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Shining Ferry

Chapter 10 NUNCEY.

Word Count: 3115    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

ghteen or twenty, in a pink print frock with a large crimson rose pinned in its bodice, and a pink

part to let her pass, and from her perch she stared down from one sid

n', Nu

t be carryin' the

l furn

rom the bundle to Hester,

tell me you're the

m Hester

y dear soul," she asked with sudden

wh

rade for old persons- toteling poor bodies, 'm

put in the youn

ss an' get breakfast for an' see their boots is shined, and after that to catch the hoss and put'n to cart-well, you'll have to forgive it. That's your luggage Tom's carryin', I s'pose?-and a funny passel of traps school teachers travel with, I will say. You must b

is not m

you two been quarrellin'? Well, I never!

ion," Hester went on, flushi

son," declared Tom Trevarthen, red a

de o' me. We'll drive back to station, fetch your trunk, and be back in time to overtake Tom at the top o'

llenly. "But I'll not take a lift alongside o' she

h mortal, you. But-I declare

rathful. "It's despise her I do-comin' here

l and trudged away s

at him for a momen

l the week round, you couldn't find a better-natered boy. Well, jump up, my dear, and

one on equal terms with themselves. She was a sensible girl, by far too sensible to nurse on second thoughts a conceit that she was their superior simply because she spoke better English. Yet ha

p. The ill-balanced trap seesawed down the slope, and soon was spinning along the c

shall have it broiling hot afore noon. Now I come to think of it, 'tis high time we made our introductions. I'm Nuncey Benny-that's short for Annunciation.

ind enough to offe

, that never crossed his head. You mustn't think, my dear, that you bain't welcome. Only-well, I may

ot mind," said Heste

n' 'ee 'tis the second load you've a-lifted off my mind. F

t w

ved at the stationmaster's cottage. The station-maste

of tea, the both of you. It'll t

tion-master while he hoisted in the trunk. Two of Hester's earliest discoveries in this strange la

going round wi' the sun, I see, same as yesterd

in. "Is that how sleeves are wearin', up the country?"

tly," Hester answered gravely. "But

dest. Boots like yours cost more than I can spend on mine in a month o' Sundays; iss, and a trifle o' vanity thrown in. You've a

or my f

and always will be. I thought it might be for o

roke off, colouring again with annoyance. What did these people mean, that

of the hill, they over

Nuncey cheerfully. "If so, climb up

rd, an easel, and a coloured globe on one's back. The globe absurdly reminded Hester of a picture of Atlas in one of her schoolbooks, and she could

aughed o

man that never has a good word to fling at nobody, and maybe spanked 'en blue when he was a tacker and went to school wi' her. He's terrible simpl

in coming-as if, at least, I were selfish and unjust. And I never hear

had asked me that an hour ago, I'd have agreed wit

left; the song of larks rang forth almost with a shout; beyond the golden ridges of the wheat the grey vapour faded as breath off a mirror, and lo! a clear line divided the turquoise sky from a sea of intensest iris-blue. As she watched the transformation her heart gave a lif

he hand of some great unknown gardener; and this gardener was, of course, the sea-breeze now filling her lungs and bracing her strength. The shaven, landward-bending thorns and hollies, the close-trimmed hedgerow, the clean-swept highroad, alike proclaimed its tireless attentions. It

arest doorways, whence one and all nodded good-naturedly at Nuncey. Of some houses the doors were reached by steep flights of steps tunnelled through the solid rock; of others by wooden stairways leading to balconies painted blue or green and adorned with pot-plants-geraniums, fuchsias, lemon-verbenas-on ledges imminent over Hester's head. The most of the passers-by were women carrying pails of water, or country folks with baskets of market stuff. The whole street seemed to

threaded their way round two more corners, and entered a street scarcely less narrow than the other, but level. He

over a green-painted board, fixed across with the evident purpose of confining him to the house. Having despatched this urchin to warn his mother that 'the furri

n our family," said Nuncey, "there's noth

your

ainted doorway where the small urchin had resumed his survey of the world beyond home. "That's another of father's inventions; but the poor cheeld pulled down the kettle when he was

benign but puzzled smile, appeared in t

n curl-papers. Dear me, now!" Mrs. Benny regarded Hester with a look of ho

e that its cleanliness must be due to Nuncey and its untidiness to Mrs. Benny. The dimness was induced by a crowd of geraniums in the w

' all night? You must be p

screamed out clos

r name? Oh, rock and roll me

n to answer in a fright, wh

elf at sight of a grey and scarlet bird eyeing her with angry inquisitiveness from the cag

" Nuncey assured her

c

died of it. Father had 'en stuffed and put 'en in the cage in

. Benny, with her kindly, unsettled smile. "

And what's become of your manners?" she demanded of the urchin who had followed them in from the passage, and now s

t!" exclaimed Robert Burns

with,'" quoted Hester, laugh

She knows about stories!"

t mothers ought to thank the Lord for it. Sometimes, as 'tis, I feel as if the whole world was on my shoulders, and I can't be responsibl

ndeed," ans

e window; "but there's eleven of 'em, and three buried, and five at school this moment. I began with two boys-two years between each-and t

re's the kettle boilin'-fit and give her a cup of tea, and take her upstairs. 'Tis near upon half-past nine already, and at half-past ten father was to b

ad already arrived; and he too could not help

maintained, laughing. "I feel my years, I assure y

had given us no partic

o me about the school

im, then, M

her's. He used to visit us regularly once

He said it almost sharply. Hester, puzzled to know what offence she had nearly co

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Shining Ferry
Shining Ferry
“Dodo Collections brings you another classic from Arthur Quiller-Couch 'Shining Ferry.'Shining Ferry was first published in 1905.Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch was a Cornish writer, who published under the pen name of Q. He published his Dead Man's Rock (a romance in the vein of Stevenson's Treasure Island) in 1887, and he followed this up with Troy Town (1888) and The Splendid Spur (1889). After some journalistic experience in London, mainly as a contributor to the Speaker, in 1891 he settled at Fowey in Cornwall. He published in 1896 a series of critical articles, Adventures in Criticism, and in 1898 he completed Robert Louis Stevenson's unfinished novel, St Ives. With the exception of the parodies entitled Green Bays: Verses and Parodies (1893), his poetical work is contained in Poems and Ballads (1896). In 1895 he published an anthology from the sixteenth and seventeenth-century English lyrists, The Golden Pomp, followed in 1900 by an equally successful Oxford Book of English Verse, 1250-1900 (1900). He was made a Bard of Gorseth Kernow in 1928, taking the Bardic name Marghak Cough ('Red Knight').Quiller-Couch was a noted literary critic, publishing editions of some of Shakespeare's plays (in the New Shakespeare, published by Cambridge University Press, with Dover Wilson) and several critical works, including Studies in Literature (1918) and On the Art of Reading (1920). He edited a successor to his verse anthology: Oxford Book of English Prose, which was published in 1923. He left his autobiography, Memories and Opinions, unfinished; it was nevertheless published in 1945.”
1 Chapter 1 ROSEWARNE OF HALL.2 Chapter 2 FATHERS AND CHILDREN.3 Chapter 3 ROSEWARNE'S PILGRIMAGE.4 Chapter 4 ROSEWARNE'S PENANCE.5 Chapter 5 THE CLOSE OF A STEWARDSHIP.6 Chapter 6 THE RAFTERS.7 Chapter 7 THE HEIRS OF HALL.8 Chapter 8 HESTER ARRIVES.9 Chapter 9 MR. SAMUEL'S POLICY.10 Chapter 10 NUNCEY.11 Chapter 11 HESTER IS ACCEPTED.12 Chapter 12 THE OPENING DAY.13 Chapter 13 TOM TREVARTHEN INTERVENES.14 Chapter 14 MR. SAM IS MAGNANIMOUS.15 Chapter 15 MYRA IN DISGRACE.16 Chapter 16 AUNT BUTSON CLOSES SCHOOL.17 Chapter 17 PETER BENNY'S DISMISSAL.18 Chapter 18 RIGHT OF FERRY.19 Chapter 19 THE INTERCEDERS.20 Chapter 20 AN OUTBURST.21 Chapter 21 MR. BENNY GETS PROMOTION.22 Chapter 22 CLEM IS LOST TO MYRA.23 Chapter 23 HESTER WRITES A LOVE-LETTER.24 Chapter 24 THE RESCUE.25 Chapter 25 BUT TOM CAN WRITE.26 Chapter 26 MESSENGERS.27 Chapter 27 HOME.28 Chapter 28 No.2829 Chapter 29 No.2930 Chapter 30 No.3031 Chapter 31 No.3132 Chapter 32 No.3233 Chapter 33 No.33