登陆注册
37751100000031

第31章

Protestant young gentlemen-The Greek letters-Open chimney-Murtagh-Paris and Salamanca-Nothing to do-To whit,to whoo!-The pack of cards-Before Christmas.

WE continued at this place for some months,during which time the soldiers performed their duties,whatever they were;and I,having no duties to perform,was sent to school.I had been to English schools,and to the celebrated one of Edinburgh;but my education,at the present day,would not be what it is-perfect,had I never had the honour of being ALUMNUS in an Irish seminary.

'Captain,'said our kind host,'you would,no doubt,wish that the young gentleman should enjoy every advantage which the town may afford towards helping him on in the path of genteel learning.

It's a great pity that he should waste his time in idleness-doing nothing else than what he says he has been doing for the last fortnight-fishing in the river for trouts which he never catches;and wandering up the glen in the mountain,in search of the hips that grow there.Now,we have a school here,where he can learn the most elegant Latin,and get an insight into the Greek letters,which is desirable;and where,moreover,he will have an opportunity of ****** acquaintance with all the Protestant young gentlemen of the place,the handsome well-dressed young persons whom your honour sees in the church on the Sundays,when your honour goes there in the morning,with the rest of the Protestant military;for it is no Papist school,though there may be a Papist or two there-a few poor farmers'sons from the country,with whom there is no necessity for your honour's child to form any acquaintance at all,at all!'

And to the school I went,where I read the Latin tongue and the Greek letters,with a nice old clergyman,who sat behind a black oaken desk,with a huge Elzevir Flaccus before him,in a long gloomy kind of hall,with a broken stone floor,the roof festooned with cobwebs,the walls considerably dilapidated,and covered over with strange figures and hieroglyphics,evidently produced by the application of burnt stick;and there I made acquaintance with the Protestant young gentlemen of the place,who,with whatever ECLATthey might appear at church on a Sunday,did assuredly not exhibit to much advantage in the schoolroom on the week days,either with respect to clothes or looks.And there I was in the habit of sitting on a large stone,before the roaring fire in the huge open chimney,and entertaining certain of the Protestant young gentlemen of my own age,seated on similar stones,with extraordinary accounts of my own adventures,and those of the corps,with an occasional anecdote extracted from the story-books of Hickathrift and Wight Wallace,pretending to be conning the lesson all the while.

And there I made acquaintance,notwithstanding the hint of the landlord,with the Papist 'gossoons,'as they were called,the farmers'sons from the country;and of these gossoons,of whom there were three,two might be reckoned as nothing at all;in the third,however,I soon discovered that there was something extraordinary.

He was about sixteen years old,and above six feet high,dressed in a gray suit;the coat,from its size,appeared to have been made for him some ten years before.He was remarkably narrow-chested and round-shouldered,owing,perhaps as much to the tightness of his garment as to the hand of nature.His face was long,and his complexion swarthy,relieved,however,by certain freckles,with which the skin was plentifully studded.He had strange wandering eyes,gray,and somewhat unequal in size;they seldom rested on the book,but were generally wandering about the room,from one object to another.Sometimes he would fix them intently on the wall,and then suddenly starting,as if from a reverie,he would commence ****** certain mysterious movements with his thumbs and forefingers,as if he were shuffling something from him.

One morning,as he sat by himself on a bench,engaged in this manner,I went up to him,and said,'Good-day,Murtagh;you do not seem to have much to do?'

'Faith,you may say that,Shorsha dear!-it is seldom much to do that I have.'

'And what are you doing with your hands?'

'Faith,then,if I must tell you,I was e'en dealing with the cards.'

'Do you play much at cards?'

同类推荐
  • 溪山琴况

    溪山琴况

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 玄霜掌上录

    玄霜掌上录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 天王太子辟罗经

    天王太子辟罗经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 宝髻经四法优波提舍

    宝髻经四法优波提舍

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 送李频之南陵主簿

    送李频之南陵主簿

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 都市鬼谷门

    都市鬼谷门

    五龙聚气的风水宝地,神秘老人的疯言疯语,高深法术的相师,如天书般的经文,都让周天隐隐感到,这背后暗藏着一个不可告人的秘密!他想破解这个秘密,却不知自己正一步一步地走进被人精心设计的圈套!铁口神断,只因能天眼洞察;改命换运,终成就一代宗师。
  • 回梦游仙梦尘寰

    回梦游仙梦尘寰

    这篇文章的构想很早之前就已经有了,只不过一直没有写出来,发现写成原创文学可能会更加好一些,但是觉得既然是根据仙剑四的故事延伸。仙剑四的世界观支持,以及表达的内容也是对仙剑四的理解,所以决定还是写成同人文吧,希望大家支持。
  • 修真业务员

    修真业务员

    【起点第一组签约作品】徐彬从小没有父母,在爷爷奶奶的抚养下长大。大学毕业后为了生存,在好师傅国际集团里当一名业务员。他为人善良耿直,热心帮助他人,虽然在公司的业绩不是太好,却很有人缘。一次偶然的机会他被两个开小商店的修真老人选为传人,以圣火教秘宝火云刀为其筑基。而后以一名业务员的身份隐藏在上水市里修真。本想低调行事,却天不遂人愿,爱打抱不平的他引起了官商两道以及黑势力的关注,同时也引来了漂亮女上司的垂青。……本书轻微YY,自始至终“猪脚”以善良的本性贯彻全文。(望多多指教)——————————————帮忙冲榜,恳求推荐收藏。因为本人写作水平有限,成绩总是上不去。为了方便书友指教,特别开了一个群:4449404
  • 妃来心动

    妃来心动

    穿越成小官家籍籍无名的小庶女,还没等缓口气,就被送往瘟疫散发地伺候战王,没想到战王根本没看上她曾是神秘组织的老大季悠然无所谓的摇头,反正这辈子姐没什么太大的追求,被人当米虫养也不错。
  • 重回校园之胖妞逆袭

    重回校园之胖妞逆袭

    穿越回校园遭遇两大学霸男神的争夺战,原本以为的甜蜜恋情居然暗藏杀机?平静如水的校园生活,总有暗流在涌动
  • 夜之公主殿下血月蔷薇

    夜之公主殿下血月蔷薇

    泠是夜之公主的名字,她冷酷,她无情,她是暗夜绽开的一朵蔷薇,是只属于黑暗的,绝对冷酷。当死神之刃割破夜空,只有战栗与鲜血与她同在。
  • 登上月球

    登上月球

    男主黄宇恒是一个落后城市的小城男孩,极度压抑可怕的生活让他生出奋斗之心,渐渐他用力成长却不断失去,坚定的眼神却让我逐渐拥有一切,全书围绕奋斗励志为主题,分90集,春夏秋冬四季,全书又名《登月》。
  • 看盛世烟云浮华1

    看盛世烟云浮华1

    看盛世烟云浮华,金粉簪缨谁家———————
  • 库布里克之原神

    库布里克之原神

    混乱不堪的世界,秩序谁来掌控,规则由何而来。光怪陆离的世界,强者才适生存。
  • 笙歌未起而落

    笙歌未起而落

    沈笙歌一生穿过两次嫁衣,只为一人,一次动情,一次心碎。