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The Bellman Book of Fiction 1906-1919

TOLD TO PARSON
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a little girl came rushing into the gate of the vicarage at postbridge, dartmoor, and it chanced that she met the minister himself as he bent in his garden and scattered lime around upspringing seeds.

“these slugs would try the patience of a saint,” he said, hearing footsteps, and not looking up. “they have eaten off nearly all my young larkspurs. how can one fight them?”

then a small, breathless voice broke in upon him.

“please, sir, mother sent me, an’ i’ve runned a’most all the way from our cottage wi’out stopping once. ’tis old mr. mundy, please. he’m dying—so he told mother when her fetched him his milk this morning—an’ he says he’ve got something very special to tell anybody as’ll care to come an’ listen to it. but nobody don’t want to hear his secrets in the village; so mother said ’twas your job, please, an’ sent me for your honor.”

“my job—yes, so it is, little maid. i’ll come at once. an’ they’d better send for the doctor. it isn’t his regular visiting day until thursday, but probably it’s his job, too.”

“mother axed the old man that; an’ he said as he didn’t want no doctor, nor his traade [medicine] neither. he says h’m nearly a hundred years old, an’ he won’t be messed about with at his time of life, but just die easy an’ comfortable.”

p. 101in twenty minutes the clergyman had walked a mile and crossed a strip of the wilderness that stretched round about the little hamlet on dartmoor where he labored. a single cottage separated from the rest by wide tracts of furze and heather stood here, and near it lay a neglected garden. but “gaffer” mundy had long ceased to fight the moor or care for his plot of land. his patch of the reclaimed earth returned fast to primitive savagery. brake fern sprouted in the potato bed; rush, heather and briar choked the currant bushes; fearless rabbits nibbled every green thing.

“come in, whoever you may be,” said an ancient voice. so the visitor obeyed and entered, to find the sufferer, fully dressed, sitting by a fire of peat. noah mundy was once very tall, but now his height had vanished and he had been long bent under his burden of years. a bald, yellow skull rose above his countenance, and infinite age marked his face. as the earth through centuries of cooling has wrinkled into mountains and flattened into ocean beds between them, so these aged features, stamped and torn with the fret and fever of long life, had become as a book whereon time had written many things for those who could read them. very weak was the man, and very thin. he was toothless and almost hairless; the scanty beard that fell from his chin was white, while his mustache had long been dyed with snuff to a lively yellow. his eyes remained alive, though one was filmed over with an opaline haze. but from the other he saw clearly enough for all his needs. he made it a boast that he could not write, and he could not read. there was no book in his house.

“’tis you, eh? i could have wished for a man p. 102out of your trade, but it won’t matter. i’ve got a thing worth telling; but mark this, i don’t care a button what you think of it, an’ i don’t want none of your bunkum an’ lies after i have told it. sit down in that thicky chair an’ smoke your pipe an’ keep cool. ban’t no use getting excited now, for what i be going to tell ’e happened more’n sixty years ago—afore you was born or thought about.”

“my smoke won’t trouble you?”

“bah! i’ve smoked and chewed an’ snuffed for more’n half a century. i’m baccy through and through—soaked in it, as you might say. an’ as for smoke, if what you tell to church be true, i shall have smoke, an’ fire too, afore long. but hell’s only a joke to frighten females. i don’t set no store by it.”

“better leave that, mr. mundy. if you really believe your end is near, let us be serious. yes, i’ll smoke my pipe. and you must feel very, very sure, that what you tell me is absolutely sacred, unless you wish it otherwise.”

“nought sacred about it, i reckon—all t’ other way. an’ as for telling, you can go an’ shout it from top of bellever tor you’m minded to. i don’t care a farden curse who knows it now. wait till i’m out of it; then do as you please.”

he drank a little milk, remained silent a moment with his eyes upon the fire, and presently began to tell his life’s strange tale.

“me an’ my brother was the only children our parents ever had; an’ my brother was five years older’n me. my father, jonas mundy, got money through a will, an’ he brought it to dartymoor, like a fool, an’ rented a bit of moor from the duchy of cornwall, an’ built a farm upon it, an’ p. 103set to work to reclaim the land. at first he prospered, an’ aller bottom farm, as my father called it, was a promising place, so long as sweat of man poured out there without ceasing. you can see the ruins of it yet, for when jonas mundy died an’ it falled to me, i left it an’ comed up here; an the chap as took it off my hands—he went bankrupt inside three year. ’tis all falled to pieces now, for none tried again.

“but that’s to overrun the matter. when i was fifteen an’ my brother, john james, was twenty, us both failed in love with the same maid. you stare; but though fifteen in years, i was twenty-five in understanding, an’ a very oncoming youth where women were concerned. nelly baker had turned seventeen, an’ more than once i told her that though a boy of fifteen couldn’t wed a maid of her age without making folks laugh, even if he could get a parson to hitch them, yet a chap of three-an’-twenty might very properly take a girl of five-an’-twenty without the deed calling for any question. an’ her loved me truly enough; for though you only see a worn-out scarecrow afore you now, yet seventy year agone i filled the eye of more maidens than one, and was a bowerly youth to look upon—tall, straight, tough, wi’ hair so black as a crow.

“john james he never knowed that i cared a button for nelly. i never showed it to a living soul but her by word or look; an’ she kept quiet—for fear of being laughed at, no doubt. her folks were dead on the match with john james, an’ he pressed her so hard that she’d have took him but for me. he was a pretty fellow too—the mundys were very personable as a family. quite different, though, from me. fair polled, wi’ flaxen hair, an p. 104terrible strong was john james, an’ the best wrastler on dartymoor in them days.

“me an’ her met by appointment a week afore she’d got to give him a final ‘yes’ or ‘no.’ i mind it very well to this hour; an’ yet ’tis seventy-odd years agone. on hartland tor us sat in the heather unseen, an’ i put my arms around her an’ loved her, an’ promised to make her a happy woman. then i told her what she’d got to do. first i made her prick her finger wi’ a thorn of the furze, an’ draw blood, an’ swear afore the living god she’d marry me as soon as i could make her mistress of a farm.

“she was for joking about the matter at first, but i soon forced her to grow serious. she done what i told her, an’ since she believed in the living god, i reckoned her oath would bind her fast enough. as for me, i laughed out of sight, for i never believed in nothing but myself—not even when i was a boy under twenty years old. next i bade her fall out with john james. i put words in her mouth to say to him. ‘i know the fashion of man he be—short an’ fiery in his temper,’ i told her. ‘be hot an’ quick with him. tell him he’s not your sort, an’ never will be—quarrel with his color, if you like. tell him he’m too pink an’ white for ’e. say ’tis enough that your own eyes be blue, an’ that you’d never wed a blue-eyed man. make him angry—you ban’t a woman if you don’t know how to do that. then the rest be easy enough. he’ll flare an’ flae like a tar barrel on guy fawkes night. but he’ll trouble you no more, for he’m so proud as satan.’

“nelly baker took in all i said; an’ inside a week she’d dropped my brother. but ’twas what p. 105he done after that startled folks, for without a word to any living soul, he vanished, like the dew of the morning, four-an’-twenty hours after she’d flinged him over. i was the last that seed him. we were working together out ’pon the land; an’ he was sour an’ crusty wi’ his trouble, an’ hadn’t a word to fling at me. dimpsy light fell, an’ i went in a tool shed to don my jacket an’ go home. ’twas autumn, an’ us had been spreading manure upon the meadow.

“‘be you coming, john james?’ i said.

“‘you go to hell,’ he answered. ‘i’ll come when i’ve a mind to, an’ maybe i won’t come at all!’

“so home i walked wi’out another word; an’ he never comed; an’ nobody ever heard a whisper about him again from that day to this. for a soldier he went, ’twas thought; but the after history of un never reached nobody at postbridge; an’ whether he was shot or whether he gathered glory in foreign parts none ’pon dartymoor can tell you.

“a nine days’ wonder it was, an’ it killed my mother; for john james was the apple of her eye. her never cared a button for me, ’cause i was the living likeness of her brother—my uncle, silas bond. they sent him to botany bay for burning down wheat stacks. a bad lot he was, no doubt; an’ a fool to boot, which is worse. for he got catched an’ punished. an’ he deserved all he got—for letting ’em catch him.

“with john james out of the way, i comed to be a bit more important in the house, an’ when my mother died, father got to trust me with his money. i was old for my years, you see. as for nelly, she kept so true to me as the bird to her nest—for p. 106five years; an’ then i’d got to be twenty, an’ had saved over three hundred pound for her; an’ she was twenty-two. a good many chaps wanted to marry her; but she kept our secret close, an’ said ‘nay’ to some very snug men, an’ just waited for me an’ aller bottom farm.

“then, when i’d reckoned to name the day an’ take her so soon as i comed of age, oliver honeywell turned up from down country an’ rented that old tenement farm what be called merripit. so good land as any ’pon all dartymoor goes with it. an’ he comed wi’ a flourish of trumpets an’ plenty of money. he was going to larn us all how to farm, an’ how to make money ’pon weekdays, an’ how to get to heaven sundays.

“rot the devil! i see him now—a smug, sleek, fat, handsome, prosperous man, with the insolence of a spoilt cat! he’d preach in the open air of a sunday, for there was no parson nor church here in them days. strong as a horse,—a, very practical man,—always right. did plenty of good, as the saying goes, an’ went about like a procession, as if he expected angels from heaven to be waiting for him at every street corner with a golden crown. his right hand was generous, but he took very good care his left hand knowed it. he didn’t do his good in secret, nor yet hide his light under a bushel.

“he was a black-haired man, wi’ scholarship an’ money behind him. he knew the better-most folk. they called upon him, i believe, an’ axed him to their houses, it was said. he hunted, and paid money to help three different packs o’ hounds. an old mother kept house for him. he tried to patronize the whole of postbridge an’ play the squire an’ vicar rolled into one. men as owed him p. 107nought an’ thanked him for nought pulled their hair to him. but there be some fools who will always touch their hats to a pair o’ horses. there comed to be an idea in people’s minds that honeywell was a godsend, though if you axed them why, they generally couldn’t tell you.

“an’ my nelly falled in love with him.

“at least she said so; though heaven knows that the pompous fool, for all his fine linen, weren’t a patch on what i was at twenty-one. anyway, he comed courting her, for ’twas not known yet that me an’ nelly was more’n friends; an’ then when he heard how we had been secretly tokened for no less than six years, he comed to see me with a long-winded lie in his mouth. an’ the lie was larded wi’ texts from scripture. nelly baker had misunderstood her feelings about me, he said; her had never knowed what true love was till she met him; an’ he hoped i’d behave as honestly as he had—an’ all the rest of it. in fact, she’d throwed me over for him an’ his money an’ his high position; an’ he comed to let me down gently with bits from the bible. as for her, she always lusted after money and property.

“us fought hand to hand, for i flew at him, man, like a dog, an’ i’d have strangled him an’ tored the liver out of him, but some chaps heard him howling an’ runned along, an’ pulled me off his throat in time.

“he didn’t have the law of me; but nelly baker kept out of my way afterwards, like as if i was the plague; an’ then six months passed an’ they was axed out in marriage so grand as you please at widecombe church.

“i only seed her once more; but after lying in p. 108wait for her, weeks an’ weeks, like a fox for a rabbit, it chanced at last that i met her one evening going home across the moor above aller bottom farm ’pon the edge of the last of our fields. then us had a bit of a tell. ’twas only a fortnight afore she was going to marry mr. oliver honeywell.

“i axed her to change her mind; i spoke to her so gentle as a dove croons; but she was ice all through—cold an’ hard an’ wicked to me. then i growed savage. i noticed how mincing her’d growed in her speech since honeywell had took her up. she was changed from a good devon maid into a town miss, full o’ airs an’ graces that made me sick to see. he’d poisoned her.

“‘do try an’ be sensible,’ she said. ‘we were silly children all them years, you know, mr. mundy. you’ll find somebody much better suited to you than i am—really you will. have you ever thought of mary reep, now? she’s prettier than i am—i am sure she is.’

“her named the darter of william reep, a common laborer as worked on honeywell’s farm at ten shilling a week. the devil in me broke loose, an’ quite right too.

“‘we’ve gone up in the world of late then? ’twas always your hope and prayer to come by a bit of property. but ’tis a coorious thing,’ i said. ‘do you know that you’m standing just where my brother, john james, stood last time ever he was seed by mortal eyes?’

“‘what’s that to me?’ she said. ‘let me go by, please, mr. mundy. i’m late, as it is.’

“‘he was never seed again,’ i told her. ‘’tis a coorious thing to me, as you be stand’—on the same spot at the same time—just as he did, in the p. 109first shadow of night. his going, you see, made me my father’s heir, an’ rich enough to give you a good home some day.’

“then her growed a thought pale an’ tried to pass me.

“i went home presently; but from that hour nelly baker was seen no more. none ever knowed i’d been the last to speak with her; an’ none ever pitied me. but there was a rare fuss made over oliver honeywell. he wore black for her; an’ lived a bachelor for five year. then he married a widow; but not till his mother died.

“an’ that’s the story i thought would interest some folks.”

the minister tapped his pipe on the hob, and knocked the ashes out. he cleared his throat and spoke. he had learned nothing that was new to him.

“it is a strange story indeed, mr. mundy, and i am interested to have heard it from your own lips. rumor has not lied, for once. the tale, as you tell it, is substantially the same that has been handed down in this village for two generations. but no one knows that you were the last to see nelly baker. did you ever guess what happened?”

the old man smiled, and showed his empty gums.

“no—i didn’t guess, because i knowed very well without guessing,” he said. “all the same i should have thought that you, with your mighty fine knowledge of human nature, would have guessed very quick. ’twas i killed my brother—broke in the back of his head wi’ a pickax when he was down on one knee tying his bootlace. an’ me only fifteen year old! an’ i killed nelly p. 110baker—how, it don’t matter. you’ll find the dust of ’em side by side in one of them old ‘money pits’ ’pon bellever tor. ’tis a place that looks due east, an’ there’s a ring of stones a hundred yards away from it. the ‘old men’ buried their dead there once, i’ve heard tell. break down a gert flat slab o’ granite alongside a white thorn tree, an’ you’ll find what’s left of ’em in a deep hole behind. so she never comed by any property after all.”

the ancient sinner’s head fell forward, but his eyes were still open.

“good god! after all these years! man, man, make your peace! confess your awful crime!” cried the clergyman.

the other answered:

“none of that—none of that rot! i’d do the same this minute; an’ if there was anything that comed after—if i meet that damned witch in hell tomorrow i’d kill her over again, if her still had a body i could shake the life out of. now get you gone, an’ let me pass in peace.”

the reverend gentleman departed at his best speed, but presently returned, bringing soups and cordials. with him there came a cottage woman who performed services for the sick. but when mrs. badger saw noah mundy, she knew that little remained to do.

“he’s gone,” she said, “soft an’ sweet as a baby falls to sleep. some soap an’ water an’ a coffin be all he wants now, your honor; not this here beautiful broth, nor brandy neither. so you had best go back along, sir, an’ send old mother dawe up to help me, if you please.”

eden phillpotts.

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