The Graveyard Book Chapter 4 PDF

Summary

Chapter 4 of the Graveyard Book introduces the reader to a witch buried in a graveyard. Bod, a boy who lives within the graveyard, learns a lot from the characters. The chapter contains discussion on morality and the afterlife.

Full Transcript

The Graveyard Book Neil Gaimon CHAPTER FOUR Part 1 The Witch’s Headstone THERE WAS A WITCH buried at the edge of the graveyard, it was common knowledge. Bod had been told to keep away from that corner of the world by Mrs. Owens...

The Graveyard Book Neil Gaimon CHAPTER FOUR Part 1 The Witch’s Headstone THERE WAS A WITCH buried at the edge of the graveyard, it was common knowledge. Bod had been told to keep away from that corner of the world by Mrs. Owens as far back as he could remember. “Why?” he asked. “T’aint healthy for a living body,” said Mrs. Owens. “There’s damp down that end of things. It’s practically a marsh. You’ll catch your death.” Mr. Owens himself was more evasive and less imaginative. “It’s not a good place,” was all he said. The graveyard proper ended at the bottom of the west side of the hill, beneath the old apple tree, with a fence of rust-brown iron railings, each topped with a small, rusting spearhead, but there was a wasteland beyond that, a mass of nettles and weeds, of brambles and autumnal rubbish, and Bod, who was, on the whole, obedient, did not push between the railings, but he went down there and looked through. He knew he wasn’t being told the whole story, and it irritated him. Bod went back up the hill, to the little chapel near the entrance to the graveyard, and he waited until it got dark. As twilight edged from grey to purple there was a noise in the spire, like a fluttering of heavy velvet, and Silas left his resting place in the belfry and clambered headfirst down the spire. “What’s in the far corner of the graveyard?” asked Bod. “Past Harrison Westwood, Baker of this Parish, and his wives, Marion and Joan?” “Why do you ask?” said his guardian, brushing the dust from his black suit with ivory fingers. Bod shrugged. “Just wondered.” “It’s unconsecrated ground,” said Silas. “Do you know what that means?” “Not really,” said Bod. Silas walked across the path without disturbing a fallen leaf and sat down on the bench beside Bod. “There are those,” he said, in his silken voice, “who believe that all land is sacred. That it is sacred before we come to it, and sacred after. But here, in your land, they blessed the churches and the ground they set aside to bury people in, to make it holy. But they left land unconsecrated beside the sacred ground, Potter’s Fields to bury the criminals or those who were not of the faith.” “So, the people buried in the ground on the other side of the fence are bad people?” Silas raised one perfect eyebrow. “Mm? Oh, not at all. Let’s see, it’s been a while since I’ve been down that way. But I don’t remember anyone particularly evil. Remember, in days gone by you could be hanged for stealing a shilling. And there are always people who find their lives have become so unsupportable they believe the best thing they could do would be to hasten their transition to another plane of existence.” “Does it work? Are they happier dead?” “Sometimes. Mostly, no. It’s like the people who believe they’ll be happy if they go and live somewhere else, but who learn it doesn’t work that way. Wherever you go, you take yourself with you. If you see what I mean.” “Sort of,” said Bod. Silas reached down and ruffled the boy’s hair. Bod said, “What about the witch?” “Yes. Exactly,” said Silas. “Criminals, and witches. Those who died unshriven.” He stood up, a midnight shadow in the twilight. “All this talking,” he said, “and I have not even had my breakfast. While you will be late for lessons.” In the twilight of the graveyard there was a silent implosion, a flutter of velvet darkness, and Silas was gone. The moon had begun to rise by the time Bod reached Mr. Pennyworth’s mausoleum, and Thomes Pennyworth was already waiting, and was not in the best of moods. “You are late,” he said. “Sorry, Mr. Pennyworth.” Pennyworth tutted. The previous week Mr. Pennyworth had been teaching Bod about Elements and Humors, and Bod had kept forgetting which was which. He was expecting a test, but instead Mr. Pennyworth said, “I think it is time to spend a few days on practical matters. Time is passing, after all.” “Is it?” asked Bod. “I am afraid so, young Master Owens. Now, how is your Fading?” Bod had hoped he would not be asked that question. “It’s all right,” he said. “I mean. You know.” “No, Master Owens. I do not know. Why do you not demonstrate for me?” Bod’s heart sank. He took a deep breath, and did his best, squinching up his eyes and trying to fade away. Mr. Pennyworth was not impressed. “Pah. That’s not the kind of thing. Not the kind of thing at all. Slipping and Fading, boy, the way of the dead. Slip through shadows. Fade from awareness. Try again.” Bod tried harder. “You’re as plain as the nose on your face,” said Mr. Pennyworth. “And your nose is remarkably obvious. As is the rest of your face, young man. As are you. For the sake of all that is holy, empty your mind. Now. You are an empty alleyway. You are a vacant doorway. You are nothing. Eyes will not see you. Minds will not hold you. Where you are is nothing and nobody.” Bod tried again. He closed his eyes and imagined himself fading into the stained stonework of the mausoleum wall, becoming a shadow on the night and nothing more. He sneezed. “Dreadful,” said Mr. Pennyworth, with a sigh. “Quite dreadful. I believe I shall have a word with your guardian about this.” He shook his head. “So. The humors. List them.” “Um. Sanguine. Choleric. Phlegmatic. And the other one. Um, Melancholic, I think.” And so it went, until it was time for Grammar and Composition with Miss Letitia Borrows, Spinster of this. Bod liked Miss Borrows, and the cosiness of her little crypt, and that she could all-too-easily be led off the subject. “They say there’s a witch in uncons—unconsecrated ground,” he said. “Yes, dear. But you don’t want to go over there.” “Why not?” Miss Borrows smiled the guileless smile of the dead. “They aren’t our sort of people,” she said. “But it is the graveyard, isn’t it? I mean, I’m allowed to go there if I want to?” “That,” said Miss Borrows, “would not be advisable.” Bod was obedient, but curious, and so, when lessons were done for the night, he walked past Harrison Westwood, Baker, and family’s memorial, a broken-armed angel, but did not climb down the hill to the Potter’s Field. Instead, he walked up the side of the hill to where a picnic some thirty years before had left its mark in the shape of a large apple tree. There were some lessons that Bod had mastered. He had eaten a bellyful of unripe apples, sour and white-pipped, from the tree some years before, and had regretted it for days, his guts cramping and painful while Mrs. Owens lectured him on what not to eat. Now he always waited until the apples were ripe before eating them, and never ate more than two or three a night. He had finished the last of the apples the week before, but he liked the apple tree as a place to think. He edged up the trunk, to his favourite place in the crook of two branches, and looked down at the Potter’s Field below him, a brambly patch of weeds and unmown grass in the moonlight. He wondered whether the witch would be old and iron-toothed and travel in a house on chicken legs, or whether she would be thin and sharp-nosed and carry a broomstick. Bod’s stomach growled and he realized that he was getting hungry. He wished he had not devoured all the apples on the tree. That he had left just one… He glanced up, and thought he saw something. He looked once, looked twice to be certain: an apple, red and ripe. Bod prided himself on his tree- climbing skills. He swung himself up, branch by branch, and imagined he was Silas, swarming smoothly up a sheer brick wall. The apple, the red of it almost black in the moonlight, hung just out of reach. Bod moved slowly forward along the branch, until he was just below the apple. Then he stretched up, and the tips of his fingers touched the perfect apple. He was never to taste it. A snap, loud as a hunter’s gun, as the branch gave way beneath him. A flash of pain woke him, sharp as ice, the color of slow thunder, down in the weeds that summer’s night. The ground beneath him seemed relatively soft, and oddly warm. He pushed a hand down and felt something like warm fur beneath him. He had landed on the grass-pile, where the graveyard’s groundskeeper threw the cuttings from the mower, and it had broken his fall. Still, there was a pain in his chest, and his leg hurt as if he had landed on it first and twisted it. Bod moaned. “Hush-a-you-hush-a-boy,” said a voice from behind him. “Where did you come from? Dropping like a thunderstone. What way is that to carry on?” “I was in the apple tree,” said Bod. “Ah. Let me see your leg. Broken like the tree’s limb, I’ll be bound.” Cool fingers prodded his left leg. “Not broken. Twisted, yes, sprained perhaps. You have the Devil’s own luck, boy, falling into the compost. ’Tain’t the end of the world.” “Oh, good,” said Bod. “Hurts, though.” He turned his head, looked up and behind him. She was older than him, but not a grownup, and she looked neither friendly nor unfriendly. Wary, mostly. She had a face that was intelligent and not even a little bit beautiful. “I’m Bod,” he said. “The live boy?” she asked. Bod nodded. “I thought you must be,” she said. “We’ve heard of you, even over here, in the Potter’s Field. What do they call you?” “Owens,” he said. “Nobody Owens. Bod, for short.” “How-de-do, young Master Bod.” Bod looked her up and down. She wore a plain white shift. Her hair was mousy and long, and there was something of the goblin in her face—a sideways hint of a smile that seemed to linger, no matter what the rest of her face was doing. “Did you steal a shilling?” “Never stole nuffink,” she said, “Not even a handkerchief. Anyway,” she said, pertly, “Ah,” said Bod. Then, suspicion forming, tentatively, he said, “They say a witch is buried here.” She nodded.

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