登陆注册
15464900000019

第19章 CHAPTER VI(2)

"No, I don't believe you would," looking down into the brave young face. "But what about your mother, Hughie?""Oh, pshaw! you wouldn't be afraid." Hughie's confidence in his mother's courage was unbounded.

"I don't know about that," she replied; and then turning to Ranald, "How about our friends of the other night?" she said. "Will they not be about?" Hughie had not heard about the wolves.

"Oh, there is no fear of them. We will keep a big fire all night, and besides, we will have our guns and the dogs.""Guns!" cried Mrs. Murray. This was a new terror for her boy.

"I'm afraid I cannot trust Hughie where there are guns. He might--""Indeed, let me catch him touching a gun!" said Ranald, quickly, and from his tone and the look in his face, Mrs. Murray felt sure that Hughie would be safe from self-destruction by the guns.

"Well, well, come away, Hughie, and we will see," said Mrs. Murray;but Hughie hung back sulking, unwilling to move till he had got his mother's promise.

"Come, Hughie. Get Fido ready. We must hurry," said his mother again.

Still Hughie hesitated. Then Ranald turned swiftly on him. "Did ye hear your mother? Come, get out of this." His manner was so fierce that Hughie started immediately for his dog, and without another word of entreaty made ready to go. The mother noted his quick obedience, and smiling at Ranald, said: "I think I might trust him with you for a night or two, Ranald. When do you think you could come for him?""We will finish the tapping to-morrow, and I could come the day after with the jumper," said Ranald, pointing to the stout, home-made sleigh used for gathering the sap and the wood for the fire.

"Oh, I see you have begun tapping," said Mrs. Murray; "and do you do it yourself?""Why, yes, mother; don't you see all those trees?" cried Hughie, pointing to a number of maples that stood behind the shanty.

"Ranald and Don did all those, and made the spiles, too. See!" He caught up a spile from a heap lying near the door. "Ranald made all these.""Why, that's fine, Ranald. How do you make them? I have never seen one made.""Oh, mother!" Hughie's voice was full of pity for her ignorance.

He had seen his first that afternoon.

"And I have never seen the tapping of a tree. I believe I shall learn just now, if Ranald will only show me, from the very beginning."Her eager interest in his work won Ranald from his reserve. "There is not much to see," he said, apologetically. "You just cut a natch in the tree, and drive in the spile, and--""Oh, but wait," she cried. "That's just what I wanted to see. How do you make the spile?""Oh, that is easy," said Ranald. He took up a slightly concave chisel or gouge, and slit a slim slab from off a block of cedar about a foot long.

"This is a spile," he exclaimed. "We drive it into the tree, and the sap runs down into the trough, you see.""No, I don't see," said the minister's wife. She was too thoroughgoing to do things by halves. "How do you drive this into the tree, and how do you get the sap to run down it?""I will show you," he said, and taking with him a gouge and ax, he approached a maple still untapped. "You first make a gash like this." So saying, with two or three blows of his ax, he made a slanting notch in the tree. "And then you make a place for the spile this way." With the back of his ax he drove his gouge into the corner of the notch, and then fitted his spile into the incision so made.

"Ah, now I see. And you put the trough under the drip from the spile. But how do you make the troughs?""I did not make them," said Ranald. "Some of them father made, and some of them belong to the Camerons. But it is easy enough. You just take a thick slab of basswood and hollow it out with the adze."Mrs. Murray was greatly pleased. "I'm very much obliged to you, Ranald," she said, "and I am glad I came down to see your camp.

Now, if you will ask me, I should like to see you make the sugar."Had her request been made before the night of their famous ride, Ranald would have found some polite reason for refusal, but now he was rather surprised to find himself urging her to come to a sugaring-off at the close of the season.

"I shall be delighted to come," cried Mrs. Murray, "and it is very good of you to ask me, and I shall bring my niece, who is coming with Mr. Murray from town to spend some weeks with me."Ranald's face fell, but his Highland courtesy forbade retreat. "If she would care," he said, doubtfully.

"Oh, I am sure she would be very glad! She has never been outside of the city, and I want her to learn all she can of the country and the woods. It is positively painful to see the ignorance of these city children in regard to all living things--beasts and birds and plants. Why, many of them couldn't tell a beech from a basswood.""Oh, mother!" protested Hughie, aghast at such ignorance.

"Yes, indeed, it is dreadful, I assure you," said his mother, smiling. "Why, I know a grown-up woman who didn't know till after she was married the difference between a spruce and a pine.""But you know them all now," said Hughie, a little anxious for his mother's reputation.

"Yes, indeed," said his mother, proudly; "every one, I think, at least when the leaves are out. So I want Maimie to learn all she can."Ranald did not like the idea any too well, but after they had gone his thoughts kept turning to the proposed visit of Mrs. Murray and her niece.

"Maimie," said Ranald to himself. "So that is her name." It had a musical sound, and was different from the names of the girls he knew--Betsy and Kirsty and Jessie and Marget and Jinny. It was finer somehow than these, and seemed to suit better a city girl.

同类推荐
  • 宝藏论

    宝藏论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 水石闲谈

    水石闲谈

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 道德经篇章玄颂

    道德经篇章玄颂

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 笔花医镜

    笔花医镜

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 道德真经集注

    道德真经集注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 君为谁笑

    君为谁笑

    与君相遇,与君相知,与君相惜,与君相恋;不盼白首不相离,只盼君一世安然。
  • 修真教科书

    修真教科书

    江子齐很倒霉!身为“仙道教科书”之称的他,带着一堆顶尖仙法,却一头撞进玄幻世界。没事,我有超过万年的修仙经验,顶尖仙法无数。抱歉,我们玄幻时代不讲修仙!那说好的退婚就送老爷爷?抱歉,单身狗没资格得到退婚的机会,您可以到那边取号,预约一个跳崖的名额。江子齐懵逼了!穿越没有金手指,想要待遇靠自己?这剧本不讲道理啊!
  • 你是我看不见的极光

    你是我看不见的极光

    曾经我以为你是我的全部,可惜,我们终究还是到不了彼此的内心......
  • 我的神器是照相机

    我的神器是照相机

    他是名扬海外的心理学家。他登过纽约杂志,是被评为全球最有创造力的男人。在敌人眼中,他无耻嚣张,是个让人即可恨又无奈的对手。在女人眼里,他披着艺术的外衣,是个像恶魔一样让你摆出各种姿势的男人。但所有人都不知道的是,这个让人津津乐道的人物,其实只是个摄影艺术家。“喂喂,我都说了,萌女仆,萌女扑,脱衫轻舞你到底懂不懂?”“还有你,贵妃醉酒不是这个姿势,麻烦你的手不要乱摸好不好,我是个艺术家你懂吗?求你尊重我!”
  • 凌天武神记

    凌天武神记

    一个被冰封的婴儿,数千载后于令海城再次获得重生,在这片被诅咒的大地上,看他如何追寻父辈足迹,寻找遗失的尊严,破除强加在人们身上的诅咒!
  • 万古药神

    万古药神

    九重天域!玄天药帝楚晨因遭天帝忌惮,天帝历337年,“意外”陨落第九天域屠魔山谷。天帝历2337年,两千年后,他重生于第三天域西南偏僻小国流云国摘星学院楚晨身上。从被人欺负、嘲讽的武道修行吊车尾,这一世,看他如何以药道封神,成就万古不朽药界大天神。
  • 佛法在世间

    佛法在世间

    本书从佛教史,佛教教义,以及时代发展要求出发切入课题研究,得出“佛法在世间的结论”。
  • 红砖医院

    红砖医院

    侦探类小说,绝对别看最后的部分,惊喜藏在最后
  • 穿越之修仙

    穿越之修仙

    李依菲,死后发现自己尽然穿越到一本小说中,成为里面的恶毒女配,重活一世,李依菲低调做人,摆脱作者的金手指,怎奈却出了一个他。
  • 宫离恨

    宫离恨

    动人心弦的古典微故事,一章一个故事,看到心涩。