Ferns Hollow | Page 5

Hesba Stretton
would now be more necessary than ever.
He must get up early, and go to bed late, and labour without a moment's
rest, doing his utmost from one day to another, with no one to help him,
or stand for a little while in his place. For a few minutes his brave spirit
sank within him, and all the landscape swam before his eyes; while
Snip took advantage of his master's inattention to put his nose into the
basin, and help himself to the largest share of the potatoes.
'I mean to be like grandmother,' said Martha's clear, sharp voice, close
beside him, and he saw his sister looking eagerly round her. 'I shall
fence the green in, and have lambs and sheep to turn out on the hillside,

and I'll rear young goslings and ducks for market; and we'll have a
brick house, with two rooms in it, as well as a shed for the coal. And
nobody shall put upon us, or touch our rights, Stephen, or they shall
have the length of my tongue.'
'Martha,' said Stephen earnestly, 'do you see how a shower is raining
down on the master's fields at Botfield; and they've been scorched up
for want of water?'
'Yes, surely,' answered Martha; 'and what of that?'
'I'm thinking,' continued Stephen, rather shyly, 'of that verse in my
chapter: "He maketh the sun to rise on the evil and the good, and
sendeth rain on the just and the unjust." What sort of a man is the
master, Martha?'
'He's a bad, unjust, niggardly old miser,' replied Martha.
'And if God sends him rain, and takes care of him,' Stephen said, 'how
much more care will He take of us, if we are good, and try to do His
commandments!'
'I should think,' said Martha, but in a softer tone, 'I should really think
He would give us the green, and the lambs, and the new house, and
everything; for both of us are good, Stephen.'
'I don't know,' replied Stephen; 'if I could read all the Bible, perhaps it
would tell us. But now I must go in and read my chapter to father.'
Martha went back to her rocking-chair and knitting, while Stephen
reached down from a shelf an old Bible, covered with green baize, and,
having carefully looked that his hard hands were quite clean, he opened
it with the greatest reverence. James Fern had only begun to teach the
boy to read a few months before, when he felt the first fatal symptoms
of his illness; and Stephen, with his few opportunities for learning, had
only mastered one chapter, the fifth chapter of St. Matthew's Gospel,
which his father had chosen for him to begin with. The sick man lay
still with closed eyes, but listening attentively to every word, and

correcting his son whenever he made any mistake. When it was
finished, James Fern read a few verses aloud himself, with low voice
and frequent pauses to regain his strength; and very soon afterwards the
whole family were in a deep sleep, except himself.
CHAPTER III.
STEPHEN'S FIRST VICTORY.
James Fern did not live many more days, and he was buried the Sunday
following his death. All the colliers and pitmen from Botfield walked
with the funeral of their old comrade and made a great burial of it. The
parish church was two miles on the other side of Botfield, and four
miles from Fern's Hollow; so James Fern and his family had never, as
he called it, 'troubled' the church with their attendance. All the
household, even to little Nan, went with their father's corpse, to bury it
in the strange and distant churchyard. Stephen felt as if he was in some
long and painful dream, as he sat in the cart, with his feet resting upon
his father's coffin, with his grandfather on a chair at the head, nodding
and laughing at every jolt on the rough road, and Martha holding a
handkerchief up to her face, and carrying a large umbrella over herself
and little Nan, to keep the dust off their new black bonnets. The boy,
grave as he was, could hardly think; he felt in too great a maze for that.
The church, too, which he had never entered before, seemed grand and
cold and immense, with its lofty arches, and a roof so high that it made
him giddy to look up to it. Now and then he heard a few sentences of
the burial service sounding out grandly in the clergyman's strange, deep
voice; but they were not words he was familiar with, and he could not
understand their meaning. At the open grave only, the clergyman said
'Our Father,' which his father had taught him during his illness; and
while his tears rolled
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