[October Vagabonds by Richard Le Gallienne]@TWC D-Link book
October Vagabonds

CHAPTER XVII
4/8

Here, we gathered, was another beautiful ne'er-do-well of Nature, too occupied with her good looks to be fit for much else than prinking herself out with wild-flowers, and falling into graceful attitudes before her mirror--and there were mirrors in plenty, many streams and willows, in Cohocton Valley; everywhere, for us, the mysterious charm of running water.

Once this idle daughter of Ceres used to grow wheat, wheat "in great plenty," but now she could be persuaded to grow nothing but potatoes.
All this and much more we learned from a friend who drew up beside us in a buggy, as I was drinking from a gleaming thread of water gliding down a mossed conduit of hollowed tree-trunks into an old cauldron sunk into the hillside, and long since turned in ferns and lichen.

Colin was seated near by making a sketch, as I drank.
"I wouldn't drink too much of that water, lads," said the friendly voice of the dapper little intelligent-faced man in the buggy.
What! not drink this fairy water?
"Why, you country folk are as afraid of fresh water as you are of fresh air," I answered, laughing.
"All right, it's up to you--but it's been a dry Summer, you know." And then the little man's attention was taken by Colin.
"Sketching ?" he asked, and then he said, half shyly, "Would you mind my taking a look how you do it ?" and, climbing down from his buggy, he came and looked over Colin's shoulder.

"I used to try my hand at it a bit when I was a boy, but those blamed trees always beat me ...

don't bother you much, seemingly though," he added, as he watched Colin's pencil with the curiosity of a child.
"I've a little girl at home who does pretty well," he continued after a moment, "but you've certainly got her skinned.


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