Mr. Midshipman Easy - Frederick Marryat (best ereader for students TXT) 📗
- Author: Frederick Marryat
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The chamber of Easy and Gascoigne was at the top of the house, and finding it excessively warm, Gascoigne had forced his way up to the flat roof above (for the houses are all built in that way in most Mahomedan countries, to enable the occupants to enjoy the cool of the evening, and sometimes to sleep there). Those roofs, where houses are built next to each other, are divided by a wall of several feet, to insure that privacy which the Mahomedan customs demand.
Gascoigne had not been long up there before he heard the voice of a female, singing a plaintive air in a low tone, on the other side of the wall. Gascoigne sang well himself, and having a very fine ear, he was pleased with the correctness of the notes, although he had never heard the air before. He leant against the wall, smoked his cigar, and listened. It was repeated again and again at intervals; Gascoigne soon caught the notes, which sounded so clear and pure in the silence of the night.
At last they ceased, and having waited another half-hour in vain, our midshipman returned to his bed, humming the air which had so pleased his ear. It haunted him during his sleep, and rang in his ears when he awoke, as it is well known any new air that pleases us will do. Before breakfast was ready, Gascoigne had put English words to it, and sang them over and over again. He inquired of the vice-consul who lived in the next house, and was answered, that it was an old Moor, who was reported to be wealthy, and to have a daughter, whom many of the people had asked in marriage, but whether for her wealth or for her beauty he could not tell; he had, however, heard that she was very handsome. Gascoigne made no further inquiries, but went out with Jack and Captain Hogg, and on board to see the water got in for the bullocks.
“Where did you pick up that air, Gascoigne? It is very pretty, but I never heard you sing it before.”
Gascoigne told him, and also what he had heard from Mr Hicks.
“I am determined, Jack, to see that girl if I can. Hicks can talk Arabic fast enough; just ask him the Arabic for these words-‘Don’t be afraid-I love you-I cannot speak your tongue, and put them down on paper as they are pronounced.
Jack rallied Gascoigne upon his fancy, which could end in nothing.
“Perhaps not,” replied Gascoigne; “and I should have cared nothing about it, if she had not sung so well. I really believe the way to my heart is through my ear;-however, I shall try tonight, and soon find if she has the feeling which I think she has. Now let us go back; I’m tired of looking at women with garments up to their eyes, and men in dirt up to their foreheads.”
As they entered the house they heard an altercation between Mr and Miss Hicks.
“I shall never give my consent, Julia; one of those midshipmen you turn your nose up at is worth a dozen Hoggs.”
“Now, if we only knew the price of a hog in this country,” observed Easy, “we should be able to calculate our exact value, Ned.”
“A hog, being an unclean animal, is not-”
“Hush,” said Jack.
“Mr Hicks,” replied Miss Julia, “I am mistress of myself and my fortune, and I shall do as I please.”
“Depend upon it, you shall not, Julia. I consider it my duty to prevent you from making an improper match: and, as his Majesty’s representative here, I cannot allow you to marry this young man.”
“Mercy on us!” said Gascoigne, “his Majesty’s representative!”
“I shall not ask your consent,” replied the lady.
“Yes, but you shall not marry without my consent. I have, as you know, Julia, from my situation here, as one of his Majesty’s ‘corps diplomatick,’ great power, and I shall forbid the banns; in fact, it is only I who can marry you.”
“Then I’ll marry elsewhere.”
“And what will you do on board of the transport until you are able to be married?”
“I shall do as I think proper,” replied the lady; “and I’ll thank you for none of your indelicate insinuations.” So saying, the lady bounced out of the room into her own, and our midshipmen then made a noise in the passage to intimate that they had come in. They found Mr Hicks looking very red and vice-consular indeed, but he recovered himself; and Captain Hogg making his appearance, they went to dinner; but Miss Julia would not make her appearance, and Mr Hicks was barely civil to the captain, but he was soon afterwards called out, and our midshipmen went into the office to enable the two lovers to meet. They were heard then talking together, and after a time they said less, and their language was more tender.
“Let us see what’s going on, Jack,” said Gascoigne; and they walked softly, so as to perceive the two lovers, who were too busy to be on the lookout.
Captain Hogg was requesting a lock of his mistress’s hair. The plump Julia could deny him nothing; she let fall her flaxen tresses, and taking out the scissors cut off a thick bunch from her hair behind, which she presented to the captain; it was at least a foot and a half long, and an inch in circumference. The captain took it in his immense hand, and thrust it into his coat-pocket behind, but one thrust down to the bottom would not get it in, so he thrust again and again until it was all coiled away like a cable in a tier.
“That’s a liberal girl,” whispered Jack, “she gives by wholesale what it will take some time to retail. But here comes Mr Hicks, let’s give them warning; I like Hogg, and as she fancies pork, she shall have it, if I can contrive to help them.”
That night Gascoigne went again on the roof, and after waiting some time heard the same air repeated: he waited until it was concluded, and then, in a very low tone, sung it himself to the words he had arranged for it. For some time all was silent, and then the singing recommenced, but it was not to the same air. Gascoigne waited until the new air had been repeated several times, and then, giving full scope to his fine tenor voice, sang the first air again. It echoed through the silence of the night air, and then he waited, but in vain; the soft voice of the female was heard no more, and Gascoigne retired to rest.
This continued for three or four nights, Gascoigne singing the same airs the ensuing night that he had heard the preceding, until at last it appeared that the female had no longer any fear, but changed the airs so as to be amused with the repetition of them next evening. On the fifth night she sang the first air, and our midshipman responding, she then sang another, until she had sung them all, waiting each time for the response. The wall was not more than eight feet high, and Gascoigne now determined, with the assistance of Jack, to have a sight of his unknown songstress. He asked Captain Hogg to bring on shore some inch line,
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