were thick in green and yellow。 At the sides of the house were
bushes of lilac and guelder…rose and privet; entirely hiding the
farm buildings behind。
At the back a confusion of sheds spread into the home…close
from out of two or three indistinct yards。 The duck…pond lay
beyond the furthest wall; littering its white feathers on the
padded earthen banks; blowing its stray soiled feathers into the
grass and the gorse bushes below the canal embankment; which
rose like a high rampart near at hand; so that occasionally a
mans figure passed in silhouette; or a man and a towing horse
traversed the sky。
At first the Brangwens were astonished by all this motion
around them。 The building of a canal across their land made them
strangers in their own place; this raw bank of earth shutting
them off disconcerted them。 As they worked in the fields; from
beyond the now familiar embankment came the rhythmic run of the
winding engines; startling at first; but afterwards a narcotic
to the brain。 Then the shrill whistle of the trains re…echoed
through the heart; with fearsome pleasure; announcing the
far…off e near and imminent。
As they drove home from town; the farmers of the land met the
blackened colliers trooping from the pit…mouth。 As they gathered
the harvest; the west wind brought a faint; sulphurous smell of
pit…refuse burning。 As they pulled the turnips in November; the
sharp clink…clink…clink…clink…clink of empty trucks shunting on
the line; vibrated in their hearts with the fact of other
activity going on beyond them。
The Alfred Brangwen of this period had married a woman from
Heanor; a daughter of the 〃Black Horse〃。 She was a slim; pretty;
dark woman; quaint in her speech; whimsical; so that the sharp
things she said did not hurt。 She was oddly a thing to herself;
rather querulous in her manner; but intrinsically separate and
indifferent; so that her long lamentable plaints; when she
raised her voice against her husband in particular and against
everybody else after him; only made those who heard her wonder
and feel affectionately towards her; even while they were
irritated and impatient with her。 She railed long and loud about
her husband; but always with a balanced; easy…flying voice and a
quaint manner of speech that warmed his belly with pride and