Garthowen | Page 4

Allen Raine
by a large black sheep dog, who bounded in and, placing his
fore-paws on the counter, with tongue hanging out, looked at Jos
Hughes intently.
"Down, Tudor!" said the girl, and he sprang on a sack of peas beside
her.
The mountain wind blowing in through the open doorway touzled the
little curls that were so unruly in Morva's hair; it was neither gold nor

ebony, but, looking at its rich tints, one was irresistibly reminded of the
ripe corn in harvest fields, while the blue eyes were like the corn
flowers in their vivid colouring.
"How are they at Garthowen?" asked Fani "bakkare."
"Oh! they are all well there," answered the girl, panting and fanning
herself with her sun-bonnet, "except the white calf, and he is better."
"There's hot it is!" said Fani, taking up her basket of groceries.
"Oh! 'tis hot!" said the girl, "but there's a lovely wind from the sea."
"What are you wanting to-day, Morva?" said Jos.
"A ball of red worsted for Ann, and an ounce of 'bacco for 'n'wncwl
Ebben, and oh! a ha'porth of sweets for Tudor."
The dog wagged his tail approvingly as Jos reached down from the
shelf a bottle of pink lollipops, for, though a wild country dog, he had
depraved tastes in the matter of sweets.
"There's serious you all look! what's the matter with you?" said the girl,
looking smilingly round.
"Nothing is the matter as I know," said Fani, "only there's always
plenty of trouble flying about. We can't be all so free from care as you,
always laughing or singing or something."
"Indeed I wish we could," said Madlen, a pale girl who was bending
over a box of knitting pins, looking round curiously and rather sadly; "I
wish the whole world could be like you, Morva."
Morva snatched the girl's listless hand in her own warm firm grasp, and
pressed it sympathetically, for she knew Madlen's secret sorrow.
"Wait another year or two," said Fani, "we'll talk to you then! Wait till
your husband comes home drunk from 'The Black Horse!'"

"And wait till you put all your money into a shop and then find it
doesn't pay you," said Jos.
Madlen said nothing, but Morva knew that in her heart she was
thinking, "Wait until your lover proves false to you!" and she gave her
hand another squeeze.
"Well, indeed!" she said springing up, "what are you all talking about?
I won't put all my money in a shop, and I won't marry a drunkard!
Sixpence, is it? I am going home over the bog and round the hill, but I
am going to sit on the bench outside a bit first. There's lots of swallows'
nests under your eaves, Jos Hughes; that brings good luck, they say, so
your shop ought to pay you well."
So saying she passed out, and sitting on the bench round the corner of
the house she kissed her hand toward the swallows, who flitted in and
out of their nests, twittering ecstatically.
"Hark to her," said Fani, "singing again, if you please--always
light-hearted! always happy! I don't think its quite right, Jos bâch, do
you? You are a deacon at Penmorien and you ought to know. If it was a
hymn now! but you hear it's all nonsense about the swallows. Ach y fi!
she is learning them from Sara ''spridion';[1] some song of the 'old
fathers' in past times!"
"Yes," said Jos, sanctimoniously clasping his stubby fingers, "I'm afraid
the girl is a bit of a heathen. What wonder is it? Nursed by
Sara--always out with the cows or the sheep, and they say she thinks
nothing of sleeping under a hedge, or out on the slopes, if any animal is
sick and wants watching."
Fani went out with a toss of her head, as the sweet voice came in
through the little side window with the twittering of the swallows and
the cluck, cluck of a happy brood hen.
Outside, Morva had forgotten all about Jos Hughes and Fani
"bakkare's" sour looks, and was singing her heart out to the sunshine.

"Sing on, little swallows," she said, "and I'll sing too. Sara taught me
the 'bird song' long ago when I was a baby."
And in a clear, sweet voice she joined the birds, and woke the echoes
from the brown cliffs. The tune was quaint and rapid; both it and the
words had come down to her with the old folklore of generations
passed away.
"Over the sea from the end of the wide world I've come without wetting
my feet, my feet, my feet, Back to the old home, straight to the
nest-home, Under the brown thatch, oh sweet! oh sweet! oh sweet!
"When over the waters I flew in the autumn, Then there was
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