfields, or the long, green

alleys of the hop-gardens with Simon, who combines innkeeping

with farming, to hear him tell of fruit and flower, of bird and

beast, is better than to read the Georgics of Virgil.

To sit in the sunshine and watch the Ancient, pipe in mouth, to

hearken to his animadversions upon Life, and Death, and Humanity,

is better than the cynical wit of Rochefoucauld, or a page out of

honest old Montaigne.

To see the proud poise of sweet Prue's averted head, and the

tender look in her eyes when George is near, and the surge of the

mighty chest and the tremble of the strong man's hand at the

sound of her light footfall, is more enthralling than any written

romance, old or new.

In regard to these latter, I began, at this time, to contrive

schemes and to plot plots for bringing them together--to bridge

over the difficulty which separated them, for, being happy, I

would fain see them happy also. Now, how I succeeded in this

self-imposed task, the reader (if he trouble to read far enough)

shall see for himself.

"George," said I, on a certain Saturday morning, as I washed the

grime from my face and hands, "are you going to the Fair this

afternoon?"

"No, Peter, I aren't."

"But Prudence is going," said I, drying myself vigorously upon

the towel.

"And how," inquired the smith, bending in turn above the bucket

in which we performed our ablutions, "and how might you know

that, Peter?"