You are here
قراءة كتاب Nancy McVeigh of the Monk Road
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Nancy McVeigh of the Monk Road, by R. Henry Mainer
Title: Nancy McVeigh of the Monk Road
Author: R. Henry Mainer
Release Date: June 30, 2008 [eBook #25938]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NANCY MCVEIGH OF THE MONK ROAD***
E-text prepared by Al Haines
Cover art

"Tommy wus one o' the boys, an' a pal o' ours."
Nancy McVeigh
OF THE MONK ROAD
BY
R. Henry Mainer
Toronto
William Briggs
1908
Copyright, Canada, 1908, by R. Henry Mainer.
These few stories of a good old
woman I dedicate to the
memory of
A. R. S. M.
who sat beside me while I wrote
them and offered many happy suggestions.
"Her face, deep lined; her eyes were gray,
Mirrors of her heart's continuous play;
Her head, crowned with a wintry sheet,
Had learned naught of this world's deceit.
She oft forgot her own in others' trials,
And met the day's rebuffs with sweetest smiles."
CONTENTS.
ILLUSTRATIONS
Cover art
"Tommy wus one o' the boys, an' a pal 'o ours." . . . . Frontispiece
"'Give me that gun, Johnny,' she called softly."
"Ye can just pull down the cover, an' I'll do me own fixin'."
NANCY McVEIGH.
CHAPTER I.
THE WOMAN OF THE INN.
During the régime of Governor Monk, of Upper Canada, the military road was cut through the virgin pine from Lake Ontario to the waters leading into Georgian Bay. The clearings followed, then the homesteads, then the corners, where the country store and the smithy flourished in primitive dignity. The roadside hostelry soon had a place on the highway, and deep into its centre was Nancy McVeigh's.
Nancy McVeigh's tavern was famed near and far. In earliest days the name was painted in letters bold across the high gabled face, but years of weather had washed the paint off. Its owner, however, had so long and faithfully dominated its destiny that it was known only as her property, and so it was named. A hill sloped gently for half a mile, traversed by a roadway of dry, grey sand, flanked on either side by a split-rail snake fence, gradually widening into an open space in front of the tavern. The tavern had reached an advanced stage of dilapidation. A rickety verandah in front shaded the first story, and a gable projected from above, so that the sill almost touched the ridge-board. A row of open sheds, facing inwards, ranged along one side of the yard, terminated by a barn, which originally had been a low log structure, but, with the increase of trade, had been capped with a board loft. Midway between the sheds and the house stood the pump, and whilst the owners gossiped over the brimming ale mugs within the house, the tired beasts dropped their muzzles into the trough. Some of the passers-by were of temperate habits, and did not enter the door leading to the bar, but accepted the refreshment offered by Nancy's pump, and thought none the less of the woman because their principles were out of sympathy with her business. The place lived only because of its mistress, and an odd character was she. Fate had directed her life into a peculiar channel, and she followed its course with a sureness of purpose that brought her admiration. She was tall, raw-boned, and muscled like a man. Her face was deeply lined, patient, and crowned with a mass of fine, fair hair turning into silvery grey, and blending so evenly that a casual observer could scarcely discern the change of color.


