"Oh, there's lots of things you could do!" he continued. "Why, of a

night you might use your pen and help me do the booking, and read and

improve yourself while I sat and smoked my pipe. Cats don't come into

the house."

"Do you mean that I should come and live with you, sir?" I said.

"That's it, my boy, always supposing you couldn't do any better. Could

you?"

I shook my head. "I don't think so, sir," I said dismally.

"Not such a good life for a boy in winter when things are bare, as in

summer when the flowers are out and the fruit comes on. Like fruit,

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don't you?"

"Yes, sir, but you don't let your boys eat the fruit."

"Tchah! I should never miss what you would eat," he said with a laugh,

"and you would soon get tired of the apples and pears and gooseberries.

Think you'd like to come, eh-em? You don't know; of course you don't.

Wouldn't make a gentleman of you. I never heard of a gentleman

gardener; plenty of gentlemen farmers, though."

"Yes, sir," I said, with my heart beating fast, "I've heard of gentlemen

farmers."

"But not of gentlemen market-gardeners, eh? No, my boy, they don't call

us gentlemen, and I never professed to be one; but a man may be a

gentleman at heart whatever his business, and that's better than being a

gentleman in name."

I looked up in his fresh red face, and there was such a kindly look in

it that I felt happier than I had been for weeks, and I don't know what

moved me to do it, but I laid my hand upon his arm.

He looked down at me thoughtfully as he went on.

"People are rather strange about these things. Gentleman farmer

cultivates a hundred acres of land that he pays a hundred and fifty

pounds a year for say: market-gardener cultivates twenty acres that he

pays two or three hundred for; and they call the one a gentleman, the

other a gardener. But it don't matter, Master Dennison, a bit. Does

it?"

"No, sir," I said, "I don't think so."

"Old business, gardening," he went on, with a dry look at me--"very old.

Let me see. There was a man named Adam took to it first, wasn't there?

Cultivated a garden, didn't he?"

I nodded and smiled.

"Ah, yes," he said; "but that was a long time ago, and you've not been

brought up for such a business. You wouldn't like it."

"Indeed, but I should, sir," I cried enthusiastically.

"No, no," he said, deliberately. "Don't be in a hurry to choose, my

boy. I knew a lad once who said he would like to be a sailor, and he

went to sea and had such a taste of it from London to Plymouth that he

would not go any farther, and they had to set him ashore."




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