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But we did not, for a few minutes later we approached a swing gate, just as the keeper came round a curve in the opposite direction.
"Here you are, then," he said, "just right. Farmer Dawson's gone off to market, and so we shan't have to ask leave. Come on, and let's see if we can find Jem Roff."
He pushed open the gate, and we went along a cart track for some distance, and then on through one of the hop-gardens, with its tall poles draped with the climbing rough-leaved vines, some of which had reached over and joined hands with their fellows, to make loops and festoons, all beautiful to my town-bred eyes, as was the glimpse I caught of a long, low old English farmhouse and garden, with a row of bee-hives, as we went round a great yard surrounded by buildings-- stables, barns, sheds, and cow-houses, with at one corner four tall towers, looking like blunt steeples with the tops cut off to accommodate as many large wooden cowls.
"What are they?" I asked.
"Oast-houses."
"What?"
"Oast-houses, where they dry the hops over a fire on horse-hair sheets,"
said Mercer. "Look! that's the pigeon-cote," he continued, pointing to three rows of holes cut in the woodwork which connected the brick towers. "The owl's nest's in one of those."
Just then a middle-aged man, with a very broad smile upon his face, and a fork in his hand, came up.
"Here, Jem," said the keeper, "the young gentlemen want to see the owl's nest."
The smile departed from the man's face, which he wiped all over with one hand, as he frowned and shook his head.
"Nay, nay," he said. "The master's very 'tickler 'bout them howls.
Why, if I was to kill one, he'd 'most kill me."
"The young gents won't hurt 'em, Jem."
"Nay, but they'd be wanting to take eggs, or young ones, or suthin'."
"Well, I should like one egg," said Mercer.
"Ah, I thowt so! Nay, you mustn't goo."
"Oh yes, let us go," said Mercer. "There, I won't touch an egg."
"An' you won't touch the birds?"
"No."
"Nor him neither."
"Oh, I won't touch them," I said eagerly.
"You see the master says they do no end of good, killing the mice and young rats."
"And I say they do no end of mischief, killing the young partridges and fezzans and hares," said the keeper. "Better not let me get a sight o'
one down our woods."
The man wiped his face again with his hand, and looked at us both attentively.
"Young master here said he'd stooff a magpie for me if you shot one, Bob Hopley."
"So I will," said Mercer, "if Mr Hopley shoots one for you."
"That's a bargain then," said the man, rummaging in his pocket, after sticking the fork in the ground. "Here, this way," he continued, as he drew out a bright key. "Coming, Bob?"
"No, I don't want to see owls, 'less they're nailed on my shed door."
He seated himself on the edge of a great hay-rack, and we followed the farmer's man through a door into the dark interior of one of the oast-houses, where we looked up to see the light coming in through the opening at the side of the cowl, and then followed Jem up some steps into a broad loft, at one corner of which was a short ladder leading up to a trap-door in the floor overhead.
"Mind your heads, young gents, ceiling's pretty low."
We had already found that out by having our caps sc.r.a.ped by a rough beam under which we pa.s.sed.
"Now then, go up the ladder and push the trap-door open gently, so as not to frighten 'em. Turn the door right over, and let it down by the staple so as it lies on the floor. 'Tain't dark; plenty o' light comes through the pigeon-holes."
"Haven't you got any pigeons now, Jem Roff?"
"No, nor don't want none. Up wi' ye, and let me get back to my work."
Mercer needed no further invitation, and, followed closely by me, he crossed to the corner where the ladder stood, climbed up, thrust the trap-door over, and disappeared--head--shoulders--body--legs.
Then I climbed too, and found myself in a dirty, garret-like place, lit by the rays falling through about a score of pigeon-holes.
For a few moments the place was dim, and I could hardly make out anything, but very soon after my eyes grew accustomed to the half light, and I was ready to join in Mercer's admiration as he cried,--"Isn't he a beauty!"
For we were looking where, in one corner, sitting bolt upright, with his eyes half closed, there was a fine young owl, just fully fledged and fit to fly, while nothing could be more beautiful than his snow-white, flossy breast, and the buff colour of his back, all dotted over with grey, and beautifully-formed dots.
"Oh, shouldn't I like him to stuff!" cried Mercer. "He'll never look so clean and beautiful again."
"But what's that?" I cried, pointing at a hideous-looking goblin-like creature, with a great head, whose bare skin was tufted with patches of white down. Its eyes were enormous, but nearly covered by a nasty-looking skin, which seemed to be stretched over them. Projecting beneath was an ugly great beak, and its nearly naked body, beneath the toppling head and weak neck, was swollen and bloated up as if it would crack at a touch. Altogether it was as disgusting a looking object as it was possible to imagine.
"That's his young brother," cried Mercer, laughing.
"Young nonsense! It must be a very, very old owl that has lost all its feathers."
"Not it. That chap's somewhere about a fortnight old; and look there, you can see an egg in the nest, too. Shouldn't I like it!"
"Then it's the nest belonging to three pairs of owls?" I said.
"No. That's the way they do--hatch one egg at a time. They all belong to the same pair."
I felt a little incredulous, but my attention was taken up then by a semicircle of little animals arranged about two feet from the nesting-place.
"Why, they're all big mice," I said.
"No; nearly all young rats," said Mercer, counting. "Twenty-two," he cried, "and all fresh. Why, they must have been caught last night.
That's a fine mouse," he cried, taking one up by its tail.
"Why, that must be a young rat," I said. "That little one's a mouse."