David Elginbrod | Page 3

George MacDonald
our lanes for want o' you, ye hizzy!"
"I didna ken it was sae late, mither," replied Margaret, in a submissive
tone, musical in spite of the rugged dialect into which the sounds were
fashioned.
"Nae dout! Ye had yer brakfast, an' ye warna that hungry for the word.
But here comes yer father, and ye'll no mend for his flytin', I'se
promise."
"Hoots! lat the bairn alane, Janet, my woman. The word'll be mair to
her afore lang."
"I wat she has a word o' her nain there. What beuk hae ye gotten there,
Meg? Whaur got ye't?"
Had it not been for the handsome binding of the book in her daughter's
hand, it would neither have caught the eye, nor roused the suspicions of
Janet. David glanced at the book in his turn, and a faint expression of
surprise, embodied chiefly in the opening of his eyelids a little wider
than usual, crossed his face. But he only said with a smile:
"I didna ken that the tree o' knowledge, wi' sic fair fruit, grew in our
wud, Maggy, my doo."
"Whaur gat ye the beuk?" reiterated Janet.
Margaret's face was by this time the colour of the crimson boards of the
volume in her hand, but she replied at once:
"I got it frae Maister Sutherlan', I reckon."
Janet's first response was an inverted whistle; her next, another
question:
"Maister Sutherlan'! wha's that o't?"
"Hoot, lass!" interposed David, "ye ken weel aneuch. It's the new tutor
lad, up at the hoose; a fine, douce, honest chield, an' weel-faured, forby.
Lat's see the bit beuky, lassie."
Margaret handed it to her father.
"Col-e-ridge's Poems," read David, with some difficulty.
"Tak' it hame direckly," said Janet.
"Na, na," said David; "a' the apples o' the tree o' knowledge are no
stappit wi sut an stew; an' gin this ane be, she'll sune ken by the taste o't
what's comin'. It's no muckle o' an ill beuk 'at ye'll read, Maggy, my
doo."
"Guid preserve's, man! I'm no sayin' it's an ill beuk. But it's no richt to

mak appintments wi' stranger lads i' the wud sae ear' i' the mornin'. Is't
noo, yersel, Meg?"
"Mither! mither!" said Margaret, and her eyes flashed through the
watery veil that tried to hide them, "hoo can ye? Ye ken yersel I had
nae appintment wi' him or ony man."
"Weel, weel!" said Janet; and, apparently either satisfied with or
overcome by the emotion she had excited, she turned and went in to
pursue her usual house-avocations; while David, handing the book to
his daughter, went away down the path that led from the cottage door,
in the direction of a road to be seen at a little distance through the trees,
which surrounded the cottage on all sides. Margaret followed her
mother into the cottage, and was soon as busy as she with her share of
the duties of the household; but it was a good many minutes before the
cloud caused by her mother's hasty words entirely disappeared from a
forehead which might with especial justice be called the sky of her
face.
Meantime David emerged upon the more open road, and bent his
course, still through fir-trees, towards a house for whose sake alone the
road seemed to have been constructed.

CHAPTER II
.
DAVID ELGINBROD AND THE NEW TUTOR.
Concord between our wit and will Where highest notes to godliness are
raised, And lowest sink not down to jot of ill.
What Languetus taught Sir Philip Sidney.
THE ARCADIA--Third Eclogue.
The House of Turriepuffit stood about a furlong from David's cottage.
It was the abode of the Laird, or landed proprietor, in whose
employment David filled several offices ordinarily distinct. The estate
was a small one, and almost entirely farmed by the owner himself; who,
with David's help, managed to turn it to good account. Upon week-days,
he appeared on horseback in a costume more fitted for following the
plough; but he did not work with his own hands; and on Sundays was at
once recognizable as a country gentleman.
David was his bailiff or grieve, to overlook the labourers on the estate;

his steward to pay them, and keep the farm accounts; his head
gardener--for little labour was expended in that direction, there being
only one lady, the mistress of the house, and she no patroness of
useless flowers: David was in fact the laird's general adviser and
executor.
The laird's family, besides the lady already mentioned, consisted only
of two boys, of the ages of eleven and fourteen, whom he wished to
enjoy the same privileges he had himself possessed, and to whom,
therefore, he was giving a classical and mathematical education, in
view of the University, by means of private tutors; the last of
whom--for the changes
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