No Name Wilkie Collins (e book reader android TXT) đ
- Author: Wilkie Collins
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She found her way to old Mazey, not by the scanty directions given her, but by the sound of the veteranâs cracked and quavering voice, singing in some distant seclusion a verse of the immortal sea-songâ ââTom Bowling.â Just as she stopped among the rambling stone passages on the basement story of the house, uncertain which way to turn next, she heard the tuneless old voice in the distance, singing these lines:
âHis form was of the manliest beau-u-u-uty,
His heart was ki-i-ind and soft;
Faithful below Tom did his duty,
But now heâs gone alo-o-o-o-oftâ â
But now heâs go-o-o-one aloft!â
Magdalen followed in the direction of the quavering voice, and found herself in a little room looking out on the back yard. There sat old Mazey, with his spectacles low on his nose, and his knotty old hands blundering over the rigging of his model ship. There were Brutus and Cassius digesting before the fire again, and snoring as if they thoroughly enjoyed it. There was Lord Nelson on one wall, in flaming watercolors; and there, on the other, was a portrait of Admiral Bartramâs last flagship, in full sail on a sea of slate, with a salmon-colored sky to complete the illusion.
âWhat, they wonât show you over the houseâ âwonât they?â said old Mazey. âI will, then! That head housemaidâs a sour one, my dearâ âif ever there was a sour one yet. Youâre too young and good-looking to please âemâ âthatâs what you are.â He rose, took off his spectacles, and feebly mended the fire. âSheâs as straight as a poplar,â said old Mazey, considering Magdalenâs figure in drowsy soliloquy. âI say sheâs as straight as a poplar, and his honor the admiral says so too! Come along, my dear,â he proceeded, addressing himself to Magdalen again. âIâll teach you your pints of the compass first. When you know your Pints, blow high, blow low, youâll find it plain sailing all over the house.â
He led the way to the doorâ âstopped, and suddenly bethinking himself of his miniature ship, went back to put his model away in an empty cupboardâ âled the way to the door againâ âstopped once moreâ âremembered that some of the rooms were chillyâ âand pottered about, swearing and grumbling, and looking for his hat. Magdalen sat down patiently to wait for him. She gratefully contrasted his treatment of her with the treatment she had received from the women. Resist it as firmly, despise it as proudly as we may, all studied unkindnessâ âno matter how contemptible it may beâ âhas a stinging power in it which reaches to the quick. Magdalen only knew how she had felt the small malice of the female servants, by the effect which the rough kindness of the old sailor produced on her afterward. The dumb welcome of the dogs, when the movements in the room had roused them from their sleep, touched her more acutely still. Brutus pushed his mighty muzzle companionably into her hand; and Cassius laid his friendly forepaw on her lap. Her heart yearned over the two creatures as she patted and caressed them. It seemed only yesterday since she and the dogs at Combe-Raven had roamed the garden together, and had idled away the summer mornings luxuriously on the shady lawn.
Old Mazey found his hat at last, and they started on their exploring expedition, with the dogs after them.
Leaving the basement story of the house, which was entirely devoted to the servantsâ offices, they ascended to the first floor, and entered the long corridor, with which Magdalenâs last nightâs experience had already made her acquainted. âPut your back agâin this wall,â said old Mazey, pointing to the long wallâ âpierced at irregular intervals with windows looking out over a courtyard and fishpondâ âwhich formed the right-hand side of the corridor, as Magdalen now stood. âPut your back here,â said the veteran, âand look straight afore you. What do you see?ââ ââThe opposite wall of the passage,â said Magdalen.â ââAy! ay! what else?ââ ââThe doors leading into the rooms.ââ ââWhat else?ââ ââI see nothing else.â Old Mazey chuckled, winked, and shook his knotty forefinger at Magdalen, impressively. âYou see one of the pints of the compass, my dear. When youâve got your back agâin this wall, and when you look straight afore you, you look Noathe. If you ever get lost hereaway, put your back agâin the wall, look out straight afore you, and say to yourself: âI look Noathe!â You do that like a good girl, and you wonât lose your bearings.â
After administering this preliminary dose of instruction, old Mazey opened the first of the doors on the left-hand side of the passage. It led into the dining-room, with which Magdalen was already familiar. The second room was fitted up as a library; and the third, as a morning-room. The fourth and fifth doorsâ âboth belonging to dismantled and uninhabited rooms, and both locked-brought them to the end of the north wing of the house, and to the opening of a second and shorter passage, placed at a right angle to the first. Here old Mazey, who had divided his time pretty equally during the investigation of the rooms, in talking of âhis honor the Admiral,â and whistling to the dogs, returned with all possible expedition to the points of the compass, and gravely directed Magdalen to repeat the ceremony of putting her back against the wall. She attempted to shorten the proceedings, by declaring (quite correctly) that in her present position she knew she was looking east. âDonât you talk about the east, my dear,â said old Mazey, proceeding unmoved with his own system of instruction, âtill you know the east first. Put your back agâin this wall, and look straight afore you. What do you see?â The remainder of the catechism proceeded as before. When the end was reached, Magdalenâs instructor was satisfied. He chuckled
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