|
|||||||
The Ghost-Ship Fairfield is a little village lying near the Portsmouth Road about half-way between London and the sea. Strangers who find it by accident now and then, call it a pretty, old-fashioned place; we who live in it and call it home dont find anything very pretty about it, but we should be sorry to live anywhere else. Our minds have taken the shape of the inn and the church and the green, I suppose. At all events we never feel comfortable out of Fairfield. Of course the Cockneys, with their vasty houses and noise-ridden streets, can call us rustics if they choose, but for all that Fairfield is a better place to live in than London. Doctor says that when he goes to London his mind is bruised with the weight of the houses, and he was a Cockney born. He had to live there himself when he was a little chap, but he knows better now. You gentlemen may laughperhaps some of you come from London waybut it seems to me that a witness like that is worth a gallon of arguments. Dull? Well, you might find it dull, but I assure you that Ive listened to all the London yarns you have spun to-night, and theyre absolutely nothing to the things that happen at Fairfield. Its because of our way of thinking and minding our own business. If one of your Londoners were set down on the green of a Saturday night when the ghosts of the lads who died in the war keep tryst with the lasses who lie in the churchyard, he couldnt help being curious and interfering, and then the ghosts would go somewhere where it was quieter. But we just let them come and go and dont make any fuss, and in consequence Fairfield is the ghostiest place in all England. Why, Ive seen a headless man sitting on the edge of the well in broad daylight, and the children playing about his feet as if he were their father. Take my word for it, spirits know when they are well off as much as human beings. Still, I must admit that the thing Im going to tell you about was queer even for our part of the world, where three packs of ghost-hounds hunt regularly during the season, and blacksmiths great-grandfather is busy all night shoeing the dead gentlemens horses. Now thats a thing that wouldnt happen in London, because of their interfering ways, but blacksmith he lies up aloft and sleeps as quiet as a lamb. Once when he had a bad head he shouted down to them not to make so much noise, and in the morning he found an old guinea left on the anvil as an apology. He wears it on his watch-chain now. But I must get on with my story; if I start telling you about the queer happenings at Fairfield Ill never stop. It all came of the great storm in the spring of 97, the year that we had two great storms. This was the first one, and I remember it very well, because I found in the morning that it had lifted the thatch of my pigsty into the widows garden as clean as a boys kite. When I looked over the hedge, widowTom Lamports widow that waswas prodding for her nasturtiums with a daisy-grubber. After I had watched her for a little I went down to the Fox and Grapes to tell landlord what she had said to me. Landlord he laughed, being a married man and at ease with the sex. Come to that, he said, the tempest has blowed something into my field. A kind of a ship I think it would be. I was surprised at that until he explained that it was only a ghost-ship and would do no hurt to the turnips. We argued that it had been blown up from the sea at Portsmouth, and then we talked of something else. There were two slates down at the parsonage and a big tree in Lumleys meadow. It was a rare storm. I reckon the wind had blown our ghosts all over England. They were coming back for days afterwards with foundered horses and as footsore as possible, and they were so glad to get back to Fairfield that some of them walked up the street crying like little children. Squire said that his great-grandfathers great-grandfather hadnt looked so dead-beat since the battle of Naseby, and hes an educated man. What with one thing and another, I should think it was a week before we got straight again, and then one afternoon I met the landlord on the green and he had a worried face. I wish youd come and have a look at that ship in my field, he said to me; it seems to me its leaning real hard on the turnips. I cant bear thinking what the missus will say when she sees it. |
|||||||
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
Copyright: All texts on Bibliomania are © Bibliomania.com Ltd, and may not be reproduced in any form without our written permission. See our FAQ for more details. | |||||||