The Flower-Patch Among the Hills. Flora Klickmann. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Flora Klickmann
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4064066183493
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       Flora Klickmann

      The Flower-Patch Among the Hills

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066183493

       I Just to Explain

       I. Who Everybody is

       II. Why the Cottage is

       III. Why this Book is

       II About Getting There

       III At the Sign of the Rosemary Bush

       IV Miss Quirker—Incidentally

       V The Geography of the Flower-Patch

       VI That Jane Price!

       VII Just Being Neighbourly

       VIII Merely to be Prepared

       IX Where the Road Led Over the Hills

       X The Little People of the Streams

       XI The Funeral of the Hero

       XII Just a Little Piece of Griskin

       XIII When the Surgeon Crossed the Hills

       XIV In Mildmay Hospital—An Interlude

       XV The Return to the Flower-Patch

       Just to Explain

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      Virginia and her sister Ursula are my most intimate friends. Virginia—really quite a harmless girl—imagines she has a scientific bias. Ursula—domesticated to the backbone—led a strenuous life in the pursuit of experimental psychology, till she switched off to wash hospital saucepans.

      It will be so obvious that I scarcely need add: What little common sense the trio possesses is centred in ME.

      Abigail is my housemaid; her title to fame is the fact that she is the only servant I have ever been able to induce to remain more than a fortnight at one stretch in the country. The others, including those who are orphans, always have a parent who suddenly breaks its leg—after they have been about ten days away—and wires for them to come home at once.

      The cook has discovered a number of cousins in the Naval Division at the Crystal Palace (detachments of which pass my London house hourly, while many units partake of my cake and lemonade), and, of course, you can’t neglect your relatives in war time.

      “You never know whether that’ll be the last time you’ll see them,” she says, waving a tearful tea-towel at all and sundry who march past. Naturally, she doesn’t care to be away from town for many days at a time.

      The parlourmaid was interested in a member of the L.C.C. Fire Brigade, when he enlisted, and incidentally married someone else—unfortunately the very week she was away with me. This has given her a marked distaste for the simple pleasures of rural life.

      Abigail is unengaged. “What I ask is: What better off are you if you are?” she inquires of space. “Take my sister, now, with eight children, and——” But as I am not taking anyone with eight children just now, the sister’s biography is neither here nor there.

      Abigail is a willing, kindhearted girl. Also she has a mania for trying to arrange every single household ornament in pairs. She would be invaluable to anyone outfitting a Noah’s Ark.

      As for the other people who walk through these pages, they do not appertain exclusively to one district. I have had two cottages, one beyond Godalming, in Surrey, the other high up among the hills that border the river Wye. Some of the country folk live in the one village, some in the other; but the scenery, the little wild things, and the garden are all related to the cottage that overlooks Tintern Abbey.

       Table of Contents

      I took a cottage in the country on a day when I had got to the fag-end of the very last straw, and felt I could not endure for another minute the screech of the trains, the honking of motors, the clanging of bells, the clatter of milk-carts, the grind-and-screel of electric cars, the ever-ringing telephone, the rattle and roar of the general traffic, the all-pervading odour of petrol, and the many other horrors that make both day and night hideous in our great city, and reduce the workers to nervous wreckage.

      The cottage has been so arranged that not one solitary thing within its walls shall bear any relation to the city left far behind; and nothing is allowed to remind the occupants of the business rush, the social scramble, and the electric-light-type of existence that have become integral parts of modern life in towns.

      Here, to keep my idle hands from mischief, I made me a Flower-patch.

       Table of Contents

      I was viciously prodding up bindweed out of the cottage garden, with the steel kitchen poker, when the telegraph boy opened the gate.

      Unhinging my back, and inducing it into the upright with painful care, I read a message from my office to the effect that there was some hitch in regard to the American copyright of a certain article I had passed for press before leaving; this would necessitate it being thrown out of the magazine that month. Would I wire back what should go in its place, as the machines were at a standstill?

      Under ordinary circumstances I should merely have waved a hand, and instantly a suitable substitute would have been