BARNABY RUDGE
BY
CHARLES DICKENS.
IN TWO VOLUMES.
VOL. I.
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY
H. K. BROWNE AND G. CATTERMOLE.
LONDON:
CHAPMAN AND HALL, 193,
PICCADILLY.
PHILADELPHIA
: J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO. 1874.
LONDON:
PRINTED BY VIRTUE AND
CO.,
CITY ROAD.
AS it is Mr. Waterton’s
opinion that ravens are gradually becoming extinct in England, I offer a few
words here about mine.
The raven in this story
is a compound of two great originals, of whom I was, at different times, the
proud possessor. The first was in the bloom of his youth, when he was
discovered in a modest retirement in London, by a friend of mine, and given to
me. He had from the first, as Sir Hugh Evans says of Anne Page, "good
gifts", which he improved by study and attention in a most exemplary
manner. He slept in a stable--generally on horseback--and so terrified a
Newfoundland dog by his preternatural sagacity, that he has been known, by the
mere superiority of his genius, to walk off unmolested with the dog’s dinner,
from before his face. He was rapidly rising in acquirements and virtues, when,
in an evil hour, his stable was newly painted. He observed the workmen closely,
saw that they were careful of the paint, and immediately burned to possess it.
On their going to dinner, he ate up all they had left behind, consisting of a
pound or two of white lead; and this youthful indiscretion terminated in death.
While I was yet
inconsolable for his loss, another friend of mine in Yorkshire discovered an
older and more gifted raven at a village public-house, which he prevailed upon
the landlord to part with for a consideration, and sent up to me. The first act
of this Sage was, to administer to the effects of his predecessor by
disinterring all the cheese and halfpence he had buried in the garden--a work
of immense labour and research, to which he devoted all the energies of his
mind. When he had achieved this task, he applied himself to the acquisition of
stable language, in which he soon became such an adept, that he would perch outside
my window and drive imaginary horses with great skill, all day. Perhaps even I
never saw him at his best, for his former master sent his duty with him,
"and if I wished the bird to come out very strong, would I be so good as
to show him a drunken man"--which I never did, having (unfortunately) none
but sober people at hand. But I could hardly have respected him more, whatever
the stimulating influences of this sight might have been. He had not the least
respect, I am sorry to say, for me in return, or for anybody but the cook; to
whom he was attached--but only, I fear, as a Policeman might have been. Once, I
met him unexpectedly, about half a mile off, walking down the middle of the
public street, attended by a pretty large crowd, and spontaneously exhibiting
the whole of his accomplishments. His gravity under those trying circumstances,
I can never forget, nor the extraordinary gallantry with which, refusing to be
brought home, he defended himself behind a pump, until overpowered by numbers.
It may have been that he was too bright a genius to live long, or it may have
been that he took some pernicious substance into his bill, and thence into his
maw--which is not improbable, seeing that he new-pointed the greater part of
the garden-wall by digging out the mortar, broke countless squares of glass by
scraping away the putty all round the frames, and tore up and swallowed, in
splinters, the greater part of a wooden staircase of six steps and a
landing--but after some three years he too was taken ill, and died before the
kitchen fire. He kept his eye to the last upon the meat as it roasted, and
suddenly. turned over on his back with a sepulchral cry of "Cuckoo!"
After this mournful
deprivation, I was, for a long time, ravenless. The kindness of another friend at
length provided me with another raven: but he is not a genius. He leads the
life of a hermit in my little orchard, on the summit of SHAKSPEARE’S Gad’s
Hill; he has no relish for society; he gives no evidence of ever cultivating
his mind; and he has picked up nothing but meat since I have known him--except
the faculty of barking like a dog.
Of the story of BARNABY
RUDGE itself, I do not think I can say anything here more to the purpose than
the following passages from the original Preface:--
"No account of the
Gordon Riots having been to my knowledge introduced into any Work of Fiction,
and the subject presenting very extraordinary and remarkable features, I was
led to project this Tale.
"It is unnecessary
to say, that those shameful tumults, while they reflect indelible disgrace upon
the time in which they occurred, and all who had act or part in them, teach a
good lesson. That what we falsely call a religious cry is easily raised by men
who have no religion, and who in their daily practice set at nought the
commonest principles of right and wrong; that it is begotten of intolerance and
persecution; that it is senseless, besotted, inveterate and unmerciful; all
History teaches us. But perhaps we do not know it in our hearts too well, to
profit by even so humble an example as the ’No Popery’ riots of Seventeen
Hundred and Eighty.
"However
imperfectly those disturbances are set forth in the following pages, they are
impartially painted by one who has no sympathy with the Romish Church, though
he acknowledges, as most men do, some esteemed friends among the followers of
its creed.
"It may be
observed that, in the description of the principal outrages, reference has been
had to the best authorities of that time, such as they are; the account given
in this Tale, of all the main features of the Riots, is substantially correct.
"It may be further
remarked, that Mr. Dennis’s alllusions to the flourishing condition of his
trade in those days have their formulation in Truth, and not in the Author’s
fancy. Any file of old Newspapers, or odd volume of the Annual Register, will
prove this with terrible ease.
Even the case of Mary
Jones, dwelt upon with so much pleasure by the same character, is no effort of
invention. The facts were stated, exactly as they are stated here, in the House
of Commons. Whether they afforded as much entertainment to the merry gentlemen
assembled there, as some other most affecting circumstances of a similar nature
mentioned by Sir Samuel Romilly, is not recorded."
That the case of Mary
Jones may speak the more emphatically for itself, I subjoin it, as related by
SIR WILLIAM MEREDITH in a speech in Parliament, "on Frequent
Executions", made in 1777.
"Under this
act," the Shop-lifting Act, "one Mary Jones was executed, whose case
I shall just mention; it was at the time when press warrants were issued, on
the alarm about Falkland Islands. The woman’s husband was pressed, their goods
seized for some debts of his, and she, with two small children, turned into the
streets a-begging. It is a circumstance not to be forgotten, that she was very
young (under nineteen), and most remarkably handsome. She went to a
linen-draper’s shop, took some coarse linen off the counter, and slipped it
under her cloak; the shopman saw her, and she laid it down: for this she was
hanged. Her defence was (I have the trial in my pocket), "that she had
lived in credit, and wanted for nothing, till a press-gang came and stole her
husband from her; but since then, she had no bed to lie on; nothing to give her
children to eat; and they were almost naked; and perhaps she might have done
something wrong, for she hardly knew what she did." The parish officers
testified the truth of this story; but it seems, there had been a good deal of
shop-lifting about Ludgate; an example was thought necessary; and this woman
was hanged for the comfort and satisfaction of shopkeepers in Ludgate Street.
When brought to receive sentence, she behaved in such a frantic manner, as
proved her mind to he in a distracted and desponding state; and the child was
sucking at her breast when she set out for Tyburn."
IN the year 1775 there
stood upon the borders of Epping Forest, at a distance of about twelve miles
from London--measuring from the Standard in Cornhill, or rather from the spot
on or near to which the Standard used to be in days of yore--a house of public
entertainment called the Maypole; which fact was demonstrated to all such
travellers as could neither read nor write (and at that time a vast number both
of travellers and stay-at-homes were in this condition) by the emblem reared on
the roadside over against the house, which, if not of those goodly proportions
that Maypoles were wont to present in olden times, was a fair young ash, thirty
feet in height, and straight as any arrow that ever English yeoman drew.
The Maypole--by which
term from henceforth is meant the house, and not its sign--the Maypole was an
old building, with more gable ends than a lazy man would care to count on a
sunny day; huge zig-zag chimneys, out of which it seemed as though even smoke
could not choose but come in more than naturally fantastic shapes, imparted to
it in its tortuous progress; and vast stables, gloomy, ruinous, and empty. The
place was said to have been built in the days of King Henry the Eighth; and
there was a legend, not only that Queen Elizabeth had slept there one night
while upon a hunting excursion, to wit, in a certain oak-panelled room with a
deep bay window, but that next morning, while standing on a mounting block before
the door with one foot in the stirrup, the virgin monarch had then and there
boxed and cuffed an unlucky page for some neglect of duty. The matter-of-fact
and doubtful folks, of whom there were a few among the Maypole customers, as
unluckily there always are in every little community, were inclined to look
upon this tradition as rather apocryphal; but, whenever the landlord of that
ancient hostelry appealed to the mounting block itself as evidence, and
triumphantly pointed out that there it stood in the same place to that very
day, the doubters never failed to be put down by a large majority, and all true
believers exulted as in a victory.
Whether these, and many
other stories of the like nature, were true or untrue, the Maypole was really
an old house, a very old house, perhaps as old as it claimed to be, and perhaps
older, which will sometimes happen with houses of an uncertain, as with ladies
of a certain, age. Its windows were old diamond-pane lattices, its floors were
sunken and uneven, its ceilings blackened by the hand of time, and heavy with
massive beams. Over the doorway was an ancient porch, quaintly and grotesquely
carved; and here on summer evenings the more favoured customers smoked and
drank--ay, and sang many a good song too, sometimes--reposing on two
grim-looking high-backed settles, which, like the twin dragons of some fairy
tale, guarded the entrance to the mansion.
In the chimneys of the
disused rooms swallows had built their nests for many a long year, and from
earliest spring to latest autumn whole colonies of sparrows chirped and
twittered in the eaves. There were more pigeons about the dreary stable-yard
and out-buildings than anybody but the landlord could reckon up. The wheeling
and circling flights of runts, fantails, tumblers,
and pouters, were
perhaps not quite consistent with the grave and sober character of the
building, but the monotonous cooing, which never ceased to be raised by some
among them all day long, suited it exactly, and seemed to lull it to rest. With
its overhanging stories, drowsy little panes of glass, and front bulging out
and projecting over the pathway, the old house looked as if it were nodding in
its sleep. Indeed, it needed no very great stretch of fancy to detect in it
other resemblances to humanity. The bricks of which it was built had originally
been a deep dark red, but had grown yellow and discoloured like an old man’s
skin; the sturdy timbers had decayed like teeth; and here and there the ivy,
like a warm garment to comfort it in its age, wrapped its green leaves closely
round the time-worn walls.
It was a hale and
hearty age though, still: and in the summer or autumn evenings, when the glow
of the setting sun fell upon the oak and chestnut trees of the adjacent forest,
the old house, partaking of its lustre, seemed their fit companion, and to have
many good years of life in him yet.
The evening with which
we have to do, was neither a summer nor an autumn one, but the twilight of a
day in March, when the wind howled dismally among the bare branches of the
trees, and rumbling in the wide chimneys and driving the rain against the
windows of the Maypole Inn, gave such of its frequenters as chanced to be there
at the moment an undeniable reason for prolonging their stay, and caused the
landlord to prophesy that the night would certainly clear at eleven o’clock
precisely,--which by a remarkable coincidence was the hour at which he always
closed his house.
The name of him upon
whom the spirit of prophecy thus descended was John Willet, a burly, large-headed
man with a fat face, which betokened profound obstinacy and slowness of
apprehension, combined with a very strong reliance upon his own merits. It was
John Willet’s ordinary boast in his more placid moods that if he were slow he
was sure; which assertion could, in one sense at least, be by no means
gainsaid, seeing that he was in everything unquestionably the reverse of fast,
and withal one of the most dogged and positive fellows in existence--always
sure that what he thought or said or did was right, and holding it as a thing
quite settled and ordained by the laws of nature and Providence, that anybody
who said or did or thought otherwise must be inevitably and of necessity wrong.
Mr. Willet walked
slowly up to the window, flattened his fat nose against the cold glass, and
shading his eyes that his sight might not be affected by the ruddy glow of the
fire, looked abroad. Then he walked slowly back to his old seat in the
chimney-corner, and, composing himself in it with a slight shiver, such as a man
might give way to and so acquire an additional relish for the warm blaze, said,
looking round upon his guests:
"It’ll clear at
eleven o’clock. No sooner and no later. Not before and not arterwards."
"How do you make
out that?" said a little man in the opposite corner. "The moon is
past the full, and she rises at nine."
John looked sedately
and solemnly at his questioner until he had brought his mind to bear upon the
whole of his observation, and then made answer, in a tone which seemed to imply
that the moon was peculiarly his business and nobody else’s:
"Never you mind
about the moon. Don’t you trouble yourself about her. You let the moon alone,
and I’ll let you alone."
"No offence I
hope?" said the little man.
Again John waited
leisurely until the observation had thoroughly penetrated to his brain, and
then replying, "No offence as yet," applied a light to his pipe and
smoked in placid silence; now and then casting a sidelong look at a man wrapped
in a loose riding- coat with huge cuffs ornamented with tarnished silver lace
and large metal buttons, who sat apart from the regular frequenters of the
house, and wearing a hat flapped over his face, which was still further shaded
by the hand on which his forehead rested, looked unsociable enough.
There was another
guest, who sat, booted and spurred, at some distance from the fire also, and
whose thoughts--to judge from his folded arms and knitted brows, and from the
untasted liquor before him--were occupied with other matters than the topics
under discussion or the persons who discussed them. This was a young man of
about eight-and-twenty, rather above the middle height, and though of somewhat
slight figure, gracefully and strongly made. He wore his own dark hair, and was
accoutred in a riding dress, which together with his large boots (resembling in
shape and fashion those worn by our Life Guardsmen at the present day), showed
indisputable traces of the bad condition of the roads. But travel- stained
though he was, he was well and even richly attired, and without being
overdressed looked a gallant gentleman.
Lying upon the table
beside him, as he had carelessly thrown them down, were a heavy riding-whip and
a slouched hat, the latter worn no doubt as being best suited to the inclemency
of the weather. There, too, were a pair of pistols in a holster-case, and a
short riding-cloak. Little of his face was visible, except the long dark lashes
which concealed his downcast eyes, but an air of careless ease and natural
gracefulness of demeanour pervaded the figure, and seemed to comprehend even
those slight accessories, which were all handsome, and in good keeping.
Towards this young
gentleman the eyes of Mr. Willet wandered but once, and then as if in mute
inquiry whether he had observed his silent neighbour. It was plain that John
and the young gentleman had often met before. Finding that his look was not
returned, or indeed observed by the person to whom it was addressed, John
gradually concentrated the whole power of his eyes into one focus, and brought
it to bear upon the man in the flapped hat, at whom he came to stare in course
of time with an intensity so remarkable, that it affected his fireside cronies,
who all, as with one accord, took their pipes from their lips, and stared with
open mouths at the stranger likewise.
The sturdy landlord had
a large pair of dull fish-like eyes, and the little man who had hazarded the
remark about the moon (and who was the parish-clerk and bell-ringer of
Chigwell, a village hard by) had little round black shiny eyes like beads;
moreover this little man wore at the knees of his rusty black breeches, and on
his rusty black coat, and all down his long flapped waistcoat, little queer
buttons like nothing except his eyes; but so like them, that as they twinkled
and glistened in the light of the fire, which shone too in his bright
shoe-buckles, he seemed all eyes from head to foot, and to be gazing with every
one of them at the unknown customer. No wonder that a man should grow restless
under such an inspection as this, to say nothing of the eyes belonging to short
Tom Cobb
the general chandler
and post-office keeper, and long Phil Parkes the ranger, both of whom, infected
by the example of their companions, regarded him of the flapped hat no less
attentively.
The stranger became
restless; perhaps from being exposed to this raking fire of eyes, perhaps from
the nature of his previous meditations--most probably from the latter cause,
for as he changed his position and looked hastily round, he started to find
himself the object of such keen regard, and darted an angry and suspicious
glance at the fireside group. It had the effect of immediately diverting all
eyes to the chimney, except those of John Willet, who finding himself as it
were, caught in the fact, and not being (as has been already observed) of a
very ready nature, remained staring at his guest in a particularly awkward and
disconcerted manner.
"Well?" said
the stranger.
Well. There was not
much in well. It was not a long speech. "I thought you gave an
order," said the landlord, after a pause of two or three minutes for
consideration.
The stranger took off
his hat, and disclosed the hard features of a man of sixty or thereabouts, much
weatherbeaten and worn by time, and the naturally harsh expression of which was
not improved by a dark handkerchief which was bound tightly round his head,
and, while it served the purpose of a wig, shaded his forehead, and almost hid
his eyebrows. If it were intended to conceal or divert attention from a deep
gash, now healed into an ugly seam, which when it was first inflicted must have
laid bare his cheekbone, the object was but indifferently attained, for it
could scarcely fail to be noted at a glance. His complexion was of a cadaverous
hue, and he had a grizzly jagged beard of some three weeks’ date. Such was the
figure (very meanly and poorly clad) that now rose from the seat, and stalking
across the room sat down in a corner of the chimney, which the politeness or
fears of the little clerk very readily assigned to him.
"A
highwayman!" whispered Tom Cobb to Parkes the ranger.
"Do you suppose
highwaymen don’t dress handsomer than that?" replied Parkes. "It’s a
better business than you think for, Tom, and highwaymen don’t need or use to be
shabby, take my word for it."
Meanwhile the subject
of their speculations had done due honour to the house by calling for some
drink, which was promptly supplied by the landlord’s son Joe, a
broad-shouldered strapping young fellow of twenty, whom it pleased his father
still to consider a little boy, and to treat accordingly. Stretching out his
hands to warm them by the blazing fire, the man turned his head towards the
company, and after running his eye sharply over them, said in a voice well
suited to his appearance:
"What house is
that which stands a mile or so from here?"
"Public-house?"
said the landlord, with his usual deliberation.
"Public-house,
father!" exclaimed Joe, "where’s the public-house within a mile or so
of the Maypole? He means the great house--the Warren--naturally and of course.
The old red brick house, sir, that stands in its own grounds--?"
"Aye," said
the stranger.
"And that fifteen
or twenty years ago stood in a park five times as broad, which with other and
richer property has bit by bit changed hands and dwindled away--more’s the
pity!" pursued the young man.
"Maybe," was
the reply. "But my question related to the owner. What it has been I don’t
care to know, and what it is I can see for myself."
The heir-apparent to
the Maypole pressed his finger on his lips, and glancing at the young gentleman
already noticed, who had changed his attitude when the house was first
mentioned, replied in a lower tone:
"The owner’s name
is Haredale, Mr. Geoffrey Haredale, and"--again he glanced in the same
direction as before--"and a worthy gentleman too--hem!"
Paying as little regard
to this admonitory cough, as to the significant gesture that had preceded it,
the stranger pursued his questioning.
"I turned out of
my way coming here, and took the footpath that crosses the grounds. Who was the
young lady that I saw entering a carriage? His daughter?"
"Why, how should I
know, honest man?" replied Joe, contriving in the course of some
arrangements about the hearth, to advance close to his questioner and pluck him
by the sleeve, "I didn’t see the young lady, you know. Whew! There’s the
wind again--and rain--well it is a night!"
"Rough weather
indeed!" observed the strange man.
"You’re used to
it?" said Joe, catching at anything which seemed to promise a diversion of
the subject.
"Pretty
well," returned the other. "About the young lady--has Mr. Haredale a
daughter?"
"No, no,"
said the young fellow fretfully, "he’s a single gentleman--he’s--be quiet,
can’t you, man? Don’t you see this talk is not relished yonder?"
Regardless of this
whispered remonstrance, and affecting not to hear it, his tormentor provokingly
continued:
"Single men have
had daughters before now. Perhaps she may be his daughter, though he is not
married."
"What do you
mean?" said Joe, adding in an undertone as he approached him again,
"You’ll come in for it presently, I know you will!"
"I mean no
harm"--returned the traveller boldly, "and have said none that I know
of. I ask a few questions--as any stranger may, and not unnaturally--about the
inmates of a remarkable house in a neighbourhood which is new to me, and you
are as aghast and disturbed as if I were talking treason against King George.
Perhaps you can tell me why, sir, for (as I say) I am a stranger, and this is
Greek to me?"
The latter observation
was addressed to the obvious cause of Joe Willet’s discomposure, who had risen
and was adjusting his riding- cloak preparatory to sallying abroad. Briefly
replying that he could give him no information, the young man beckoned to Joe,
and handing him a piece of money in payment of his reckoning, hurried out
attended by young Willet himself, who taking up a candle followed to light him
to the house-door.
While Joe was absent on
this errand, the elder Willet and his three companions continued to smoke with
profound gravity, and in a deep silence, each having his eyes fixed on a huge
copper boiler that was suspended over the fire. After some time John Willet
slowly shook his head, and thereupon his friends slowly shook theirs; but no
man withdrew his eyes from the boiler, or altered the solemn expression of his
countenance in the slightest degree.
At length Joe
returned--very talkative and conciliatory, as though with a strong presentiment
that he was going to be found fault with.
"Such a thing as
love is!" he said, drawing a chair near the fire, and looking round for
sympathy. "He has set off to walk to London,--all the way to London. His
nag gone lame in riding out here this blessed afternoon, and comfortably
littered down in our stable at this minute; and he giving up a good hot supper
and our best bed, because Miss Haredale has gone to a masquerade up in town,
and he has set his heart upon seeing her! I don’t think I could persuade myself
to do that, beautiful as she is,--but then I’m not in love (at least I don’t
think I am) and that’s the whole difference."
"He is in love
then?" said the stranger.
"Rather,"
replied Joe. "He’ll never be more in love, and may very easily be
less."
"Silence,
sir!" cried his father.
"What a chap you
are, Joe!" said Long Parkes.
"Such a inconsiderate
lad!" murmured Tom Cobb.
"Putting himself
forward and wringing the very nose off his own father’s face!" exclaimed
the parish-clerk, metaphorically.
"What have I
done?" reasoned poor Joe.
"Silence,
sir!" returned his father, "what do you mean by talking, when you see
people that are more than two or three times your age, sitting still and silent
and not dreaming of saying a word?"
"Why that’s the
proper time for me to talk, isn’t it?" said Joe rebelliously.
"The proper time,
sir!" retorted his father, "the proper time’s no time."
"Ah to be
sure!" muttered Parkes, nodding gravely to the other two who nodded
likewise, observing under their breaths that that was the point.
"The proper time’s
no time, sir," repeated John Willet; "when I was your age I never
talked, I never wanted to talk. I listened and improved myself that’s what I
did."
"And you’d find
your father rather a tough customer in argeyment, Joe, if anybody was to try
and tackle him," said Parkes.
"For the matter o’
that, Phil!" observed Mr. Willet, blowing a long, thin, spiral cloud of
smoke out of the corner of his mouth, and staring at it abstractedly as it
floated away; "For the matter o’ that, Phil, argeyment is a gift of Natur.
If Natur has gifted a man with powers of argeyment, a man has a right to make
the best of ’em, and has not a right to stand on false delicacy, and deny that
he is so gifted; for that is a turning of his back on Natur, a flouting of her,
a slighting of her precious caskets, and a proving of one’s self to be a swine
that isn’t worth her scattering pearls before."
The landlord pausing
here for a very long time, Mr. Parkes naturally concluded that he had brought
his discourse to an end; and therefore, turning to the young man with some
austerity, exclaimed:
"You hear what
your father says, Joe? You wouldn’t much like to tackle him in argeyment, I’m
thinking, sir."
"IF," said
John Willet, turning his eyes from the ceiling to the face of his interrupter,
and uttering the monosyllable in capitals, to apprise him that he had put in
his oar, as the vulgar say, with unbecoming and irreverent haste; "IF,
sir, Natur has fixed upon me the gift of argeyment, why should I not own to it,
and rather glory in the same? Yes, sir, I am a tough customer that way. You are
right, sir. My toughness has been proved, sir, in this room many and many a
time, as I think you know; and if you don’t know," added John, putting his
pipe in his mouth again, "so much the better, for I an’t proud and am not
going to tell you."
A general murmur from
his three cronies, and a general shaking of heads at the copper boiler, assured
John Willet that they had had good experience of his powers and needed no
further evidence to assure them of his superiority. John smoked with a little
more dignity and surveyed them in silence.
"It’s all very
fine talking," muttered Joe, who had been fidgeting in his chair with
divers uneasy gestures. "But if you mean to tell me that I’m never to open
my lips--"
"Silence,
sir!" roared his father. "No, you never are. When your opinion’s
wanted, you give it. When you’re spoke to, you speak. When your opinion’s not
wanted and you’re not spoke to, don’t you give an opinion and don’t you speak.
The world’s undergone a nice alteration since my time, certainly. My belief is
that there an’t any boys left--that there isn’t such a thing as a boy--that
there’s nothing now between a male baby and a man--and that all the boys went
out with his blessed Majesty King George the Second."
"That’s a very
true observation, always excepting the young princes," said the
parish-clerk, who, as the representative of church and state in that company,
held himself bound to the nicest loyalty. "If it’s godly and righteous for
boys, being of the ages of boys, to behave themselves like boys, then the young
princes must be boys and cannot be otherwise."
"Did you ever hear
tell of mermaids, sir?" said Mr. Willet.
"Certainly I
have," replied the clerk.
"Very good,"
said Mr. Willet. "According to the constitution of mermaids, so much of a
mermaid as is not a woman must be a fish. According to the constitution of
young princes, so much of a young prince (if anything) as is not actually an
angel, must be godly and righteous. Therefore if it’s becoming and godly and
righteous in the young princes (as it is at their ages) that they should be
boys, they are and must be boys, and cannot by possibility be anything
else."
This elucidation of a
knotty point being received with such marks of approval as to put John Willet
into a good humour, he contented himself with repeating to his son his command
of silence, and addressing the stranger, said:
"If you had asked
your questions of a grown-up person--of me or any of these gentlemen--you’d
have had some satisfaction, and wouldn’t have wasted breath. Miss Haredale is
Mr. Geoffrey Haredale’s niece."
"Is her father
alive?" said the man, carelessly.
"No,"
rejoined the landlord, "he is not alive, and he is not dead--"
"Not dead!"
cried the other.
"Not dead in a
common sort of way," said the landlord.
The cronies nodded to
each other, and Mr. Parkes remarked in an undertone, shaking his head meanwhile
as who should say, "let no man contradict me, for I won’t believe
him," that John Willet was in amazing force to-night, and fit to tackle a
Chief Justice.
The stranger suffered a
short pause to elapse, and then asked abruptly, "What do you mean?"
"More than you
think for, friend," returned John Willet. "Perhaps there’s more
meaning in them words than you suspect."
"Perhaps there
is," said the strange man, gruffly; "but what the devil do you speak
in such mysteries for? You tell me, first, that a man is not alive, nor yet
dead--then, that he’s not dead in a common sort of way--then, that you mean a
great deal more than I think for. To tell you the truth, you may do that easily;
for so far as I can make out, you mean nothing. What do you mean, I ask
again?"
"That,"
returned the landlord, a little brought down from his dignity by the stranger’s
surliness, "is a Maypole story, and has been any time these
four-and-twenty years. That story is Solomon Daisy’s story. It belongs to the
house; and nobody but Solomon Daisy has ever told it under this roof, or ever
shall--that’s more."
The man glanced at the
parish-clerk, whose air of consciousness and importance plainly betokened him
to be the person referred to, and, observing that he had taken his pipe from
his lips, after a very long whiff to keep it alight, and was evidently about to
tell his story without further solicitation, gathered his large coat about him,
and shrinking further back was almost lost in the gloom of the spacious
chimney-corner, except when the flame, struggling from under a great faggot,
whose weight almost crushed it for the time, shot upward with a strong and
sudden glare, and illumining his figure for a moment, seemed afterwards to cast
it into deeper obscurity than before.
By this flickering
light, which made the old room, with its heavy timbers and panelled walls, look
as if it were built of polished ebony--the wind roaring and howling without,
now rattling the latch and creaking the hinges of the stout oaken door, and now
driving at the casement as though it would beat it in--by this light, and under
circumstances so auspicious, Solomon Daisy began his tale:
"It was Mr. Reuben
Haredale, Mr. Geoffrey’s elder brother--"
Here he came to a dead
stop, and made so long a pause that even John Willet grew impatient and asked
why he did not proceed.
"Cobb," said
Solomon Daisy, dropping his voice and appealing to the post-office keeper;
"what day of the month is this?"
"The
nineteenth."
"Of March,"
said the clerk, bending forward, "the nineteenth of March; that’s very
strange."
In a low voice they all
acquiesced, and Solomon went on:
"It was Mr. Reuben
Haredale, Mr. Geoffrey’s elder brother, that twenty-two years ago was the owner
of the Warren, which, as Joe has said--not that you remember it, Joe, for a boy
like you can’t do that, but because you have often heard me say so--was then a
much larger and better place, and a much more valuable property than it is now.
His lady was lately dead, and he was left with one child--the Miss Haredale you
have been inquiring about--who was then scarcely a year old."
Although the speaker
addressed himself to the man who had shown so much curiosity about this same
family, and made a pause here as if expecting some exclamation of surprise or
encouragement, the latter made no remark, nor gave any indication that he heard
or was interested in what was said. Solomon therefore turned to his old
companions, whose noses were brightly illuminated by the deep red glow from the
bowls of their pipes; assured, by long experience, of their attention, and
resolved to show his sense of such indecent behaviour.
"Mr.
Haredale," said Solomon, turning his back upon the strange man, "left
this place when his lady died, feeling it lonely like, and went up to London,
where he stopped some months; but finding that place as lonely as this--as I
suppose and have always heard say--he suddenly came back again with his little
girl to the Warren, bringing with him besides, that day, only two women
servants, and his steward, and a gardener."
Mr. Daisy stopped to
take a whiff at his pipe, which was going out, and then proceeded--at first in
a snuffling tone, occasioned by keen enjoyment of the tobacco and strong
pulling at the pipe, and afterwards with increasing distinctness:
"--Bringing with
him two women servants, and his steward, and a gardener. The rest stopped
behind up in London, and were to follow next day. It happened that that night,
an old gentleman who lived at Chigwell Row, and had long been poorly, deceased,
and an order came to me at half after twelve o’clock at night to go and toll
the passing-bell."
There was a movement in
the little group of listeners, sufficiently indicative of the strong repugnance
any one of them would have felt to have turned out at such a time upon such an
errand. The clerk felt and understood it, and pursued his theme accordingly.
"It was a dreary
thing, especially as the grave-digger was laid up in his bed, from long working
in a damp soil and sitting down to take his dinner on cold tombstones, and I
was consequently under obligation to go alone, for it was too late to hope to
get any other companion. However, I wasn’t unprepared for it; as the old
gentleman had often made it a request that the bell should be tolled as soon as
possible after the breath was out of his body, and he had been expected to go
for some days. I put as good a face upon it as I could, and muffling myself up
(for it was mortal cold), started out with a lighted lantern in one hand and
the key of the church in the other."
At this point of the
narrative, the dress of the strange man rustled as if he had turned himself to
hear more distinctly. Slightly pointing over his shoulder, Solomon elevated his
eyebrows and nodded a silent inquiry to Joe whether this was the case. Joe
shaded his eyes with his hand and peered into the corner, but could make out
nothing, and so shook his head.
"It was just such
a night as this; blowing a hurricane, raining heavily, and very dark--I often
think now, darker than I ever saw it before or since; that may be my fancy, but
the houses were all close shut and the folks in doors, and perhaps there is
only one other man who knows how dark it really was. I got into the church,
chained the door back so that it should keep ajar--for, to tell the truth, I
didn’t like to be shut in there alone--and putting my lantern on the stone seat
in the little corner where the bell-rope is, sat down beside it to trim the
candle.
"I sat down to
trim the candle, and when I had done so I could not persuade myself to get up
again, and go about my work. I don’t know how it was, but I thought of all the
ghost stories I had ever heard, even those that I had heard when I was a boy at
school, and had forgotten long ago; and they didn’t come into my mind one after
another, but all crowding at once, like. I recollected one story there was in
the village, how that on a certain night in the year (it might be that very
night for anything I knew), all the dead people came out of the ground and sat
at the heads of their own graves till morning. This made me think how many
people I had known, were buried between the church-door and the churchyard
gate, and what a dreadful thing it would be to have to pass among them and know
them again, so earthy and unlike themselves. I had known all the niches and
arches in the church from a child; still, I couldn’t persuade myself that those
were their natural shadows which I saw on the pavement, but felt sure there
were some ugly figures hiding among ’em and peeping out. Thinking on in this
way, I began to think of the old gentleman who was just dead, and I could have
sworn, as I looked up the dark chancel, that I saw him in his usual place,
wrapping his shroud about him and shivering as if he felt it cold. All this
time I sat listening and listening, and hardly dared to breathe. At length I
started up and took the bell-rope in my hands. At that minute there rang--not
that bell, for I had hardly touched the rope--but another!
"I heard the
ringing of another bell, and a deep bell too, plainly. It was only for an
instant, and even then the wind carried the sound away, but I heard it. I
listened for a long time, but it rang no more. I had heard of corpse candles,
and at last I persuaded myself that this must be a corpse bell tolling of
itself at midnight for the dead. I tolled my bell--how, or how long, I don’t
know--and ran home to bed as fast as I could touch the ground.
"I was up early
next morning after a restless night, and told the story to my neighbours. Some
were serious and some made light of it; I don’t think anybody believed it real.
But, that morning, Mr. Reuben Haredale was found murdered in his bedchamber;
and in his hand was a piece of the cord attached to an alarm-bell outside the
roof, which hung in his room and had been cut asunder, no doubt by the
murderer, when he seized it.
"That was the bell
I heard.
"A bureau was
found opened, and a cash-box, which Mr. Haredale had brought down that day, and
was supposed to contain a large sum of money, was gone. The steward and
gardener were both missing and both suspected for a long time, but they were
never found, though hunted far and wide. And far enough they might have looked
for poor Mr. Rudge the steward, whose body--scarcely to be recognised by his
clothes and the watch and ring he wore--was found, months afterwards, at the
bottom of a piece of water in the grounds, with a deep gash in the breast where
he had been stabbed with a knife. He was only partly dressed; and people all
agreed that he had been sitting up reading in his own room, where there were
many traces of blood, and was suddenly fallen upon and killed before his
master.
Everybody now knew that
the gardener must be the murderer, and though he has never been heard of from
that day to this, he will be, mark my words. The crime was committed this day
two-and-twenty years--on the nineteenth of March, one thousand seven hundred
and fifty-three. On the nineteenth of March in some year--no matter when--I
know it, I am sure of it, for we have always, in some strange way or other,
been brought back to the subject on that day ever since--on the nineteenth of
March in some year, sooner or later, that man will be discovered."
"A STRANGE
story!" said the man who had been the cause of the
narration.--"Stranger still if it comes about as you predict. Is that
all?"
A question so
unexpected, nettled Solomon Daisy not a little. By dint of relating the story
very often, and ornamenting it (according to village report) with a few
flourishes suggested by the various hearers from time to time, he had come by
degrees to tell it with great effect; and "Is that all?" after the
climax, was not what he was accustomed to.
"Is that
all?" he repeated, "yes, that’s all, sir. And enough too, I
think."
"I think so too.
My horse, young man! He is but a hack hired from a roadside posting house, but
he must carry me to London to-night."
"To-night!"
said Joe.
"To-night,"
returned the other. "What do you stare at? This tavern would seem to be a
house of call for all the gaping idlers of the neighbourhood!"
At this remark, which
evidently had reference to the scrutiny he had undergone, as mentioned in the
foregoing chapter, the eyes of John Willet and his friends were diverted with
marvellous rapidity to the copper boiler again. Not so with Joe, who, being a
mettlesome fellow, returned the stranger’s angry glance with a steady look, and
rejoined:
"It is not a very
bold thing to wonder at your going on to-night. Surely you have been asked such
a harmless question in an inn before, and in better weather than this. I
thought you mightn’t know the way, as you seem strange to this part."
"The way--"
repeated the other, irritably.
"Yes. Do you know
it?"
"I’ll--humph!--I’ll
find it," replied the nian, waving his hand and turning on his heel.
"Landlord, take the reckoning here."
John Willet did as he
was desired; for on that point he was seldom slow, except in the particulars of
giving change, and testing the goodness of any piece of coin that was proffered
to him, by the application of his teeth or his tongue, or some other test, or
in doubtful cases, by a long series of tests terminating in its rejection. The
guest then wrapped his garments about him so as to shelter himself as effectually
as he could from the rough weather, and without any word or sign of farewell
betook himself to the stableyard. Here Joe (who had left the room on the
conclusion of their short dialogue) was protecting himself and the horse from
the rain under the shelter of an old penthouse roof.
"He’s pretty much
of my opinion," said Joe, patting the horse upon the neck. "I’ll
wager that your stopping here to-night would please him better than it would
please me."
"He and I are of
different opinions, as we have been more than once on our way here," was
the short reply.
"So I was thinking
before you came out, for he has felt your spurs, poor beast."
The stranger adjusted
his coat-collar about his face, and made no answer.
"You’ll know me
again, I see," he said, marking the young fellow’s earnest gaze, when he
had sprung into the saddle.
"The man’s worth
knowing, master, who travels a road he don’t know, mounted on a jaded horse,
and leaves good quarters to do it on such a night as this."
"You have sharp
eyes and a sharp tongue, I find."
"Both I hope by
nature, but the last grows rusty sometimes for want of using."
"Use the first
less too, and keep their sharpness for your sweethearts, boy," said the
man.
So saying he shook his
hand from the bridle, struck him roughly on the head with the butt end of his
whip, and galloped away; dashing through the mud and darkness with a headlong
speed, which few badly mounted horsemen would have cared to venture, even had
they been thoroughly acquainted with the country; and which, to one who knew
nothing of the way he rode, was attended at every step with great hazard and
danger.
The roads, even within
twelve miles of London, were at that time ill paved, seldom repaired, and very
badly made. The way this rider traversed had been ploughed up by the wheels of
heavy waggons, and rendered rotten by the frosts and thaws of the preceding
winter, or possibly of many winters. Great holes and gaps had been worn into
the soil, which, being now filled with water from the late rains, were not
easily distinguishable even by day; and a plunge into any one of them might
have brought down a surer-footed horse than the poor beast now urged forward to
the utmost extent of his powers. Sharp flints and stones rolled from under his
hoofs continually; the rider could scarcely see beyond the animal’s head, or
farther on either side than his own arm would have extended. At that time, too,
all the roads in the neighbourhood of the metropolis were infested by footpads
or highwaymen, and it was a night, of all others, in which any evil- disposed
person of this class might have pursued his unlawful calling with little fear
of detection.
Still, the traveller
dashed forward at the same reckless pace, regardless alike of the dirt and wet
which flew about his head, the profound darkness of the night, and the
probability of encountering some desperate characters abroad. At every turn and
angle, even where a deviation from the direct course might have been least
expected, and could not possibly be seen until he was close upon it, he guided
the bridle with an unerring hand, and kept the middle of the road. Thus he sped
onward, raising himself in the stirrups, leaning his body forward until it
almost touched the horse’s neck, and flourishing his heavy whip above his head
with the fervour of a madman.
There are times when,
the elements being in unusual commotion, those who are bent on daring
enterprises, or agitated by great thoughts, whether of good or evil, feel a
mysterious sympathy with the tumult of nature, and are roused into
corresponding violence. In the midst of thunder, lightning, and storm, many
tremendous deeds have been committed; men, self-possessed before, have given a
sudden loose to passions they could no longer control. The demons of wrath and
despair have striven to emulate those who ride the whirlwind and direct the
storm; and man, lashed into madness with the roaring winds and boiling waters,
has become for the time as wild and merciless as the elements themselves.
Whether the traveller
was possessed by thoughts which the fury of the night had heated and stimulated
into a quicker current, or was merely impelled by some strong motive to reach
his journey’s end, on he swept more like a hunted phantom than a man, nor
checked his pace until, arriving at some cross roads, one of which led by a
longer route to the place whence he had lately started, he bore down so
suddenly upon a vehicle which was coming towards him, that in the effort to
avoid it he well-nigh pulled his horse upon his haunches, and narrowly escaped
being thrown.
"Yoho!" cried
the voice of a man. "What’s that? Who goes there?"
"A friend!"
replied the traveller.
"A friend!"
repeated the voice. "Who calls himself a friend and rides like that,
abusing Heaven’s gifts in the shape of horseflesh, and endangering, not only
his own neck (which might be no great matter) but the necks of other
people?"
"You have a
lantern there, I see," said the traveller dismounting, "lend it me
for a moment. You have wounded my horse, I think, with your shaft or
wheel."
"Wounded
him!" cried the other, "if I haven’t killed him, it’s no fault of
yours. What do you mean by galloping along the king’s highway like that,
eh?"
"Give me the
light," returned the traveller, snatching it from his hand, "and don’t
ask idle questions of a man who is in no mood for talking."
"If you had said
you were in no mood for talking before, I should perhaps have been in no mood
for lighting," said the voice. "Hows’ever as it’s the poor horse that’s
damaged and not you, one of you is welcome to the light at all events--but it’s
not the crusty one."
The traveller returned
no answer to this speech, but holding the light near to his panting and reeking
beast, examined him in limb and carcass. Meanwhile, the other man sat very
composedly in his vehicle, which was a kind of chaise with a depository for a
large bag of tools, and watched his proceedings with a careful eye.
The looker-on was a
round, red-faced, sturdy yeoman, with a double chin, and a voice husky with
good living, good sleeping, good humour, and good health. He was past the prime
of life, but Father Time is not always a hard parent, and, though he tarries
for none of his children, often lays his hand lightly upon those who have used
him well; making them old men and women inexorably enough, but leaving their
hearts and spirits young and in full vigour. With such people the grey head is
but the impression of the old fellow’s hand in giving them his blessing, and
every wrinkle but a notch in the quiet calendar of a well-spent life.
The person whom the
traveller had so abruptly encountered was of this kind: bluff, hale, hearty,
and in a green old age: at peace with himself, and evidently disposed to be so
with all the world. Although muffled up in divers coats and handkerchiefs--one
of which, passed over his crown, and tied in a convenient crease of his double
chin, secured his three-cornered hat and bob-wig from blowing off his
head--there was no disguising his plump and comfortable figure; neither did
certain dirty finger-marks upon his face give it any other than an odd and
comical expression, through which its natural good humour shone with
undiminished lustre.
"He is not
hurt," said the traveller at length, raising his head and the lantern
together.
"You have found
that out at last, have you?" rejoined the old man. "My eyes have seen
more light than yours, but I wouldn’t change with you."
"What do you
mean?"
"Mean! I could
have told you he wasn’t hurt, five minutes ago. Give me the light, friend; ride
forward at a gentler pace; and good night."
In handing up the
lantern, the man necessarily cast its rays full on the speaker’s face. Their
eyes met at the instant. He suddenly dropped it and crushed it with his foot.
"Did you never see
a locksmith before, that you start as if you had come upon a ghost?" cried
the old man in the chaise, "or is this," he added hastily, thrusting
his hand into the tool basket and drawing out a hammer, "a scheme for
robbing me? I know these roads, friend. When I travel them, I carry nothing but
a few shillings, and not a crown’s worth of them. I tell you plainly, to save
us both trouble, that there’s nothing to be got from me but a pretty stout arm
considering my years, and this tool, which, mayhap from long acquaintance with,
I can use pretty briskly. You shall not have it all your own way, I promise
you, if you play at that game." With these words he stood upon the
defensive.
"I am not what you
take me for, Gabriel Varden," replied the other.
"Then what and who
are you?" returned the locksmith. "You know my name, it seems. Let me
know yours."
"I have not gained
the information from any confidence of yours, but from the inscription on your
cart which tells it to all the town," replied the traveller.
"You have better
eyes for that than you had for your horse, then," said Varden, descending
nimbly from his chaise; "who are you? Let me see your face."
While the locksmith
alighted, the traveller had regained his saddle, from which he now confronted
the old man, who, moving as the horse moved in chafing under the tightened
rein, kept close beside him.
"Let me see your
face, I say."
"Stand off!"
"No masquerading
tricks," said the locksmith, "and tales at the club to-morrow, how
Gabriel Varden was frightened by a surly voice and a dark night. Stand--let me
see your face."
Finding that further
resistance would only involve him in a personal struggle with an antagonist by
no means to be despised, the traveller threw back his coat, and stooping down
looked steadily at the locksmith.
Perhaps two men more
powerfully contrasted, never opposed each other face to face. The ruddy
features of the locksmith so set off and heightened the excessive paleness of
the man on horseback, that he looked like a bloodless ghost, while the
moisture, which hard riding had brought out upon his skin, hung there in dark
and heavy drops, like dews of agony and death. The countenance of the old
locksmith lighted up with the smile of one expecting to detect in this
unpromising stranger some latent roguery of eye or lip, which should reveal a
familiar person in that arch disguise, and spoil his jest. The face of the
other, sullen and fierce, but shrinking too, was that of a man who stood at
bay; while his firmly closed jaws, his puckered mouth, and more than all a
certain stealthy motion of the hand within his breast, seemed to announce a
desperate purpose very foreign to acting, or child’s play.
Thus they regarded each
other for some time, in silence.
"Humph!" he
said when he had scanned his features; "I don’t know you."
"Don’t desire
to?"--returned the other, muffling himself as before.
"I don’t,"
said Gabriel; "to be plain with you, friend, you don’t carry in your
countenance a letter of recommendation."
"It’s not my
wish," said the traveller. "My humour is to be avoided."
"Well," said
the locksmith bluntly, "I think you’ll have your humour."
"I will, at any
cost," rejoined the traveller. "In proof of it, lay this to
heart--that you were never in such peril of your life as you have been within
these few moments; when you are within five minutes of breathing your last, you
will not be nearer death than you have been to-night!"
"Aye!" said
the sturdy locksmith.
"Aye! and a
violent death."
"From whose
hand?"
"From mine,"
replied the traveller.
With that he put spurs
to his horse, and rode away; at first plashing heavily through the mire at a
smart trot, but gradually increasing in speed until the last sound of his horse’s
hoofs died away upon the wind; when he was again hurrying on at the same
furious gallop, which had been his pace when the locksmith first encountered
him.
Gabriel Varden remained
standing in the road with the broken lantern in his hand, listening in
stupefied silence until no sound reached his ear but the moaning of the wind,
and the fast-falling rain; when he struck himself one or two smart blows in the
breast by way of rousing himself, and broke into an exclamation of surprise.
"What in the name
of wonder can this fellow be! a madman? a highwayman? a cut-throat? If he had
not scoured off so fast, we’d have seen who was in most danger, he or I. I
never nearer death than I have been to-night! I hope I may be no nearer to it
for a score of years to come--if so, I’ll be content to be no farther from it.
My stars!--a pretty brag this to a stout man--pooh, pooh!"
Gabriel resumed his
seat, and looked wistfully up the road by which the traveller had come;
murmuring in a half whisper:
"The Maypole--two
miles to the Maypole. I came the other road from the Warren after a long day’s
work at locks and bells, on purpose that I should not come by the Maypole and
break my promise to Martha by looking in--there’s resolution! It would be
dangerous to go on to London without a light; and it’s four miles, and a good
half mile besides, to the Halfway-House; and between this and that is the very
place where one needs a light most. Two miles to the Maypole! I told Martha I
wouldn’t; I said I wouldn’t, and I didn’t--there’s resolution!"
Repeating these two
last words very often, as if to compensate for the little resolution he was
going to show by piquing himself on the great resolution he had shown, Gabriel
Varden quietly turned back, determining to get a light at the Maypole, and to
take nothing but a light.
When he got to the
Maypole, however, and Joe, responding to his well-known hail, came running out
to the horse’s head, leaving the door open behind him, and disclosing a
delicious perspective of warmth and brightness--when the ruddy gleam of the
fire, streaming through the old red curtains of the common room, seemed to bring
with it, as part of itself, a pleasant hum of voices, and a fragrant odour of
steaming grog and rare tobacco, all steeped as it were in the cheerful
glow--when the shadows, flitting across the curtain, showed that those inside
had risen from their snug seats, and were making room in the snuggest corner
(how well he knew that corner!) for the honest locksmith, and a broad glare,
suddenly streaming up, bespoke the goodness of the crackling log from which a
brilliant train of sparks was doubtless at that moment whirling up the chimney
in honour of his coming--when, superadded to these enticements, there stole
upon him from the distant kitchen a gentle sound of frying, with a musical
clatter of plates and dishes, and a savoury smell that made even the boisterous
wind a perfume--Gabriel felt his firmness oozing rapidly away. He tried to look
stoically at the tavern, but his features would relax into a look of fondness.
He turned his head the other way, and the cold black country seemed to frown
him off, and drive him for a refuge into its hospitable arms.
"The merciful man,
Joe," said the locksmith, "is merciful to his beast. I’ll get out for
a little while."
And how natural it was
to get out! And how unnatural it seemed for a sober man to be plodding wearily along
through miry roads, encountering the rude buffets of the wind and pelting of
the rain, when there was a clean floor covered with crisp white sand, a well
swept hearth, a blazing fire, a table decorated with white cloth, bright pewter
flagons, and other tempting preparations for a well-cooked meal--when there
were these things, and company disposed to make the most of them, all ready to
his hand, and entreatings him to enjoyment!
SUCH were the locksmith’s
thoughts when first seated in the snug corner, and slowly recovering from a
pleasant defect of vision--pleasant, because occasioned by the wind blowing in
his eyes--which made it a matter of sound policy and duty to himself, that he
should take refuge from the weather, and tempted him, for the same reason, to
aggravate a slight cough, and declare he felt but poorly. Such were still his
thoughts more than a full hour afterwards, when, supper over, he still sat with
shining jovial face in the same warm nook, listening to the cricket-like chirrup
of little Solomon Daisy, and bearing no unimportant or slightly respected part
in the social gossip round the Maypole fire.
"I wish he may be
an honest man, that’s all," said Solomon, winding up a variety of
speculations relative to the stranger, concerning whom Gabriel had compared
notes with the company, and so raised a grave discussion; "I wish he may
be an honest man."
"So we all do, I
suppose, don’t we?" observed the locksmith.
"I don’t,"
said Joe.
"No!" cried
Gabriel.
"No. He struck me
with his whip, the coward, when he was mounted and I afoot, and I should be
better pleased that he turned out what I think him."
"And what may that
be, Joe?"
"No good, Mr.
Varden. You may shake your head, father, but I say no good, and will say no
good, and I would say no good a hundred times over, if that would bring him
back to have the drubbing he deserves."
"Hold your tongue,
sir," said John Willet.
"I won’t, father.
It’s all along of you that he ventured to do what he did. Seeing me treated
like a child, and put down like a fool, he plucks up a heart and has a fling at
a fellow that he thinks--and may well think too--hasn’t a grain of spirit. But
he’s mistaken, as I’ll show him, and as I’ll show all of you before long."
"Does the boy know
what he’s a saying of!" cried the astonished John Willet.
"Father,"
returned Joe, "I know what I say and mean, well--better than you do when
you hear me. I can bear with you, but I cannot bear the contempt that your
treating me in the way you do, brings upon me from others every day. Look at
other young men of my age. Have they no liberty, no will, no right to speak?
Are they obliged to sit mumchance, and to be ordered about till they are the
laughing-stock of young and old? I am a bye-word all over Chigwell, and I say--and
it’s fairer my saying so now, than waiting till you are dead, and I have got
your money--I say, that before long I shall be driven to break such bounds, and
that when I do, it won’t be me that you’ll have to blame, but your own self,
and no other."
John Willet was so
amazed by the exasperation and boldness of his hopeful son, that he sat as one
bewildered, staring in a ludicrous manner at the boiler, and endeavouring, but
quite ineffectually, to collect his tardy thoughts, and invent an answer. The guests,
scarcely less disturbed, were equally at a loss; and at length, with a variety
of muttered, half-expressed condolences, and pieces of advice, rose to depart;
being at the same time slightly muddled with liquor.
The honest locksmith
alone addressed a few words of coherent and sensible advice to both parties,
urging John Willet to remember that Joe was nearly arrived at man’s estate, and
should not be ruled with too tight a hand, and exhorting Joe himself to bear
with his father’s caprices, and rather endeavour to turn them aside by
temperate remonstrance than by ill-timed rebellion. This advice was received as
such advice usually is. On John Willet it made almost as much impression as on
the sign outside the door, while Joe, who took it in the best part, avowed
himself more obliged than he could well express, but politely intimated his
intention nevertheless of taking his own course uninfluenced by anybody.
"You have always
been a very good friend to me, Mr. Varden," he said, as they stood
without, in the porch, and the locksmith was equipping himself for his journey
home; "I take it very kind of you to say all this, but the time’s nearly
come when the Maypole and I must part company."
"Roving stones
gather no moss, Joe," said Gabriel.
"Nor milestones
much," replied Joe. "I’m little better than one here, and see as much
of the world."
"Then, what would
you do, Joe?" pursued the locksmith, stroking his chin reflectively.
"What could you be? Where could you go, you see?"
"I must trust to
chance, Mr. Varden."
"A bad thing to
trust to, Joe. I don’t like it. I always tell my girl when we talk about a
husband for her, never to trust to chance, but to make sure beforehand that she
has a good man and true, and then chance will neither make her nor break her.
What are you fidgeting about there, Joe? Nothing gone in the harness, I
hope?"
"No no," said
Joe--finding, however, something very engrossing to do in the way of strapping
and buckling--"Miss Dolly quite well?"
"Hearty, thankye.
She looks pretty enough to be well, and good too."
"She’s always
both, sir"--
"So she is, thank
God!"
"I hope,"
said Joe after some hesitation, "that you won’t tell this story against
me--this of my having been beat like the boy they’d make of me--at all events,
till I have met this man again and settled the account. It’ll be a better story
then."
"Why who should I
tell it to?" returned Gabriel. "They know it here, and I’m not likely
to come across anybody else who would care about it."
"That’s true
enough," said the young fellow with a sigh. "I quite forgot that.
Yes, that’s true!"
So saying, he raised
his face, which was very red,--no doubt from the exertion of strapping and
buckling as aforesaid,--and giving the reins to the old man, who had by this
time taken his seat, sighed again and bade him good night.
"Good night!"
cried Gabriel. "Now think better of what we have just been speaking of;
and don’t be rash, there’s a good fellow! I have an interest in you, and wouldn’t
have you cast yourself away. Good night!"
Returning his cheery
farewell with cordial goodwill, Joe Willet lingered until the sound of wheels
ceased to vibrate in his ears, and then, shaking his head mournfully,
re-entered the house.
Gabriel Varden went his
way towards London, thinking of a great many things, and most of all of flaming
terms in which to relate his adventure, and so account satisfactorily to Mrs.
Varden for visiting the Maypole, despite certain solemn covenants between
himself and that lady. Thinking begets, not only thought, but drowsiness
occasionally, and the more the locksmith thought, the more sleepy he became.
A man may be very
sober--or at least firmly set upon his legs on that neutral ground which lies
between the confines of perfect sobriety and slight tipsiness--and yet feel a
strong tendency to mingle up present circumstances with others which have no
manner of connection with them; to confound all consideration of persons,
things, times, and places; and to jumble his disjointed thoughts together in a
kind of mental kaleidoscope, producing combinations as unexpected as they are
transitory. This was Gabriel Varden’s state, as, nodding in his dog sleep, and
leaving his horse to pursue a road with which he was well acquainted, he got
over the ground unconsciously, and drew nearer and nearer home. He had roused
himself once, when the horse stopped until the turnpike gate was opened, and
had cried a lusty "good night!" to the toll- keeper; but then he
awoke out of a dream about picking a lock in the stomach of the Great Mogul,
and even when he did wake, mixed up the turnpike man with his mother-in-law who
had been dead twenty years. It is not surprising, therefore, that he soon
relapsed, and jogged heavily along, quite insensible to his progress.
And, now, he approached
the great city, which lay outstretched before him like a dark shadow on the
ground, reddening the sluggish air with a deep dull light, that told of
labyrinths of public ways and shops, and swarms of busy people. Approaching
nearer and nearer yet, this halo began to fade, and the causes which produced
it slowly to develop themselves. Long lines of poorly lighted streets might be
faintly traced, with here and there a lighter spot, where lamps were clustered
round a square or market, or round some great building; after a time these grew
more distinct, and the lamps themselves were visible; slight yellow specks,
that seemed to be rapidly snuffed out, one by one, as intervening obstacles hid
them from the sight. Then, sounds arose--the striking of church clocks, the
distant bark of dogs, the hum of traffic in the streets; then outlines might be
traced--tall steeples looming in the air, and piles of unequal roofs oppressed
by chimneys; then, the noise swelled into a louder sound, and forms grew more
distinct and numerous still, and London--visible in the darkness by its own
faint light, and not by that of Heaven--was at hand.
The locksmith, however,
all unconscious of its near vicinity, still jogged on, half sleeping and half
waking, when a loud cry at no great distance ahead, roused him with a start.
For a moment or two he
looked about him like a man who had been transported to some strange country in
his sleep, but soon recognising familiar objects, rubbed his eyes lazily and
might have relapsed again, but that the cry was repeated-- not once or twice or
thrice, but many times, and each time, if possible, with increased vehemence.
Thoroughly aroused, Gabriel, who was a bold man and not easily daunted, made
straight to the spot, urging on his stout little horse as if for life or death.
The matter indeed
looked sufficiently serious, for, coming to the place whence the cries had
proceeded, he descried the figure of a man extended in an apparently lifeless
state upon the pathway, and, hovering round him, another person with a torch in
his hand, which he waved in the air with a wild impatience, redoubling
meanwhile those cries for help which had brought the locksmith to the spot.
"What’s here to
do?" said the old man, alighting. "How’s this--what--Barnaby?"
The bearer of the torch
shook his long loose hair back from his eyes, and thrusting his face eagerly
into that of the locksmith, fixed upon him a look which told his history at
once.
"You know me,
Barnaby?" said Varden.
He nodded--not once or
twice, but a score of times, and that with a fantastic exaggeration which would
have kept his head in motion for an hour, but that the locksmith held up his
finger, and fixing his eye sternly upon him caused him to desist; then pointed
to the body with an inquiring look.
"There’s blood
upon him," said Barnaby with a shudder. "It makes me sick!"
"How came it
there?" demanded Varden.
"Steel, steel,
steel!" he replied fiercely, imitating with his hand the thrust of a
sword.
"Is he
robbed?" said the locksmith.
Barnaby caught him by
the arm, and nodded "Yes;" then pointed towards the city.
"Oh!" said
the old man, bending over the body and looking round as he spoke into Barnaby’s
pale face, strangely lighted up by something that was not intellect. "The
robber made off that way, did he? Well, well, never mind that just now. Hold
your torch this way--a
little farther off--so. Now stand quiet, while I try to see what harm is
done."
With these words, he
applied himself to a closer examination of the prostrate form, while Barnaby,
holding the torch as he had been directed, looked on in silence, fascinated by
interest or curiosity, but repelled nevertheless by some strong and secret
horror which convulsed him in every nerve.
As he stood, at that
moment, half shrinking back and half bending forward, both his face and figure
were full in the strong glare of the link, and as distinctly revealed as though
it had been broad day. He was about three-and-twenty years old, and though
rather spare, of a fair height and strong make. His hair, of which he had a
great profusion, was red, and hanging in disorder about his face and shoulders,
gave to his restless looks an expression quite unearthly--enhanced by the
paleness of his complexion, and the glassy lustre of his large protruding eyes.
Startling as his aspect was, the features were good, and there was something
even plaintive in his wan and haggard aspect. But, the absence of the soul is
far more terrible in a living man than in a dead one; and in this unfortunate
being its noblest powers were wanting.
His dress was of green,
clumsily trimmed here and there--apparently by his own hands--with gaudy lace;
brightest where the cloth was most worn and soiled, and poorest where it was at
the best. A pair of tawdry ruffles dangled at his wrists, while his throat was
nearly bare. He had ornamented his hat with a cluster of peacock’s feathers,
but they were limp and broken, and now trailed negligently down his back. Girt
to his side was the steel hilt of an old sword without blade or scabbard; and
some particoloured ends of ribands and poor glass toys completed the ornamental
portion of his attire. The fluttered and confused disposition of all the motley
scraps that formed his dress, bespoke, in a scarcely less degree than his eager
and unsettled manner, the disorder of his mind, and by a grotesque contrast set
off and heightened the more impressive wildness of his face.
"Barnaby,"
said the locksmith, after a hasty but careful inspection, "this man is not
dead, but he has a wound in his side, and is in a fainting-fit."
"I know him, I
know him!" cried Barnaby, clapping his hands.
"Know him?"
repeated the locksmith.
"Hush!" said
Barnaby, laying his fingers upon his lips. "He went out to-day a wooing. I
wouldn’t for a light guinea that he should never go a wooing again, for, if he
did, some eyes would grow dim that are now as bright as--see, when I talk of
eyes, the stars come out! Whose eyes are they? If they are angels’ eyes, why do
they look down here and see good men hurt, and only wink and sparkle all the
night?"
"Now Heaven help
this silly fellow," murmured the perplexed locksmith; "can he know
this gentleman? His mother’s house is not far off; I had better see if she can
tell me who he is. Barnaby, my man, help me to put him in the chaise, and we’ll
ride home together."
"I can’t touch
him!" cried the idiot falling back, and shuddering as with a strong spasm;
he’s bloody!"
"It’s in his
nature, I know," muttered the locksmith, "it’s cruel to ask him, but
I must have help. Barnaby--good Barnaby--dear Barnaby--if you know this
gentleman, for the sake of his life and everybody’s life that loves him, help
me to raise him and lay him down."
"Cover him then,
wrap him close--don’t let me see it--smell it--hear the word. Don’t speak the
word--don’t!"
"No, no, I’ll not.
There, you see he’s covered now. Gently. Well done, well done!"
They placed him in the
carriage with great ease, for Barnaby was strong and active, but all the time
they were so occupied he shivered from head to foot, and evidently experienced
an ecstasy of terror.
This accomplished, and
the wounded man being covered with Varden’s own greatcoat which he took off for
the purpose, they proceeded onward at a brisk pace: Barnaby gaily counting the
stars upon his fingers, and Gabriel inwardly congratulating himself upon having
an adventure now, which would silence Mrs. Varden on the subject of the
Maypole, for that night, or there was no faith in woman.
IN the venerable
suburb--it was a suburb once--of Clerkenwell, towards that part of its confines
which is nearest to the Charter House, and in one of those cool, shady Streets,
of which a few, widely scattered and dispersed, yet remain in such old parts of
the metropolis,--each tenement quietly vegetating like an ancient citizen who
long ago retired from business, and dozing on in its infirmity until in course
of time it tumbles down, and is replaced by some extravagant young heir,
flaunting in stucco and ornamental work, and all the vanities of modern
days,--in this quarter, and in a street of this description, the business of
the present chapter lies.
At the time of which it
treats, though only six-and-sixty years ago, a very large part of what is
London now had no existence. Even in the brains of the wildest speculators,
there had sprung up no long rows of streets connecting Highgate with
Whitechapel, no assemblages of palaces in the swampy levels, nor little cities
in the open fields. Although this part of town was then, as now, parcelled out
in streets, and plentifully peopled, it wore a different aspect. There were
gardens to many of the houses, and trees by the pavement side; with an air of
freshness breathing up and down, which in these days would be sought in vain.
Fields were nigh at hand, through which the New River took its winding course, and
where there was merry haymaking in the summer time. Nature was not so far
removed, or hard to get at, as in these days; and although there were busy
trades in Clerkenwell, and working jewellers by scores, it was a purer place,
with farm-houses nearer to it than many modern Londoners would readily believe,
and lovers’ walks at no great distance, which turned into squalid courts, long
before the lovers of this age were born, or, as the phrase goes, thought of.
In one of these
streets, the cleanest of them all, and on the shady side of the way--for good
housewives know that sunlight damages their cherished furniture, and so choose
the shade rather than its intrusive glare--there stood the house with which we
have to deal. It was a modest building, not very straight, not large, not tall;
not bold-faced, with great staring windows, but a shy, blinking house, with a
conical roof going up into a peak over its garret window of four small panes of
glass, like a cocked hat on the head of an elderly gentleman with one eye. It
was not built of brick or lofty stone, but of wood and plaster; it was not
planned with a dull and wearisome regard to regularity, for no one window
matched the other, or seemed to have the slightest reference to anything
besides itself.
The shop--for it had a
shop--was, with reference to the first floor, where shops usually are; and
there all resemblance between it and any other shop stopped short and ceased.
People who went in and out didn’t go up a flight of steps to it, or walk easily
in upon a level with the street, but dived down three steep stairs, as into a
cellar. Its floor was paved with stone and brick, as that of any other cellar
might be; and in lieu of window framed and glazed it had a great black wooden
flap or shutter, nearly breast high from the ground, which turned back in the
day-time, admitting as much cold air as light, and very often more. Behind this
shop was a wainscoted parlour, looking first into a paved yard, and beyond that
again into a little terrace garden, raised some feet above it. Any stranger
would have supposed that this wainscoted parlour, saving for the door of
communication by which he had entered, was cut off and detached from all the
world; and indeed most strangers on their first entrance were observed to grow
extremely thoughtful, as weighing and pondering in their minds whether the
upper rooms were only approachable by ladders from without; never suspecting
that two of the most unassuming and unlikely doors in existence, which the most
ingenious mechanician on earth must of necessity have supposed to be the doors
of closets, opened out of this room--each without the smallest preparation, or
so much as a quarter of an inch of passage--upon two dark winding flights of
stairs, the one upward, the other downward, which were the sole means of
communication between that chamber and the other portions of the house.
With all these
oddities, there was not a neater, more scrupulously tidy, or more punctiliously
ordered house, in Clerkenwell, in London, in all England. There were not
cleaner windows, or whiter floors, or brighter Stoves, or more highly shining
articles of furniture in old mahogany; there was not more rubbing, scrubbing,
burnishing and polishing, in the whole street put together. Nor was this
excellence attained without some cost and trouble and great expenditure of
voice, as the neighbours were frequently reminded when the good lady of the
house overlooked and assisted in its being put to rights on cleaning
days--which were usually from Monday morning till Saturday night, both days
inclusive.
Leaning against the
door-post of this, his dwelling, the locksmith stood early on the morning after
he had met with the wounded man, gazing disconsolately at a great wooden emblem
of a key, painted in vivid yellow to resemble gold, which dangled from the
house-front, and swung to and fro with a mournful creaking noise, as if
complaining that it had nothing to unlock. Sometimes, he looked over his
shoulder into the shop, which was so dark and dingy with numerous tokens of his
trade, and so blackened by the smoke of a little forge, near which his ’prentice
was at work, that it would have been difficult for one unused to such espials
to have distinguished anything but various tools of uncouth make and shape,
great bunches of rusty keys, fragments of iron, half-finished locks, and such
like things, which garnished the walls and hung in clusters from the ceiling.
After a long and
patient contemplation of the golden key, and many such backward glances,
Gabriel stepped into the road, and stole a look at the upper windows. One of
them chanced to be thrown open at the moment, and a roguish face met his; a
face lighted up by the loveliest pair of sparkling eyes that ever locksmith
looked upon; the face of a pretty, laughing, girl; dimpled and fresh, and
healthful--the very impersonation of good-humour and blooming beauty.
"Hush!" she
whispered, bending forward and pointing archly to the window underneath.
"Mother is still asleep."
"Still, my
dear," returned the locksmith in the same tone. "You talk as if she
had been asleep all night, instead of little more than half an hour. But I’m
very thankful. Sleep’s a blessing--no doubt about it." The last few words
he muttered to himself.
"How cruel of you
to keep us up so late this morning, and never tell us where you were, or send
us word!" said the girl.
"Ah Dolly,
Dolly!" returned the locksmith, shaking his head, and smiling, "how
cruel of you to run upstairs to bed! Come down to breakfast, madcap, and come
down lightly, or you’ll wake your mother. She must be tired, I am sure--I
am."
Keeping these latter
words to himself, and returning his daughter’s nod, he was passing into the
workshop, with the smile she had awakened still beaming on his face, when he
just caught sight of his ’prentice’s brown paper cap ducking down to avoid
observation, and shrinking from the window back to its former place, which the
wearer no sooner reached than he began to hammer lustily.
"Listening again,
Simon!" said Gabriel to himself. "That’s bad. What in the name of
wonder does he expect the girl to say, that I always catch him listening when
she speaks, and never at any other time! A bad habit, Sim, a sneaking,
underhanded way. Ah! you may hammer, but you won’t beat that out of me, if you
work at it till your time’s up!"
So saying, and shaking
his head gravely, he re-entered the workshop, and confronted the subject of
these remarks.
"There’s enough of
that just now," said the locksmith. "You needn’t make any more of
that confounded clatter. Breakfast’s ready."
"Sir," said
Sim, looking up with amazing politeness, and a peculiar little bow cut short
off at the neck, "I shall attend you immediately."
"I suppose,"
muttered Gabriel, "that’s out of the ’Prentice’s Garland or the ’Prentice’s
Delight, or the ’Prentice’s Warbler, or the Prentice’s Guide to the Gallows, or
some such improving textbook. Now he’s going to beautify himself--here’s a
precious locksmith!"
Quite unconscious that
his master was looking on from the dark corner by the parlour door, Sim threw
off the paper cap, sprang from his seat, and in two extraordinary steps,
something between skating and minuet dancing, bounded to a washing place at the
other end of the shop, and there removed from his face and hands all traces of
his previous work--practising the same step all the time with the utmost
gravity. This done, he drew from some concealed place a little scrap of
looking-glass, and with its assistance arranged his hair, and ascertained the
exact state of a little carbuncle on his nose. Having now completed his toilet,
he placed the fragment of mirror on a low bench, and looked over his shoulder
at so much of his legs as could be reflected in that small compass, with the
greatest possible complacency and satisfaction.
Sim, as he was called in
the locksmith’s family, or Mr. Simon Tappertit, as he called himself, and
required all men to style him out of doors, on holidays, and Sundays out,--was
an old-fashioned, thin-faced, sleek-haired, sharp-nosed, small-eyed little
fellow, very little more than five feet high, and thoroughly convinced in his
own mind that he was above the middle size; rather tall, in fact, than
otherwise. Of his figure, which was well enough formed, though somewhat of the
leanest, he entertained the highest admiration; and with his legs, which, in
knee-breeches, were perfect curiosities of littleness, he was enraptured to a
degree amounting to enthusiasm. He also had some majestic, shadowy ideas, which
had never been quite fathomed by his intimate friends, concerning the power of
his eye. Indeed he had been known to go so far as to boast that he could
utterly quell and subdue the haughtiest beauty by a simple process, which he
termed "eyeing her over;" but it must be added, that neither of this
faculty, nor of the power he claimed to have, through the same gift, of
vanquishing and heaving down dumb animals, even in a rabid state, had he ever
furnished evidence which could be deemed quite satisfactory and conclusive.
It may be inferred from
these premises, that in the small body of Mr. Tappertit there was locked up an
ambitious and aspiring soul. As certain liquors, confined in casks too cramped
in their dimensions, will ferment, and fret, and chafe in their imprisonment,
so the spiritual essence or soul of Mr. Tappertit would sometimes fume within
that precious cask, his body, until, with great foam and froth and splutter, it
would force a vent, and carry all before it. It was his custom to remark, in
reference to any one of these occasions, that his soul had got into his head; and
in this novel kind of intoxication many scrapes and mishaps befell him, which
he had frequently concealed with no small difficulty from his worthy master.
Sim Tappertit, among
the other fancies upon which his before-mentioned soul was for ever feasting
and regaling itself (and which fancies, like the liver of Prometheus, grew as
they were fed upon), had a mighty notion of his order; and had been heard by
the servant-maid openly expressing his regret that the ’prentices no longer
carried clubs wherewith to mace the citizens: that was his strong expression.
He was likewise reported to have said that in former times a stigma had been
cast upon the body by the execution of George Barnwell, to which they should
not have basely submitted, but should have demanded him of the
legislature--temperately at first; then by an appeal to arms, if necessary--to
be dealt with as they in their wisdom might think fit. These thoughts always
led him to consider what a glorious engine the ’prentices might yet become if
they had but a master spirit at their head; and then he would darkly, and to
the terror of his hearers, hint at certain reckless fellows that he knew of,
and at a certain Lion Heart ready to become their captain, who, once afoot,
would make the Lord Mayor tremble on his throne.
In respect of dress and
personal decoration, Sim Tappertit was no less of an adventurous and
enterprising character. He had been seen, beyond dispute, to pull off ruffles
of the finest quality at the corner of the street on Sunday nights, and to put
them carefully in his pocket before returning home; and it was quite notorious
that on all great holiday occasions it was his habit to exchange his plain
steel knee-buckles for a pair of glittering paste, under cover of a friendly
post, planted most conveniently in that same spot. Add to this that he was in
years just twenty, in his looks much older, and in conceit at least two
hundred; that he had no objection to be jested with, touching his admiration of
his master’s daughter; and had even, when called upon at a certain obscure
tavern to pledge the lady whom he honoured with his love, toasted, with many
winks and leers, a fair creature whose Christian name, he said, began with a
D--;--and as much is known of Sim Tappertit, who has by this time followed the
locksmith in to breakfast, as is necessary to be known in making his
acquaintance.
It was a substantial
meal; for, over and above the ordinary tea equipage, the board creaked beneath
the weight of a jolly round of beef, a ham of the first magnitude, and sundry
towers of buttered Yorkshire cake, piled slice upon slice in most alluring
order. There was also a goodly jug of well-browned clay, fashioned into the
form of an old gentleman, not by any means unlike the locksmith, atop of whose
bald head was a fine white froth answering to his wig, indicative, beyond
dispute, of sparkling home-brewed ale. But, better far than fair home-brewed,
or Yorkshire cake, or ham, or beef, or anything to eat or drink that earth or
air or water can supply, there sat, presiding over all, the locksmith’s rosy
daughter, before whose dark eyes even beef grew insignificant, and malt became
as nothing.
Fathers should never
kiss their daughters when young men are by. It’s too much. There are bounds to
human endurance. So thought Sim Tappertit when Gabriel drew those rosy lips to
his--those lips within Sim’s reach from day to day, and yet so far off. He had
a respect for his master, but he wished the Yorkshire cake might choke him.
"Father,"
said the locksmith’s daughter, when this salute was over, and they took their
seats at table, "what is this I hear about last night?"
"All true, my
dear; true as the Gospel, Doll."
"Young Mr. Chester
robbed, and lying wounded in the road, when you came up!"
"Ay--Mr. Edward.
And beside him, Barnaby, calling for help with all his might. It was well it
happened as it did; for the road’s a lonely one, the hour was late, and, the
night being cold, and poor Barnaby even less sensible than usual from surprise
and fright, the young gentleman might have met his death in a very short
time."
"I dread to think
of it!" cried his daughter with a shudder. "How did you know
him?"
"Know him!"
returned the locksmith. "I didn’t know him--how could I? I had never seen
him, often as I had heard and spoken of him. I took him to Mrs. Rudge’s; and
she no sooner saw him than the truth came out."
"Miss Emma,
father--If this news should reach her, enlarged upon as it is sure to be, she
will go distracted."
"Why, lookye there
again, how a man suffers for being good-natured," said the locksmith.
"Miss Emma was with her uncle at the masquerade at Carlisle House, where
she had gone, as the people at the Warren told me, sorely against her will.
What does your blockhead father when he and Mrs. Rudge have laid their heads
together, but goes there when he ought to be abed, makes interest with his
friend the doorkeeper, slips him on a mask and domino, and mixes with the
masquers."
"And like himself
to do so!" cried the girl, putting her fair arm round his neck, and giving
him a most enthusiastic kiss.
"Like
himself!" repeated Gabriel, affecting to grumble, but evidently delighted
with the part he had taken, and with her praise. "Very like himself--so
your mother said. However, he mingled with the crowd, and prettily worried and
badgered he was, I warrant you, with people squeaking, ’Don’t you know me?’ and
’I’ve found you out,’ and all that kind of nonsense in his ears. He might have
wandered on till now, but in a little room there was a young lady who had taken
off her mask, on account of the place being very warm, and was sitting there
alone."
"And that was
she?" said his daughter hastily.
"And that was
she," replied the locksmith; "and I no sooner whispered to her what
the matter was--as softly, Doll, and with nearly as much art as you could have
used yourself--than she gives a kind of scream and faints away."
"What did you
do--what happened next?" asked his daughter. "Why, the masks came
flocking round, with a general noise and hubbub, and I thought myself in luck to
get clear off, that’s all," rejoined the locksmith. "What happened
when I reached home you may guess, if you didn’t hear it. Ah! Well, it’s a poor
heart that never rejoices.--Put Toby this way, my dear."
This Toby was the brown
jug of which previous mention has been made. Applying his lips to the worthy
old gentleman’s benevolent forehead, the locksmith, who had all this time been
ravaging among the eatables, kept them there so long, at the same time raising
the vessel slowly in the air, that at length
Toby stood on his head
upon his nose, when he smacked his lips, and set him on the table again with
fond reluctance.
Although Sim Tappertit
had taken no share in this conversation, no part of it being addressed to him,
he had not been wanting in such silent manifestations of astonishment, as he
deemed most compatible with the favourable display of his eyes. Regarding the
pause which now ensued, as a particularly advantageous opportunity for doing
great execution with them upon the locksmith’s daughter (who he had no doubt
was looking at him in mute admiration), he began to screw and twist his face,
and especially those features, into such extraordinary, hideous, and
unparalleled contortions, that Gabriel, who happened to look towards him, was
stricken with amazement.
"Why, what the
devil’s the matter with the lad?" cried the locksmith. "Is he
choking?"
"Who?"
demanded Sim, with some disdain.
"Who? Why,
you," returned his master. "What do you mean by making those horrible
faces over your breakfast?"
"Faces are matters
of taste, sir," said Mr. Tappertit, rather discomfited; not the less so
because he saw the locksmith’s daughter smiling.
"Sim,"
rejoined Gabriel, laughing heartily. "Don’t be a fool, for I’d rather see
you in your senses. These young fellows," he added, turning to his
daughter, "are always committing some folly or another. There was a
quarrel between Joe Willet and old John last night though I can’t say Joe was
much in fault either. He’ll be missing one of these mornings, and will have gone
away upon some wild-goose errand, seeking his fortune.--Why, what’s the matter,
Doll? You are making faces now. The girls are as bad as the boys every
bit!"
"It’s the
tea," said Dolly, turning alternately very red and very white, which is no
doubt the effect of a slight scald--"so very hot."
Mr. Tappertit looked
immensely big at a quartern loaf on the table, and breathed hard.
"Is that
all?" returned the locksmith. "Put some more milk in it.--Yes, I am
sorry for Joe, because he is a likely young fellow, and gains upon one every
time one sees him. But he’ll start off, you’ll find. Indeed he told me as much
himself!"
"Indeed!"
cried Dolly in a faint voice. "In-deed!"
"Is the tea
tickling your throat still, my dear?" said the locksmith.
But, before his
daughter could make him any answer, she was taken with a troublesome cough, and
it was such a very unpleasant cough, that, when she left off, the tears were
starting in her bright eyes. The good-natured locksmith was still patting her
on the back and applying such gentle restoratives, when a message arrived from
Mrs. Varden, making known to all whom it might concern, that she felt too much
indisposed to rise after her great agitation and anxiety of the previous night;
and therefore desired to be immediately accommodated with the little black
teapot of strong mixed tea, a couple of rounds of buttered toast, a
middling-sized dish of beef and ham cut thin, and the Protestant Manual in two
volumes post octavo. Like some other ladies who in remote ages flourished upon
this globe, Mrs. Varden was most devout when most ill-tempered. Whenever she
and her husband were at unusual variance, then the Protestant Manual was in
high feather.
Knowing from experience
what these requests portended, the triumvirate broke up; Dolly, to see the
orders executed with all despatch; Gabriel, to some out-of-door work in his
little chaise; and Sim, to his daily duty in the workshop, to which retreat he
carried the big look, although the loaf remained behind.
Indeed the big look
increased immensely, and when he had tied his apron on, became quite gigantic.
It was not until he had several times walked up and down with folded arms, and
the longest strides be could take, and had kicked a great many small articles
out of his way, that his lip began to curl. At length, a gloomy derision came
upon his features, and he smiled; uttering meanwhile with supreme contempt the
monosyllable "Joe!"
"I eyed her over,
while he talked about the fellow," he said, "and that was of course
the reason of her being confused. Joe!"
He walked up and down
again much quicker than before, and if possible with longer strides; sometimes
stopping to take a glance at his legs, and sometimes to jerk out, and cast from
him, another "Joe!" In the course of a quarter of an hour or so he
again assumed the paper cap and tried to work. No. It could not be done.
"I’ll do nothing
to-day," said Mr. Tappertit, dashing it down again, "but grind. I’ll
grind up all the tools. Grinding will suit my present humour well. Joe!"
Whirr-r-r-r. The
grindstone was soon in motion; the sparks
were flying off in
showers. This was the occupation for his heated spirit.
Whirr-r-r-r-r-r-r.
"Something will
come of this!" said Mr. Tappertit, pausing as if in triumph, and wiping
his heated face upon his sleeve. "Something will come of this. I hope it
mayn’t be human gore!"
Whirr-r-r-r-r-r-r-r.
AS soon as the business
of the day was over, the locksmith sallied forth, alone, to visit the wounded
gentleman and ascertain the progress of his recovery. The house where he had
left him was in a by-street in Southwark, not far from London Bridge; and
thither he hied with all speed, bent upon returning with as little delay as
might be, and getting to bed betimes.
The evening was
boisterous--scarcely better than the previous night had been. It was not easy
for a stout man like Gabriel to keep his legs at the street corners, or to make
head against the high wind, which often fairly got the better of him, and drove
him back some paces, or, in defiance of all his energy, forced him to take
shelter in an arch or doorway until the fury of the gust was spent.
Occasionally a hat or wig, or both, came spinning and trundling past him, like
a mad thing; while the more serious spectacle of falling tiles and slates, or
of masses of brick and mortar or fragments of stone-coping rattling upon the
pavement near at hand, and splitting into fragments, did not increase the
pleasure of the journey, or make the way less dreary.
"A trying night
for a man like me to walk in!" said the locksmith, as he knocked softly at
the widow’s door. "I’d rather be in old John’s chimney-corner,
faith!"
"Who’s
there?" demanded a woman’s voice from within. Being answered, it added a
hasty word of welcome, and the door was quickly opened.
She was about
forty--perhaps two or three years older-- with a cheerful aspect, and a face
that had once been pretty. It bore traces of affliction and care, but they were
of an old date, and Time had smoothed them. Any one who had bestowed but a casual
glance on Barnaby might have known that this was his mother, from the strong
resemblance between them; but where in his face there was wildness and vacancy,
in hers there was the patient composure of long effort and quiet resignation.
One thing about this
face was very strange and startling. You could not look upon it in its most
cheerful mood without feeling that it had some extraordinary capacity of
expressing terror. It was not on the surface. It was in no one feature that it
lingered. You could not take the eyes or mouth, or lines upon the cheek, and
say, if this or that were otherwise, it would not be so. Yet there it always
lurked--something for ever dimly seen, but ever there, and never absent for a
moment. It was the faintest, palest shadow of some look, to which an instant of
intense and most unutterable horror only could have given birth; but indistinct
and feeble as it was, it did suggest what that look must have been, and fixed
it in the mind as if it had had existence in a dream.
More faintly imaged,
and wanting force and purpose, as it were, because of his darkened intellect,
there was this same stamp upon the son. Seen in a picture, it must have had
some legend with it, and would have haunted those who looked upon the canvas.
They who knew the Maypole story, and could remember what the widow was, before
her husband’s and his master’s murder, understood it well. They recollected how
the change had come, and could call to mind that when her son was born, upon
the very day the deed was known, he bore upon his wrist what seemed a smear of
blood but half washed out.
"God save you,
neighbour!" said the locksmith, as he followed her, with the air of an old
friend, into a little parlour where a cheerful fire was burning.
"And you,"
she answered smiling. "Your kind heart has brought you here again. Nothing
will keep you at home, I know of old, if there are friends to serve or comfort,
out of doors."
"Tut, tut,"
returned the locksmith, rubbing his hands and warming them. "You women are
such talkers. What of the patient, neighbour?"
"He is sleeping
now. He was very restless towards daylight, and for some hours tossed and
tumbled sadly. But the fever has left him, and the doctor says he will soon
mend. He must not be removed until to-morrow."
"He has had
visitors to-day--humph?" said Gabriel, slyly.
"Yes. Old Mr.
Chester has been here ever since we sent for him, and had not been gone many
minutes when you knocked."
"No ladies?"
said Gabriel, elevating his eyebrows and looking disappointed.
"A letter,"
replied the widow.
"Come. That’s
better than nothing!" replied the locksmith. "Who was the
bearer?"
"Barnaby, of
course."
"Barnaby’s a
jewel!" said Varden; "and comes and goes with ease where we who think
ourselves much wiser would make but a poor hand of it. He is not out wandering,
again, I hope?"
"Thank Heaven he
is in his bed; having been up all night, as you know, and on his feet all day.
He was quite tired out. Ah, neighbour, if I could but see him oftener so--if I
could but tame down that terrible restlessness--"
"In good
time," said the locksmith, kindly, "in good time--don’t be
down-hearted. To my mind he grows wiser every day."
The widow shook her
head. And yet, though she knew the locksmith sought to cheer her, and spoke
from no conviction of his own, she was glad to hear even this praise of her
poor benighted son.
"He will be a ’cute
man yet," resumed the locksmith. "Take care, when we are growing old
and foolish, Barnaby doesn’t put us to the blush, that’s all. But our other
friend," he added, looking under the table and about the
floor--"sharpest and cunningest of all the sharp and cunning ones--where’s
he?"
"In Barnaby’s
room," rejoined the widow, with a faint smile.
"Ah! He’s a
knowing blade!" said Varden, shaking his head. "I should be sorry to
talk secrets before him. Oh! He’s a deep customer. I’ve no doubt he can read,
and write, and cast accounts if he chooses. What was that? Him tapping at the
door?"
"No,"
returned the widow. "It was in the street, I think. Hark! Yes. There again!
’Tis some one knocking softly at the shutter. Who can it be!"
They had been speaking
in a low tone, for the invalid lay overhead, and the walls and ceilings being
thin and poorly built, the sound of their voices might otherwise have disturbed
his slumber. The party without, whoever it was, could have stood close to the
shutter without hearing anything spoken; and, seeing the light through the
chinks and finding all so quiet, might have been persuaded that only one person
was there.
"Some thief or ruffian
maybe," said the locksmith. "Give me the light."
"No, no," she
returned hastily. "Such visitors have never come to this poor dwelling. Do
you stay here. You’re within call, at the worst. I would rather go
myself--alone."
"Why?" said
the locksmith, unwillingly relinquishing the candle he had caught up from the
table.
"Because--I don’t
know why--because the wish is so strong upon me," she rejoined.
"There again--do not detain me, I beg of you!"
Gabriel looked at her,
in great surprise to see one who was usually so mild and quiet thus agitated,
and with so little cause. She left the room and closed the door behind her. She
stood for a moment as if hesitating, with her hand upon the lock. In this short
interval the knocking came again, and a voice close to the window--a voice the
locksmith seemed to recollect, and to have some disagreeable association
with--whispered "Make haste."
The words were uttered
in that low distinct voice which finds its way so readily to sleepers’ ears,
and wakes them in a fright. For a moment it startled even the locksmith; who
involuntarily drew back from the window, and listened.
The wind rumbling in
the chimney made it difficult to hear what passed, but he could tell that the
door was opened, that there was the tread of a man upon the creaking boards,
and then a moment’s silence--broken by a suppressed something which was not a
shriek, or groan, or cry for help, and yet might have been either or all three;
and the words "My God!" uttered in a voice it chilled him to hear.
He rushed out upon the
instant. There, at last, was that dreadful look--the very one he seemed to know
so well and yet had never seen before--upon her face. There she stood, frozen
to the ground, gazing with starting eyes, and livid cheeks, and every feature
fixed and ghastly, upon the man he had encountered in the dark last night. His
eyes met those of the locksmith. It was but a flash, an instant, a breath upon
a polished glass, and he was gone.
The locksmith was upon
him--had the skirts of his streaming garment almost in his grasp--when his arms
were tightly clutched, and the widow flung herself upon the ground before him.
"The other
way--the other way," she cried. "He went the other way.
Turn--turn!"
"The other way! I
see him now," rejoined the locksmith, pointing--"yonder--there--there
is his shadow passing by that light. What-- who is this? Let me go."
"Come back, come
back!" exclaimed the woman, clasping him; "Do not touch him on your
life. I charge you, come back. He carries other lives besides his own. Come
back!"
"What does this
mean?" cried the locksmith.
"No matter what it
means, don’t ask, don’t speak, don’t think about it. He is not to be followed,
checked, or stopped. Come back!"
The old man looked at
her in wonder, as she writhed and clung about him; and, borne down by her
passion, suffered her to drag him into the house. It was not until she had
chained and double-locked the door, fastened every bolt and bar with the heat
and fury of a maniac, and drawn him back into the room, that she turned upon
him, once again, that stony look of horror, and, sinking down into a chair,
covered her face, and shuddered, as though the hand of death were on her.
BEYOND all measure
astonished by the strange occurrences which had passed with so much violence
and rapidity, the locksmith gazed upon the shuddering figure in the chair like
one half stupefied, and would have gazed much longer, had not his tongue been
loosened by compassion and humanity.
"You are
ill," said Gabriel. "Let me call some neighbour in."
"Not for the
world," she rejoined, motioning to him with her trembling hand, and
holding her face averted. "It is enough that you have been by, to see
this."
"Nay, more than
enough--or less," said Gabriel.
"Be it so,"
she returned. "As you like. Ask me no questions, I entreat you."
"Neighbour,"
said the locksmith, after a pause. "Is this fair, or reasonable, or just
to yourself? Is it like you, who have known me so long and sought my advice in
all matters--like you, who from a girl have had a strong mind and a staunch
heart?"
"I have need of
them," she replied. "I am growing old, both in years and care.
Perhaps that, and too much trial, have made them weaker than they used to be.
Do not speak to me."
"How can I see
what I have seen, and hold my peace!" returned the locksmith. "Who
was that man, and why has his coming made this change in you?"
She was silent, but
held to the chair as though to save herself from falling on the ground.
"I take the
licence of an old acquaintance, Mary," said the locksmith, "who has
ever had a warm regard for you, and maybe has tried to prove it when he could.
Who is this ill-favoured man, and what has he to do with you? Who is this
ghost, that is only seen in the black nights and bad weather? How does he know,
and why does he haunt, this house, whispering through chinks and crevices, as
if there was that between him and you, which neither durst so much as speak
aloud of? Who is he?"
"You do well to
say he haunts this house," returned the widow, faintly. "His shadow
has been upon it and me, in light and darkness, at noonday and midnight. And
now, at last, he has come in the body!"
"But he wouldn’t
have gone in the body," returned the locksmith with some irritation,
"if you had left my arms and legs at liberty. What riddle is it?"
"It is one,"
she answered, rising as she spoke, "that must remain for ever as it is. I
dare not say more than that."
"Dare not!"
repeated the wondering locksmith.
"Do not press
me," she replied. "I am sick and faint, and every faculty of life
seems dead within me.--No!--Do not touch me, either."
Gabriel, who had
stepped forward to render her assistance, fell back as she made this hasty
exclamation, and regarded her in silent wonder.
"Let me go my way
alone," she said in a low voice, "and let the hands of no honest man
touch mine to-night." When she had tottered to the door, she turned, and
added with a stronger effort, "This is a secret, which, of necessity, I
trust to you. You are a true man. As you have ever been good and kind to
me,--keep it. If any noise was heard above, make some excuse--say anything but
what you really saw, and never let a word or look between us, recall this
circumstance. I trust to you. Mind, I trust to you. How much I trust, you never
can conceive."
Casting her eyes upon
him for an instant, she withdrew, and left him there alone.
Gabriel, not knowing
what to think, stood staring at the door with a countenance full of surprise
and dismay. The more he pondered on what had passed, the less able he was to give
it any favourable interpretation. To find this widow woman, whose life for so
many years had been supposed to be one of solitude and retirement, and who, in
her quiet suffering character, had gained the good opinion and respect of all
who knew her--to find her linked mysteriously with an ill-omened man, alarmed
at his appearance, and yet favouring his escape, was a discovery that pained as
much as startled him. Her reliance on his secrecy, and his tacit acquiescence,
increased his distress of mind. If he had spoken boldly, persisted in
questioning her, detained her when she rose to leave the room, made any kind of
protest, instead of silently compromising himself, as he felt he had done, he
would have been more at ease.
"Why did I let her
say it was a secret, and she trusted it to me!" said Gabriel, putting his
wig on one side to scratch his head with greater ease, and looking ruefully at
the fire. "I have no more readiness than old John himself. Why didn’t I
say firmly, "You have no right to such secrets, and I demand of you to
tell me what this means," instead of standing gaping at her, like an old
moon- calf as I am! But there’s my weakness. I can be obstinate enough with men
if need be, but women may twist me round their fingers at their pleasure."
He took his wig off
outright as he made this reflection, and, warming his handkerchief at the fire
began to rub and polish his bald head with it, until it glistened again.
"And yet,"
said the locksmith, softening under this soothing process, and stopping to
smile, "it may be nothing. Any drunken brawler trying to make his way into
the house, would have alarmed a quiet soul like her. But then"--and here
was the vexation--"how came it to be that man; how comes he to have this
influence over her; how came she to favour his getting away from me; and, more
than all, how came she not to say it was a sudden fright, and nothing more? It’s
a sad thing to have, in one minute, reason to mistrust a person I have known so
long, and an old sweetheart into the bargain; but what else can I do, with all
this upon my mind!--Is that Barnaby outside there?"
"Ay!" he
cried, looking in and nodding. "Sure enough it’s Barnaby--how did you
guess?"
"By your
shadow," said the locksmith.
"Oho!" cried
Barnaby, glancing over his shoulder, "He’s a merry fellow, that shadow,
and keeps close to me, though I am silly. We have such pranks, such walks, such
runs, such gambols on the grass! Sometimes he’ll be half as tall as a church
steeple, and sometimes no bigger than a dwarf. Now, he goes on before, and now
behind, and anon he’ll be stealing on, on this side, or on that, stopping
whenever I stop, and thinking I can’t see him, though I have my eye on him
sharp enough. Oh! he’s a merry fellow. Tell me--is he silly too? I think he
is."
"Why?" asked
Gabriel.
"Because be never
tires of mocking me, but does it all day long.--Why don’t you come?"
"Where?"
"Upstairs. He
wants you. Stay--where’s his shadow? Come. You’re a wise man; tell me
that."
"Beside him,
Barnaby; beside him, I suppose," returned the locksmith.
"No!" he
replied, shaking his head. "Guess again."
"Gone out a
walking, maybe?"
"He has changed
shadows with a woman," the idiot whispered in his ear, and then fell back
with a look of triumph. "Her shadow’s always with him, and his with her.
That’s sport I think, eh?"
"Barnaby,"
said the locksmith, with a grave look; "come hither, lad."
"I know what you
want to say. I know!" he replied, keeping away from him. "But I’m
cunning, I’m silent. I only say so much to you--are you ready?" As he
spoke, he caught up the light, and waved it with a wild laugh above his head.
"Softly--gently,"
said the locksmith, exerting all his influence to keep him calm and quiet.
"I thought you had been asleep."
"So I have been
asleep," he rejoined, with widely-opened eyes. "There have been great
faces coming and going--close to my face, and then a mile away--low places to
creep through, whether I would or no--high churches to fall down from--strange
creatures crowded up together neck and heels, to sit upon the bed--that’s
sleep, eh?"
"Dreams, Barnaby,
dreams," said the locksmith.
"Dreams!" he
echoed softly, drawing closer to him. "Those are not dreams."
"What are,"
replied the locksmith, "if they are not?"
"I dreamed,"
said Barnaby, passing his arm through Varden’s, and peering close into his face
as he answered in a whisper, "I dreamed just now that something--it was in
the shape of a man--followed me--came softly after me--wouldn’t let me be--but
was always hiding and crouching, like a cat in dark corners, waiting till I
should pass; when it crept out and came softly after me.--Did you ever see me
run?"
"Many a time, you
know."
"You never saw me
run as I did in this dream. Still it came creeping on to worry me. Nearer,
nearer, nearer--I ran faster--leaped--sprung out of bed, and to the window--and
there, in the street below--but he is waiting for us. Are you coming?"
"What in the
street below, Barnaby?" said Varden, imagining that he traced some
connection between this vision and what had actually occurred.
Barnaby looked into his
face, muttered incoherently, waved the light above his head again, laughed, and
drawing the locksmith’s arm more tightly through his own, led him up the stairs
in silence.
They entered a homely
bedchamber, garnished in a scanty way with chairs whose spindle-shanks bespoke
their age, and other furniture of very little worth; but clean and neatly kept.
Reclining in an easy-chair before the fire, pale and weak from waste of blood,
was Edward Chester, the young gentleman who had been the first to quit the
Maypole on the previous night, and who, extending his hand to the locksmith,
welcomed him as his preserver and friend.
"Say no more, sir,
say no more," said Gabriel. "I hope I would have done at least as
much for any man in such a strait, and most of all for you, sir. A certain
young lady," he added with some hesitation, "has done us many a kind
turn, and we naturally feel-- I hope I give you no offence in saying this,
sir?"
The young man smiled
and shook his head; at the same time moving in his chair as if in pain.
"It’s no great
matter," he said, in answer to the locksmith’s sympathising look, "a
mere uneasiness, arising at least as much from being cooped up here as from the
slight wound I have, or from the loss of blood. Be seated, Mr. Varden."
"If I may make so
bold, Mr. Edward, as to lean upon your chair," returned the locksmith,
accomodating his action to his speech, and bending over him, "I’ll stand
here, for the convenience of speaking low. Barnaby is not in his quietest
humour to-night, and at such times talking never does him good."
They both glanced at
the subject of this remark, who had taken a seat on the other side of the fire,
and, smiling vacantly, was making puzzles on his fingers with a skein of
string.
"Pray tell me,
sir," said Varden, dropping his voice still lower, "exactly what
happened last night. I have my reason for inquiring. You left the Maypole
alone?"
"And walked
homeward alone until I had nearly reached the place where you found me, when I
heard the gallop of a horse."
"Behind you?"
said the locksmith.
"Indeed,
yes--behind me. It was a single rider, who soon overtook me, and checking his
horse, inquired the way to London."
"You were on the
alert, sir, knowing how many highwaymen there are, scouring the roads in all
directions?" said Varden.
"I was, but I had
only a stick, having imprudently left my pistols in their holster-case with the
landlord’s son. I directed him as he desired. Before the words had passed my
lips, he rode upon me furiously, as if bent on trampling me down beneath his
horse’s hoofs. In starting aside, I slipped and fell. You found me with this
stab and an ugly bruise or two, and without my purse--in which he found little
enough for his pains. And now, Mr. Varden," he added, shaking the
locksmith by the hand, "saving the extent of my gratitude to you, you know
as much as I."
"Except,"
said Gabriel, bending down yet more, and looking cautiously towards their
silent neighhour, "except in respect of the robber himself. What like was
he, sir? Speak low, if you please. Barnaby means no harm, but I have watched
him oftener than you, and I know, little as you would think it, that he’s
listening now."
It required a strong
confidence in the locksmith’s veracity to lead any one to this belief, for
every sense and faculty that Barnahy possessed, seemed to be fixed upon his
game, to the exclusion of all other things. Something in the young man’s face
expressed this opinion, for Gabriel repeated what he had just said, more
earnestly than before, and with another glance towards Barnaby, again asked
what like the man was.
"The night was so
dark," said Edward, "the attack so sudden, and he so wrapped and
muffled up, that I can hardly say. It seems that--"
"Don’t mention his
name, sir," returned the locksmith, following his look towards Barnaby;
"I know he saw him. I want to know what you saw."
"All I remember
is," said Edward, "that as he checked his horse his hat was blown
off. He caught it, and replaced it on his head, which I observed was bound with
a dark handkerchief. A stranger entered the Maypole while I was there, whom I
had not seen--for I had sat apart for reasons of my own--and when I rose to
leave the room and glanced round, he was in the shadow of the chimney and
hidden from my sight. But, if he and the robber were two different persons,
their voices were strangely and most remarkably alike; for directly the man
addressed me in the road, I recognised his speech again."
"It is as I
feared. The very man was here to-night," thought the locksmith, changing
colour. "What dark history is this!"
"Halloa!"
cried a hoarse voice in his ear. "Halloa, halloa, halloa! Bow wow wow.
What’s the matter here! Hal-loa!"
The speaker--who made
the locksmith start as if he had been some supernatural agent--was a large
raven, who had perched upon the top of the easy-chair, unseen by him and
Edward, and listened with a polite attention and a most extraordinary
appearance of comprehending every word, to all they had said up to this point;
turning his head from one to the other, as if his office were to judge between
them, and it were of the very last importance that he should not lose a word.
"Look at
him!" said Varden, divided between admiration of the bird and a kind of
fear of him. "Was there ever such a knowing imp as that! Oh he’s a
dreadful fellow!"
The raven, with his
head very much on one side, and his bright eye shining like a diamond,
preserved a thoughtful silence for a few seconds, and then replied in a voice
so hoarse and distant, that it seemed to come through his thick feathers rather
than out of his mouth.
"Halloa, halloa,
halloa! What’s the matter here! Keep up your spirits. Never say die. Bow wow
wow. I’m a devil, I’m a devil, I’m a devil. Hurrah!"--And then, as if
exulting in his infernal character, he began to whistle.
"I more than half
believe he speaks the truth. Upon my word I do," said Varden. "Do you
see how he looks at me, as if he knew what I was saying?"
To which the bird,
balancing himself on tiptoe, as it were, and moving his body up and down in a
sort of grave dance, rejoined, "I’m a devil, I’m a devil, I’m a
devil," and flapped his wings against his sides as if he were bursting
with laughter. Barnaby clapped his hands, and fairly rolled upon the ground in
an ecstasy of delight.
"Strange
companions, sir," said the locksmith, shaking his head, and looking from
one to the other. "The bird has all the wit."
"Strange
indeed!" said Edward, holding out his forefinger to the raven, who, in
acknowledgment of the attention, made a dive at it immediately with his iron
bill. "Is he old?"
"A mere boy,
sir," replied the locksmith. "A hundred and twenty, or thereabouts.
Call him down, Barnaby, my man."
"Call him!"
echoed Barnaby, sitting upright upon the floor, and staring vacantly at
Gabriel, as he thrust his hair back from his face. "But who can make him
come! He calls me, and makes me go where he will. He goes on before, and I
follow. He’s the master, and I’m the man. Is that the truth, Grip?"
The raven gave a short,
comfortable, confidential kind of croak;--a most expressive croak, which seemed
to say, "You needn’t let these fellows into our secrets. We understand
each other. It’s all right."
"I make him
come?" cried Barnaby, pointing to the bird. "Him, who never goes to
sleep, or so much as winks!--Why, any time of night, you may see his eyes in my
dark room, shining like two sparks. And every night, and all night too, he’s
broad awake, talking to himself, thinking what he shall do to-morrow, where we
shall go, and what he shall steal, and hide, and bury. I make him come! Ha ha
ha!"
On second thoughts, the
bird appeared disposed to come of himself. After a short survey of the ground,
and a few sidelong looks at the ceiling and at everybody present in turn, he
fluttered to the floor, and went to Barnaby--not in a hop, or walk, or run, but
in a pace like that of a very particular gentleman with exceedingly tight boots
on, trying to walk fast over loose pebbles. Then, stepping into his extended
hand, and condescending to be held out at arm’s length, he gave vent to a
succession of sounds, not unlike the drawing of some eight or ten dozen of long
corks, and again asserted his brimstone birth and parentage with great
distinctness.
The locksmith shook his
head--perhaps in some doubt of the creature’s being really nothing but a
bird--perhaps in pity for Bamaby, who by this time had him in his arms, and was
rolling about, with him, on the ground. As he raised his eyes from the poor
fellow he encountered those of his mother, who had entered the room, and was
looking on in silence.
She was quite white in
the face, even to her lips, but had wholly subdued her emotion, and wore her
usual quiet look. Varden fancied as he glanced at her that she shrunk from his
eye; and that she busied herself about the wounded gentleman to avoid him the
better.
It was time he went to
bed, she said. He was to be removed to his own home on the morrow, and he had
already exceeded his time for sitting up, by a full hour. Acting on this hint,
the locksmith prepared to take his leave.
"By-the-bye,"
said Edward, as he shook him by the hand, and looked from him to Mrs. Rudge and
back again, "what noise was that below? I heard your voice in the midst of
it, and should have inquired before, but our other conversation drove it from
my memory. What was it?"
The locksmith looked
towards her, and bit his lip. She leant against the chair, and bent her eyes
upon the ground. Barnaby too-- he was listening.
"--Some mad or
drunken fellow, sir," Varden at length made answer, looking steadily at
the widow as he spoke. "He mistook the house, and tried to force an
entrance."
She breathed more
freely, but stood quite motionless. As the locksmith said "Good
night," and Barnaby caught up the candle to light him down the stairs, she
took it from him, and charged him--with more haste and earnestness than so
slight an occasion appeared to warrant--not to stir. The raven followed them to
satisfy himself that all was right below, and when they reached the
street-door, stood on the bottom stair drawing corks out of number.
With a trembling hand
she unfastened the chain and bolts, and turned the key. As she had her hand
upon the latch, the locksmith said in a low voice,
"I have told a lie
to-night, for your sake, Mary, and for the sake of bygone times and old
acquaintance, when I would scorn to do so for my own. I hope I may have done no
harm, or led to none. I can’t help the suspicions you have forced upon me, and
I am loth, I tell you plainly, to leave Mr. Edward here. Take care he comes to
no hurt. I doubt the safety of this roof, and am glad he leaves it so soon.
Now, let me go."
For a moment she hid
her face in her hands and wept; but resisting the strong impulse which
evidently moved her to reply, opened the door--no wider than was sufficient for
the passage of his body-- and motioned him away. As the locksmith stood upon
the step, it was chained and locked behind him, and the raven, in furtherance
of these precautions, barked like a lusty house-dog.
"In league with
that ill-looking figure that might have fallen from a gibbet--he listening and
hiding here--Barnaby first upon the spot last night--can she who has always
borne so fair a name be guilty of such crimes in secret!" said the
locksmith, musing. "Heaven forgive me if I am wrong, and send me just
thoughts; but she is poor, the temptation may be great, and we daily hear of
things as strange.--Ay, bark away, my friend. If there’s any wickedness going
on, that raven’s in it, I’ll be sworn."
MRS. VARDEN was a lady
of what is commonly called an uncertain temper--a phrase which being
interpreted signifies a temper tolerably certain to make everybody more or less
uncomfortable. Thus it generally happened, that when other people were merry,
Mrs. Varden was dull; and that when other people were dull, Mrs. Varden was
disposed to be amazingly cheerful. Indeed the worthy housewife was of such a
capricious nature, that she not only attained a higher pitch of genius than
Macbeth, in respect of her ability to be wise, amazed, temperate and furious,
loyal and neutral in an instant, but would sometimes ring the changes backwards
and forwards on all possible moods and flights in one short quarter of an hour;
performing, as it were, a kind of triple bob major on the peal of instruments
in the female belfry, with a skilfulness and rapidity of execution that
astonished all who heard her.
It had been observed in
this good lady (who did not want for personal attractions, being plump and
buxom to look at, though like her fair daughter, somewhat short in stature)
that this uncertainty of disposition strengthened and increased with her
temporal prosperity; and divers wise men and matrons, on friendly terms with
the locksmith and his family, even went so far as to assert, that a tumble down
some half-dozen rounds in the world’s ladder--such as the breaking of the bank
in which her husband kept his money, or some little fall of that kind--would be
the making of her, and could hardly fail to render her one of the most
agreeable companions in existence. Whether they were right or wrong in this
conjecture, certain it is that minds, like bodies, will often fall into a
pimpled ill-conditioned state from mere excess of comfort, and like them, are
often successfully cured by remedies in themselves very nauseous and
unpalatable.
Mrs. Varden’s chief
aider and abettor, and at the same time her principal victim and object of
wrath, was her single domestic servant, one Miss Miggs; or as she was called,
in conformity with those prejudices of society which lop and top from poor
hand- maidens all such genteel excrescences--Miggs. This Miggs was a tall young
lady, very much addicted to pattens in private life; slender and shrewish, of a
rather uncomfortable figure, and though not absolutely ill-looking, of a sharp
and acid visage. As a general principle and abstract proposition, Miggs held
the male sex to be utterly contemptible and unworthy of notice; to be fickle,
false, base, sottish, inclined to perjury, and wholly undeserving. When
particularly exasperated against them (which, scandal said, was when Sim
Tappertit slighted her most) she was accustomed to wish with great emphasis
that the whole race of women could but die off, in order that the men might be
brought to know the real value of the blessings by which they set so little
store; nay, her feeling for her order ran so high, that she sometimes declared,
if she could only have good security for a fair, round number--say ten
thousand--of young virgins following her example, she would, to spite mankind,
hang, drown, stab, or poison herself, with a joy past all expression.
It was the voice of
Miggs that greeted the locksmith, when he knocked at his own house, with a
shrill cry of "Who’s there?"
"Me, girl,
me," returned Gabriel.
"What, already,
sir!" said Miggs, opening the door with a look of surprise. "We were
just getting on our nightcaps to sit up,--me and mistress. Oh, she has been so
bad!"
Miggs said this with an
air of uncommon candour and concern; but the parlour-door was standing open,
and as Gabriel very well knew for whose ears it was designed, he regarded her
with anything but an approving look as he passed in.
"Master’s come
home, mim," cried Miggs, running before him into the parlour. "You
was wrong, mim, and I was right. I thought he wouldn’t keep us up so late, two
nights running, mim. Master’s always considerate so far. I’m so glad, mim, on
your account. I’m a little"--here Miggs simpered--"a little sleepy
myself; I’ll own it now, mim, though I said I wasn’t when you asked me. It ain’t
of no consequence, mim, of course."
"You had
better," said the locksmith, who most devoutly wished that Barnaby’s raven
was at Miggs’s ankles, "you had better get to bed at once then."
"Thanking you
kindly, sir," returned Miggs, "I couldn’t take my rest in peace, nor fix
my thoughts upon my prayers, otherways than that I knew mistress was
comfortable in her bed this night; by rights she ought to have been there,
hours ago."
"You’re talkative,
mistress," said Varden, pulling off his greatcoat, and looking at her
askew.
"Taking the hint,
sir," cried Miggs, with a flushed face, "and thanking you for it most
kindly, I will make bold to say, that if I give offence by having consideration
for my mistress, I do not ask your pardon, but am content to get myself into
trouble and to be in suffering."
Here Mrs. Varden, who,
with her countenance shrouded in a large nightcap, had been all this time
intent upon the Protestant Manual, looked round, and acknowledged Miggs’s
championship by commanding her to hold her tongue.
Every little bone in
Miggs’s throat and neck developed itself with a spitefulness quite alarming, as
she replied, "Yes, mim, I will."
"How do you find
yourself now, my dear?" said the locksmith, taking a chair near his wife
(who had resumed her book), and rubbing his knees hard as he made the inquiry.
"You’re very
anxious to know, an’t you?" returned Mrs. Varden, with her eyes upon the
print. "You, that have not been near me all day, and wouldn’t have been if
I was dying!"
"My dear
Martha--" said Gabriel.
Mrs. Varden turned over
to the next page; then went back again to the bottom line over leaf to be quite
sure of the last words; and then went on reading with an appearance of the
deepest interest and study.
"My dear
Martha," said the locksmith, "how can you say such things, when you
know you don’t mean them? If you were dying! Why, if there was anything serious
the matter with you, Martha, shouldn’t I be in constant attendance upon
you?"
"Yes!" cried
Mrs. Varden, bursting into tears, "yes, you would. I don’t doubt it,
Varden. Certainly you would. That’s as much as to tell me that you would be
hovering round me like a vulture, waiting till the breath was out of my body,
that you might go and marry somebody else."
Miggs groaned in
sympathy--a little short groan, checked in its birth, and changed into a cough.
It seemed to say, "I can’t help it. It’s wrung from me by the dreadful
brutality of that monster master."
"But you’ll break
my heart one of these days," added Mrs. Varden, with more resignation,
"and then we shall both be happy. My only desire is to see Dolly
comfortably settled, and when she is, you may settle me as soon as you
like."
"Ah!" cried
Miggs--and coughed again.
Poor Gabriel twisted
his wig about in silence for a long time, and then said mildly, "Has Dolly
gone to bed?"
"Your master
speaks to you," said Mrs. Varden, looking sternly over her shoulder at
Miss Miggs in waiting.
"No, my dear, I
spoke to you," suggested the locksmith.
"Did you hear me,
Miggs?" cried the obdurate lady, stamping her foot upon the ground.
"You are beginning to despise me now, are you? But this is example!"
At this cruel rebuke,
Miggs, whose tears were always ready, for large or small parties, on the
shortest notice and the most reasonable terms, fell a crying violently; holding
both her hands tight upon her heart meanwhile, as if nothing less would prevent
its splitting into small fragments. Mrs. Varden, who likewise possessed that
faculty in high perfection, wept too, against Miggs; and with such effect that
Miggs gave in after a time, and, except for an occasional sob, which seemed to
threaten some remote intention of breaking out again, left her mistress in
possession of the field. Her superiority being thoroughly asserted, that lady
soon desisted likewise, and fell into a quiet melancholy.
The relief was so
great, and the fatiguing occurrences of last night so completely overpowered
the locksmith, that he nodded in his chair, and would doubtless have slept
there all night, but for the voice of Mrs. Varden, which, after a pause of some
five minutes, awoke him with a start.
"If I am
ever," said Mrs. V.--not scolding, but in a sort of monotonous
remonstrance--"in spirits, if I am ever cheerful, if I am ever more than
usually disposed to be talkative and comfortable, this is the way I am
treated."
"Such spirits as
you was in too, mim, but half an hour ago!" cried Miggs. "I never see
such company!"
"Because,"
said Mrs. Varden, "because I never interfere or interrupt; because I never
question where anybody comes or goes; because my whole mind and soul is bent on
saving where I can save, and labouring in this house;--therefore, they try me
as they do."
"Martha,"
urged the locksmith, endeavouring to look as wakeful as possible, "what is
it you complain of? I really came home with every wish and desire to be happy.
I did, indeed."
"What do I
complain of!" retorted his wife. "Is it a chilling thing to have one’s
husband sulking and falling asleep directly he comes home--to have him freezing
all one’s warm-heartedness, and throwing cold water over the fireside? Is it
natural, when I know he went out upon a matter in which I am as much interested
as anybody can be, that I should wish to know all that has happened, or that he
should tell me without my begging and praying him to do it? Is that natural, or
is it not?"
"I am very sorry,
Martha," said the good-natured locksmith. "I was really afraid you
were not disposed to talk pleasantly; I’ll tell you everything; I shall only be
too glad, my dear."
"No, Varden,"
returned his wife, rising with dignity. "I dare say-- thank you! I’m not a
child to be corrected one minute and petted the next--I’m a little too old for
that, Varden. Miggs, carry the light.--You can be cheerful, Miggs, at
least"
Miggs, who, to this
moment, had been in the very depths of compassionate despondency, passed
instantly into the liveliest state conceivable, and tossing her head as she
glanced towards the locksmith, bore off her mistress and the light together.
"Now, who would
think," thought Varden, shrugging his shoulders and drawing his chair
nearer to the fire, "that that woman could ever be pleasant and agreeable?
And yet she can be. Well, well, all of us have our faults. I’ll not be hard
upon hers. We have been man and wife too long for that."
He dozed again--not the
less pleasantly, perhaps, for his hearty temper. While his eyes were closed,
the door leading to the upper stairs was partially opened; and a head appeared,
which, at sight of him, hastily drew back again.
"I wish,"
murmured Gabriel, waking at the noise, and looking round the room, "I wish
somebody would marry Miggs. But that’s impossible! I wonder whether there’s any
madman alive, who would marry Miggs!"
This was such a vast
speculation that he fell into a doze again, and slept until the fire was quite
burnt out. At last he roused himself; and having double-locked the street-door
according to custom, and put the key in his pocket, went off to bed.
He had not left the
room in darkness many minutes, when the head again appeared, and Sim Tappertit
entered, bearing in his hand a little lamp.
"What the devil
business has he to stop up so late!" muttered Sim, passing into the
workshop, and setting it down upon the forge. "Here’s half the night gone
already. There’s only one good that has ever come to me, out of this cursed old
rusty mechanical trade, and that’s this piece of ironmongery, upon my
soul!"
As he spoke, he drew
from the right hand, or rather right leg pocket of his smalls, a clumsy
large-sized key, which he inserted cautiously in the lock his master had
secured, and softly opened the door. That done, he replaced his piece of secret
workmanship in his pocket; and leaving the lamp burning, and closing the door
carefully and without noise, stole out into the street--as little suspected by
the locksmith in his sound deep sleep, as by Barnaby himself in his
phantom-haunted dreams.
CLEAR of the locksmith’s
house, Sim Tappertit laid aside his cautious manner, and assuming in its stead
that of a ruffling, swaggering, roving blade, who would rather kill a man than
otherwise, and eat him too if needful, made the best of his way along the
darkened streets.
Half pausing for an
instant now and then to smite his pocket and assure himself of the safety of
his master key, he hurried on to Barbican, and turning into one of the
narrowest of the narrow streets which diverged from that centre, slackened his
pace and wiped his heated brow, as if the termination of his walk were near at
hand.
It was not a very
choice spot for midnight expeditions, being in truth one of more than
questionable character, and of an appearance by no means inviting. From the
main street he had entered, itself little better than an alley, a low-browed
doorway led into a blind court, or yard, profoundly dark, unpaved, and reeking
with stagnant odours. Into this ill-favoured pit, the locksmith’s vagrant ’prentice
groped his way; and stopping at a house from whose defaced and rotten front the
rude effigy of a bottle swung to and fro like some gibbeted malefactor, struck
thrice upon an iron grating with his foot. After listening in vain for some
response to his signal, Mr. Tappertit became impatient, and struck the grating
thrice again.
A further delay ensued,
but it was not of long duration. The ground seemed to open at his feet, and a
ragged head appeared.
"Is that the
captain?" said a voice as ragged as the head.
"Yes,"
replied Mr. Tappertit haughtily, descending as he spoke, "who should it
be?"
"It’s so late, we
gave you up," returned the voice, as its owner stopped to shut and fasten
the grating. "You’re late, sir."
"Lead on,"
said Mr. Tappertit, with a gloomy majesty, "and make remarks when I
require you. Forward!"
This latter word of
command was perhaps somewhat theatrical and unnecessary, inasmuch as the descent
was by a very narrow, steep, and slippery flight of steps, and any rashness or
departure from the beaten track must have ended in a yawning water-butt. But
Mr. Tappertit being, like some other great commanders, favourable to strong
effects, and personal display, cried "Forward!" again, in the
hoarsest voice he could assume; and led the way, with folded arms and knitted
brows, to the cellar down below, where there was a small copper fixed in one
corner, a chair or two, a form and table, a glimmering fire, and a truckle-bed,
covered with a ragged patchwork rug.
"Welcome, noble
captain!" cried a lanky figure, rising as from a nap.
The captain nodded.
Then, throwing off his outer coat, he stood composed in all his dignity, and
eyed his follower over.
"What news
to-night?" he asked, when he had looked into his very soul.
"Nothing
particular," replied the other, stretching himself--and he was so long
already that it was quite alarming to see him do it-- "how come you to be
so late?"
"No matter,"
was all the captain deigned to say in answer. "Is the room prepared?"
"It is,"
replied the follower.
"The comrade--is
he here?"
"Yes. And a
sprinkling of the others--you hear ’em?"
"Playing
skittles!" said the captain moodily. "Light-hearted revellers!"
There was no doubt
respecting the particular amusement in which these heedless spirits were
indulging, for even in the close and stifling atmosphere of the vault, the
noise sounded like distant thunder. It certainly appeared, at first sight, a
singular spot to choose, for that or any other purpose of relaxation, if the
other cellars answered to the one in which this brief colloquy took place; for
the floors were of sodden earth, the walls and roof of damp bare brick
tapestried with the tracks of snails and slugs; the air was sickening, tainted,
and offensive. It seemed, from one strong flavour which was uppermost among the
various odours of the place, that it had, at no very distant period, been used
as a storehouse for cheeses; a circumstance which, while it accounted for the
greasy moisture that hung about it, was agreeably suggestive of rats. It was
naturally damp besides, and little trees of fungus sprung from every mouldering
corner.
The proprietor of this
charming retreat, and owner of the ragged head before mentioned--for he wore an
old tie-wig as bare and frowzy as a stunted hearth-broom--had by this time
joined them; and stood a little apart, rubbing his hands, wagging his hoary
bristled chin, and smiling in silence. His eyes were closed; but had they been
wide open, it would have been easy to tell, from the attentive expression of
the face he turned towards them--pale and unwholesome as might be expected in
one of his underground existence--and from a certain anxious raising and
quivering of the lids, that he was blind.
"Even Stagg hath
been asleep," said the long comrade, nodding towards this person.
"Sound, captain,
sound!" cried the blind man; "what does my noble captain drink--is it
brandy, rum, usquebaugh? Is it soaked gunpowder, or blazing oil? Give it a
name, heart of oak, and we’d get it for you, if it was wine from a bishop’s
cellar, or melted gold from King George’s mint."
"See," said
Mr. Tappertit haughtily, "that it’s something strong, and comes quick; and
so long as you take care of that, you may bring it from the devil’s cellar, if
you like."
"Boldly said,
noble captain!" rejoined the blind man. "Spoken like the ’Prentices’
Glory. Ha, ha! From the devil’s cellar! A brave joke! The captain joketh. Ha,
ha, ha!"
"I’ll tell you
what, my fine feller," said Mr. Tappertit, eyeing the host over as he
walked to a closet, and took out a bottle and glass as carelessly as if he had
been in full possession of his sight, "if you make that row, you’ll find
that the captain’s very far from joking, and so I tell you."
"He’s got his eyes
on me!" cried Stagg, stopping short on his way back, and affecting to
screen his face with the bottle. "I feel ’em though I can’t see ’em. Take ’em
off, noble captain. Remove ’em, for they pierce like gimlets."
Mr. Tappertit smiled
grimly at his comrade; and twisting out one more look--a kind of ocular
screw--under the influence of which the blind man feigned to undergo great
anguish and torture, bade him, in a softened tone, approach, and hold his
peace.
"I obey you,
captain," cried Stagg, drawing close to him and filling out a bumper
without spilling a drop, by reason that he held his little finger at the brim
of the glass, and stopped at the instant the liquor touched it, "drink,
noble governor. Death to all masters, life to all ’prentices, and love to all
fair damsels. Drink, brave general, and warm your gallant heart!"
Mr. Tappertit
condescended to take the glass from his outstretched hand. Stagg then dropped
on one knee, and gently smoothed the calves of his legs, with an air of humble
admiration.
"That I had but
eyes!" he cried, "to behold my captain’s symmetrical proportions!
That I had but eyes, to look upon these twin invaders of domestic peace!"
"Get out!"
said Mr. Tappertit, glancing downward at his favourite limbs. "Go along,
will you, Stagg!"
"When I touch my
own afterwards," cried the host, smiting them reproachfully, "I hate ’em.
Comparatively speaking, they’ve no more shape than wooden legs, beside these
models of my noble captain’s."
"Yours!"
exclaimed Mr. Tappertit. "No, I should think not. Don’t talk about those
precious old toothpicks in the same breath with mine; that’s rather too much.
Here. Take the glass. Benjamin. Lead on. To business!"
With these words, he
folded his arms again; and frowning with a sullen majesty, passed with his
companion through a little door at the upper end of the cellar, and
disappeared; leaving Stagg to his private meditations.
The vault they entered,
strewn with sawdust and dimly lighted, was between the outer one from which they
had just come, and that in which the skittle-players were diverting themselves;
as was manifested by the increased noise and clamour of tongues, which was
suddenly stopped, however, and replaced by a dead silence, at a signal from the
long comrade. Then, this young gentleman, going to a little cupboard, returned
with a thigh-bone, which in former times must have been part and parcel of some
individual at least as long as himself, and placed the same in the hands of Mr.
Tappertit; who, receiving it as a sceptre and staff of authority, cocked his
three-cornered hat fiercely on the top of his head, and mounted a large table,
whereon a chair of state, cheerfully ornamented with a couple of skulls, was
placed ready for his reception.
He had no sooner assumed
this position, than another young gentleman appeared, bearing in his arms a
huge clasped book, who made him a profound obeisance, and delivering it to the
long comrade, advanced to the table, and turning his back upon it, stood there
Atlas-wise. Then, the long comrade got upon the table too; and seating himself
in a lower chair than Mr. Tappertit’s, with much state and ceremony, placed the
large book on the shoulders of their mute companion as deliberately as if he
had been a wooden desk, and prepared to make entries therein with a pen of
corresponding size.
When the long comrade
had made these preparations, he looked towards Mr. Tappertit; and Mr.
Tappertit, flourishing the bone, knocked nine times therewith upon one of the
skulls.
At the ninth stroke, a
third young gentleman emerged from the door leading to the skittle ground, and
bowing low, awaited his commands.
"Prentice!"
said the mighty captain, "who waits without?"
The ’prentice made
answer that a stranger was in attendance, who claimed admission into that
secret society of ’Prentice Knights, and a free participation in their rights,
privileges, and immunities. Thereupon Mr. Tappertit flourished the bone again,
and giving the other skull a prodigious rap on the nose, exclaimed "Admit
him!" At these dread words the ’prentice bowed once more, and so withdrew
as he had come.
There soon appeared at
the same door, two other ’prentices, having between them a third, whose eyes
were bandaged, and who was attired in a bag-wig, and a broad-skirted coat, trimmed
with tarnished lace; and who was girded with a sword, in compliance with the
laws of the Institution regulating the introduction of candidates, which
required them to assume this courtly dress, and kept it constantly in lavender,
for their convenience. One of the conductors of this novice held a rusty
blunderbuss pointed towards his ear, and the other a very ancient sabre, with
which he carved imaginary offenders as he came along in a sanguinary and
anatomical manner.
As this silent group
advanced, Mr. Tappertit fixed his hat upon his head. The novice then laid his
hand upon his breast and bent before him. When he had humbled himself
sufficiently, the captain ordered the bandage to be removed, and proceeded to
eye him over.
"Ha!" said
the captain, thoughtfully, when he had concluded this ordeal.
"Proceed."
The long comrade read
aloud as follows:--"Mark Gilbert. Age, nineteen. Bound to Thomas Curzon,
hosier, Golden Fleece, Aldgate. Loves Curzon’s daughter. Cannot say that Curzon’s
daughter loves him. Should think it probable. Curzon pulled his ears last
Tuesday week."
"How!" cried
the captain, starting.
"For looking at
his daughter, please you," said the novice.
"Write Curzon
down, Denounced," said the captain. "Put a black cross against the
name of Curzon."
"So please
you," said the novice, "that’s not the worst--he calls his ’prentice
idle dog, and stops his beer unless he works to his liking. He gives Dutch
cheese, too, eating Cheshire, sir, himself; and Sundays out, are only once a
month."
"This," said
Mr. Tappert;t gravely, "is a flagrant case. Put two black crosses to the
name of Curzon."
"If the
society," said the novice, who was an ill-looking, one- sided, shambling
lad, with sunken eyes set close together in his head--"if the society would
burn his house down--for he’s not insured--or beat him as he comes home from
his club at night, or help me to carry off his daughter, and marry her at the
Fleet, whether she gave consent or no--"
Mr. Tappertit waved his
grizzly truncheon as an admonition to him not to interrupt, and ordered three
black crosses to the name of Curzon.
"Which
means," he said in gracious explanation, "vengeance, complete and
terrible. ’Prentice, do you love the Constitution?"
To which the novice
(being to that end instructed by his attendant sponsors) replied "I
do!"
"The Church, the
State, and everything established--but the masters?" quoth the captain.
Again the novice said
"I do."
Having said it, he
listened meekly to the captain, who in an address prepared for such occasions,
told him how that under that same Constitution (which was kept in a strong box
somewhere, but where exactly he could not find out, or he would have
endeavoured to procure a copy of it), the ’prentices had, in times gone by, had
frequent holidays of right, broken people’s heads by scores, defied their
masters, nay, even achieved some glorious murders in the streets, which
privileges had gradually been wrested from them, and in all which noble
aspirations they were now restrained; how the degrading checks imposed upon
them were unquestionably attributable to the innovating spirit of the times,
and how they united therefore to resist all change, except such change as would
restore those good old English customs, by which they would stand or fall. After
illustrating the wisdom of going backward, by reference to that sagacious fish,
the crab, and the not unfrequent practice of the mule and donkey, he described
their general objects; which were briefly vengeance on their Tyrant Masters (of
whose grievous and insupportable oppression no ’prentice could entertain a
moment’s doubt) and the restoration, as aforesaid, of their ancient rights and
holidays; for neither of which objects were they now quite ripe, being barely
twenty strong, but which they pledged themselves to pursue with fire and sword
when needful. Then he described the oath which every member of that small
remnant of a noble body took, and which was of a dreadful and impressive kind;
binding him, at the bidding of his chief, to resist and obstruct the Lord
Mayor, sword-bearer, and chaplain; to despise the authority of the sheriffs;
and to hold the court of aldermen as nought; but not on any account, in case
the fulness of time should bring a general rising of ’prentices, to damage or
in any way disfigure Temple Bar, which was strictly constitutional and always
to be approached with reverence. Having gone over these several heads with
great eloquence and force, and having further informed the novice that this
society had its origin in his own teeming brain, stimulated by a swelling sense
of wrong and outrage, Mr. Tappertit demanded whether he had strength of heart
to take the mighty pledge required, or whether he would withdraw while retreat
was yet in his power.
To this the novice made
rejoinder, that he would take the vow, though it should choke him; and it was
accordingly administered with many impressive circumstances, among which the
lighting up of the two skulls with a candle-end inside of each, and a great
many flourishes with the bone, were chiefly conspicuous; not to mention a
variety of grave exercises with the blunderbuss and sabre, and some dismal
groaning by unseen ’prentices without. All these dark and direful ceremonies
being at length completed, the table was put aside, the chair of state removed,
the sceptre locked up in its usual cupboard, the doors of communication between
the three cellars thrown freely open, and the ’Prentice Knights resigned
themselves to merriment.
But Mr. Tappertit, who
had a soul above the vulgar herd, and who, on account of his greatness, could
only afford to be merry now and then, threw himself on a bench with the air of
a man who was faint with dignity. He looked with an indifferent eye, alike on
skittles, cards, and dice, thinking only of the locksmith’s daughter, and the
base degenerate days on which he had fallen.
"My noble captain
neither games, nor sings, nor dances," said his host, taking a seat beside
him. "Drink, gallant general!"
Mr. Tappertit drained
the proffered goblet to the dregs; then thrust his hands into his pockets, and
with a lowering visage walked among the skittles, while his followers (such is
the influence of superior genius) restrained the ardent ball, and held his
little shins in dumb respect.
"If I had been
born a corsair or a pirate, a brigand, genteel highwayman or patriot--and they’re
the same thing," thought Mr. Tappertit, musing among the nine-pins,
"I should have been all right. But to drag out a ignoble existence
unbeknown to mankind in general--patience! I will be famous yet. A voice within
me keeps on whispering Greatness. I shall burst out one of these days, and when
I do, what power can keep me down? I feel my soul getting into my head at the
idea. More drink there!"
"The novice,"
pursued Mr. Tappertit, not exactly in a voice of thunder, for his tones, to say
the truth were rather cracked and shrill--but very impressively,
notwithstanding--"where is he?"
"Here, noble
captain!" cried Stagg. "One stands beside me who I feel is a
stranger."
"Have you,"
said Mr. Tappertit, letting his gaze fall on the party indicated, who was
indeed the new knight, by this time restored to his own apparel; "Have you
the impression of your street-door key in wax?"
The long comrade
anticipated the reply, by producing it from the shelf on which it had been
deposited.
"Good," said
Mr. Tappertit, scrutinising it attentively, while a breathless silence reigned
around; for he had constructed secret door-keys for the whole society, and
perhaps owed something of his influence to that mean and trivial
circumstance--on such slight accidents do even men of mind depend!--"This
is easily made. Come hither, friend."
With that, he beckoned
the new knight apart, and putting the pattern in his pocket, motioned to him to
walk by his side.
"And so," he
said, when they had taken a few turns up and down, "you--you love your
master’s daughter?"
"I do," said
the ’prentice. "Honour bright. No chaff, you know."
"Have you,"
rejoined Mr. Tappertit, catching him by the wrist, and giving him a look which
would have been expressive of the most deadly malevolence, but for an
accidental hiccup that rather interfered with it; "have you a--a
rival?"
"Not as I know
on," replied the ’prentice.
"If you had
now--" said Mr. Tappertit--"what would you--eh?--"
The ’prentice looked
fierce and clenched his fists.
"It is
enough," cried Mr. Tappertit hastily, "we understand each other. We
are observed. I thank you."
So saying, he cast him
off again; and calling the long comrade aside after taking a few hasty turns by
himself, bade him immediately write and post against the wall, a notice,
proscribing one Joseph Willet (commonly known as Joe) of Chigwell; forbidding
all ’Prentice Knights to succour, comfort, or hold communion with him; and
requiring them, on pain of excommunication, to molest, hurt, wrong, annoy, and
pick quarrels with the said Joseph, whensoever and wheresoever they, or any of
them, should happen to encounter him.
Having relieved his
mind by this energetic proceeding, he condescended to approach the festive
board, and warming by degrees, at length deigned to preside, and even to
enchant the company with a song. After this, he rose to such a pitch as to
consent to regale the society with a hornpipe, which be actually performed to
the music of a fiddle (played by an ingenious member) with such surpassing
agility and brilliancy of execution, that the spectators could not be
sufficiently enthusiastic in their admiration; and their host protested, with
tears in his eyes, that he had never truly felt his blindness until that
moment.
But the host
withdrawing--probably to weep in secret--soon returned with the information
that it wanted little more than an hour of day, and that all the cocks in
Barbican had already begun to crow, as if their lives depended on it. At this
intelligence, the ’Prentice Knights arose in haste, and marshalling into a
line, filed off one by one and dispersed with all speed to their several homes,
leaving their leader to pass the grating last.
"Good night, noble
captain," whispered the blind man as he held it open for his passage out;
"Farewell, brave general. Bye, bye, illustrious commander. Good luck go
with you for a--conceited, bragging, empty-headed, duck-legged idiot."
With which parting
words, coolly added as he listened to his receding footsteps and locked the
grate upon himself, he descended the steps, and lighting the fire below the
little copper, prepared, without any assistance, for his daily occupation;
which was to retail at the area-head above pennyworths of broth and soup, and
savoury puddings, compounded of such scraps as were to be bought in the heap
for the least money at Fleet Market in the evening time; and for the sale of
which he had need to have depended chiefly on his private connection, for the
court had no thoroughfare, and was not that kind of place in which many people
were likely to take the air, or to frequent as an agreeable promenade.
CHRONICLERS are
privileged to enter where they list, to come and go through keyholes, to ride
upon the wind, to overcome, in their soarings up and down, all obstacles of
distance, time, and place. Thrice blessed be this last consideration, since it
enables us to follow the disdainful Miggs even into the sanctity of her
chamber, and to hold her in sweet companionship through the dreary watches of
the night!
Miss Miggs, having
undone her mistress, as she phrased it (which means, assisted to undress her),
and having seen her comfortably to bed in the back room on the first floor,
withdrew to her own apartment, in the attic story. Notwithstanding her
declaration in the locksmith’s presence, she was in no mood for sleep; so,
putting her light upon the table and withdrawing the little window curtain, she
gazed out pensively at the wild night sky.
Perhaps she wondered
what star was destined for her habitation when she had run her little course
below; perhaps speculated which of those glimmering spheres might be the natal
orb of Mr. Tappertit; perhaps marvelled how they could gaze down on that
perfidious creature, man, and not sicken and turn green as chemists’ lamps;
perhaps thought of nothing in particular. Whatever she thought about, there she
sat, until her attention, alive to anything connected with the insinuating ’prentice,
was attracted by a noise in the next room to her own--his room; the room in
which he slept, and dreamed--it might be, sometimes dreamed of her.
That he was not
dreaming now, unless he was taking a walk in his sleep, was clear, for every
now and then there came a shuffling noise, as though he were engaged in polishing
the whitewashed wall; then a gentle creaking of his door; then the faintest
indication of his stealthy footsteps on the landing-place outside. Noting this
latter circumstance, Miss Miggs turned pale and shuddered, as mistrusting his
intentions; and more than once exclaimed, below her breath, "Oh! what a
Providence it is, as I am bolted in!"--which, owing doubtless to her
alarm, was a confusion of ideas on her part between a bolt and its use; for
though there was one on the door, it was not fastened.
Miss Miggs’s sense of
hearing, however, having as sharp an edge as her temper, and being of the same
snappish and suspicious kind, very soon informed her that the footsteps passed
her door, and appeared to have some object quite separate and disconnected from
herself. At this discovery she became more alarmed than ever, and was about to
give utterance to those cries of "Thieves!" and "Murder!"
which she had hitherto restrained, when it occurred to her to look softly out,
and see that her fears had some good palpable foundation.
Looking out
accordingly, and stretching her neck over the handrail, she descried, to her
great amazement, Mr. Tappertit completely dressed, stealing downstairs, one
step at a time, with his shoes in one hand and a lamp in the other. Following
him with her eyes, and going down a little way herself to get the better of an
intervening angle, she beheld him thrust his head in at the parlour-door, draw
it back again with great swiftness, and immediately begin a retreat upstairs
with all possible expedition.
"Here’s
mysteries!" said the damsel, when she was safe in her own room again,
quite out of breath. "Oh, gracious, here’s mysteries!"
The prospect of finding
anybody out in anything, would have kept Miss Miggs awake under the influence
of henbane. Presently, she heard the step again, as she would have done if it
had been that of a feather endowed with motion and walking down on tiptoe. Then
gliding out as before, she again beheld the retreating figure of the ’prentice;
again he looked cautiously in at the parlour-door, but this time instead of
retreating, he passed in and disappeared.
Miggs was back in her
room, and had her head out of the window, before an elderly gentleman could
have winked and recovered from it. Out he came at the street-door, shut it
carefully behind him, tried it with his knee, and swaggered off, putting
something in his pocket as he went along. At this spectacle Miggs cried
"Gracious!" again, and then "Goodness gracious!" and then
"Goodness gracious me!" and then, candle in hand, went downstairs as
he had done. Coming to the workshop, she saw the lamp burning on the forge, and
everything as Sim had left it.
"Why I wish I may
only have a walking funeral, and never be buried decent with a mourning-coach
and feathers, if the boy hasn’t been and made a key for his own self!"
cried Miggs. "Oh the little villain!"
This conclusion was not
arrived at without consideration, and much peeping and peering about; nor was
it unassisted by the recollection that she had on several occasions come upon
the ’prentice suddenly, and found him busy at some mysterious occupation. Lest
the fact of Miss Miggs calling him, on whom she stooped to cast a favourable
eye, a boy, should create surprise in any breast, it may be observed that she invariably
affected to regard all male bipeds under thirty as mere chits and infants;
which phenomenon is not unusual in ladies of Miss Miggs’s temper, and is indeed
generally found to be the associate of such indomitable and savage virtue.
Miss Miggs deliberated
within herself for some little time, looking hard at the shop-door while she
did so, as though her eyes and thoughts were both upon it; and then, taking a
sheet of paper from a drawer, twisted it into a long thin spiral tube. Having
filled this instrument with a quantity of small coal dust from the forge, she
approached the door, and dropping on one knee before it, dexterously blew into
the keyhole as much of these fine ashes as the lock would hold. When she had
filled it to the brim in a very workmanlike and skilful manner, she crept
upstairs again, and chuckled as she went.
"There!"
cried Miggs, rubbing her hands, "now let’s see whether you won’t be glad
to take some notice of me, mister. He, he, he! You’ll have eyes for somebody
besides Miss Dolly now, I think. A fat-faced puss she is, as ever I come
across!"
As she uttered this
criticism, she glanced approvingly at her small mirror, as who should say, I
thank my stars that can’t be said of me!--as it certainly could not; for Miss
Miggs’s style of beauty was of that kind which Mr. Tappertit himself had not
inaptly termed, in private, "scraggy."
"I don’t go to bed
this night!" said Miggs, wrapping herself in a shawl, and drawing a couple
of chairs near the window, flouncing down upon one, and putting her feet upon
the other, "till you come home, my lad. I wouldn’t," said Miggs
viciously, "no, not for five-and-forty pound!"
With that, and with an
expression of face in which a great number of opposite ingredients, such as
mischief, cunning, malice, triumph, and patient expectation, were all mixed up
together in a kind of physiognomical punch, Miss Miggs composed herself to wait
and listen, like some fair ogress who had set a trap and was watching for a
nibble from a plump young traveller.
She sat there, with
perfect composure, all night. At length, just upon break of day, there was a
footstep in the street, and presently she could hear Mr. Tappertit stop at the
door. Then she could make out that he tried his key--that he was blowing into
it-- that he knocked it on the nearest post to beat the dust out--that he took
it under a lamp to look at it--that he poked bits of stick into the lock to
clear it--that he peeped into the keyhole, first with one eye, and then with
the other--that he tried the key again-- that he couldn’t turn it, and, what
was
worse, couldn’t get it
out--that he bent it--that then it was much less disposed to come out than
before--that he gave it a mighty twist and a great pull, and then it came out
so suddenly that he staggered backwards--that he kicked the door--that he shook
it--finally, that he smote his forehead, and sat down on the step in despair.
When this crisis had
arrived, Miss Miggs, affecting to be exhausted with terror, and to cling to the
window-sill for support, put out her nightcap, and demanded in a faint voice
who was there.
Mr. Tappertit cried
"Hush!" and, backing to the road, exhorted her in frenzied pantomime
to secrecy and silence.
"Tell me one
thing," said Miggs. "Is it thieves?"
"No--no--no!"
cried Mr. Tappertit.
"Then," said
Miggs, more faintly than before, "it’s fire. Where is it, sir? It’s near
this room, I know. I’ve a good conscience, sir, and would much rather die than
go down a ladder. All I wish is, respecting my love to my married sister, Golden
Lion Court, number twenty-sivin, second bell-handle on the right-hand door-
post."
"Miggs!"
cried Mr. Tappertit, "don’t you know me? Sim, you know-- Sim--"
"Oh! what about
him!" cried Miggs, clasping her hands. "Is he in any danger? Is he in
the midst of flames and blazes! Oh gracious, gracious!"
"Why I’m here, an’t
I?" rejoined Mr. Tappertit, knocking himself on the breast. "Don’t
you see me? What a fool you are, Miggs!"
"There!"
cried Miggs, unmindful of this compliment. "Why--so it-- Goodness, what is
the meaning of--If you please, mim, here’s--"
"No, no!"
cried Mr. Tappertit, standing on tiptoe, as if by that means he, in the street,
were any nearer being able to stop the mouth of Miggs in the garret. "Don’t!--I’ve
been out without leave, and something or another’s the matter with the lock.
Come down, and undo the shop window, that I may get in that way."
"I dursn’t do it,
Simmun," cried Miggs--for that was her pronunciation of his Christian
name. "I dursn’t do it, indeed. You know as well as anybody, how
particular I am. And to come down in the dead of night, when the house is
wrapped in slumbers and weiled in obscurity." And there she stopped and
shivered, for her modesty caught cold at the very thought.
"But Miggs,"
cried Mr. Tappertit, getting under the lamp, that she might see his eyes.
"My darling Miggs--"
Miggs screamed
slightly.
"--That I love so
much, and never can help thinking of," and it is impossible to describe
the use he made of his eyes when he said this--"do--for my sake, do."
"Oh Simmun,"
cried Miggs, "this is worse than all. I know if I come down, you’ll go,
and--"
"And what, my
precious?" said Mr. Tappertit.
"And try,"
said Miggs, hysterically, "to kiss me, or some such dreadfulness; I know
you will!"
"I swear I won’t,"
said Mr. Tappertit, with remarkable earnestness. "Upon my soul I won’t. It’s
getting broad day, and the watchman’s waking up. Angelic Miggs! If you’ll only
come and let me in, I promise you faithfully and truly I won’t."
Miss Miggs, whose
gentle heart was touched, did not wait for the oath (knowing how strong the
temptation was, and fearing he might forswear himself), but tripped lightly
down the stairs, and with her own fair hands drew back the rough fastenings of
the workshop window. Having helped the wayward ’prentice in, she faintly
articulated the words "Simmun is safe!" and yielding to her woman’s
nature, immediately became insensible.
"I knew I should
quench her," said Sim, rather embarrassed by this circumstance. "Of
course I was certain it would come to this, but there was nothing else to be
done--if I hadn’t eyed her over, she wouldn’t have come down. Here. Keep up a
minute, Miggs. What a slippery figure she is! There’s no holding her,
comfortably. Do keep up a minute, Miggs, will you?"
As Miggs, however, was
deaf to all entreaties, Mr. Tappertit leant her against the wall as one might
dispose of a walking-stick or umbrella, until he had secured the window, when
he took her in his arms again, and, in short stages and with great
difficulty--arising from her being tall and his being short, and perhaps in
some degree from that peculiar physical conformation on which he had already
remarked--carried her upstairs, and planting her, in the same umbrella and
walking-stick fashion, just inside her own door, left her to her repose.
"He may be as cool
as he likes," said Miss Miggs, recovering as soon as she was left alone;
"but I’m in his confidence and he can’t help himself, nor couldn’t if he
was twenty Simmunses!"
IT was on one of those
mornings, common in early spring, when the year, fickle and changeable in its
youth like all other created things, is undecided whether to step backward into
winter or forward into summer, and in its uncertainty inclines now to the one
and now to the other, and now to both at once--wooing summer in the sunshine,
and lingering still with winter in the shade--it was, in short, on one of those
mornings, when it is hot and cold, wet and dry, bright and lowering, sad and
cheerful, withering and genial, in the compass of one short hour, that old John
Willet, who was dropping asleep over the copper boiler, was roused by the sound
of a horse’s feet, and glancing out at window, beheld a traveller of goodly
promise, checking his bridle at the Maypole door.
He was none of your
flippant young fellows, who would call for a tankard of mulled ale, and make
themselves as much at home as if they had ordered a hogshead of wine; none of
your audacious young swaggerers, who would even penetrate into the bar--that
solemn sanctuary--and, smiting old John upon the back, inquire if there was
never a pretty girl in the house, and where he hid his little chambermaids,
with a hundred other impertinences of that nature; none of your free-and-easy
companions, who would scrape their boots upon the firedogs in the common room,
and be not at all particular on the subject of spittoons; none of your
unconscionable blades, requiring impossible chops, and taking unheard-of
pickles for granted. He was a staid, grave, placid gentleman, something past the
prime of life, yet upright in his carriage, for all that, and slim as a
greyhound. He was well-mounted upon a sturdy chestnut cob, and had the graceful
seat of an experienced horseman; while his riding gear, though free from such
fopperies as were then in vogue, was handsome and well chosen. He wore a
riding-coat of a somewhat brighter green than might have been expected to suit
the taste of a gentleman of his years, with a short, black velvet cape, and
laced pocket-holes and cuffs, all of a jaunty fashion; his linen, too, was of
the finest kind, worked in a rich pattern at the wrists and throat, and
scrupulously white. Although he seemed, judging from the mud he had picked up
on the way, to have come from London, his horse was as smooth and cool as his
own iron-grey periwig and pigtail. Neither man nor beast had turned a single
hair; and saving for his soiled skirts and spatter-dashes, this gentleman, with
his blooming face, white teeth, exactly-ordered dress, and perfect calmness,
might have come from making an elaborate and leisurely toilet, to sit for an
equestrian portrait at old John Willet’s gate.
It must not be supposed
that John observed these several characteristics by other than very slow
degrees, or that he took in more than half a one at a time, or that he even
made up his mind upon that, without a great deal of very serious consideration.
Indeed, if he had been distracted in the first instance by questionings and
orders, it would have taken him at the least a fortnight to have noted what is
here set down; but it happened that the gentleman, being struck with the old
house, or with the plump pigeons which were skimming and curtseying about it,
or with the tall maypole, on the top of which a weathercock, which had been out
of order for fifteen years, performed a perpetual walk to the music of its own
creaking, sat for some little time looking round in silence. Hence John,
standing with his hand upon the horse’s bridle, and his great eyes on the
rider, and with nothing passing to divert his thoughts, had really got some of
these little circumstances into his brain by the time he was called upon to
speak.
"A quaint place
this," said the gentleman--and his voice was as rich as his dress.
"Are you the landlord?"
"At your service,
sir," replied John Willet.
"You can give my
horse good stabling, can you, and me an early dinner (I am not particular what,
so that it be cleanly served), and a decent room of which there seems to be no
lack in this great mansion," said the stranger, again running his eyes
over the exterior.
"You can have,
sir," returned John with a readiness quite surprising, "anything you
please."
"It’s well I am
easily satisfied," returned the other with a smile, "or that might
prove a hardy pledge, my friend." And saying so, he dismounted, with the
aid of the block before the door, in a twinkling.
"Halloa there!
Hugh!" roared John. "I ask your pardon, sir, for keeping you standing
in the porch; but my son has gone to town on business, and the boy being, as I
may say, of a kind of use to me, I’m rather put out when he’s away. Hugh!--a
dreadful idle vagrant fellow, sir, half a gipsy, as I think--always sleeping in
the sun in summer, and in the straw in winter time, sir--Hugh! Dear Lord, to
keep a gentleman a waiting here through him!--Hugh! I wish that chap was dead,
I do indeed."
"Possibly he
is," returned the other. "I should think if he were living, he would
have heard you by this time."
"In his fits of
laziness, he sleeps so desperate hard," said the distracted host,
"that if you were to fire off cannon-balls into his ears, it wouldn’t wake
him, sir."
The guest made no
remark upon this novel cure for drowsiness, and recipe for making people
lively, but, with his hands clasped behind him, stood in the porch, very much
amused to see old John, with the bridle in his hand, wavering between a strong
impulse to abandon the animal to his fate, and a half disposition to lead him
into the house, and shut him up in the parlour, while he waited on his master.
"Pillory the
fellow, here he is at last!" cried John, in the very height and zenith of
his distress. "Did you hear me a calling, villain?"
The figure he addressed
made no answer, but putting his hand upon the saddle, sprung into it at a
bound, turned the horse’s head towards the stable, and was gone in an instant.
"Brisk enough when
he is awake," said the guest.
"Brisk enough,
sir!" replied John, looking at the place where the horse had been, as if
not yet understanding quite, what had become of him. "He melts, I think.
He goes like a drop of froth. You look at him, and there he is. You look at him
again, and--there he isn’t."
Having, in the absence
of any more words, put this sudden climax to what he had faintly intended
should be a long explanation of the whole life and character of his man, the
oracular John Willet led the gentleman up his wide dismantled staircase into
the Maypole’s best apartment.
It was spacious enough
in all conscience, occupying the whole depth of the house, and having at either
end a great bay window, as large as many modern rooms; in which some few panes
of stained glass, emblazoned with fragments of armorial bearings, though
cracked, and patched, and shattered, yet remained; attesting, by their
presence, that the former owner had made the very light subservient to his
state, and pressed the sun itself into his list of flatterers; bidding it, when
it shone into his chamber, reflect the badges of his ancient family, and take
new hues and colours from their pride.
But those were old
days, and now every little ray came and went as it would; telling the plain,
bare, searching truth. Although the best room of the inn, it had the melancholy
aspect of grandeur in decay, and was much too vast for comfort. Rich rustling
hangings, waving on the walls; and, better far, the rustling of youth and
beauty’s dress; the light of women’s eyes, outshining the tapers and their own
rich jewels; the sound of gentle tongues, and music, and the tread of maiden
feet, had
once been there, and
filled it with delight. But they were gone, and with them all its gladness. It
was no longer a home; children were never born and bred there; the fireside had
become mercenary--a something to be bought and sold--a very courtezan: let who
would die, or sit beside, or leave it, it was still the same--it missed nobody,
cared for nobody, had equal warmth and smiles for all. God help the man whose
heart ever changes with the world, as an old mansion when it becomes an inn!
No effort had been made
to furnish this chilly waste, but before the broad chimney a colony of chairs
and tables had been planted on a square of carpet, flanked by a ghostly screen,
enriched with figures, grinning and grotesque. After lighting with his own
hands the faggots which were heaped upon the hearth, old John withdrew to hold
grave council with his cook, touching the stranger’s entertainment; while the
guest himself, seeing small comfort in the yet unkindled wood, opened a lattice
in the distant window, and basked in a sickly gleam of cold March sun.
Leaving the window now
and then, to rake the crackling logs together, or pace the echoing room from
end to end, he closed it when the fire was quite burnt up, and having wheeled
the easiest chair into the warmest corner, summoned John Willet.
"Sir," said
John.
He wanted pen, ink, and
paper. There was an old standish on the mantelshelf containing a dusty apology
for all three. Having set this before him, the landlord was retiring, when he
motioned him to stay.
"There’s a house
not far from here," said the guest when he had written a few lines,
"which you call the Warren, I believe?"
As this was said in the
tone of one who knew the fact, and asked the question as a thing of course,
John contented himself with nodding his head in the affirmative; at the same
time taking one hand out of his pockets to cough behind, and then putting it in
again.
"I want this
note"--said the guest, glancing on what he had written, and folding it,
"conveyed there without loss of time, and an answer brought back here.
Have you a messenger at hand?"
John was thoughtful for
a minute or thereabouts, and then said Yes.
"Let me see
him," said the guest.
This was disconcerting;
for Joe being out, and Hugh engaged in rubbing down the chestnut cob, he
designed sending on the errand, Barnaby, who had just then arrived in one of
his rambles, and who, so that he thought himself employed on a grave and
serious business, would go anywhere.
"Why the truth
is," said John after a long pause, "that the person who’d go
quickest, is a sort of natural, as one may say, sir; and though quick of foot,
and as much to be trusted as the post itself, he’s not good at talking, being
touched and flighty, sir."
"You don’t,"
said the guest, raising his eyes to John’s fat face, "you don’t mean--what’s
the fellow’s name--you don’t mean Barnaby?"
"Yes, I do,"
returned the landlord, his features turning quite expressive with surprise.
"How comes he to
be here?" inquired the guest, leaning back in his chair; speaking in the
bland, even tone, from which he never varied; and with the same soft,
courteous, never-changing smile upon his face. "I saw him in London last
night."
"He’s, for ever,
here one hour, and there the next," returned old John, after the usual
pause to get the question in his mind. "Sometimes he walks, and sometimes
runs. He’s known along the road by everybody, and sometimes comes here in a
cart or chaise, and sometimes riding double. He comes and goes, through wind,
rain, snow, and hail, and on the darkest nights. Nothing hurts him."
"He goes often to
the Warren, does he not?" said the guest carelessly. "I seem to
remember his mother telling me something to that effect yesterday. But I was
not attending to the good woman much."
"You’re right,
sir," John made answer, "he does. His father, sir, was murdered in
that house."
"So I have
heard," returned the guest, taking a gold toothpick from his pocket with
the same sweet smile. "A very disagreeable circumstance for the
family."
"Very," said
John with a puzzled look, as if it occurred to him, dimly and afar off, that
this might by possibility be a cool way of treating the subject.
"All the
circumstances after a murder," said the guest soliloquising, "must be
dreadfully unpleasant--so much bustle and disturbance--no repose--a constant
dwelling upon one subject --and the running in and out, and up and down stairs,
intolerable. I wouldn’t have such a thing happen to anybody I was nearly
interested in, on any account. ’Twould be enough to wear one’s life out.--You
were going to say, friend--" he added, turning to John again.
"Only that Mrs.
Rudge lives on a little pension from the family, and that Barnaby’s as free of
the house as any cat or dog about it," answered John. "Shall he do
your errand, sir?"
"Oh yes,"
replied the guest. "Oh certainly. Let him do it by all means. Please to bring
him here that I may charge him to be quick. If he objects to come you may tell
him it’s Mr. Chester. He will remember my name, I dare say."
John was so very much
astonished to find who his visitor was, that he could express no astonishment
at all, by looks or otherwise, but left the room as if he were in the most
placid and imperturbable of all possible conditions. It has been reported that
when he got downstairs, he looked steadily at the boiler for ten minutes by the
clock, and all that time never once left off shaking his head; for which
statement there would seem to be some ground of truth and feasibility, inasmuch
as that interval of time did certainly elapse, before he returned with Barnaby
to the guest’s apartment.
"Come hither,
lad," said Mr. Chester. "You know Mr. Geoffrey Haredale?"
Barnaby laughed, and
looked at the landlord as though he would say, "You hear him?" John,
who was greatly shocked at this breach of decorum, clapped his finger to his
nose, and shook his head in mute remonstrance.
"He knows him,
sir," said John, frowning aside at Barnaby, "as well as you or I
do."
"I haven’t the
pleasure of much acquaintance with the gentleman," returned his guest.
"You may have. Limit the comparison to yourself, my friend."
Although this was said
with the same easy affability, and the same smile, John felt himself put down,
and laying the indignity at Barnaby’s door, determined to kick his raven, on
the very first opportunity.
"Give that,"
said the guest, who had by this time sealed the note, and who beckoned his
messenger towards him as he spoke, "into Mr. Haredale’s own hands. Wait
for an answer, and bring it back to me here. If you should find that Mr.
Haredale is engaged just now, tell him--can he remember a message,
landlord?"
"When he chooses,
sir," replied John. "He won’t forget this one."
"How are you sure
of that?"
John merely pointed to
him as he stood with his head bent forward, and his earnest gaze fixed closely
on his questioner’s face; and nodded sagely.
"Tell him then,
Barnaby, should he be engaged," said Mr. Chester, "that I shall be
glad to wait his convenience here, and to see him (if he will call) at any time
this evening.--At the worst I can have a bed here, Willet, I suppose?"
Old John, immensely
flattered by the personal notoriety implied in this familiar form of address,
answered, with something like a knowing look, "I should believe you could,
sir," and was turning over in his mind various forms of eulogium, with the
view of selecting one appropriate to the qualities of his best bed, when his
ideas were put to flight by Mr. Chester giving Barnaby the letter, and bidding
him make all speed away.
"Speed!" said
Barnaby, folding the little packet in his breast, "Speed! If you want to
see hurry and mystery, come here. Here!"
With that, he put his
hand, very much to John Willet’s horror, on the guest’s fine broadcloth sleeve,
and led him stealthily to the back window.
"Look down
there," he said softly; "do you mark how they whisper in each other’s
ears; then dance and leap, to make believe they are in sport? Do you see how
they stop for a moment, when they think there is no one looking, and mutter
among themselves again; and then how they roll and gambol, delighted with the
mischief they’ve been plotting? Look at ’em now. See how they whirl and plunge.
And now they stop again, and whisper, cautiously together--little thinking,
mind, how often I have lain upon the grass and watched them. I say what is it
that they plot and hatch? Do you know?"
"They are only
clothes," returned the guest, "such as we wear; hanging on those
lines to dry, and fluttering in the wind."
"Clothes!"
echoed Barnaby, looking close into his face, and falling quickly back. "Ha
ha! Why, how much better to be silly, than as wise as you! You don’t see shadowy
people there, like those that live in sleep--not you. Nor eyes in the knotted
panes of glass, nor swift ghosts when it blows hard, nor do you hear voices in
the air, nor see men stalking in the sky--not you! I lead a merrier life than
you, with all your cleverness. You’re the dull men. We’re the bright ones. Ha!
ha! I’ll not change with you, clever as you are,--not I!"
With that, he waved his
hat above his head, and darted off.
"A strange
creature, upon my word!" said the guest, pulling out a handsome box, and
taking a pinch of snuff.
"He wants
imagination," said Mr. Willet, very slowly, and after a long silence;
"that’s what he wants. I’ve tried to instil it into him, many and many’s
the time; but"--John added this in confidence-- "he an’t made for it;
that’s the fact."
To record that Mr.
Chester smiled at John’s remark would be little to the purpose, for he
preserved the same conciliatory and pleasant look at all times. He drew his
chair nearer to the fire though, as a kind of hint that he would prefer to be
alone, and John, having no reasonable excuse for remaining, left him to
himself.
Very thoughtful old
John Willet was, while the dinner was preparing; and if his brain were ever
less clear at one time than another, it is but reasonable to suppose that he
addled it in no slight degree by shaking his head so much that day. That Mr.
Chester, between whom and Mr. Haredale, it was notorious to all the
neighbourhood, a deep and bitter animosity existed, should come down there for
the sole purpose, as it seemed, of seeing him, and should choose the Maypole
for their place of meeting, and should send to him express, were stumbling
blocks John could not overcome. The only resource he had, was to consult the
boiler, and wait impatiently for Barnaby’s return.
But Barnaby delayed
beyond all precedent. The visitor’s dinner was served, removed, his wine was
set, the fire replenished, the hearth clean swept; the light waned without, it
grew dusk, became quite dark, and still no Barnaby appeared. Yet, though John Willet
was full of wonder and misgiving, his guest sat cross-legged in the easy-chair,
to all appearance as little ruffled in his thoughts as in his dress--the same
calm, easy, cool gentleman, without a care or thought beyond his golden
toothpick.
"Barnaby’s
late," John ventured to observe, as he placed a pair of tarnished
candlesticks, some three feet high, upon the table, and snuffed the lights they
held.
"He is rather
so," replied the guest, sipping his wine. "He will not be much
longer, I dare say."
John coughed and raked
the fire together.
"As your roads
bear no very good character, if I may judge from my son’s mishap, though,"
said Mr. Chester, "and as I have no fancy to be knocked on the head--which
is not only disconcerting at the moment, but places one, besides, in a
ridiculous position with respect to the people who chance to pick one up--I
shall stop here to-night. I think you said you had a bed to spare."
"Such a bed,
sir," returned John Willet; "ay, such a bed as few, even of the
gentry’s houses, own. A fixter here, sir. I’ve heard say that bedstead is nigh
two hundred years of age. Your noble son--a fine young gentleman--slept in it
last, sir, half a year ago."
"Upon my life, a
recommendation!" said the guest, shrugging his shoulders and wheeling his
chair nearer to the fire. "See that it be well aired, Mr. Willet, and let
a blazing fire be lighted there at once. This house is something damp and
chilly."
John raked the faggots
up again, more from habit than presence of mind, or any reference to this
remark, and was about to withdraw, when a bounding step was heard upon the
stair, and Barnaby came panting in.
"He’ll have his
foot in the stirrup in an hour’s time," he cried, advancing. "He has
been riding hard all day--has just come home-- but will be in the saddle again
as soon as he has eat and drank, to meet his loving friend."
"Was that his
message?" asked the visitor, looking up, but without the smallest
discomposure--or at least without the show of any.
"All but the last
words," Barnaby rejoined. "He meant those. I saw that, in his
face."
"This for your
pains," said the other, putting money in his hand, and glancing at him
steadfastly. "This for your pains, sharp Barnaby."
"For Grip, and me,
and Hugh, to share among us," he rejoined, putting it up, and nodding, as
he counted it on his fingers. "Grip one, me two, Hugh three; the dog, the
goat, the cats--well, we shall spend it pretty soon, I warn you. Stay.--Look.
Do you wise men see nothing there, now?"
He bent eagerly down on
one knee, and gazed intently at the smoke, which was rolling up the chimney in
a thick black cloud. John Willet, who appeared to consider himself particularly
and chiefly referred to under the term wise men, looked that way likewise, and
with great solidity of feature.
"Now, where do
they go to, when they spring so fast up there," asked Barnaby; "eh?
Why do they tread so closely on each other’s heels, and why are they always in
a hurry--which is what you blame me for, when I only take pattern by these busy
folk about me? More of ’em! catching to each other’s skirts; and as fast as
they go, others come! What a merry dance it is! I would that Grip and I could
frisk like that!"
"What has he in
that basket at his back?" asked the guest after a few moments, during which
Barnaby was still bending down to look higher up the chimney, and earnestly
watching the smoke.
"In this?" he
answered, jumping up, before John Willet could reply-- shaking it as he spoke,
and stooping his head to listen. "In this! What is there here? Tell
him!"
"A devil, a devil,
a devil!" cried a hoarse voice.
"Here’s
money!" said Barnaby, chinking it in his hand, "money for a treat,
Grip!"
"Hurrah! Hurrah!
Hurrah!" replied the raven, "keep up your spirits. Never say die.
Bow, wow, wow!"
Mr. Willet, who
appeared to entertain strong doubts whether a customer in a laced coat and fine
linen could be supposed to have any acquaintance even with the existence of
such unpolite gentry as the bird claimed to belong to, took Barnaby off at this
juncture, with the view of preventing any other improper declarations, and
quitted the room with his very best bow.
THERE was great news
that night for the regular Maypole customers, to each of whom, as he straggled
in to occupy his allotted seat in the chimney-corner, John, with a most
impressive slowness of delivery, and in an apoplectic whisper, communicated the
fact that Mr. Chester was alone in the large room upstairs, and was waiting the
arrival of Mr. Geoffrey Haredale, to whom he had sent a letter (doubtless of a
threatening nature) by the hands of Barnaby, then and there present.
For a little knot of
smokers and solemn gossips, who had seldom any new topics of discussion, this
was a perfect Godsend. Here was a good, dark-looking mystery progressing under
that very roof-- brought home to the fireside, as it were, and enjoyable
without the smallest pains or trouble. It is extraordinary what a zest and
relish it gave to the drink, and how it heightened the flavour of the tobacco.
Every man smoked his pipe with a face of grave and serious delight, and looked
at his neighbour with a sort of quiet congratulation. Nay, it was felt to be
such a holiday and special night, that, on the motion of little Solomon Daisy,
every man (including John himself) put down his sixpence for a can of flip,
which grateful beverage was brewed with all despatch, and set down in the midst
of them on the brick floor; both that it might simmer and stew before the fire,
and that its fragrant steam, rising up among them, and mixing with the wreaths
of vapour from their pipes, might shroud them in a delicious atmosphere of
their own, and shut out all the world. The very furniture of the room seemed to
mellow and deepen in
its tone; the ceiling
and walls looked blacker and more highly polished, the curtains of a ruddier
red; the fire burnt clear and high, and the crickets in the hearthstone chirped
with a more than wonted satisfaction.
There were present two,
however, who showed but little interest in the general contentment. Of these,
one was Barnaby himself, who slept, or, to avoid being beset with questions,
feigned to sleep, in the chimney-corner; the other, Hugh, who, sleeping too,
lay stretched upon the bench on the opposite side, in the full glare of the
blazing fire.
The light that fell
upon this slumbering form, showed it in all its muscular and handsome
proportions. It was that of a young man, of a hale athletic figure, and a giant’s
strength, whose sunburnt face and swarthy throat, overgrown with jet black
hair, might have served a painter for a model. Loosely attired, in the coarsest
and roughest garb, with scraps of straw and hay--his usual bed-- clinging here
and there, and mingling with his uncombed locks, he had fallen asleep in a
posture as careless as his dress. The negligence and disorder of the whole man,
with something fierce and sullen in his features, gave him a picturesque
appearance, that attracted the regards even of the Maypole customers who knew
him well, and caused Long Parkes to say that Hugh looked more like a poaching
rascal to-night than ever he had seen him yet.
"He’s waiting
here, I suppose," said Solomon, "to take Mr. Haredale’s horse."
"That’s it,
sir," replied John Willet. "He’s not often in the house, you know. He’s
more at his ease among horses than men. I look upon him as a animal
himself."
Following up this
opinion with a shrug that seemed meant to say, "we can’t expect everybody
to be like us," John put his pipe into his mouth again, and smoked like
one who felt his superiority over the general run of mankind.
"That chap,
sir," said John, taking it out again after a time, and pointing at him
with the stem, "though he’s got all his faculties about him--bottled up
and corked down, if I may say so, somewheres or another--"
"Very good!"
said Parkes, nodding his head. "A very good expression, Johnny. You’ll be
a tackling somebody presently. You’re in twig to-night, I see."
"Take care,"
said Mr. Willet, not at all grateful for the compliment, "that I don’t
tackle you, sir, which I shall certainly endeavour to do, if you interrupt me
when I’m making observations. --That chap, I was a saying, though he has all
his faculties about him, somewheres or another, bottled up and corked down, has
no more imagination than Barnaby has. And why hasn’t he?"
The three friends shook
their heads at each other; saying by that action, without the trouble of
opening their lips, "Do you observe what a philosophical mind our friend
has?"
"Why hasn’t
he?" said John, gently striking the table with his open hand. "Because
they was never drawed out of him when he was a boy. That’s why. What would any
of us have been, if our fathers hadn’t drawed our faculties out of us? What
would my boy Joe have been, if I hadn’t drawed his faculties out of him?--Do
you mind what I’m a saying of, gentlemen?"
"Ah! we mind
you," cried Parkes. "Go on improving of us, Johnny."
"Consequently,
then," said Mr. Willet, "that chap, whose mother was hung when he was
a little boy, along with six others, for passing bad notes--and it’s a blessed
thing to think how many people are hung in batches every six weeks for that,
and such like offences, as showing how wide awake our government is--that chap
that was then turned loose, and had to mind cows, and frighten birds away, and
what not, for a few pence to live on, and so got on by degrees to mind horses,
and to sleep in course of time in lofts and litter, instead of under haystacks
and hedges, till at last he come to be hostler at the Maypole for his board and
lodging and a annual trifle--that chap that can’t read nor write, and has never
had much to do with anything but animals, and has never lived in any way but
like the animals he has lived among, is a animal. And," said Mr. Willet,
arriving at his logical conclusion, "is to be treated accordingly."
"Willet,"
said Solomon Daisy, who had exhibited some impatience at the intrusion of so
unworthy a subject on their more interesting theme, "when Mr. Chester come
this morning, did he order the large room?"
"He signified,
sir," said John, "that he wanted a large apartment. Yes.
Certainly."
"Why then, I’ll
tell you what," said Solomon, speaking softly and with an earnest look.
"He and Mr. Haredale are going to fight a duel in it."
Everybody looked at Mr.
Willet, after this alarming suggestion. Mr. Willet looked at the fire, weighing
in his own mind the effect which such an occurrence would be likely to have on
the establishment.
"Well," said
John, "I don’t know--I am sure--I remember that when I went up last, he
had put the lights upon the mantel-shelf."
"It’s as
plain," returned Solomon, "as the nose on Parkes’s face"-- Mr.
Parkes, who had a large nose, rubbed it, and looked as if he considered this a
personal allusion--"they’ll fight in that room. You know by the newspapers
what a common thing it is for gentlemen to fight in coffee-houses without
seconds. One of ’em will be wounded or perhaps killed in this house."
"That was a
challenge that Barnaby took then, eh?" said John.
"--Inclosing a
slip of paper with the measure of his sword upon it, I’ll bet a guinea,"
answered the little man. "We know what sort of gentleman Mr. Haredale is.
You have told us what Barnaby said about his looks, when he came back. Depend
upon it, I’m right. Now, mind."
The flip had had no
flavour till now. The tobacco had been of mere English growth, compared with
its present taste. A duel in that great old rambling room upstairs, and the
best bed ordered already for the wounded man!
"Would it be
swords or pistols, now?" said John.
"Heaven knows.
Perhaps both," returned Solomon. "The gentlemen wear swords, and may
easily have pistols in their pockets--most likely have, indeed. If they fire at
each other without effect, then they’ll draw, and go to work in earnest."
A shade passed over Mr.
Willet’s face as he thought of broken windows and disabled furniture, but
bethinking himself that one of the parties would probably be left alive to pay
the damage, he brightened up again.
"And then,"
said Solomon, looking from face to face, "then we shall have one of those
stains upon the floor that never come out. If Mr. Haredale wins, depend upon
it, it’ll be a deep one; or if he loses, it will perhaps be deeper still, for
he’ll never give in unless he’s beaten down. We know him better, eh?"
"Better
indeed!" they whispered all together.
"As to its ever
being got out again," said Solomon, "I tell you it never will, or can
be. Why, do you know that it has been tried, at a certain house we are
acquainted with?"
"The Warren!"
cried John. "No, sure!"
"Yes, sure--yes.
It’s only known by very few. It has been whispered about though, for all that.
They planed the board away, but there it was. They went deep, but it went
deeper. They put new boards down, but there was one great spot that came
through still, and showed itself in the old place. And--harkye--draw
nearer--Mr. Geoffrey made that room his study, and sits there, always, with his
foot (as I have heard) upon it; and he believes, through thinking of it long
and very much, that it will never fade until he finds the man who did the deed."
As this recital ended,
and they all drew closer round the fire, the tramp of a horse was heard
without.
"The very
man!" cried John, starting up. "Hugh! Hugh!"
The sleeper staggered
to his feet, and hurried after him. John quickly returned, ushering in with great
attention and deference (for Mr. Haredale was his landlord) the long-expected
visitor, who strode into the room clanking his heavy boots upon the floor; and
looking keenly round upon the bowing group, raised his hat in acknowledgment of
their profound respect.
"You have a
stranger here, Willet, who sent to me," he said, in a voice which sounded
naturally stern and deep. "Where is he?"
"In the great room
upstairs, sir," answered John.
"Show the way.
Your staircase is dark, I know. Gentlemen, good night."
With that, he signed to
the landlord to go on before; and went clanking out, and up the stairs; old
John, in his agitation, ingeniously lighting everything but the way, and making
a stumble at every second step.
"Stop!" he
said, when they reached the landing. "I can announce myself. Don’t
wait."
He laid his hand upon
the door, entered, and shut it heavily. Mr. Willet was by no means disposed to
stand there listening by himself, especially as the walls were very thick; so
descended, with much greater alacrity than he had come up, and joined his
friends below.
THERE was a brief pause
in the state-room of the Maypole, as Mr. Haredale tried the lock to satisfy
himself that he had shut the door securely, and, striding up the dark chamber
to where the screen inclosed a little patch of light and warmth, presented
himself, abruptly and in silence, before the smiling guest.
If the two had no
greater sympathy in their inward thoughts than in their outward bearing and
appearance, the meeting did not seem likely to prove a very calm or pleasant
one. With no great disparity between them in point of years, they were, in
every other respect, as unlike and far removed from each other as two men could
well be. The one was soft-spoken, delicately made, precise, and elegant; the
other, a burly square-built man, negligently dressed, rough and abrupt in
manner, stern, and, in his present mood, forbidding both in look and speech.
The one preserved a calm and placid smile; the other, a distrustful frown. The
new-comer, indeed, appeared bent on showing by his every tone and gesture his
determined opposition and hostility to the man he had come to meet. The guest
who received him, on the other hand, seemed to feel that the contrast between
them was all in his favour, and to derive a quiet exultation from it which put
him more at his ease than ever.
"Haredale,"
said this gentleman, without the least appearance of embarrassment or reserve,
"I am very glad to see you."
"Let us dispense
with compliments. They are misplaced between us," returned the other,
waving his hand, "and say plainly what we have to say. You have asked me
to meet you. I am here. Why do we stand face to face again?"
"Still the same
frank and sturdy character, I see!"
"Good or bad, sir,
I am," returned the other, leaning his arm upon the chimney-piece, and
turning a haughty look upon the occupant of the easy-chair, "the man I
used to be. I have lost no old likings or dislikings; my memory has not failed
me by a hair’s-breadth. You ask me to give you a meeting. I say, I am
here."
"Our meeting,
Haredale," said Mr. Chester, tapping his snuff-box, and following with a
smile the impatient gesture he had made-- perhaps unconsciously--towards his
sword, "is one of conference and peace, I hope?"
"I have come
here," returned the other, "at your desire, holding myself bound to
meet you, when and where you would. I have not come to bandy pleasant speeches,
or hollow professions. You are a smooth man of the world, sir, and at such play
have me at a disadvantage. The very last man on this earth with whom I would
enter the lists to combat with gentle compliments and masked faces, is Mr.
Chester, I do assure you. I am not his match at such weapons, and have reason
to believe that few men are."
"You do me a great
deal of honour Haredale," returned the other, most composedly, "and I
thank you. I will be frank with you--"
"I beg your
pardon--will be what?"
"Frank--open--perfectly
candid."
"Hab!" cried
Mr. Haredale, drawing his breath. "But don’t let me interrupt you."
"So resolved am I
to hold this course," returned the other, tasting his wine with great
deliberation; "that I have determined not to quarrel with you, and not to
be betrayed into a warm expression or a hasty word."
"There
again," said Mr. Haredale, "you have me at a great advantage. Your
self-command--"
"Is not to be
disturbed, when it will serve my purpose, you would say"--rejoined the
other, interrupting him with the same complacency. "Granted. I allow it.
And I have a purpose to serve now. So have you. I am sure our object is the
same. Let us attain it like sensible men, who have ceased to be boys some
time.-- Do you drink?"
"With my
friends," returned the other.
"At least,"
said Mr. Chester, "you will be seated?"
"I will
stand," returned Mr. Haredale impatiently, "on this dismantled,
beggared hearth, and not pollute it, fallen as it is, with mockeries. Go
on."
"You are wrong,
Haredale," said the other, crossing his legs, and smiling as he held his
glass up in the bright glow of the fire. "You are really very wrong. The
world is a lively place enough, in which we must accommodate ourselves to
circumstances, sail with the stream as glibly as we can, be content to take
froth for substance, the surface for the depth, the counterfeit for the real coin.
I wonder no philosopher has ever established that our globe itself is hollow.
It should be, if Nature is consistent in her works."
"You think it is,
perhaps?"
"I should
say," he returned, sipping his wine, "there could be no doubt about
it. Well; we, in trifling with this jingling toy, have had the ill-luck to
jostle and fall out. We are not what the world calls friends; but we are as
good and true and loving friends for all that, as nine out of every ten of
those on whom it bestows the title. You have a niece, and I a son--a fine lad,
Haredale, but foolish. They fall in love with each other, and form what this
same world calls an attachment; meaning a something fanciful and false like the
rest, which, if it took its own free time, would break like any other bubble.
But it may not have its own free time--will not, if they are left alone--and
the question is, shall we two, because society calls us enemies, stand aloof,
and let them rush into each other’s arms, when, by approaching each other
sensibly, as we do now, we can prevent it, and part them?"
"I love my
niece," said Mr. Haredale, after a short silence. "It may sound
strangely in your ears; but I love her."
"Strangely, my
good fellow!" cried Mr. Chester, lazily filling his glass again, and pulling
out his toothpick. "Not at all. I like Ned too--or, as you say, love
him--that’s the word among such near relations. I’m very fond of Ned. He’s an
amazingly good fellow, and a handsome fellow--foolish and weak as yet; that’s
all. But the thing is, Haredale--for I’ll be very frank, as I told you I would
at first--independently of any dislike that you and I might have to being
related to each other, and independently of the religious differences between
us--and damn it, that’s important--I couldn’t afford a match of this
description. Ned and I couldn’t do it. It’s impossible."
"Curb your tongue,
in God’s name, if this conversation is to last," retorted Mr. Haredale
fiercely. "I have said I love my niece. Do you think that, loving her, I
would have her fling her heart away on any man who had your blood in his
veins?"
"You see,"
said the other, not at all disturbed, "the advantage of being so frank and
open. Just what I was about to add, upon my honour! I am amazingly attached to
Ned--quite doat upon him, indeed--and even if we could afford to throw
ourselves away, that very objection would be quite insuperable.--I wish you’d
take some wine?"
"Mark me,"
said Mr. Haredale, striding to the table, and laying his hand upon it heavily.
"If any man believes--presumes to think-- that I, in word or deed, or in
the wildest dream, ever entertained remotely the idea of Emma Haredale’s
favouring the suit of any one who was akin to you--in any way--I care not
what--he lies. He lies, and does me grievous wrong, in the mere thought."
"Haredale,"
returned the other, rocking himself to and fro as in assent, and nodding at the
fire, "it’s extremely manly, and really very generous in you, to meet me
in this unreserved and handsome way. Upon my word, those are exactly my sentiments,
only expressed with much more force and power than I could use--you know my
sluggish nature, and will forgive me, I am sure."
"While I would
restrain her from all correspondence with your son, and sever their intercourse
here, though it should cause her death," said Mr. Haredale, who had been
pacing to and fro, "I would do it kindly and tenderly if I can. I have a
trust to discharge, which my nature is not formed to understand, and, for this
reason, the bare fact of there being any love between them comes upon me
to-night, almost for the first time."
"I am more
delighted than I can possibly tell you," rejoined Mr. Chester with the
utmost blandness, "to find my own impression so confirmed. You see the
advantage of our having met. We understand each other. We quite agree. We have
a most complete and thorough explanation, and we know what course to take.--Why
don’t you taste your tenant’s wine? It’s really very good."
"Pray who,"
said Mr. Haredale, "have aided Emma, or your son? Who are their
go-betweens, and agents--do you know?"
"All the good
people hereabouts--the neighbourhood in general, I think,’ returned the other,
with his most affable smile. "The messenger I sent to you to-day, foremost
among them all."
"The idiot?
Barnaby?"
"You are surprised?
I am glad of that, for I was rather so myself. Yes. I wrung that from his
mother--a very decent sort of woman-- from whom, indeed, I chiefly learnt how
serious the matter had become, and so determined to ride out here to-day, and
hold a parley with you on this neutral ground.--You’re stouter than you used to
be, Haredale, but you look extremely well."
"Our business, I
presume, is nearly at an end," said Mr. Haredale, with an expression of
impatience he was at no pains to conceal. "Trust me, Mr. Chester, my niece
shall change from this time. I will appeal," he added in a lower tone,
"to her woman’s heart, her dignity, her pride, her duty--"
"I shall do the
same by Ned," said Mr. Chester, restoring some errant faggots to their
places in the grate with the toe of his boot. "If there is anything real
in this world, it is those amazingly fine feelings and those natural
obligations which must subsist between father and son. I shall put it to him on
every ground of moral and religious feeling. I shall represent to him that we
cannot possibly afford it--that I have always looked forward to his marrying
well, for a genteel provision for myself in the autumn of life--that there are
a great many clamorous dogs to pay, whose claims are perfectly just and right,
and who must be paid out of his wife’s fortune. In short, that the very highest
and most honourable feelings of our nature, with every consideration of filial
duty and affection, and all that sort of thing, imperatively demand that he
should run away with an heiress."
"And break her
heart as speedily as possible?" said Mr. Haredale, drawing on his glove.
"There Ned will
act exactly as he pleases," returned the other, sipping his wine;
"that’s entirely his affair. I wouldn’t for the world interfere with my
son, Haredale, beyond a certain point. The relationship between father and son,
you know, is positively quite a holy kind of bond.--Won’t you let me persuade
you to take one glass of wine? Well! as you please, as you please," he
added, helping himself again.
"Chester,"
said Mr. Haredale, after a short silence, during which he had eyed his smiling
face from time to time intently, "you have the head and heart of an evil
spirit in all matters of deception."
"Your
health!" said the other, with a nod. "But I have interrupted
you--"
"If now,"
pursued Mr. Haredale, "we should find it difficult to separate these young
people, and break off their intercourse --if, for instance, you find it
difficult on your side, what course do you intend to take?"
"Nothing plainer,
my good fellow, nothing easier," returned the other, shrugging his
shoulders and stretching himself more comfortably before the fire. "I
shall then exert those powers on which you flatter me so highly--though, upon
my word, I don’t deserve your compliments to their full extent--and resort to a
few little trivial subterfuges for rousing jealousy and resentment. You
see?"
"In short,
justifying the means by the end, we are, as a last resource for tearing them
asunder, to resort to treachery and--and lying," said Mr. Haredale.
"Oh dear no. Fie,
fie!" returned the other, relishing a pinch of snuff extremely. "Not
lying. Only a little management, a little diplomacy, a little--intriguing, that’s
the word."
"I wish,"
said Mr. Haredale, moving to and fro, and stopping, and moving on again, like
one who was ill at ease, "that this could have been foreseen or prevented.
But as it has gone so far, and it is necessary for us to act, it is of no use
shrinking or regretting. Well! I shall second your endeavours to the utmost of
my power. There is one topic in the whole wide range of human thoughts on which
we both agree. We shall act in concert, but apart. There will be no need, I
hope, for us to meet again."
"Are you
going?" said Mr. Chester, rising with a graceful indolence. "Let me
light you down the stairs."
"Pray keep your
seat," returned the other drily, "I know the way." So, waving
his hand slightly, and putting on his hat as he turned upon his heel, he went
clanking out as he had come, shut the door behind him, and tramped down the
echoing stairs.
"Pah! A very
coarse animal, indeed!" said Mr. Chester, composing himself in the
easy-chair again. "A rough brute. Quite a human badger!"
John Willet and his
friends, who had been listening intently for the clash of swords, or firing of
pistols in the great room, and had indeed settled the order in which they
should rush in when summoned--in which procession old John had carefully
arranged that he should bring up the rear--were very much astonished to see Mr.
Haredale come down without a scratch, call for his horse, and ride away
thoughtfully at a footpace. After some consideration, it was decided that he
had left the gentleman above, for dead, and had adopted this stratagem to
divert suspicion or pursuit.
As this conclusion
involved the necessity of their going upstairs forthwith, they were about to
ascend in the order they had agreed upon, when a smart ringing at the guest’s
bell, as if he had pulled it vigorously, overthrew all their speculations, and
involved them in great uncertainty and doubt. At length Mr. Willet agreed to go
upstairs himself, escorted by Hugh and Barnaby, as the strongest and stoutest
fellows on the premises, who were to make their appearance under pretence of
clearing away the glasses.
Under this protection,
the brave and broad-faced John boldly entered the room, half a foot in advance,
and received an order for a boot-jack without trembling. But when it was
brought, and he leant his sturdy shoulder to the guest, Mr. Willet was observed
to look very hard into his boots as he pulled them off, and, by opening his
eyes much wider than usual, to appear to express some surprise and
disappointment at not finding them full of blood. He took occasion, too, to
examine the gentleman as closely as he could, expecting to discover sundry
loopholes in his person, pierced by his adversary’s sword. Finding none,
however, and observing in course of time that his guest was as cool and
unruffled, both in his dress and temper, as he had been all day, old John at
last heaved a deep sigh, and began to think no duel had been fought that night.
"And now,
Willet," said Mr. Chester, "if the room’s well aired, I’ll try the
merits of that famous bed."
"The room,
sir," returned John, taking up a candle, and
nudging Barnaby and
Hugh to accompany them, in case the gentleman should unexpectedly drop down
faint or dead from some internal wound, "the room’s as warm as any toast
in a tankard. Barnaby, take you that other candle, and go on before. Hugh!
Follow up, sir, with the easy-chair."
In this order--and
still, in his earnest inspection, holding his candle very close to the guest;
now making him feel extremely warm about the legs, now threatening to set his
wig on fire, and constantly begging his pardon with great awkwardness and
embarrassment--John led the party to the best bedroom, which was nearly as
large as the chamber from which they had come, and held, drawn out near the
fire for warmth, a great old spectral bedstead, hung with faded brocade, and
ornamented, at the top of each carved post, with a plume of feathers that
had once been white,
but with dust and age had now grown hearse-like and funereal.
"Good night, my
friends," said Mr. Chester with a sweet smile, seating himself, when he
had surveyed the room from end to end, in the easy-chair which his attendants
wheeled before the fire. "Good night! Barnaby, my good fellow, you say
some prayers before you go to bed, I hope?"
Barnaby nodded.
"He has some nonsense that he calls his prayers, sir," returned old
John, officiously. "I’m afraid there an’t much good in em."
"And Hugh?"
said Mr. Chester, turning to him.
"Not I," he
answered. "I know his"--pointing to Barnaby--"they’re well
enough. He sings ’em sometimes in the straw. I listen."
"He’s quite a
animal, sir," John whispered in his ear with dignity. "You’ll excuse
him, I’m sure. If he has any soul at all, sir, it must be such a very small
one, that it don’t signify what he does or doesn’t in that way. Good night,
sir!"
The guest rejoined
"God bless you!" with a fervour that was quite affecting; and John,
beckoning his guards to go before, bowed himself out of the room, and left him
to his rest in the Maypole’s ancient bed.
IF Joseph Willet, the
denounced and proscribed of ’prentices, had happened to be at home when his
father’s courtly guest presented himself before the Maypole door--that is, if
it had not perversely chanced to be one of the half-dozen days in the whole
year on which he was at liberty to absent himself for as many hours without question
or reproach--he would have contrived, by hook or crook, to dive to the very
bottom of Mr. Chester’s mystery, and to come at his purpose with as much
certainty as though he had been his confidential adviser. In that fortunate
case, the lovers would have had quick warning of the ills that threatened them,
and the aid of various timely and wise suggestions to boot; for all Joe’s
readiness of thought and action, and all his sympathies and good wishes, were
enlisted in favour of the young people, and were staunch in devotion to their
cause. Whether this disposition arose out of his old prepossessions in favour
of the young lady, whose history had surrounded her in his mind, almost from
his cradle, with circumstances of unusual interest; or from his attachment
towards the young gentleman, into whose confidence he had, through his
shrewdness and alacrity, and the rendering of sundry important services as a
spy and messenger, almost imperceptibly glided; whether they had their origin
in either of these sources, or in the habit natural to youth, or in the
constant badgering and worrying of his venerable parent, or in any hidden
little love affair of his own which gave him something of a fellow-feeling in
the matter, it is needless to inquire--especially as Joe was out of the way,
and had no opportunity on that particular occasion of testifying to his
sentiments either on one side or the other.
It was, in fact, the
twenty-fifth of March, which, as most people know to their cost, is, and has
been time out of mind, one of those unpleasant epochs termed quarter-days. On
this twenty-fifth of March, it was John Willet’s pride annually to settle, in
hard cash, his account with a certain vintner and distiller in the city of
London; to give into whose hands a canvas bag containing its exact amount, and
not a penny more or less, was the end and object of a journey for Joe, so
surely as the year and day came round.
This journey was
performed upon an old grey mare, concerning whom John had an indistinct set of
ideas hovering about him, to the effect that she could win a plate or cup if
she tried. She never had tried, and probably never would now, being some
fourteen or fifteen years of age, short in wind, long in body, and rather the
worse for wear in respect of her mane and tail. Notwithstanding these slight
defects, John perfectly gloried in the animal; and when she was brought round
to the door by Hugh, actually retired into the bar, and there, in a secret
grove of lemons, laughed with pride.
"There’s a bit of
horseflesh, Hugh!" said John, when he had recovered enough self-command to
appear at the door again. "There’s a comely creature! There’s high mettle!
There’s bone!"
There was bone enough
beyond all doubt; and so Hugh seemed to think, as he sat sideways in the saddle,
lazily doubled up with his chin nearly touching his knees; and heedless of the
dangling stirrups and loose bridle-rein, sauntered up and down on the little
green before the door.
"Mind you take
good care of her, sir," said John, appealing from this insensible person
to his son and heir, who now appeared, fully equipped and ready. "Don’t
you ride hard."
"I should be
puzzled to do that, I think, father," Joe replied, casting a disconsolate
look at the animal.
"None of your
impudence, sir, if you please," retorted old John. "What would you
ride, sir? A wild ass or zebra would be too tame for you, wouldn’t he, eh sir?
You’d like to ride a roaring lion, wouldn’t you, sir, eh sir? Hold your tongue,
sir." When Mr. Willet, in his differences with his son, had exhausted all
the questions that occurred to him, and Joe had said nothing at all in answer,
he generally wound up by bidding him hold his tongue.
"And what does the
boy mean," added Mr. Willet, after he had stared at him for a little time,
in a species of stupefaction, "by cocking his hat, to such an extent! Are
you going to kill the wintner, sir?"
"No," said
Joe, tartly; "I’m not. Now your mind’s at ease, father."
"With a milintary
air, too!" said Mr. Willet, surveying him from top to toe; "with a
swaggering, fire-eating, biling-water drinking sort of way with him! And what
do you mean by pulling up the crocuses and snowdrops, eh sir?"
"It’s only a
little nosegay," said Joe, reddening. "There’s no harm in that, I
hope?"
"You’re a boy of
business, you are, sir!" said Mr. Willet, disdainfully, "to go
supposing that wintners care for nosegays."
"I don’t suppose
anything of the kind," returned Joe. "Let them keep their red noses
for bottles and tankards. These are going to Mr. Varden’s house."
"And do you
suppose he minds such things as crocuses?" demanded John.
"I don’t know, and
to say the truth, I don’t care," said Joe. "Come, father, give me the
money, and in the name of patience let me go."
"There it is,
sir," replied John; "and take care of it; and mind you don’t make too
much haste back, but give the mare a long rest.-- Do you mind?"
"Ay, I mind,"
returned Joe. "She’ll need it, Heaven knows."
"And don’t you
score up too much at the Black Lion," said John. "Mind that
too."
"Then why don’t
you let me have some money of my own?" retorted Joe, sorrowfully;
"why don’t you, father? What do you send me into London for, giving me
only the right to call for my dinner at the Black Lion, which you’re to pay for
next time you go, as if I was not to be trusted with a few shillings? Why do
you use me like this? It’s not right of you. You can’t expect me to be quiet
under it."
"Let him have
money!" cried John, in a drowsy reverie. "What does he call
money--guineas? Hasn’t he got money? Over and above the tolls, hasn’t he one
and sixpence?"
"One and
sixpence!" repeated his son contemptuously.
"Yes, sir,"
returned John, "one and sixpence. When I was your age, I had never seen so
much money, in a heap. A shilling of it is in case of accidents--the mare
casting a shoe, or the like of that. The other sixpence is to spend in the
diversions of London; and the diversion I recommend is going to the top of the
Monument, and sitting there. There’s no temptation there, sir--no drink--no
young women--no bad characters of any sort--nothing but imagination. That’s the
way I enjoyed myself when I was your age, sir."
To this, Joe made no
answer, but beckoning Hugh, leaped into the saddle and rode away; and a very
stalwart, manly horseman he looked, deserving a better charger than it was his
fortune to bestride. John stood staring after him, or rather after the grey
mare (for he had no eyes for her rider), until man and beast had been out of
sight some twenty minutes, when he began to think they were gone, and slowly
re-entering the house, fell into a gentle doze.
The unfortunate grey
mare, who was the agony of Joe’s life, floundered along at her own will and
pleasure until the Maypole was no longer visible, and then, contracting her
legs into what in a puppet would have been looked upon as a clumsy and awkward
imitation of a canter, mended her pace all at once, and
did it of her own
accord. The acquaintance with her rider’s usual mode of proceeding, which
suggested this improvement in hers, impelled her likewise to turn up a bye-way,
leading--not to London, but through lanes running parallel with the road they
had come, and passing within a few hundred yards of the Maypole, which led
finally to an inclosure surrounding a large, old, red-brick mansion--the same
of which mention was made as the Warren in the first chapter of this history.
Coming to a dead stop in a little copse thereabout, she suffered her rider to
dismount with right goodwill, and to tie her to the trunk of a tree.
"Stay there, old
girl," said Joe, "and let us see whether there’s any little
commission for me to-day." So saying, he left her to browze upon such
stunted grass and weeds as happened to grow within the length of her tether,
and passing through a wicket gate, entered the grounds on foot.
The pathway, after a
very few minutes’ walking, brought him close to the house, towards which, and
especially towards one particular window, he directed many covert glances. It
was a dreary, silent building, with echoing courtyards, desolated
turret-chambers, and whole suites of rooms shut up and mouldering to ruin.
The terrace-garden,
dark with the shade of overhanging trees, had an air of melancholy that was
quite oppressive. Great iron gates, disused for many years, and red with rust,
drooping on their hinges and overgrown with long rank grass, seemed as though
they tried to sink into the ground, and hide their fallen state among the
friendly weeds. The fantastic monsters on the walls, green with age and damp,
and covered here and there with moss, looked grim and desolate. There was a
sombre aspect even on that part of the mansion which was inhabited and kept in
good repair, that struck the beholder with a sense of sadness; of something
forlorn and failing, whence cheerfulness was banished. It would have been difficult
to imagine a bright fire blazing in the dull and darkened rooms, or to picture
any gaiety of heart or revelry that the frowning walls shut in. It seemed a
place where such things had been, but could be no more--the very ghost of a
house, haunting the old spot in its old outward form, and that was all.
Much of this decayed
and sombre look was attributable, no doubt, to the death of its former master,
and the temper of its present occupant; but remembering the tale connected with
the mansion, it seemed the very place for such a deed, and one that might have
been its predestined theatre years upon years ago. Viewed with reference to
this legend, the sheet of water where the steward’s body had been found
appeared to wear a black and sullen character, such as no other pool might own;
the bell upon the roof that had told the tale of murder to the midnight wind,
became a very phantom whose voice would raise the listener’s hair on end; and
every leafless bough that nodded to another, had its stealthy whispering of the
crime.
Joe paced up and down
the path, sometimes stopping in affected contemplation of the building or the
prospect, sometimes leaning against a tree with an assumed air of idleness and
indifference, but always keeping an eye upon the window he had singled out at
first. After some quarter of an hour’s delay, a small white hand was waved to
him for an instant from this casement, and the young man, with a respectful
bow, departed; saying under his breath as he crossed his horse again, "No
errand for me to-day!"
But the air of
smartness, the cock of the hat to which John Willet had objected, and the
spring nosegay, all betokened some little errand of his own, having a more
interesting object than a vintner or even a locksmith. So, indeed, it turned
out; for when he had settled with the vintner--whose place of business was down
in some deep cellars hard by Thames Street, and who was as purple-faced an old
gentleman as if he had all his life supported their arched roof on his
head--when he had settled the account, and taken the receipt, and declined
tasting more than three glasses of old sherry, to the unbounded astonishment of
the purple-faced vintner, who, gimlet in hand, had projected an attack upon at
least a score of dusty casks, and who stood transfixed, or morally gimleted as
it were, to his own wall--when he had done all this, and disposed besides of a
frugal dinner at the Black Lion in Whitechapel; spurning the Monument and John’s
advice, he turned his steps towards the locksmith’s house, attracted by the
eyes of blooming Dolly Varden.
Joe was by no means a
sheepish fellow, but, for all that, when he got to the corner of the street in
which the locksmith lived, he could by no means make up his mind to walk
straight to the house. First, he resolved to stroll up another street for five
minutes, then up another street for five minutes more, and so on until he had
lost full half an hour, when he made a bold plunge and found himself with a red
face and a beating heart in the smoky workshop.
"Joe Willet, or
his ghost?" said Varden, rising from the desk at which he was busy with
his books, and looking at him under his spectacles. "Which is it? Joe in
the flesh, eh? That’s hearty. And how are all the Chigwell company, Joe?"
"Much as usual,
sir--they and I agree as well as ever."
"Well, well!"
said the locksmith. "We must be patient, Joe, and bear with old folks’
foibles. How’s the mare, Joe? Does she do the four miles an hour as easily as
ever? Ha, ha, ha! Does she, Joe? Eh!--What have we there, Joe--a nosegay!"
"A very poor one,
sir--I thought Miss Dolly--"
"No, no,"
said Gabriel, dropping his voice, and shaking his head, "not Dolly. Give ’em
to her mother, Joe. A great deal better give ’em to her mother. Would you mind
giving ’em to Mrs. Varden, Joe?"
"Oh no, sir,"
Joe replied, and endeavouring, but not with the greatest possible success, to
hide his disappointment. "I shall be very glad, I’m sure."
"That’s
right," said the locksmith, patting him on the back. "It don’t matter
who has ’em, Joe?"
"Not a bit,
sir."--Dear heart, how the words stuck in his throat!
"Come in,"
said Gabriel. "I have just been called to tea. She’s in the parlour."
"She,"
thought Joe. "Which of ’em I wonder--Mrs. or Miss?" The locksmith
settled the doubt as neatly as if it had been expressed aloud, by leading him
to the door, and saying, "Martha, my dear, here’s young Mr. Willet."
Now, Mrs. Varden,
regarding the Maypole as a sort of human mantrap, or decoy for husbands;
viewing its proprietor, and all who aided and abetted him, in the light of so
many poachers among Christian men; and believing, moreover, that the publicans
coupled with sinners in Holy Writ were veritable licensed victuallers; was far
from being favourably disposed towards her visitor. Wherefore she was taken faint
directly; and being duly presented with the crocuses and snowdrops, divined on
further consideration that they were the occasion of the languor which had
seized upon her spirits. "I’m afraid I couldn’t bear the room another
minute," said the good lady, "if they remained here. Would you excuse
my putting them out of window?"
Joe begged she wouldn’t
mention it on any account, and smiled feebly as he saw them deposited on the
sill outside. If anybody could have known the pains he had taken to make up
that despised and misused bunch of flowers!--
"I feel it quite a
relief to get rid of them, I assure you," said Mrs. Varden. "I’m
better already." And indeed she did appear to have plucked up her spirits.
Joe expressed his
gratitude to Providence for this favourable dispensation, and tried to look as
if he didn’t wonder where Dolly was.
"You’re sad people
at Chigwell, Mr. Joseph," said Mrs. V.
"I hope not, ma’am,"
returned Joe.
"You’re the
cruellest and most inconsiderate people in the world," said Mrs. Varden,
bridling. "I wonder old Mr. Willet, having been a married man himself,
doesn’t know better than to conduct himself as he does. His doing it for profit
is no excuse. I would rather pay the money twenty times over, and have Varden
come home like a respectable and sober tradesman. If there is one
character," said Mrs. Varden with great emphasis, "that offends and
disgusts me more than another, it is a sot."
"Come, Martha, my
dear," said the locksmith cheerily, "let us have tea, and don’t let
us talk about sots. There are none here, and Joe don’t want to hear about them,
I dare say."
At this crisis, Miggs
appeared with toast.
"I dare say he
does not," said Mrs. Varden; "and I dare say you do not, Varden. It’s
a very unpleasant subiect, I have no doubt, though I won’t say it’s
personal"--Miggs coughed--"whatever I may be forced to
think"--Miggs sneezed expressively. "You never will know, Varden, and
nobody at young Mr. Willet’s age--you’ll excuse me, sir--can be expected to
know, what a woman suffers when she is waiting at home under such
circumstances. If you don’t believe me, as I know you don’t, here’s Miggs, who
is only too often a witness of it--ask her."
"Oh! she were very
bad the other night, sir, indeed she were," said Miggs. "If you hadn’t
the sweetness of an angel in you, mim, I don’t think you could abear it, I raly
don"t."
"Miggs," said
Mrs. Varden, "you’re profane."
"Begging your
pardon, mim," returned Miggs, with shrill rapidity, "such was not my
intentions, and such I hope is not my character, though I am but a
servant."
"Answering me,
Miggs, and providing yourself," retorted her mistress, looking round with
dignity, "is one and the same thing. How dare you speak of angels in
connection with your sinful fellow-beings--mere"--said Mrs. Varden,
glancing at herself in a neighbouring mirror, and arranging the ribbon of her
cap in a more becoming fashion--"mere worms and grovellers as we
are!"
"I did not intend,
mim, if you please, to give offence," said Miggs, confident in the
strength of her compliment, and developing strongly in the throat as usual,
"and I did not expect it would be took as such. I hope I know my own
unworthiness, and that I hate and despise myself and all my fellow-creatures as
every practicable Christian should."
"You’ll have the
goodness, if you please," said Mrs. Varden, loftily, "to step
upstairs and see if Dolly has finished dressing, and to tell her that the chair
that was ordered for her will be here in a minute, and that if she keeps it
waiting, I shall send it away that instant.--I’m sorry to see that you don’t
take your tea, Varden, and that you don’t take yours, Mr. Joseph; though of
course it would be foolish of me to expect that anything that can be had at
home, and in the company of females, would please you."
This pronoun was
understood in the plural sense, and included both gentlemen, upon both of whom
it was rather hard and undeserved, for Gabriel had applied himself to the meal
with a very promising appetite, until it was spoilt by Mrs. Varden herself, and
Joe had as great a liking for the female society of the locksmith’s house--or
for a part of it at all events--as man could well entertain.
But he had no
opportunity to say anything in his own defence, for at that moment Dolly
herself appeared, and struck him quite dumb with her beauty. Never had Dolly
looked so handsome as she did then, in all the glow and grace of youth, with
all her charms increased a hundredfold by a most becoming dress, by a thousand
little coquettish ways which nobody could assume with a better grace, and all
the sparkling expectation of that accursed party. It is impossible to tell how
Joe hated that party wherever it was, and all the other people who were going
to it, whoever they were.
And she hardly looked
at him--no, hardly looked at him. And when the chair was seen through the open
door coming blundering into the workshop, she actually clapped her hands and
seemed glad to go. But Joe gave her his arm--there was some comfort in
that--and handed her into it. To see her seat herself inside, with her laughing
eyes brighter than diamonds, and her hand--surely she had the prettiest hand in
the world--on the ledge of the open window, and her little finger provokingly
and pertly tilted up, as if it wondered why Joe didn’t squeeze or kiss it! To
think how well one or two of the modest snowdrops would have become that
delicate bodice, and how they were lying neglected outside the parlour window!
To see how Miggs looked on with a face expressive of knowing how all this
loveliness was got up, and of being in the secret of every string and pin and
hook and eye, and of saying it ain’t half as real as you think, and I could
look quite as well myself if I took the pains! To hear that provoking precious
little scream when the chair was hoisted on its poles, and to catch that
transient but not-to-be-forgotten vision of the happy face within--what
torments and aggravations, and yet what delights were these! The very chairmen
seemed favoured rivals as they bore her down the street.
There never was such an
alteration in a small room in a small time as in that parlour when they went
back to finish tea. So dark, so deserted, so perfectly disenchanted. It seemed
such sheer nonsense to be sitting tamely there, when she was at a dance with
more lovers than man could calculate fluttering about her--with the whole party
doting on and adoring her, and wanting to marry her. Miggs was hovering about
too; and the fact of her existence, the mere circumstance of her ever having
been born, appeared, after Dolly, such an unaccountable practical joke. It was
impossible to talk. It couldn’t be done. He had nothing left for it but to stir
his tea round, and round, and round, and ruminate on all the fascinations of
the locksmith’s lovely daughter.
Gabriel was dull too.
It was a part of the certain uncertainty of Mrs. Varden’s temper, that when
they were in this condition, she should be gay and sprightly.
"I need have a
cheerful disposition, I am sure," said the smiling housewife, "to
preserve any spirits at all; and how I do it I can scarcely tell."
"Ah, mim,"
sighed Miggs, "begging your pardon for the interruption, there an’t a many
like you."
"Take away,
Miggs," said Mrs. Varden, rising, "take away, pray. I know I’m a
restraint here, and as I wish everybody to enjoy themselves as they best can, I
feel I had better go."
"No, no,
Martha," cried the locksmith. "Stop here. I’m sure we shall be very
sorry to lose you, eh Joe!" Joe started, and said "Certainly."
"Thank you,
Varden, my dear," returned his wife; "but I know your wishes better.
Tobacco and beer, or spirits, have much greater attractions than any I can
boast of, and therefore I shall go and sit upstairs and look out of window, my
love. Good night, Mr. Joseph. I’m very glad to have seen you, and I only wish I
could have provided something more suitable to your taste. Remember me very
kindly if you please to old Mr. Willet, and tell him that whenever he comes
here I have a crow to pluck with him. Good night!"
Having uttered these
words with great sweetness of manner, the good lady dropped a curtsey
remarkable for its condescension, and serenely withdrew.
And it was for this Joe
had looked forward to the twenty-fifth of March for weeks and weeks, and had
gathered the flowers with so much care, and had cocked his hat, and made
himself so smart! This was the end of all his bold determination, resolved upon
for the hundredth time, to speak out to Dolly and tell her how he loved her! To
see her for a minute--for but a minute--to find her going out to a party and
glad to go; to be looked upon as a common pipe- smoker, beer-bibber,
spirit-guzzler, and tosspot! He bade farewell to his friend the locksmith, and
hastened to take horse at the Black Lion, thinking as he turned towards home,
as many another Joe has thought before and since, that here was an end to all
his hopes--that the thing was impossible and never could be--that she didn’t
care for him--that he was wretched for life--and that the only congenial
prospect left him, was to go for a soldier or a sailor, and get some obliging
enemy to knock his brains out as soon as possible.
JOE WILLET rode
leisurely along in his desponding mood, picturing the locksmith’s daughter
going down long country-dances, and poussetting dreadfully with bold
strangers--which was almost too much to bear--when he heard the tramp of a
horse’s feet behind him, and looking back, saw a well-mounted gentleman
advancing at a smart canter. As this rider passed, he checked his steed, and
called him of the Maypole by his name. Joe set spurs to the grey mare, and was
at his side directly.
"I thought it was
you, sir," he said, touching his hat. "A fair evening, sir. Glad to
see you out of doors again."
The gentleman smiled
and nodded. "What gay doings have been going on to-day, Joe? Is she as
pretty as ever? Nay, don’t blush, man."
"If I coloured at
all, Mr. Edward," said Joe, "which I didn’t know I did, it was to
think I should have been such a fool as ever to have any hope of her. She’s as
far out of my reach as--as Heaven is."
"Well, Joe, I hope
that’s not altogether beyond it," said Edward, good-humouredly.
"Eh?"
"Ah!" sighed
Joe. "It’s all very fine talking, sir. Proverbs are easily made in cold
blood. But it can’t be helped. Are you bound for our house, sir?"
"Yes. As I am not
quite strong yet, I shall stay there to-night, and ride home coolly in the
morning."
"If you’re in no
particular hurry," said Joe after a short silence, "and will bear
with the pace of this poor jade, I shall be glad to ride on with you to the
Warren, sir, and hold your horse when you dismount. It’ll save you having to
walk from the Maypole, there and back again. I can spare the time well, sir,
for I am too soon."
"And so am
I," returned Edward, "though I was unconsciously riding fast just
now, in compliment I suppose to the pace of my thoughts, which were travelling
post. We will keep together, Joe, willingly, and be as good company as may be.
And cheer up, cheer up, think of the locksmith’s daughter with a stout heart,
and you shall win her yet."
Joe shook his head; but
there was something so cheery in the buoyant hopeful manner of this speech,
that his spirits rose under its influence, and communicated as it would seem
some new impulse even to the grey mare, who, breaking from her sober amble into
a gentle trot, emulated the pace of Edward Chester’s horse, and appeared to
flatter herself that he was doing his very best.
It was a fine dry
night, and the light of a young moon, which was then just rising, shed around
that peace and tranquillity which gives to evening time its most delicious
charm. The lengthened shadows of the trees, softened as if reflected in still
water, threw their carpet on the path the travellers pursued, and the light
wind stirred yet more softly than before, as though it were soothing Nature in
her sleep. By little and little they ceased talking, and rode on side by side
in a pleasant silence.
"The Maypole
lights are brilliant to-night," said Edward, as they rode along the lane
from which, while the intervening trees were bare of leaves, that hostelry was
visible.
"Brilliant indeed,
sir," returned Joe, rising in his stirrups to get a better view.
"Lights in the large room, and a fire glimmering in the best bedchamber?
Why, what company can this be for, I wonder!"
"Some benighted
horseman wending towards London, and deterred from going on to-night by the
marvellous tales of my friend the highwayman, I suppose," said Edward.
"He must be a
horseman of good quality to have such accommodations. Your bed too,
sir--!"
"No matter, Joe.
Any other room will do for me. But come--there’s nine striking. We may push
on."
They cantered forward
at as brisk a pace as Joe’s charger could attain, and presently stopped in the
little copse where he had left her in the morning. Edward dismounted, gave his
bridle to his companion, and walked with a light step towards the house.
A female servant was
waiting at a side gate in the garden-wall, and admitted him without delay. He
hurried along the terrace-walk, and darted up a flight of broad steps leading
into an old and gloomy hall, whose walls were ornamented with rusty suits of
armour, antlers, weapons of the chase, and suchlike garniture. Here he paused,
but not long; for as he looked round, as if expecting the attendant to have
followed, and wondering she had not done so, a lovely girl appeared, whose dark
hair next moment rested on his breast. Almost at the same instant a heavy hand
was laid upon her arm, Edward felt himself thrust away, and Mr. Haredale stood
between them.
He regarded the young
man sternly without removing his hat; with one hand clasped his niece, and with
the other, in which he held his riding-whip, motioned him towards the door. The
young man drew himself up, and returned his gaze.
"This is well done
of you, sir, to corrupt my servants, and enter my house unbidden and in secret,
like a thief!" said Mr. Haredale. "Leave it, sir, and return no
more."
"Miss Haredale’s
presence," returned the young man, "and your relationship to her,
give you a licence which, if you are a brave man, you will not abuse. You have
compelled me to this course, and the fault is yours--not mine."
"It is neither
generous, nor honourable, nor the act of a true man, sir," retorted the
other, "to tamper with the affections of a weak, trusting girl, while you
shrink, in your unworthiness, from her guardian and protector, and dare not
meet the light of
day. More than this I
will not say to you, save that I forbid you this house, and require you to be
gone."
"It is neither
generous, nor honourable, nor the act of a true man to play the spy," said
Edward. "Your words imply dishonour, and I reject them with the scorn they
merit."
"You will
find," said Mr. Haredale, calmly, "your trusty go-between in waiting
at the gate by which you entered. I have played no spy’s part, sir. I chanced
to see you pass the gate, and followed. You might have heard me knocking for
admission, had you been less swift of foot, or lingered in the garden. Please
to withdraw. Your presence here is offensive to me and distressful to my niece."
As he said these words, he passed his arm about the waist of the terrified and
weeping girl, and drew her closer to him; and though the habitual severity of
his manner was scarcely changed, there was yet apparent in the action an air of
kindness and sympathy for her distress.
"Mr.
Haredale," said Edward, "your arm encircles her on whom I have set my
every hope and thought, and to purchase one minute’s happiness for whom I would
gladly lay down my life; this house is the casket that holds the precious jewel
of my existence. Your niece has plighted her faith to me, and I have plighted
mine to her. What have I done that you should hold me in this light esteem, and
give me these discourteous words?"
"You have done
that, sir," answered Mr. Haredale, "which must he undone. You have
tied a lover’s knot here which must be cut asunder. Take good heed of what I
say. Must. I cancel the bond between ye. I reject you, and all of your kith and
kin--all the false, hollow, heartless stock."
"High words,
sir," said Edward, scornfully.
"Words of purpose
and meaning, as you will find," replied the other. "Lay them to
heart."
"Lay you then,
these," said Edward. "Your cold and sullen temper, which chills every
breast about you, which turns affection into fear, and changes duty into dread,
has forced us on this secret course, repugnant to our nature and our wish, and
far more foreign, sir, to us than you. I am not a false, a hollow, or a
heartless man; the character is yours, who poorly venture on these injurious
terms, against the truth, and under the shelter whereof I reminded you just
now. You shall not cancel the bond between us. I will not abandon this pursuit.
I rely upon your niece’s truth and honour, and set your influence at nought. I
leave her with a confidence in her pure faith, which you will never weaken, and
with no concern but that I do not leave her in some gentler care."
With that, he pressed
her cold hand to his lips, and once more encountering and returning Mr.
Haredale’s steady look, withdrew.
A few words to Joe as
he mounted his horse sufficiently explained what had passed, and renewed all
that young gentleman’s despondency with tenfold aggravation. They rode back to
the Maypole without exchanging a syllable, and arrived at the door with heavy
hearts.
Old John, who had
peeped from behind the red curtain as they rode up shouting for Hugh, was out
directly, and said with great importance as he held the young man’s stirrup,
"He’s comfortable
in bed--the best bed. A thorough gentleman; the smilingest, affablest gentleman
I ever had to do with."
"Who,
Willet?" said Edward carelessly, as he dismounted.
"Your worthy
father, sir," replied John. "Your honourable, venerable father."
"What does he
mean?" said Edward, looking with a mixture of alarm and doubt, at Joe.
"What do you
mean?" said Joe. "Don’t you see Mr. Edward doesn’t understand,
father?"
"Why, didn’t you
know of it, sir?" said John, opening his eyes wide. "How very
singular! Bless you, he’s been here ever since noon to-day, and Mr. Haredale
has been having a long talk with him, and hasn’t been gone an hour."
"My father,
Willet!"
"Yes, sir, he told
me so--a handsome, slim, upright gentleman, in green-and-gold. In your old room
up yonder, sir. No doubt you can go in, sir," said John, walking backwards
into the road and looking up at the window. "He hasn’t put out his candles
yet, I see."
Edward glanced at the
window also, and hastily murmuring that he had changed his mind--forgotten
something--and must return to London, mounted his horse again and rode away;
leaving the Willets, father and son, looking at each other in mute
astonishment.
AT noon next day, John
Willet’s guest sat lingering over his breakfast in his own home, surrounded by
a variety of comforts, which left the Maypole’s highest flight and utmost
stretch of accommodation at an infinite distance behind, and suggested
comparisons very much to the disadvantage and disfavour of that venerable
tavern.
In the broad
old-fashioned window-seat--as capacious as many modern sofas, and cushioned to
serve the purpose of a luxurious settee--in the broad old-fashioned window-seat
of a roomy chamber, Mr. Chester lounged, very much at his ease, over a
well-furnished breakfast- table. He had exchanged his riding-coat for a
handsome morning- gown, his boots for slippers; had been at great pains to
atone for the having been obliged to make his toilet when he rose without the
aid of dressing-case and tiring equipage; and, having gradually forgotten
through these means the discomforts of an indifferent night and an early ride,
was in a state of perfect complacency, indolence, and satisfaction.
The situation in which
he found himself, indeed, was particularly favourable to the growth of these
feelings; for, not to mention the lazy influence of a late and lonely
breakfast, with the additional sedative of a newspaper, there was an air of
repose about his place of residence peculiar to itself, and which hangs about
it, even in these times, when it is more bustling and busy than it was in days
of yore.
There are, still, worse
places than the Temple, on a sultry day, for basking in the sun, or resting
idly in the shade. There is yet a drowsiness in its courts, and a dreamy
dulness in its trees and gardens; those who pace its lanes and squares may yet
hear the echoes of their footsteps on the sounding stones, and read upon its
gates, in passing from the tumult of the Strand or Fleet Street, "Who
enters here leaves noise behind." There is still the plash of falling
water in fair Fountain Court, and there are yet nooks and corners where
dun-haunted students may look down from their dusty garrets, on a vagrant ray
of sunlight patching the shade of the tall houses, and seldom troubled to
reflect a passing stranger’s form. There is yet, in the Temple, something of a
clerkly monkish atmosphere, which public offices of law have not disturbed, and
even legal firms have failed to scare away. In summer time, its pumps suggest
to thirsty idlers, springs cooler, and more sparkling, and deeper than other
wells; and as they trace the spillings of full pitchers on the heated ground,
they snuff the freshness, and, sighing, cast sad looks towards the Thames, and
think of baths and boats, and saunter on, despondent.
It was in a room in
Paper Buildings--a row of goodly tenements, shaded in front by ancient trees,
and looking, at the back, upon the Temple Gardens--that this, our idler,
lounged; now taking up again the paper he had laid down a hundred times; now
trifling with the fragments of his meal; now pulling forth his golden toothpick,
and glancing leisurely about the room, or out at window into the trim garden
walks, where a few early loiterers were already pacing to and fro. Here a pair
of lovers met to quarrel and make up; there a dark-eyed nursery-maid had better
eyes for Templars than her charge; on this hand an ancient spinster, with her
lapdog in a string, regarded both enormities with scornful sidelong looks; on
that a weazen old gentleman, ogling the nursery-maid, looked with like scorn
upon the spinster, and wondered she didn’t know she was no longer young. Apart
from all these, on the river’s margin two or three couple of business-talkers
walked slowly up and down in earnest conversation; and one young man sat
thoughtfully on a bench alone.
"Ned is amazingly
patient!" said Mr. Chester, glancing at this last- named person as he set
down his teacup and plied the golden toothpick, "immensely patient! He was
sitting yonder when I began to dress, and has scarcely changed his posture
since. A most eccentric dog!"
As he spoke, the figure
rose, and came towards him with a rapid pace.
"Really, as if he
had heard me," said the father, resuming his newspaper with a yawn.
"Dear Ned!"
Presently the room-door
opened, and the young man entered; to whom his father gently waved his hand,
and smiled.
"Are you at
leisure for a little conversation, sir?" said Edward.
"Surely, Ned. I am
always at leisure. You know my constitution.-- Have you breakfasted?"
"Three hours
ago."
"What a very early
dog!" cried his father, contemplating him from behind the toothpick, with
a languid smile.
"The truth
is," said Edward, bringing a chair forward, and seating himself near the
table, "that I slept but ill last night, and was glad to rise. The cause
of my uneasiness cannot but be known to you, sir; and it is upon that I wish to
speak."
"My dear
boy," returned his father, "confide in me, I beg. But you know my
constitution--don’t be prosy, Ned."
"I will be plain,
and brief," said Edward.
"Don’t say you
will, my good fellow," returned his father, crossing his legs, "or
you certainly will not. You are going to tell me"--
"Plainly this,
then," said the son, with an air of great concern, "that I know where
you were last night--from being on the spot, indeed--and whom you saw, and what
your purpose was."
"You don’t say
so!" cried his father. "I am delighted to hear it. It saves us the
worry, and terrible wear and tear of a long explanation, and is a great relief
for both. At the very house! Why didn’t you come up? I should have been charmed
to see you."
"I knew that what
I had to say would be better said after a night’s reflection, when both of us
were cool," returned the son.
"’Fore Gad,
Ned," rejoined the father, "I was cool enough last night. That
detestable Maypole! By some infernal contrivance of the builder, it holds the
wind, and keeps it fresh. You remember the sharp east wind that blew so hard
five weeks ago? I give you my honour it was rampant in that old house last
night, though out of doors there was a dead calm. But you were saying"--
"I was about to
say, Heaven knows how seriously and earnestly, that you have made me wretched,
sir. Will you hear me gravely for a moment?"
"My dear
Ned," said his father, "I will hear you with the patience of an
anchorite. Oblige me with the milk."
"I saw Miss
Haredale last night," Edward resumed, when he had complied with this
request; "her uncle, in her presence, immediately after your interview,
and, as of course I know, in consequence of it, forbade me the house, and, with
circumstances of indignity which are of your creation I am sure, commanded me
to leave it on the instant."
"For his manner of
doing so, I give you my honour, Ned, I am not accountable," said his
father. "That you must excuse. He is a mere boor, a log, a brute, with no
address in life.--Positively a fly in the jug. The first I have seen this
year."
Edward rose, and paced
the room. His imperturbable parent sipped his tea.
"Father,"
said the young man, stopping at length before him, "we must not trifle in
this matter. We must not deceive each other, or ourselves. Let me pursue the
manly open part I wish to take, and do not repel me by this unkind
indifference."
"Whether I am
indifferent or no," returned the other, "I leave you, my dear boy, to
judge. A ride of twenty-five or thirty miles, through miry roads--a Maypole
dinner--a tete-a-tete with Haredale, which, vanity apart, was quite a Valentine
and Orson business--a Maypole bed--a Maypole landlord, and a Maypole retinue of
idiots and centaurs;--whether the voluntary endurance of these things looks
like indifference, dear Ned, or like the excessive anxiety, and devotion, and
all that sort of thing, of a parent, you shall determine for yourself."
"I wish you to
consider, sir," said Edward, "in what a cruel situation I am placed.
Loving Miss Haredale as I do"--
"My dear
fellow," interrupted his father with a compassionate smile, "you do
nothing of the kind. You don’t know anything about it. There’s no such thing, I
assure you. Now, do take my word for it. You have good sense, Ned,--great good
sense. I wonder you should be guilty of such amazing absurdities. You really
surprise me."
"I repeat,"
said his son firmly, "that I love her. You have interposed to part us, and
have, to the extent I have just now told you of, succeeded. May I induce you,
sir, in time, to think more favourably of our attachment, or is it your
intention and your fixed design to hold us asunder if you can?"
"My dear
Ned," returned his father, taking a pinch of snuff and pushing his box
towards him, "that is my purpose most undoubtedly."
"The time that has
elapsed," rejoined his son, "since I began to know her worth, has
flown in such a dream that until now I have hardly once paused to reflect upon
my true position. What is it? From my childhood I have been accustomed to luxury
and idleness, and have been bred as though my fortune were large, and my
expectations almost without a limit. The idea of wealth has been familiarised
to me from my cradle. I have been taught to look upon those means, by which men
raise themselves to riches and distinction, as being beyond my heeding, and
beneath my care. I have been, as the phrase is, liberally educated, and am fit
for nothing. I find myself at last wholly dependent upon you, with no resource
but in your favour. In this momentous question of my life we do not, and it
would seem we never can, agree. I have shrunk instinctively alike from those to
whom you have urged me to pay court, and from the motives of interest and gain
which have rendered them in your eyes visible objects for my suit. If there
never has been thus much plain-speaking between us before, sir, the fault has
not been mine, indeed. If I seem to speak too plainly now, it is, believe me
father, in the hope that there may be a franker spirit, a worthier reliance,
and a kinder confidence between us in time to come."
"My good
fellow," said his smiling father, "you quite affect me. Go on, my
dear Edward, I beg. But remember your promise. There is great earnestness, vast
candour, a manifest sincerity in all you say, but I fear I observe the faintest
indications of a tendency to prose."
"I am very sorry,
sir."
"I am very sorry,
too, Ned, but you know that I cannot fix my mind for any long period upon one
subject. If you’ll come to the point at once, I’ll imagine all that ought to go
before, and conclude it said. Oblige me with the milk again. Listening,
invariably makes me feverish."
"What I would say
then, tends to this," said Edward. "I cannot bear this absolute
dependence, sir, even upon you. Time has been lost and opportunity thrown away,
but I am yet a young man, and may retrieve it. Will you give me the means of
devoting such abilities and energies as I possess, to some worthy pursuit? Will
you let me try to make for myself an honourable path in life? For any term you
please to name--say for five years if you will--I will pledge myself to move no
further in the matter of our difference without your fall concurrence. During
that period, I will endeavour earnestly and patiently, if ever man did, to open
some prospect for myself, and free you from the burden you fear I should become
if I married one whose worth and beauty are her chief endowments. Will you do
this, sir? At the expiration of the term we agree upon, let us discuss this
subject again. Till then, unless it is revived by you, let it never be renewed
between us."
"My dear
Ned," returned his father, laying down the newspaper at which he had been
glancing carelessly, and throwing himself back in the window-seat, "I
believe you know how very much I dislike what are called family affairs, which
are only fit for plebeian Christmas days, and have no manner of business with
people of our condition. But as you are proceeding upon a mistake, Ned--
altogether upon a mistake--I will conquer my repugnance to entering on such matters,
and give you a perfectly plain and candid answer, if you will do me the favour
to shut the door."
Edward having obeyed
him, he took an elegant little knife from his pocket, and paring his nails,
continued:
"You have to thank
me, Ned, for being of good family; for your mother, charming person as she was,
and almost broken-hearted, and so forth, as she left me, when she was
prematurely compelled to become immortal--had nothing to boast of in that
respect."
"Her father was at
least an eminent lawyer, sir," said Edward.
"Quite right, Ned;
perfectly so. He stood high at the bar, had a great name and great wealth, but
having risen from nothing--I have always closed my eyes to the circumstance and
steadily resisted its contemplation, but I fear his father dealt in pork, and
that his business did once involve cow-heel and sausages--he wished to marry
his daughter into a good family. He had his heart’s desire, Ned. I was a
younger son’s younger son, and I married her. We each had our object, and
gained it. She stepped at once into the politest and best circles, and I
stepped into a fortune which I assure you was very necessary to my
comfort--quite indispensable. Now, my good fellow, that fortune is among the
things that have been. It is gone, Ned, and has been gone--how old are you? I
always forget."
"Seven-and-twenty,
sir."
"Are you
indeed?" cried his father, raising his eyelids in a languishing surprise.
"So much! Then I should say, Ned, that as nearly as I remember, its skirts
vanished from human knowledge, about eighteen or nineteen years ago. It was
about that time when I came to live in these chambers (once your grandfather’s,
and bequeathed by that extremely respectable person to me), and commenced to
live upon an inconsiderable annuity and my past reputation."
"You are jesting
with me, sir," said Edward.
"Not in the
slightest degree, I assure you," returned his father with great composure.
"These family topics are so extremely dry, that I am sorry to say they don’t
admit of any such relief. It is for that reason, and because they have an
appearance of business, that I dislike them so very much. Well! You know the
rest. A son, Ned, unless he is old enough to be a companion--that is to say,
unless he is some two or three and twenty--is not the kind of thing to have
about one. He is a restraint upon his father, his father is a restraint upon
him, and they make each other mutually uncomfortable. Therefore, until within
the last four years or so-- I have a poor memory for dates, and if I mistake,
you will correct me in your own mind--you pursued your studies at a distance,
and picked up a great variety of accomplishments. Occasionally we passed a week
or two together here, and disconcerted each other as only such near relations
can. At last you came home. I candidly tell you, my dear boy, that if you had
been awkward and overgrown, I should have exported you to some distant part of
the world."
"I wish with all
my soul you had, sir," said Edward.
"No you don’t,
Ned," said his father coolly; "you are mistaken, I assure you. I
found you a handsome, prepossessing, elegant fellow, and I threw you into the
society I can still command. Having done that, my dear fellow, I consider that
I have provided for you in life, and rely upon your doing something to provide
for me in return."
"I do not
understand your meaning, sir."
"My meaning, Ned,
is obvious--I observe another fly in the cream- jug, but have the goodness not
to take it out as you did the first, for their walk when their legs are milky,
is extremely ungraceful and disagreeable--my meaning is, that you must do as I
did; that you must marry well and make the most of yourself."
"A mere
fortune-hunter!" cried the son, indignantly.
"What in the devil’s
name, Ned, would you be!" returned the father. "All men are fortune-hunters,
are they not? The law, the church, the court, the camp--see how they are all
crowded with fortune- hunters, jostling each other in the pursuit. The
stock-exchange, the pulpit, the counting-house, the royal drawing-room, the
senate,--what but fortune-hunters are they filled with? A fortune- hunter! Yes.
You are one; and you would be nothing else, my dear Ned, if you were the
greatest courtier, lawyer, legislator, prelate, or merchant, in existence. If
you are squeamish and moral, Ned, console yourself with the reflection that at
the very worst your fortune-hunting can make but one person miserable or
unhappy. How many people do you suppose these other kinds of huntsmen crush in
following their sport--hundreds at a step? Or thousands?"
The young man leant his
head upon his hand, and made no answer.
"I am quite
charmed," said the father rising, and walking slowly to and fro--stopping
now and then to glance at himself in the mirror, or survey a picture through
his glass, with the air of a connoisseur, "that we have had this
conversation, Ned, unpromising as it was. It establishes a confidence between
us which is quite delightful, and was certainly necessary, though how you can
ever have mistaken our positions and designs, I confess I cannot understand. I
conceived, until I found your fancy for this girl, that all these points were
tacitly agreed upon between us."
"I knew you were
embarrassed, sir," returned the son, raising his head for a moment, and
then falling into his former attitude, "but I had no idea we were the
beggared wretches you describe. How could I suppose it, bred as I have been;
witnessing the life you have always led; and the appearance you have always
made?"
"My dear
child," said the father--"for you really talk so like a child that I
must call you one--you were bred upon a careful principle; the very manner of
your education, I assure you, maintained my credit surprisingly. As to the life
I lead, I must lead it, Ned. I must have these little refinements about me. I
have always been used to them, and I cannot exist without them. They must
surround me, you observe, and therefore they are here. With regard to our
circumstances, Ned, you may set your mind at rest upon that score. They are
desperate. Your own appearance is by no means despicable, and our joint
pocket-money alone devours our income. That’s the truth."
"Why have I never
known this before? Why have you encouraged me, sir, to an expenditure and mode
of life to which we have no right or title?"
"My good
fellow," returned his father more compassionately than ever, "if you
made no appearance, how could you possibly succeed in the pursuit for which I
destined you? As to our mode of life, every man has a right to live in the best
way he can; and to make himself as comfortable as he can, or he is an unnatural
scoundrel. Our debts, I grant, are very great, and therefore it the more
behoves you, as a young man of principle and honour, to pay them off as
speedily as possible."
"The villain’s
part," muttered Edward, "that I have unconsciously played! I to win
the heart of Emma Haredale! I would, for her sake, I had died first!"
"I am glad you
see, Ned," returned his father, "how perfectly self- evident it is,
that nothing can be done in that quarter. But apart from this, and the necessity
of your speedily bestowing yourself on another (as you know you could
to-morrow, if you chose), I wish you’d look upon it pleasantly. In a religious
point of view alone, how could you ever think of uniting yourself to a
Catholic, unless she was amazingly rich? You ought to be so very Protestant,
coming of such a Protestant family as you do. Let us be moral, Ned, or we are
nothing. Even if one could set that objection aside, which is impossible, we
come to another which is quite conclusive. The very idea of marrying a girl
whose father was killed, like meat! Good God, Ned, how disagreeable! Consider
the impossibility of having any respect for your father-in-law under such
unpleasant circumstances--think of his having been "viewed" by jurors,
and "sat upon" by coroners, and of his very doubtful position in the
family ever afterwards. It seems to me such an indelicate sort of thing that I
really think the girl ought to have been put to death by the state to prevent
its happening. But I tease you perhaps. You would rather be alone? My dear Ned,
most willingly. God bless you. I shall be going out presently, but we shall
meet to-night, or if not to-night, certainly to-morrow. Take care of yourself
in the mean time, for both our sakes. You are a person of great consequence to
me, Ned--of vast consequence indeed. God bless you!"
With these words, the
father, who had been arranging his cravat in the glass, while he uttered them
in a disconnected careless manner, withdrew, humming a tune as he went. The
son, who had appeared so lost in thought as not to hear or understand them,
remained quite still and silent. After the lapse of half an hour or so, the
elder Chester, gaily dressed, went out. The younger still sat with his head
resting on his hands, in what appeared to be a kind of stupor.
A SERIES of pictures
representing the streets of London in the night, even at the comparatively
recent date of this tale, would present to the eye something so very different
in character from the reality which is witnessed in these times, that it would
be difficult for the beholder to recognise his most familiar walks in the
altered aspect of little more than half a century ago.
They were, one and all,
from the broadest and best to the narrowest and least frequented, very dark.
The oil and cotton lamps, though regularly trimmed twice or thrice in the long
winter nights, burnt feebly at the best; and at a late hour, when they were
unassisted by the lamps and candles in the shops, cast but a narrow track of
doubtful light upon the footway, leaving the projecting doors and house-fronts
in the deepest gloom. Many of the courts and lanes were left in total darkness;
those of the meaner sort, where one glimmering light twinkled for a score of
houses, being favoured in no slight degree. Even in these places, the
inhabitants had often good reason for extinguishing their lamp as soon as it
was lighted; and the watch being utterly inefficient and powerless to prevent
them, they did so at their pleasure. Thus, in the lightest thoroughfares, there
was at every turn some obscure and dangerous spot whither a thief might fly or
shelter, and few would care to follow; and the city being belted round by
fields, green lanes, waste grounds, and lonely roads, dividing it at that time
from the suburbs that have joined it since, escape, even where the pursuit was
hot, was rendered easy.
It is no wonder that
with these favouring circumstances in full and constant operation, street
robberies, often accompanied by cruel wounds, and not unfrequently by loss of
life, should have been of nightly occurrence in the very heart of London, or
that quiet folks should have had great dread of traversing its streets after
the shops were closed. It was not unusual for those who wended home alone at
midnight, to keep the middle of the road, the better to guard against surprise
from lurking footpads; few would venture to repair at a late hour to Kentish
Town or Hampstead, or even to Kensington or Chelsea, unarmed and unattended;
while he who had been loudest and most valiant at the supper-table or the
tavern, and had but a mile or so to go, was glad to fee a link-boy to escort
him home.
There were many other
characteristics--not quite so disagreeable-- about the thoroughfares of London
then, with which they had been long familiar. Some of the shops, especially
those to the eastward of Temple Bar, still adhered to the old practice of
hanging out a sign; and the creaking and swinging of these boards in their iron
frames on windy nights, formed a strange and mournfal concert for the ears of
those who lay awake in bed or hurried through the streets. Long stands of
hackney-chairs and groups of chairmen, compared with whom the coachmen of our
day are gentle and polite, obstructed the way and filled the air with clamour;
night-cellars, indicated by a little stream of light crossing the pavement, and
stretching out half-way into the road, and by the stifled roar of voices from
below, yawned for the reception and entertainment of the most abandoned of both
sexes; under every shed and bulk small groups of link-boys gamed away the
earnings of the day; or one more weary than the rest, gave way to sleep, and
let the fragment of his torch fall hissing on the puddled ground.
Then there was the
watch with staff and lantern crying the hour, and the kind of weather; and
those who woke up at his voice and turned them round in bed, were glad to hear
it rained, or snowed, or blew, or froze, for very comfort’s sake. The solitary
passenger was startled
by the chairmen’s cry of "By your leave there!" as two came trotting
past him with their empty vehicle--carried backwards to show its being
disengaged--and hurried to the nearest stand. Many a private chair, too,
inclosing some fine lady, monstrously hooped and furbelowed, and preceded by
running-footmen bearing flambeaux--for which extinguishers are yet suspended
before the doors of a few houses of the better sort--made the way gay and light
as it danced along, and darker and more dismal when it had passed. It was not
unusual for these running gentry, who carried it with a very high hand, to
quarrel in the servants’ hall while waiting for their masters and mistresses;
and, falling to blows either there or in the street without, to strew the place
of skirmish with hair-powder, fragments of bag-wigs, and scattered nosegays.
Gaming, the vice which ran so high among all classes (the fashion being of
course set by the upper), was generally the cause of these disputes; for cards
and dice were as openly used, and worked as much mischief, and yielded as much
excitement below stairs, as above. While incidents like these, arising out of
drums and masquerades and parties at quadrille, were passing at the west end of
the town, heavy stagecoaches and scarce heavier waggons were lumbering slowly
towards the city, the coachmen, guard, and passengers, armed to the teeth, and
the coach--a day or so perhaps behind its time, but that was nothing--despoiled
by highwaymen; who made no scruple to attack, alone and single-handed, a whole
caravan of goods and men, and sometimes shot a passenger or two, and were
sometimes shot themselves, as the case might be. On the morrow, rumours of this
new act of daring on the road yielded matter for a few hours’ conversation
through the town, and a Public Progress of some fine gentleman (half-drunk) to
Tyburn, dressed in the newest fashion, and damning the ordinary with
unspeakable gallantry and grace, furnished to the populace, at once a pleasant
excitement and a wholesome and profound example.
Among all the dangerous
characters who, in such a state of society, prowled and skulked in the
metropolis at night, there was one man from whom many as uncouth and fierce as
he, shrunk with an involuntary dread. Who he was, or whence he came, was a
question often asked, but which none could answer. His name was unknown, he had
never been seen until within about eight days or thereabouts, and was equally a
stranger to the old ruffians, upon whose haunts he ventured fearlessly, as to
the young. He could be no spy, for he never removed his slouched hat to look
about him, entered into conversation with no man, heeded nothing that passed,
listened to no discourse, regarded nobody that came or went. But so surely as
the dead of night set in, so surely this man was in the midst of the loose concourse
in the night-cellar where outcasts of every grade resorted; and there he sat
till morning.
He was not only a
spectre at their licentious feasts; a something in the midst of their revelry
and riot that chilled and haunted them; but out of doors he was the same.
Directly it was dark, he was abroad--never in company with any one, but always
alone; never lingering or loitering, but always walking swiftly; and looking
(so they said who had seen him) over his shoulder from time to time, and as he
did so quickening his pace. In the fields, the lanes, the roads, in all
quarters of the town--east, west, north, and south--that man was seen gliding
on like a shadow. He was always hurrying away. Those who encountered him, saw
him steal past, caught sight of the backward glance, and so lost him in the
darkness.
This constant
restlessness, and flitting to and fro, gave rise to strange stories. He was
seen in such distant and remote places, at times so nearly tallying with each
other, that some doubted whether there were not two of them, or more--some,
whether he had not unearthly means of travelling from spot to spot. The footpad
hiding in a ditch had marked him passing like a ghost along its brink; the
vagrant had met him on the dark high-road; the beggar had seen him pause upon
the bridge to look down at the water, and then sweep on again; they who dealt
in bodies with the surgeons could swear he slept in churchyards, and that they
had beheld him glide away among the tombs on their approach. And as they told
these stories to each other, one who had looked about him would pull his
neighbour by the sleeve, and there he would be among them.
At last, one man--he
was one of those whose commerce lay among the graves--resolved to question this
strange companion. Next night, when he had eat his poor meal voraciously (he
was accustomed to do that, they had observed, as though he had no other in the
day), this fellow sat down at his elbow.
"A black night,
master!"
"It is a black
night."
"Blacker than
last, though that was pitchy too. Didn’t I pass you near the turnpike in the
Oxford Road?"
"It’s like you
may. I don’t know."
"Come, come,
master," cried the fellow, urged on by the looks of his comrades, and
slapping him on the shoulder; "be more companionable and communicative. Be
more the gentleman in this good company. There are tales among us that you have
sold yourself to the devil, and I know not what."
"We all have, have
we not?" returned the stranger, looking up. "If we were fewer in
number, perhaps he would give better wages."
"It goes rather
hard with you, indeed," said the fellow, as the stranger disclosed his
haggard unwashed face, and torn clothes. "What of that? Be merry, master.
A stave of a roaring song now"--
"Sing you, if you
desire to hear one," replied the other, shaking him roughly off; "and
don’t touch me if you’re a prudent man; I carry arms which go off easily--they
have done so, before now--and make it dangerous for strangers who don’t know
the trick of them, to lay hands upon me."
"Do you threaten?"
said the fellow.
"Yes,"
returned the other, rising and turning upon him, and looking fiercely round as
if in apprehension of a general attack.
His voice, and look,
and bearing--all expressive of the wildest recklessness and
desperation--daunted while they repelled the bystanders. Although in a very
different sphere of action now, they were not without much of the effect they
had wrought at the Maypole Inn.
"I am what you all
are, and live as you all do," said the man sternly, after a short silence.
"I am in hiding here like the rest, and if we were surprised would perhaps
do my part with the best of ye. If it’s my humour to be left to myself, let me
have it. Otherwise,"--and here he swore a tremendous oath--"there’ll
be mischief done in this place, though there are odds of a score against
me."
A low murmur, having
its origin perhaps in a dread of the man and the mystery that surrounded him,
or perhaps in a sincere opinion on the part of some of those present, that it
would be an inconvenient precedent to meddle too curiously with a gentleman’s
private affairs if he saw reason to conceal them, warned the fellow who had
occasioned this discussion that he had best pursue it no further. After a short
time the strange man lay down upon a bench to sleep, and when they thought of
him again, they found he was gone.
Next night, as soon as
it was dark, he was abroad again and traversing the streets; he was before the
locksmith’s house more than once, but the family were out, and it was close
shut. This night he crossed London Bridge and passed into Southwark. As he
glided down a bye street, a woman with a little basket on her arm, turned into
it at the other end. Directly he observed her, he sought the shelter of an
archway, and stood aside until she had passed. Then he emerged cautiously from
his hiding-place, and followed.
She went into several
shops to purchase various kinds of household necessaries, and round every place
at which she stopped he hovered like her evil spirit; following her when she
reappeared. It was nigh eleven o’clock, and the passengers in the streets were
thinning fast, when she turned, doubtless to go home. The phantom still
followed her.
She turned into the
same bye street in which he had seen her first, which, being free from shops,
and narrow, was extremely dark. She quickened her pace here, as though
distrustful of being stopped, and robbed of such trifling property as she
carried with her. He crept along on the other side of the road. Had she been
gifted with the speed of wind, it seemed as if his terrible shadow would have
tracked her down.
At length the
widow--for she it was--reached her own door, and, panting for breath, paused to
take the key from her basket. In a flush and glow, with the haste she had made,
and the pleasure of being safe at home, she stooped to draw it out, when,
raising her head, she saw him standing silently beside her: the apparition of a
dream.
His hand was on her
mouth, but that was needless, for her tongue clove to its roof, and her power
of utterance was gone. "I have been looking for you many nights. Is the
house empty? Answer me. Is any one inside?"
She could only answer
by a rattle in her throat.
"Make me a
sign."
She seemed to indicate
that there was no one there. He took the key, unlocked the door, carried her
in, and secured it carefully behind them.
IT was a chilly night,
and the fire in the widow’s parlour had burnt low. Her strange companion placed
her in a chair, and stooping down before the half-extinguished ashes, raked
them together and fanned them with his hat. From time to time he glanced at her
over his shoulder, as though to assure himself of her remaining quiet and
making no effort to depart; and that done, busied himself about the fire again.
It was not without
reason that he took these pains, for his dress was dank and drenched with wet,
his jaws rattled with cold, and he shivered from head to foot. It had rained
hard during the previous night and for some hours in the morning, but since
noon it had been fine. Wheresoever he had passed the hours of darkness, his
condition sufficiently betokened that many of them had been spent beneath the
open sky. Besmeared with mire; his saturated clothes clinging with a damp
embrace about his limbs; his beard unshaven, his face unwashed, his meagre
cheeks worn into deep hollows,--a more miserable wretch could hardly be, than
this man who now cowered down upon the widow’s hearth, and watched the
struggling flame with bloodshot eyes.
She had covered her
face with her hands, fearing, as it seemed, to look towards him. So they
remained for some short time in silence. Glancing round again, he asked at
length:
"Is this your
house?"
"It is. Why, in
the name of Heaven, do you darken it?"
"Give me meat and
drink," he answered sullenly, "or I dare do more than that. The very
marrow in my bones is cold with wet and hunger. I must have warmth and food,
and I will have them here."
"You were the
robber on the Chigwell road."
"I was."
"And nearly a
murderer then."
"The will was not
wanting. There was one came upon me and raised the hue-and-cry, that it would
have gone hard with, but for his nimbleness. I made a thrust at him."
"You thrust your
sword at him!" cried the widow, looking upwards. "You hear this man!
you hear and saw!"
He looked at her, as,
with her head thrown back, and her hands tight clenched together, she uttered
these words in an agony of appeal. Then, starting to his feet as she had done,
he advanced towards her.
"Beware!" she
cried in a suppressed voice, whose firmness stopped him midway. "Do not so
much as touch me with a finger, or you are lost; body and soul, you are
lost."
"Hear me," he
replied, menacing her with his hand. "I, that in the form of a man live
the life of a hunted beast; that in the body am a spirit, a ghost upon the
earth, a thing from which all creatures shrink, save those curst beings of
another world, who will not leave me;--I am, in my desperation of this night,
past all fear but that of the hell in which I exist from day to day. Give the
alarm, cry out, refuse to shelter me. I will not hurt you. But I will not be
taken alive; and so surely as you threaten me above your breath, I fall a dead
man on this floor. The blood with which I sprinkle it, be on you and yours, in
the name of the Evil Spirit that tempts men to their ruin!"
As he spoke, he took a
pistol from his breast, and firmly clutched it in his hand.
"Remove this man
from me, good Heaven!" cried the widow. "In thy grace and mercy, give
him one minute’s penitence, and strike him dead!"
"It has no such
purpose," he said, confronting her. "It is deaf. Give me to eat and
drink, lest I do that it cannot help my doing, and will not do for you."
"Will you leave
me, if I do thus much? Will you leave me and return no more?"
"I will promise
nothing," he rejoined, seating himself at the table, "nothing but
this--I will execute my threat if you betray me."
She rose at length, and
going to a closet or pantry in the room, brought out some fragments of cold
meat and bread and put them on the table. He asked for brandy, and for water.
These she produced likewise; and he ate and drank with the voracity of a
famished hound. All the time he was so engaged she kept at the uttermost
distance of the chamber, and sat there shuddering, but with her face towards
him. She never turned her back upon him once; and although when she passed him
(as she was obliged to do in going to and from the cupboard) she gathered the
skirts of her garment about her, as if even its touching his by chance were
horrible to think of, still, in the midst of all this dread and terror, she
kept her face towards his own, and watched his every movement.
His repast ended--if
that can be called one, which was a mere ravenous satisfying of the calls of
hunger--he moved his chair towards the fire again, and warming himself before
the blaze which had now sprung brightly up, accosted her once more.
"I am an outcast,
to whom a roof above his head is often an uncommon luxury, and the food a
beggar would reject is delicate fare. You live here at your ease. Do you live
alone?"
"I do not,"
she made answer with an effort.
"Who dwells here
besides?"
"One--it is no
matter who. You had best begone, or he may find you here. Why do you
linger?"
"For warmth,"
he replied, spreading out his hands before the fire. "For warmth. You are
rich, perhaps?"
"Very," she
said faintly. "Very rich. No doubt I am very rich."
"At least you are
not penniless. You have some money. You were making purchases to-night."
"I have a little
left. It is but a few shillings."
"Give me your
purse. You had it in your hand at the door. Give it to me."
She stepped to the
table and laid it down. He reached across, took it up, and told the contents
into his hand. As he was counting them, she listened for a moment, and sprung
towards him.
"Take what there
is, take all, take more if more were there, but go before it is too late. I
have heard a wayward step without, I know full well. It will return directly.
Begone."
"What do you
mean?"
"Do not stop to
ask. I will not answer. Much as I dread to touch you, I would drag you to the
door if I possessed the strength, rather than you should lose an instant.
Miserable wretch! fly from this place."
"If there are
spies without, I am safer here," replied the man, standing aghast. "I
will remain here, and will not fly till the danger is past."
"It is too
late!" cried the widow, who had listened for the step, and not to him.
"Hark to that foot upon the ground. Do you tremble to hear it! It is my
son, my idiot son!"
As she said this
wildly, there came a heavy knocking at the door. He looked at her, and she at
him.
"Let him come
in," said the man, hoarsely. "I fear him less than the dark,
houseless night. He knocks again. Let him come in!"
"The dread of this
hour," returned the widow, "has been upon me all my life, and I will
not. Evil will fall upon him, if you stand eye to eye. My blighted boy! Oh! all
good angels who know the truth-- hear a poor mother’s prayer, and spare my boy
from knowledge of this man!"
"He rattles at the
shutters!" cried the man. "He calls you. That voice and cry! It was
he who grappled with me in the road. Was it he?"
She had sunk upon her
knees, and so knelt down, moving her lips, but uttering no sound. As he gazed
upon her, uncertain what to do or where to turn, the shutters flew open. He had
barely time to catch a knife from the table, sheathe it in the loose sleeve of
his coat, hide in the closet, and do all with the lightning’s speed, when
Barnaby tapped at the bare glass, and raised the sash exultingly.
"Why, who can keep
out Grip and me!" he cried, thrusting in his head, and staring round the
room. "Are you there, mother? How long you keep us from the fire and
light."
She stammered some
excuse and tendered him her hand. But Barnaby sprung lightly in without
assistance, and putting his arms about her neck, kissed her a hundred times.
"We have been
afield, mother--leaping ditches, scrambling through hedges, running down steep
banks, up and away, and hurrying on. The wind has been blowing, and the rushes
and young plants bowing and bending to it, lest it should do them harm, the
cowards--and Grip--ha ha ha!--brave Grip, who cares for nothing, and when the
wind rolls him over in the dust, turns manfully to bite it--Grip, bold Grip,
has quarrelled with every little bowing twig--thinking, he told me, that it
mocked him--and has worried it like a bulldog. Ha ha ha!"
The raven, in his
little basket at his master’s back, hearing this frequent mention of his name
in a tone of exultation, expressed his sympathy by crowing like a cock, and
afterwards running over his various phrases of speech with such rapidity, and
in so many varieties of hoarseness, that they sounded like the murmurs of a
crowd of people.
"He takes such
care of me besides!" said Barnaby. "Such care, mother! He watches all
the time I sleep, and when I shut my eyes and make-believe to slumber, he
practises new learning softly; but he keeps his eye on me the while, and if
he sees me laugh,
though never so little, stops directly. He won’t surprise me till he’s perfect."
The raven crowed again
in a rapturous manner which plainly said, "Those are certainly some of my
characteristics, and I glory in them." In the meantime, Barnaby closed the
window and secured it, and coming to the fireplace, prepared to sit down with
his face to the closet. But his mother prevented this, by hastily taking that
side herself, and motioning him towards the other.
"How pale you are
to-night!" said Barnaby, leaning on his stick. "We have been cruel,
Grip, and made her anxious!"
Anxious in good truth,
and sick at heart! The listener held the door of his hiding-place open with his
hand, and closely watched her son. Grip--alive to everything his master was
unconscious of-- had his head out of the basket, and in return was watching him
intently with his glistening eye.
"He flaps his
wings," said Barnaby, turning almost quickly enough to catch the
retreating form and closing door, "as if there were strangers here, but
Grip is wiser than to fancy that. Jump then!"
Accepting this
invitation with a dignity peculiar to himself, the bird hopped up on his master’s
shoulder, from that to his extended hand, and so to the ground. Barnaby
unstrapping the basket and putting it down in a corner with the lid open, Grip’s
first care was to shut it down with all possible despatch, and then to stand
upon it. Believing, no doubt, that he had now rendered it utterly impossible,
and beyond the power of mortal man, to shut him up in it any more, he drew a
great many corks in triumph, and uttered a corresponding number of hurrahs.
"Mother!"
said Barnaby, laying aside his hat and stick, and returning to the chair from
which he had risen, "I’ll tell you where we have been to-day, and what we
have been doing,--shall I?"
She took his hand in
hers, and holding it, nodded the word she could not speak.
"You mustn’t
tell," said Barnaby, holding up his finger, "for it’s a secret, mind,
and only known to me, and Grip, and Hugh. We had the dog with us, but he’s not
like Grip, clever as he is, and doesn’t guess it yet, I’ll wager.--Why do you
look behind me so?"
"Did I?" she
answered faintly. "I didn’t know I did. Come nearer me."
"You are
frightened!" said Barnaby, changing colour. "Mother--you don’t
see"--
"See what?"
"There’s--there’s
none of this about, is there?" he answered in a whisper, drawing closer to
her and clasping the mark upon his wrist. "I am afraid there is,
somewhere. You make my hair stand on end, and my flesh creep. Why do you look
like that? Is it in the room as I have seen it in my dreams, dashing the ceiling
and the walls with red? Tell me. Is it?"
He fell into a
shivering fit as he put the question, and shutting out the light with his
hands, sat shaking in every limb until it had passed away. After a time, he
raised his head and looked about him.
"Is it gone?"
"There has been
nothing here," rejoined his mother, soothing him. "Nothing indeed,
dear Barnaby. Look! You see there are but you and me."
He gazed at her
vacantly, and, becoming reassured by degrees, burst into a wild laugh.
"But let us
see," he said, thoughtfully. "Were we talking? Was it you and me?
Where have we been?"
"Nowhere but
here."
"Aye, but Hugh,
and I," said Barnaby,--"that’s it. Maypole Hugh, and I, you know, and
Grip--we have been lying in the forest, and among the trees by the road side,
with a dark lantern after night came on, and the dog in a noose ready to slip
him when the man came by."
"What man?"
"The robber; him
that the stars winked at. We have waited for him after dark these many nights,
and we shall have him. I’d know him in a thousand. Mother, see here! This is
the man. Look!"
He twisted his
handkerchief round his head, pulled his hat upon his brow, wrapped his coat
about him, and stood up before her: so like the original he counterfeited, that
the dark figure peering out behind him might have passed for his own shadow.
"Ha ha ha! We
shall have him," he cried, ridding himself of the semblance as hastily as
he had assumed it. "You shall see him, mother, bound hand and foot, and
brought to London at a saddle- girth; and you shall hear of him at Tyburn Tree
if we have luck. So Hugh says. You’re pale again, and trembling. And why do you
look behind me so?"
"It is
nothing," she answered. "I am not quite well. Go you to bed, dear,
and leave me here."
"To bed!" he
answered. "I don’t like bed. I like to lie before the fire, watching the
prospects in the burning coals--the rivers, hills, and dells, in the deep, red
sunset, and the wild faces. I am hungry too, and Grip has eaten nothing since
broad noon. Let us to supper. Grip! To supper, lad!"
The raven flapped his
wings, and, croaking his satisfaction, hopped to the feet of his master, and
there held his bill open, ready for snapping up such lumps of meat as he should
throw him. Of these he received about a score in rapid succession, without the
smallest discomposure.
"That’s all,"
said Barnaby.
"More!" cried
Grip. "More!"
But it appearing for a
certainty that no more was to be had, he retreated with his store; and
disgorging the morsels one by one from his pouch, hid them in various
corners--taking particular care, however, to avoid the closet, as being
doubtful of the hidden man’s propensities and power of resisting temptation.
When he had concluded these arrangements, he took a turn or two across the room
with an elaborate assumption of having nothing on his mind (but with one eye
hard upon his treasure all the time), and then, and not till then, began to
drag it out, piece by piece, and eat it with the utmost relish.
Barnaby, for his part,
having pressed his mother to eat in vain, made a hearty supper too. Once during
the progress of his meal, he wanted more bread from the closet and rose to get
it. She hurriedly interposed to prevent him, and summoning her utmost
fortitude, passed into the recess, and brought it out herself.
"Mother,"
said Barnaby, looking at her steadfastly as she sat down beside him after doing
so; "is to-day my birthday?"
"To-day!" she
answered. "Don’t you recollect it was but a week or so ago, and that
summer, autumn, and winter have to pass before it comes again?"
"I remember that
it has been so till now," said Barnaby. "But I think to-day must be
my birthday too, for all that."
She asked him why?
"I’ll tell you why," he said. "I have always seen you--I didn’t
let you know it, but I have--on the evening of that day grow very sad. I have
seen you cry when Grip and I were most glad; and look frightened with no
reason; and I have touched your hand, and felt that it was cold--as it is now.
Once, mother (on a birthday that was, also), Grip and I thought of this after
we went upstairs to bed, and when it was midnight, striking one o’clock, we
came down to your door to see if you were well. You were on your knees. I
forget what it was you said. Grip, what was it we heard her say that
night?"
"I’m a devil!"
rejoined the raven promptly.
"No, no,"
said Barnaby. "But you said something in a prayer; and when you rose and
walked about, you looked (as you have done ever since, mother, towards night on
my birthday) just as you do now. I have found that out, you see, though I am
silly. So I say you’re wrong; and this must be my birthday--my birthday,
Grip!"
The bird received this
information with a crow of such duration as a cock, gifted with intelligence
beyond all others of his kind, might usher in the longest day with. Then, as if
he had well considered the sentiment, and regarded it as apposite to birthdays,
he cried, "Never say die!" a great many times, and flapped his wings
for emphasis.
The widow tried to make
light of Barnaby’s remark, and endeavoured to divert his attention to some new
subject; too easy a task at all times, as she knew. His supper done, Barnaby,
regardless of her entreaties, stretched himself on the mat before the fire;
Grip perched upon his leg, and divided his time between dozing in the grateful
warmth, and endeavouring (as it presently appeared) to recall a new
accomplishment he had been studying all day.
A long and profound
silence ensued, broken only by some change of position on the part of Barnaby,
whose eyes were still wide open and intently fixed upon the fire; or by an
effort of recollection on the part of Grip, who would cry in a low voice from
time to time, "Polly put the ket--" and there stop short, forgetting
the remainder, and go off in a doze again.
After a long interval, Barnaby’s
breathing grew more deep and regular, and his eyes were closed. But even then
the unquiet spirit of the raven interposed. "Polly put the ket--"
cried Grip, and his master was broad awake again.
At length Barnaby slept
soundly, and the bird with his bill sunk upon his breast, his breast itself
puffed out into a comfortable alderman-like form, and his bright eye growing
smaller and smaller, really seemed to be subsiding into a state of repose. Now
and then he muttered in a sepulchral voice, "Polly put the ket--" but
very drowsily, and more like a drunken man than a reflecting raven.
The widow, scarcely
venturing to breathe, rose from her seat. The man glided from the closet, and
extinguished the candle.
"--tle on,"
cried Grip, suddenly struck with an idea and very much excited. "--tle on.
Hurrah! Polly put the ket-tle on, we’ll all have tea; Polly put the ket-tle on,
we’ll all have tea. Hurrah, hurrah, hurrah! I’m a devil, I’m a devil, I’m a
ket-tle on, Keep up your spirits, Never say die, Bow, wow, wow, I’m a devil, I’m
a ket-tle, I’m a--Polly put the ket-tle on, we’ll all have tea."
They stood rooted to
the ground, as though it had been a voice from the grave.
But even this failed to
awaken the sleeper. He turned over towards the fire, his arm fell to the
ground, and his head drooped heavily upon it. The widow and her unwelcome
visitor gazed at him and at each other for a moment, and then she motioned him
towards the door.
"Stay," he
whispered. "You teach your son well."
"I have taught him
nothing that you heard to-night. Depart instantly, or I will rouse him."
"You are free to
do so. Shall I rouse him?"
"You dare not do
that."
"I dare do
anything, I have told you. He knows me well, it seems. At least I will know
him."
"Would you kill
him in his sleep?" cried the widow, throwing herself between them.
"Woman," he
returned between his teeth, as he motioned her aside, "I would see him
nearer, and I will. If you want one of us to kill the other, wake him."
With that he advanced,
and bending down over the prostrate form, softly turned back the head and
looked into the face. The light of the fire was upon it, and its every
lineament was revealed distinctly. He contemplated it for a brief space, and
hastily uprose.
"Observe," he
whispered in the widow’s ear: "In him, of whose existence I was ignorant
until to-night, I have you in my power. Be careful how you use me. Be careful
how you use me. I am destitute and starving, and a wanderer upon the earth. I
may take a sure and slow revenge."
"There is some
dreadful meaning in your words. I do not fathom it."
"There is a
meaning in them, and I see you fathom it to its very depth. You have
anticipated it for years; you have told me as much. I leave you to digest it.
Do not forget my warning."
He pointed, as he left
her, to the slumbering form, and stealthily withdrawing, made his way into the
street. She fell on her knees beside the sleeper, and remained like one
stricken into stone, until the tears which fear had frozen so long, came
tenderly to her relief.
"Oh Thou,"
she cried, "who hast taught me such deep love for this one remnant of the
promise of a happy life, out of whose affliction, even, perhaps the comfort
springs that he is ever a relying, loving child to me--never growing old or cold
at heart, but needing my care and duty in his manly strength as in his
cradle-time--help him, in his darkened walk through this sad world, or he is
doomed, and my poor heart is broken!"
GLIDING along the
silent streets, and holding his course where they were darkest and most gloomy,
the man who had left the widow’s house crossed London Bridge, and arriving in
the City, plunged into the backways, lanes, and courts, between Cornhill and
Smithfield; with no more fixedness of purpose than to lose himself among their
windings, and baffle pursuit, if any one were dogging his steps.
It was the dead time of
the night, and all was quiet. Now and then a drowsy watchman’s footsteps
sounded on the pavement, or the lamplighter on his rounds went flashing past,
leaving behind a little track of smoke mingled with glowing morsels of his hot
red link. He hid himself even from these partakers of his lonely walk, and,
shrinking in some arch or doorway while they passed, issued forth again when
they were gone and so pursued his solitary way.
To be shelterless and
alone in the open country, hearing the wind moan and watching for day through
the whole long weary night; to listen to the falling rain, and crouch for
warmth beneath the lee of some old barn or rick, or in the hollow of a tree;
are dismal things--but not so dismal as the wandering up and down where shelter
is, and beds and sleepers are by thousands; a houseless rejected creature. To
pace the echoing stones from hour to hour, counting the dull chimes of the clocks;
to watch the lights twinkling in chamber windows, to think what happy
forgetfulness each house shuts in; that here are children coiled together in
their beds, here youth, here age, here poverty, here wealth, all equal in their
sleep, and all at rest; to have nothing in common with the slumbering world
around, not even sleep, Heaven’s gift to all its creatures, and be akin to
nothing but despair; to feel, by the wretched contrast with everything on every
hand, more utterly alone and cast away than in a trackless desert; this is a
kind of suffering, on which the rivers of great cities close full many a time,
and which the solitude in crowds alone awakens.
The miserable man paced
up and down the streets--so long, so wearisome, so like each other--and often
cast a wistful look towards the east, hoping to see the first faint streaks of
day. But obdurate night had yet possession of the sky, and his disturbed and
restless walk found no relief.
One house in a back
street was bright with the cheerful glare of lights; there was the sound of
music in it too, and the tread of dancers, and there were cheerful voices, and
many a burst of laughter. To this place--to be near something that was awake
and glad--he returned again and again; and more than one of those who left it
when the merriment was at its height, felt it a check upon their mirthful mood
to see him flitting to and fro like an uneasy ghost. At last the guests
departed, one and all; and then the house was close shut up, and became as dull
and silent as the rest.
His wanderings brought
him at one time to the city jail. Instead of hastening from it as a place of
ill omen, and one he had cause to shun, he sat down on some steps hard by, and
resting his chin upon his hand, gazed upon its rough and frowning walls as
though even they became a refuge in his jaded eyes. He paced it round and
round, came back to the same spot, and sat down again. He did this often, and
once, with a hasty movement, crossed to where some men were watching in the
prison lodge, and had his foot upon the steps as though determined to accost
them. But looking round, he saw that the day began to break, and failing in his
purpose, turned and fled.
He was soon in the
quarter he had lately traversed, and pacing to and fro again as he had done
before. He was passing down a mean street, when from an alley close at hand
some shouts of revelry arose, and there came straggling forth a dozen madcaps,
whooping and calling to each other, who, parting noisily, took different ways
and dispersed in smaller groups.
Hoping that some low
place of entertainment which would afford him a safe refuge might be near at
hand, he turned into this court when they were all gone, and looked about for a
half-opened door, or lighted window, or other indication of the place whence
they had come. It was so profoundly dark, however, and so ill-favoured, that he
concluded they had but turned up there, missing their way, and were pouring out
again when he observed them. With this impression, and finding there was no
outlet but that by which he had entered, he was about to turn, when from a
grating near his feet a sudden stream of light appeared, and the sound of
talking came. He retreated into a doorway to see who these talkers were, and to
listen to them.
The light came to the
level of the pavement as he did this, and a man ascended, bearing in his hand a
torch. This figure unlocked and held open the grating as for the passage of
another, who presently appeared, in the form of a young man of small stature
and uncommon self-importance, dressed in an obsolete and very gaudy fashion.
"Good night, noble
captain," said he with the torch. "Farewell, commander. Good luck,
illustrious general!"
In return to these
compliments the other bade him hold his tongue, and keep his noise to himself,
and laid upon him many similar injunctions, with great fluency of speech and
sternness of manner.
"Commend me,
captain, to the stricken Miggs," returned the torch- bearer in a lower
voice. "My captain flies at higher game than Miggses. Ha, ha, ha! My
captain is an eagle, both as respects his eye and soaring wings. My captain
breaketh hearts as other bachelors break eggs at breakfast."
"What a fool you
are, Stagg!" said Mr. Tappertit, stepping on the pavement of the court,
and brushing from his legs the dust he had contracted in his passage upward.
"His precious
limbs!" cried Stagg, clasping one of his ankles. "Shall a Miggs
aspire to these proportions! No, no, my captain. We will inveigle ladies fair,
and wed them in our secret cavern. We will unite ourselves with blooming
beauties, captain."
"I’ll tell you
what, my buck," said Mr. Tappertit, releasing his leg; "I’ll trouble
you not to take liberties, and not to broach certain questions unless certain
questions are broached to you. Speak when you’re spoke to on particular
subjects, and not otherways. Hold the torch up till I’ve got to the end of the
court, and then kennel yourself, do you hear?"
"I hear you, noble
captain."
"Obey then,"
said Mr. Tappertit haughtily. "Gentlemen, lead on!" With which word
of command (addressed to an imaginary staff or retinue) he folded his arms, and
walked with surpassing dignity down the court.
His obsequious follower
stood holding the torch above his head, and then the observer saw for the first
time, from his place of concealment, that he was blind. Some involuntary motion
on his part caught the quick ear of the blind man, before he was conscious of
having moved an inch towards him, for he turned suddenly and cried, "Who’s
there?"
"A man," said
the other, advancing. "A friend."
"A stranger!"
rejoined the blind man. "Strangers are not my friends. What do you do
there?"
"I saw your
company come out, and waited here till they were gone. I want a lodging."
"A lodging at this
time!" returned Stagg, pointing towards the dawn as though he saw it.
"Do you know the day is breaking?"
"I know it,"
rejoined the other, "to my cost. I have been traversing this iron-hearted
town all night."
"You had better
traverse it again," said the blind man, preparing to descend, "till
you find some lodgings suitable to your taste. I don’t let any."
"Stay!" cried
the other, holding him by the arm.
"I’ll beat this
light about that hangdog face of yours (for hangdog it is, if it answers to
your voice), and rouse the neighbourhood besides, if you detain me," said
the blind man. "Let me go. Do you hear?"
"Do you
hear!" returned the other, chinking a few shillings together, and
hurriedly pressing them into his hand. "I beg nothing of you. I will pay
for the shelter you give me. Death! Is it much to ask of such as you! I have
come from the country, and desire to rest where there are none to question me.
I am faint, exhausted, worn out, almost dead. Let me lie down, like a dog,
before your fire. I ask no more than that. If you would be rid of me, I will
depart to-morrow."
"If a gentleman
has been unfortunate on the road," muttered Stagg, yielding to the other,
who, pressing on him, had already gained a footing on the steps--"and can
pay for his accommodation--"
"I will pay you
with all I have. I am just now past the want of food, God knows, and wish but
to purchase shelter. What companion have you below?"
"None."
"Then fasten your
grate there, and show me the way. Quick!"
The blind man complied
after a moment’s hesitation, and they descended together. The dialogue had
passed as hurriedly as the words could be spoken, and they stood in his
wretched room before he had had time to recover from his first surprise.
"May I see where
that door leads to, and what is beyond?" said the man, glancing keenly
round. "You will not mind that?"
"I will show you
myself. Follow me, or go before. Take your choice."
He bade him lead the
way, and, by the light of the torch which his conductor held up for the
purpose, inspected all three cellars narrowly. Assured that the blind man had
spoken truth, and that he lived there alone, the visitor returned with him to
the first, in which a fire was burning, and flung himself with a deep groan
upon the ground before it.
His host pursued his
usual occupation without seeming to heed him any further. But directly he fell
asleep--and he noted his falling into a slumber, as readily as the
keenest-sighted man could have done--he knelt down beside him, and passed his
hand lightly but carefully over his face and person.
His sleep was checkered
with starts and moans, and sometimes with a muttered word or two. His hands
were clenched, his brow bent, and his mouth firmly set. All this, the blind man
accurately marked; and as if his curiosity were strongly awakened, and he had
already some inkling of his mystery, he sat watching him, if the expression may
be used, and listening, until it was broad day.
DOLLY VARDEN’S pretty
little head was yet bewildered by various recollections of the party, and her
bright eyes were yet dazzled by a crowd of images, dancing before them like
motes in the sunbeams, among which the effigy of one partner in particular did
especially figure, the same being a young coachmaker (a master in his own
right) who had given her to understand, when he handed her into the chair at
parting, that it was his fixed resolve to neglect his business from that time,
and die slowly for the love of her-- Dolly’s head, and eyes, and thoughts, and
seven senses, were all in a state of flutter and confusion for which the party
was accountable, although it was now three days old, when, as she was sitting
listlessly at breakfast, reading all manner of fortunes (that is to say, of
married and flourishing fortunes) in the grounds of her teacup, a step was
heard in the workshop, and Mr. Edward Chester was descried through the glass
door, standing among the rusty locks and keys, like love among the roses--for
which apt comparison the historian may by no means take any credit to himself,
the same being the invention, in a sentimental mood, of the chaste and modest
Miggs, who, beholding him from the doorsteps she was then cleaning, did, in her
maiden meditation, give utterance to the simile.
The locksmith, who
happened at the moment to have his eyes thrown upward and his head backward, in
an intense communing with Toby, did not see his visitor, until Mrs. Varden,
more watchful than the rest, had desired Sim Tappertit to open the glass door
and give him admission--from which untoward circumstance the good lady argued (for
she could deduce a precious moral from the most trifling event) that to take a
draught of small ale in the morning was to observe a pernicious, irreligious,
and Pagan custom, the relish whereof should be left to swine, and Satan, or at
least to Popish persons, and should be shunned by the righteous as a work of
sin and evil. She would no doubt have pursued her admonition much further, and
would have founded on it a long list of precious precepts of inestimable value,
but that the young gentleman standing by in a somewhat uncomfortable and
discomfited manner while she read her spouse this lecture, occasioned her to
bring it to a premature conclusion.
"I’m sure you’ll
excuse me, sir," said Mrs. Varden, rising and curtseying. "Varden is
so very thoughtless, and needs so much reminding--Sim, bring a chair
here."
Mr. Tappertit obeyed,
with a flourish implying that he did so, under protest.
"And you can go,
Sim," said the locksmith.
Mr. Tappertit obeyed
again, still under protest; and betaking himself to the workshop, began
seriously to fear that he might find it necessary to poison his master, before
his time was out.
In the meantime, Edward
returned suitable replies to Mrs. Varden’s courtesies, and that lady brightened
up very much; so that when he accepted a dish of tea from the fair hands of
Dolly, she was perfectly agreeable.
"I am sure if
there’s anything we can do,--Varden, or I, or Dolly either,--to serve you, sir,
at any time, you have only to say it, and it shall be done," said Mrs. V.
"I am much obliged
to you, I am sure," returned Edward. "You encourage me to say that I
have come here now, to beg your good offices."
Mrs. Varden was
delighted beyond measure.
"It occurred to me
that probably your fair daughter might be going to the Warren, either to-day or
to-morrow," said Edward, glancing at Dolly; "and if so, and you will
allow her to take charge of this letter, ma’am, you will oblige me more than I
can tell you. The truth is, that while I am very anxious it should reach its
destination, I have particular reasons for not trusting it to any other
conveyance; so that without your help, I am wholly at a loss."
"She was not going
that way, sir, either to-day, or to-morrow, nor indeed all next week," the
lady graciously rejoined, "but we shall be very glad to put ourselves out
of the way on your account, and if you wish it, you may depend upon its going
to-day. You might suppose," said Mrs. Varden, frowning at her husband,
"from Varden’s sitting there so glum and silent, that he objected to this
arrangement; but you must not mind that, sir, if you please. It’s his way at
home. Out of doors, he can be cheerful and talkative enough."
Now, the fact was, that
the unfortunate locksmith, blessing his stars to find his helpmate in such good
humour, had been sitting with a beaming face, hearing this discourse with a joy
past all expression. Wherefore this sudden attack quite took him by surprise.
"My dear
Martha--" he said.
"Oh yes, I dare
say," interrupted Mrs. Varden, with a smile of mingled scorn and pleasantry.
"Very dear! We all know that."
"No, but my good
soul," said Gabriel, "you are quite mistaken. You are indeed. I was
delighted to find you so kind and ready. I waited, my dear, anxiously, I assure
you, to hear what you would say."
"You waited anxiously,"
repeated Mrs. V. "Yes! Thank you, Varden. You waited, as you always do,
that I might bear the blame, if any came of it. But I am used to it," said
the lady with a kind of solemn titter, "and that’s my comfort!"
"I give you my
word, Martha--" said Gabriel.
"Let me give you
my word, my dear," interposed his wife with a Christian smile, "that
such discussions as these between married people, are much better left alone.
Therefore, if you please, Varden, we’ll drop the subject. I have no wish to
pursue it. I could. I might say a great deal. But I would rather not. Pray don’t
say any more."
"I don’t want to
say any more," rejoined the goaded locksmith.
"Well then, don’t,"
said Mrs. Varden.
"Nor did I begin
it, Martha," added the locksmith, good-humouredly, "I must say
that."
"You did not begin
it, Varden!" exclaimed his wife, opening her eyes very wide and looking
round upon the company, as though she would say, You hear this man! "You
did not begin it, Varden! But you shall not say I was out of temper. No, you
did not begin it, oh dear no, not you, my dear!"
"Well, well,"
said the locksmith. "That’s settled then."
"Oh yes,"
rejoined his wife, "quite. If you like to say Dolly began it, my dear, I
shall not contradict you. I know my duty. I need know it, I am sure. I am often
obliged to bear it in mind, when my inclination perhaps would be for the moment
to forget it. Thank you, Varden." And so, with a mighty show of humility
and forgiveness, she folded her hands, and looked round again, with a smile which
plainly said, "If you desire to see the first and foremost among female
martyrs, here she is, on view!"
This little incident,
illustrative though it was of Mrs. Varden’s extraordinary sweetness and
amiability, had so strong a tendency to check the conversation and to
disconcert all parties but that excellent lady, that only a few monosyllables
were uttered until Edward withdrew; which he presently did, thanking the lady
of the house a great many times for her condescension, and whispering in Dolly’s
ear that he would call on the morrow, in case there should happen to be an
answer to the note--which, indeed, she knew without his telling, as Barnaby and
his friend Grip had dropped in on the previous night to prepare her for the
visit which was then terminating.
Gabriel, who had
attended Edward to the door, came back with his hands in his pockets; and,
after fidgeting about the room in a very uneasy manner, and casting a great
many sidelong looks at Mrs. Varden (who with the calmest countenance in the world
was five fathoms deep in the Protestant Manual), inquired of Dolly how she
meant to go. Dolly supposed by the stage-coach, and looked at her lady mother,
who finding herself silently appealed to, dived down at least another fathom
into the Manual, and became unconscious of all earthly things.
"Martha--"
said the locksmith.
"I hear you,
Varden," said his wife, without rising to the surface.
"I am sorry, my
dear, you have such an objection to the Maypole and old John, for otherways as
it’s a very fine morning, and Saturday’s not a busy day with us, we might have
all three gone to Chigwell in the chaise, and had quite a happy day of
it."
Mrs. Varden immediately
closed the Manual, and bursting into tears, requested to be led upstairs.
"What is the
matter now, Martha?" inquired the locksmith.
To which Martha
rejoined, "Oh! don’t speak to me," and protested in agony that if
anybody had told her so, she wouldn’t have believed it.
"But,
Martha," said Gabriel, putting himself in the way as she was moving off
with the aid of Dolly’s shoulder, "wouldn’t have believed what? Tell me
what’s wrong now. Do tell me. Upon my soul I don’t know. Do you know, child?
Damme!" cried the locksmith, plucking at his wig in a kind of frenzy,
"nobody does know, I verily believe, but Miggs!"
"Miggs," said
Mrs. Varden faintly, and with symptoms of approaching incoherence, "is
attached to me, and that is sufficient to draw down hatred upon her in this
house. She is a comfort to me, whatever she may be to others."
"She’s no comfort
to me," cried Gabriel, made bold by despair. "She’s the misery of my
life. She’s all the plagues of Egypt in one."
"She’s considered
so, I have no doubt," said Mrs. Varden. "I was prepared for that; it’s
natural; it’s of a piece with the rest. When you taunt me as you do to my face,
how can I wonder that you taunt her behind her back!" And here the
incoherence coming on very strong, Mrs. Varden wept, and laughed, and sobbed,
and shivered, and hiccoughed, and choked; and said she knew it was very foolish
but she couldn’t help it; and that when she was dead and gone, perhaps they
would be sorry for it--which really under the circumstances did not appear
quite so probable as she seemed to think--with a great deal more to the same
effect. In a word, she passed with great decency through all the ceremonies
incidental to such occasions; and being supported upstairs, was deposited in a
highly spasmodic state on her own bed, where Miss Miggs shortly afterwards
flung herself upon the body.
The philosophy of all
this was, that Mrs. Varden wanted to go to Chigwell; that she did not want to
make any concession or explanation; that she would only go on being implored
and entreated so to do; and that she would accept no other terms. Accordingly,
after a vast amount of moaning and crying upstairs, and much damping of
foreheads, and vinegaring of temples, and hartshorning of noses, and so forth;
and after most pathetic adjurations from Miggs, assisted by warm
brandy-and-water not over-weak, and divers other cordials, also of a
stimulating quality, administered at first in teaspoonfuls and afterwards in
increasing doses, and of which Miss Miggs herself partook as a preventive
measure (for fainting is infectious); after all these remedies, and many more
too numerous to mention, but not to take, had been applied; and many verbal
consolations, moral, religious, and miscellaneous, had been super-added
thereto; the locksmith humbled himself, and the end was gained.
"If it’s only for
the sake of peace and quietness, father," said Dolly, urging him to go
upstairs.
"Oh, Doll,
Doll," said her good-natured father. "If you ever have a husband of
your own--"
Dolly glanced at the
glass.
"--Well, when you
have," said the locksmith, "never faint, my darling. More domestic
unhappiness has come of easy fainting, Doll, than from all the greater passions
put together. Remember that, my dear, if you would be really happy, which you
never can be, if your husband isn’t. And a word in your ear, my precious. Never
have a Miggs about you!"
With this advice he
kissed his blooming daughter on the cheek, and slowly repaired to Mrs. Varden’s
room; where that lady, lying all pale and languid on her couch, was refreshing
herself with a sight of her last new bonnet, which Miggs, as a means of calming
her scattered spirits, displayed to the best advantage at her bedside.
"Here’s master,
mim," said Miggs. "Oh, what a happiness it is when man and wife come
round again! Oh gracious, to think that him and her should ever have a word
together!" In the energy of these sentiments, which were uttered as an
apostrophe to the Heavens in general, Miss Miggs perched the bonnet on the top
of her own head, and folding her hands, turned on her tears.
"I can’t help
it," cried Miggs. "I couldn’t, if I was to be drownded in ’em. She
has such a forgiving spirit! She’ll forget all that has passed, and go along
with you, sir--Oh, if it was to the world’s end, she’d go along with you."
Mrs. Varden with a
faint smile gently reproved her attendant for this enthusiasm, and reminded her
at the same time that she was far too unwell to venture out that day.
"Oh no, you’re
not, mim, indeed you’re not," said Miggs; "I repeal to master; master
knows you’re not, mim. The hair, and motion of the shay, will do you good, mim,
and you must not give way, you must not raly. She must keep up, mustn’t she,
sir, for all out sakes? I was a telling her that, just now. She must remember
us, even if she forgets herself. Master will persuade you, mim, I’m sure. There’s
Miss Dolly’s a-going you know, and master, and you, and all so happy and so
comfortable. Oh!" cried Miggs, turning on the tears again, previous to
quitting the room in great emotion, "I never see such a blessed one as she
is for the forgiveness of her spirit, I never, never, never did. Not more did
master neither; no, nor no one--never!"
For five minutes or
thereabouts, Mrs. Varden remained mildly opposed to all her husband’s prayers
that she would oblige him by taking a day’s pleasure, but relenting at length,
she suffered herself to be persuaded, and granting him her free forgiveness
(the merit whereof, she meekly said, rested with the Manual and not with her),
desired that Miggs might come and help her dress. The handmaid attended
promptly, and it is but justice to their joint exertions to record that, when
the good lady came downstairs in course of time, completely decked out for the
journey, she really looked as if nothing had happened, and appeared in the very
best health imaginable.
As to Dolly, there she
was again, the very pink and pattern of good looks, in a smart little
cherry-coloured mantle, with a hood of the same drawn over her head, and upon
the top of that hood, a little straw hat trimmed with cherry-coloured ribbons,
and worn the merest trifle on one side--just enough in short to make it the
wickedest and most provoking head-dress that ever malicious milliner devised.
And not to speak of the manner in which these cherry-coloured decorations
brightened her eyes, or vied with her lips, or shed a new bloom on her face,
she wore such a cruel little muff, and such a heart-rending pair of shoes, and
was so surrounded and hemmed in, as it were, by aggravations of all kinds, that
when Mr. Tappettit, holding the horse’s head, saw her come out of the house
alone, such impulses came over him to decoy her into the chaise and drive off
like mad, that he would unquestionably have done it, but for certain uneasy
doubts besetting him as to the shortest way to Gretna Green; whether it was up
the street or down, or up the right-hand turning or the left; and whether,
supposing all the turnpikes to be carried by storm, the blacksmith in the end
would marry them on credit; which by reason of his clerical office appeared,
even to his excited imagination, so unlikely, that he hesitated. And while he stood
hesitating, and looking post-chaises-and-six at Dolly, out came his master and
his mistress, and the constant Miggs, and the opportunity was gone for ever.
For now the chaise creaked upon its springs, and Mrs. Varden was inside; and
now it creaked again, and more than ever, and the locksmith was inside; and now
it bounded once, as if its heart beat lightly, and Dolly was inside; and now it
was gone and its place was empty, and he and that dreary Miggs were standing in
the street together.
The hearty locksmith
was in as good a humour as if nothing had occurred for the last twelve months
to put him out of his way, Dolly was all smiles and graces, and Mrs. Varden was
agreeable beyond all precedent. As they jogged through the streets talking of
this thing and of that, who should be descried upon the pavement but that very
coachmaker, looking so genteel that nobody would have believed he had ever had
anything to do with a coach but riding in it, and bowing like any nobleman. To
be sure Dolly was confused when she bowed again, and to be sure the
cherry-coloured ribbons trembled a little when she met his mournful eye, which
seemed to say, "I have kept my word, I have begun, the business is going
to the devil, and you’re the cause of it." There he stood, rooted to the
ground: as Dolly said, like a statue; and as Mrs. Varden said, like a pump;
till they turned the corner: and when her father thought it was like his
impudence, and her mother wondered what he meant by it, Dolly blushed again
till her very hood was pale.
But on they went, not
the less merrily for this, and there was the locksmith in the incautious
fulness of his heart "pulling-up" at all manner of places, and
evincing a most intimate acquaintance with all the taverns on the road, and all
the landlords and all the landladies, with whom, indeed, the little horse was
on equally friendly terms, for he kept on stopping of his own accord. Never
were people so glad to see other people as these landlords and landladies were
to behold Mr. Varden and Mrs. Varden and Miss Varden; and wouldn’t they get
out, said one; and they really must walk upstairs, said another; and she would
take it ill and be quite certain they were proud if they wouldn’t have a little
taste of something, said a third; and so on, that it was really quite a
Progress rather than a ride, and one continued scene of hospitality from
beginning to end. It was pleasant enough to be held in such esteem, not to
mention the refreshments; so Mrs. Varden said nothing at the time, and was all
affability and delight--but such a body of evidence as she collected against
the unfortunate locksmith that day, to be used thereafter as occasion might
require, never was got together for matrimonial purposes.
In course of time--and
in course of a pretty long time too, for these agreeable interruptions delayed
them not a little,--they arrived upon the skirts of the Forest, and riding
pleasantly on among the trees, came at last to the Maypole, where the locksmith’s
cheerful "Yoho!" speedily brought to the porch old John, and after
him young Joe, both of whom were so transfixed at sight of the ladies, that for
a moment they were perfectly unable to give them any welcome, and could do
nothing but stare.
It was only for a
moment, however, that Joe forgot himself, for speedily reviving he thrust his
drowsy father aside--to Mr. Willet’s mighty and inexpressible indignation--and
darting out, stood ready to help them to alight. It was necessary for Dolly to
get out first. Joe had her in his arms;--yes, though for a space of time no
longer than you could count one in, Joe had her in his arms. Here was a glimpse
of happiness!
It would be difficult
to describe what a flat and commonplace affair the helping Mrs. Varden out
afterwards was, but Joe did it, and did it too with the best grace in the
world. Then old John, who, entertaining a dull and foggy sort of idea that Mrs.
Varden wasn’t fond of him, had been in some doubt whether she might not have
come for purposes of assault and battery, took courage, hoped she was well, and
offered to conduct her into the house. This tender being amicably received,
they marched in together; Joe and Dolly followed, arm-in-arm, (happiness
again!) and Varden brought up the rear.
Old John would have it
that they must sit in the bar, and nobody objecting, into the bar they went.
All bars are snug places, but the Maypole’s was the very snuggest, cosiest, and
completest bar, that ever the wit of man devised. Such amazing bottles in old
oaken pigeon-holes; such gleaming tankards dangling from pegs at about the same
inclination as thirsty men would hold them to their lips; such sturdy little
Dutch kegs ranged in rows on shelves; so many lemons hanging in separate nets,
and forming the fragrant grove already mentioned in this chronicle, suggestive,
with goodly loaves of snowy sugar stowed away hard by, of punch, idealised
beyond all mortal knowledge; such closets, such presses, such drawers full of
pipes, such places for putting things away in hollow window-seats, all crammed
to the throat with eatables, drinkables, or savoury condiments; lastly, and to
crown all, as typical of the immense resources of the establishment, and its
defiances to all visitors to cut and come again, such a stupendous cheese!
It is a poor heart that
never rejoices--it must have been the poorest, weakest, and most watery heart
that ever beat, which would not have warmed towards the Maypole bar. Mrs.
Varden’s did directly. She could no more have reproached John Willet among
those household gods, the kegs and bottles, lemons, pipes, and cheese, than she
could have stabbed him with his own bright carving-knife. The order for dinner
too--it might have soothed a savage. "A bit of fish," said John to
the cook, "and some lamb chops (breaded, with plenty of ketchup), and a good
salad, and a roast spring chicken, with a dish of sausages and mashed potatoes,
or something of that sort." Something of that sort! The resources of these
inns! To talk carelessly about dishes, which in themselves were a first-rate
holiday kind of dinner, suitable to one’s wedding-day, as something of that
sort: meaning, if you can’t get a spring chicken, any other trifle in the way
of poultry will do--such as a peacock, perhaps! The kitchen too, with its great
broad cavernous chimney; the kitchen, where nothing in the way of cookery
seemed impossible; where you could believe in anything to eat, they chose to
tell you of. Mrs. Varden returned from the contemplation of these wonders to
the bar again, with a head quite dizzy and bewildered. Her housekeeping
capacity was not large enough to comprehend them. She was obliged to go to
sleep. Waking was pain, in the midst of such immensity.
Dolly in the meanwhile,
whose gay heart and head ran upon other matters, passed out at the garden door,
and glancing back now and then (but of course not wondering whether Joe saw
her), tripped away by a path across the fields with which she was well
acquainted, to discharge her mission at the Warren; and this deponent hath been
informed and verily believes, that you might have seen many less pleasant
objects than the cherry-coloured mantle and ribbons, as they went fluttering
along the green meadows in the bright light of the day, like giddy things as
they were.
THE proud consciousness
of her trust, and the great importance she derived from it, might have
advertised it to all the house if she had had to run the gauntlet of its
inhabitants; but as Dolly had played in every dull room and passage many and
many a time, when a child, and had ever since been the humble friend of Miss Haredale,
whose foster-sister she was, she was as free of the building as the young lady
herself. So, using no greater precaution than holding her breath and walking on
tiptoe as she passed the library door, she went straight to Emma’s room as a
privileged visitor.
It was the liveliest
room in the building. The chamber was sombre like the rest for the matter of
that, but the presence of youth and beauty would make a prison cheerful (saving
alas! that confinement withers them), and lend some charms of their own to the
gloomiest scene. Birds, flowers, books, drawing, music, and a hundred such
graceful tokens of feminine loves and cares, filled it with more of life and
human sympathy than the whole house besides seemed made to hold. There was
heart in the room; and who that has a heart, ever fails to recognise the silent
presence of another!
Dolly had one
undoubtedly, and it was not a tough one either, though there was a little mist
of coquettishness about it, such as sometimes surrounds that sun of life in its
morning, and slightly dims its lustre. Thus, when Emma rose to greet her, and
kissing her affectionately on the cheek, told her, in her quiet way, that she
had been very unhappy, the tears stood in Dolly’s eyes, and she felt more sorry
than she could tell;
but next moment she
happened to raise them to the glass, and really there was something there so
exceedingly agreeable, that as she sighed, she smiled, and felt surprisingly
consoled.
"I have heard
about it, miss," said Dolly, "and it’s very sad indeed, but when
things are at the worst they are sure to mend."
"But are you sure
they are at the worst?" asked Emma with a smile.
"Why, I don’t see
how they can very well be more unpromising than they are; I really don’t,"
said Dolly. "And I bring something to begin with."
"Not from
Edward?"
Dolly nodded and
smiled, and feeling in her pockets (there were pockets in those days) with an
affectation of not being able to find what she wanted, which greatly enhanced
her importance, at length produced the letter. As Emma hastily broke the seal
and became absorbed in its contents, Dolly’s eyes, by one of those strange
accidents for which there is no accounting, wandered to the glass again. She
could not help wondering whether the coach-maker suffered very much, and quite
pitied the poor man.
It was a long letter--a
very long letter, written close on all four sides of the sheet of paper, and
crossed afterwards; but it was not a consolatory letter, for as Emma read it
she stopped from time to time to put her handkerchief to her eyes. To be sure
Dolly marvelled greatly to see her in so much distress, for to her thinking a
love affair ought to be one of the best jokes, and the slyest, merriest kind of
thing in life. But she set it down in her own mind that all this came from Miss
Haredale’s being so constant, and that if she would only take on with some
other young gentleman-- just in the most innocent way possible, to keep her
first lover up to the mark--she would find herself inexpressibly comforted.
"I am sure that’s
what I should do if it was me," thought Dolly. "To make one’s
sweetheart miserable is well enough and quite right, but to be made miserable
one’s self is a little too much!"
However it wouldn’t do
to say so, and therefore she sat looking on in silence. She needed a pretty
considerable stretch of patience, for when the long letter had been read once
all through it was read again, and when it had been read twice all through it
was read again. During this tedious process, Dolly beguiled the time in the most
improving manner that occurred to her, by curling her hair on her fingers, with
the aid of the looking-glass before mentioned, and giving it some killing
twists.
Everything has an end.
Even young ladies in love cannot read their letters for ever. In course of time
the packet was folded up, and it only remained to write the answer.
But as this promised to
be a work of time likewise, Emma said she would put it off until after dinner,
and that Dolly must dine with her. As Dolly had made up her mind to do so
beforehand, she required very little pressing; and when they had settled this
point, they went to walk in the garden.
They strolled up and
down the terrace walks, talking incessantly-- at least, Dolly never left off
once--and making that quarter of the sad and mournful house quite gay. Not that
they talked loudly or laughed much, but they were both so very handsome, and it
was such a breezy day, and their light dresses and dark curls appeared so free
and joyous in their abandonment, and Emma was so fair, and Dolly so rosy, and
Emma so delicately shaped, and Dolly so plump, and--in short, there are no
flowers for any garden like such flowers, let horticulturists say what they
may, and both house and garden seemed to know it, and to brighten up sensibly.
After this, came the
dinner and the letter writing, and some more talking, in the course of which
Miss Haredale took occasion to charge upon Dolly certain flirtish and
inconstant propensities, which accusations Dolly seemed to think very
complimentary indeed, and to be mightily amused with. Finding her quite
incorrigible in this respect, Emma suffered her to depart; but not before she
had confided to her that important and never-sufficiently-to-be-taken- care-of
answer, and endowed her moreover with a pretty little bracelet as a keepsake.
Having clasped it on her arm, and again advised her half in jest and half in
earnest to amend her roguish ways, for she knew she was fond of Joe at heart
(which Dolly stoutly denied, with a great many haughty protestations that she
hoped she could do better than that indeed! and so forth), she bade her
farewell; and after calling her back to give her more supplementary messages
for Edward, than anybody with tenfold the gravity of Dolly Varden could be
reasonably expected to remember, at length dismissed her.
Dolly bade her good
bye, and tripping lightly down the stairs arrived at the dreaded library door,
and was about to pass it again on tiptoe, when it opened, and behold! there
stood Mr. Haredale. Now, Dolly had from her childhood associated with this
gentleman the idea of something grim and ghostly, and being at the moment
conscience-stricken besides, the sight of him threw her into such a flurry that
she could neither acknowledge his presence nor run away, so she gave a great
start, and then with downcast eyes stood still and trembled.
"Come here,
girl," said Mr. Haredale, taking her by the hand. "I want to speak to
you."
"If you please,
sir, I’m in a hurry," faltered Dolly, "and--you have frightened me by
coming so suddenly upon me, sir--I would rather go, sir, if you’ll be so good
as to let me."
"Immediately,"
said Mr. Haredale, who had by this time led her into the room and closed the
door. "You shall go directly. You have just left Emma?"
"Yes, sir, just
this minute.--Father’s waiting for me, sir, if you’ll please to have the
goodness--"
"I know. I
know," said Mr. Haredale. "Answer me a question. What did you bring
here to-day?"
"Bring here,
sir?" faltered Dolly.
"You will tell me
the truth, I am sure. Yes."
Dolly hesitated for a
little while, and somewhat emboldened by his manner, said at last, "Well
then, sir. It was a letter."
"From Mr. Edward
Chester, of course. And you are the bearer of the answer?"
Dolly hesitated again,
and not being able to decide upon any other course of action, burst into tears.
"You alarm
yourself without cause," said Mr. Haredale. "Why are you so foolish?
Surely you can answer me. You know that I have but to put the question to Emma
and learn the truth directly. Have you the answer with you?"
Dolly had what is
popularly called a spirit of her own, and being now fairly at bay, made the
best of it.
"Yes, sir,"
she rejoined, trembling and frightened as she was. "Yes, sir, I have. You
may kill me if you please, sir, but I won’t give it up. I’m very sorry,--but I
won’t. There, sir."
"I commend your
firmness and your plain-speaking," said Mr. Haredale. "Rest assured
that I have as little desire to take your letter as your life. You are a very
discreet messenger and a good girl."
Not feeling quite
certain, as she afterwards said, whether he might not be "coming over
her" with these compliments, Dolly kept as far from him as she could,
cried again, and resolved to defend her pocket (for the letter was there) to
the last extremity.
"I have some
design," said Mr. Haredale after a short silence, during which a smile, as
he regarded her, had struggled through the gloom and melancholy that was
natural to his face, "of providing a companion for my niece; for her life
is a very lonely one. Would you like the office? You are the oldest friend she
has, and the best entitled to it."
"I don’t know,
sir," answered Dolly, not sure but he was bantering her; "I can’t
say. I don’t know what they might wish at home. I couldn’t give an opinion,
sir."
"If your friends
had no objection, would you have any?" said Mr. Haredale. "Come.
There’s a plain question; and easy to answer."
"None at all that
I know of sir," replied Dolly. "I should be very glad to be near Miss
Emma of course, and always am."
"That’s well,"
said Mr. Haredale. "That is all I had to say. You are anxious to go. Don’t
let me detain you."
Dolly didn’t let him,
nor did she wait for him to try, for the words had no sooner passed his lips
than she was out of the room, out of the house, and in the fields again.
The first thing to be
done, of course, when she came to herself and considered what a flurry she had
been in, was to cry afresh; and the next thing, when she reflected how well she
had got over it, was to laugh heartily. The tears once banished gave place to
the smiles, and at last Dolly laughed so much that she was fain to lean against
a tree, and give vent to her exultation. When she could laugh no longer, and
was quite tired, she put her head-dress to rights, dried her eyes, looked back
very merrily and triumphantly at the Warren chimneys, which were just visible,
and resumed her walk.
The twilight had come
on, and it was quickly growing dusk, but the path was so familiar to her from
frequent traversing that she hardly thought of this, and certainly felt no
uneasiness at being left alone. Moreover, there was the bracelet to admire; and
when she had given it a good rub, and held it out at arm’s length, it sparkled
and glittered so beautifully on her wrist, that to look at it in every point of
view and with every possible turn of the arm, was quite an absorbing business.
There was the letter too, and it looked so mysterious and knowing, when she
took it out of her pocket, and it held, as she knew, so much inside, that to
turn it over and over, and think about it, and wonder how it began, and how it
ended, and what it said all through, was another matter of constant occupation.
Between the bracelet and the letter, there was quite enough to do without
thinking of anything else; and admiring each by turns, Dolly went on gaily.
As she passed through a
wicket-gate to where the path was narrow, and lay between two hedges garnished
here and there with trees, she heard a rustling close at hand, which brought
her to a sudden stop. She listened. All was very quiet, and she went on
again--not absolutely frightened, but a little quicker than before perhaps, and
possibly not quite so much at her ease, for a check of that kind is startling.
She had no sooner moved
on again, than she was conscious of the same sound, which was like that of a
person tramping stealthily among bushes and brushwood. Looking towards the spot
whence it appeared to come, she almost fancied she could make out a crouching
figure. She stopped again. All was quiet as before. On she went once
more--decidedly faster now--and tried to sing softly to herself. It must he the
wind.
But how came the wind
to blow only when she walked, and cease when she stood still? She stopped
involuntarily as she made the reflection, and the rustling noise stopped
likewise. She was really frightened now, and was yet hesitating what to do,
when the bushes crackled and snapped, and a man came plunging through them,
close before her.
IT was for the moment
an inexpressible relief to Dolly to recognise in the person who forced himself
into the path so abruptly, and now stood directly in her way, Hugh of the
Maypole, whose name she uttered in a tone of delighted surprise that came from
her heart.
"Was it you?"
she said, "How glad I am to see you! and how could you terrify me
so?"
In answer to which, he
said nothing at all, but stood quite still, looking at her.
"Did you come to
meet me?" asked Dolly.
Hugh nodded, and
muttered something to the effect that he had been waiting for her, and had
expected her sooner.
"I thought it
likely they would send," said Dolly, greatly reassured by this.
"Nobody sent
me," was his sullen answer. "I came of my own accord."
The rough bearing of
this fellow, and his wild, uncouth appearance, had often filled the girl with a
vague apprehension even when other people were by, and had occasioned her to
shrink from him involuntarily. The having him for an unbidden companion in so
solitary a place, with the darkness fast gathering about them, renewed and even
increased the alarm she had felt at first.
If his manner had been
merely dogged and passively fierce, as usual, she would have had no greater
dislike to his company than she always felt--perhaps, indeed, would have been
rather glad to have had him at hand. But there was something of
coarse bold admiration
in his look, which terrified her very much. She glanced timidly towards him,
uncertain whether to go forward or retreat, and he stood gazing at her like a
handsome satyr; and so they remained for some short time without stirring or
breaking silence. At length Dolly took courage, shot past him, and hurried on.
"Why do you spend
so much breath in avoiding me?" said Hugh, accommodating his pace to hers,
and keeping close at her side.
"I wish to get
back as quickly as I can, and you walk too near me, answered Dolly."
"Too near!"
said Hugh, stooping over her so that she could feel his breath upon her
forehead. "Why too near? You’re always proud to me, mistress."
"I am proud to no
one. You mistake me," answered Dolly. "Fall back, if you please, or
go on."
"Nay,
mistress," he rejoined, endeavouring to draw her arm through his, "I’ll
walk with you."
She released herself
and clenching her little hand, struck him with right good will. At this,
Maypole Hugh burst into a roar of laughter, and passing his arm about her
waist, held her in his strong grasp as easily as if she had been a bird.
"Ha ha ha! Well
done, mistress! Strike again. You shall beat my face, and tear my hair, and
pluck my beard up by the roots, and welcome, for the sake of your bright eyes.
Strike again, mistress. Do. Ha ha ha! I like it."
"Let me go,"
she cried, endeavouring with both her hands to push him off. "Let me go
this moment."
"You had as good
be kinder to me, Sweetlips," said Hugh. "You had, indeed. Come. Tell
me now. Why are you always so proud? I don’t quarrel with you for it. I love
you when you’re proud. Ha ha ha! You can’t hide your beauty from a poor fellow;
that’s a comfort!"
She gave him no answer,
but as he had not yet checked her progress, continued to press forward as
rapidly as she could. At length, between the hurry she had made, her terror,
and the tightness of his embrace, her strength failed her, and she could go no
further.
"Hugh," cried
the panting girl, "good Hugh; if you will leave me I will give you
anything--everything I have--and never tell one word of this to any living
creature."
"You had best
not," he answered. "Harkye, little dove, you had best not. All about
here know me, and what I dare do if I have a mind. If ever you are going to
tell, stop when the words are on your lips, and think of the mischief you’ll
bring, if you do, upon some innocent heads that you wouldn’t wish to hurt a
hair of. Bring trouble on me, and I’ll bring trouble and something more on them
in return. I care no more for them than for so many dogs; not so much--why
should I? I’d sooner kill a man than a dog any day. I’ve never been sorry for a
man’s death in all my life, and I have for a dog’s."
There was something so
thoroughly savage in the manner of these expressions, and the looks and
gestures by which they were accompanied, that her great fear of him gave her
new strength, and enabled her by a sudden effort to extricate herself and run
fleetly from him. But Hugh was as nimble, strong, and swift of foot, as any man
in broad England, and it was but a fruitless expenditure of energy, for he had
her in his encircling arms again before she had gone a hundred yards.
"Softly,
darling--gently--would you fly from rough Hugh, that loves you as well as any
drawing-room gallant?"
"I would,"
she answered, struggling to free herself again. "I will. Help!"
"A fine for crying
out," said Hugh. "Ha ha ha! A fine, pretty one, from your lips. I pay
myself! Ha ha ha!"
"Help! help!
help!" As she shrieked with the utmost violence she could exert, a shout
was heard in answer, and another, and another.
"Thank
Heaven!" cried the girl in an ecstasy. "Joe, dear Joe, this way.
Help!"
Her assailant paused,
and stood irresolute for a moment, but the shouts drawing nearer and coming
quick upon them, forced him to a speedy decision. He released her, whispered
with a menacing look, "Tell him: and see what follows!" and leaping
the hedge, was gone in an instant. Dolly darted off, and fairly ran into Joe
Willet’s open arms.
"What is the
matter? are you hurt? what was it? who was it? where is he? what was he
like?" with a great many encouraging expressions and assurances of safety,
were the first words Joe poured forth. But poor little Dolly was so breathless
and terrified that for some time she was quite unable to answer him, and hung
upon his shoulder, sobbing and crying as if her heart would break.
Joe had not the
smallest objection to have her hanging on his shoulder; no, not the least,
though it crushed the cherry-coloured ribbons sadly, and put the smart little
hat out of all shape. But he couldn’t bear to see her cry; it went to his very
heart. He tried to console her, bent over her, whispered to her--some say
kissed her, but that’s a fable. At any rate he said all the kind and tender
things he could think of and Dolly let him go on and didn’t interrupt him once,
and it was a good ten minutes before she was able to raise her head and thank
him.
"What was it that
frightened you?" said Joe.
A man whose person was
unknown to her had followed her, she answered; he began by begging, and went on
to threats of robbery, which he was on the point of carrying into execution,
and would have executed, but for Joe’s timely aid. The hesitation and confusion
with which she said this, Joe attributed to the fright she had sustained, and
no suspicion of the truth occurred to him for a moment.
"Stop when the
words are on your lips." A hundred times that night, and very often
afterwards, when the disclosure was rising to her tongue, Dolly thought of
that, and repressed it. A deeply rooted dread of the man; the conviction that
his ferocious nature, once roused, would stop at nothing; and the strong
assurance that if she impeached him, the full measure of his wrath and
vengeance would be wreaked on Joe, who had preserved her; these were
considerations she had not the courage to overcome, and inducements to secrecy
too powerful for her to surmount.
Joe, for his part, was
a great deal too happy to inquire very curiously into the matter; and Dolly
being yet too tremulous to walk without assistance, they went forward very
slowly, and in his mind very pleasantly, until the Maypole lights were near at
hand, twinkling their cheerful welcome, when Dolly stopped suddenly and with a
half scream exclaimed,
"The letter!"
"What
letter?" cried Joe.
"That I was
carrying--I had it in my hand. My bracelet too," she said, clasping her
wrist. "I have lost them both."
"Do you mean just
now?" said Joe.
"Either I dropped
them then, or they were taken from me," answered Dolly, vainly searching
her pocket and rustling her dress. "They are gone, both gone. What an
unhappy girl I am!" With these words poor Dolly, who to do her justice was
quite as sorry for the loss of the letter as for her bracelet, fell a-crying again,
and bemoaned her fate most movingly.
Joe tried to comfort
her with the assurance that directly he had housed her in the Maypole, he would
return to the spot with a lantern (for it was now quite dark) and make strict
search for the missing articles, which there was great probability of his
finding, as it was not likely that anybody had passed that way since, and she
was not conscious that they had been forcibly taken from her. Dolly thanked him
very heartily for this offer, though with no great hope of his quest being
successful; and so with many lamentations on her side, and many hopeful words
on his, and much weakness on the part of Dolly and much tender supporting on
the part of Joe, they reached the Maypole bar at last, where the locksmith and
his wife and old John were yet keeping high festival.
Mr. Willet received the
intelligence of Dolly’s trouble with that surprising presence of mind and
readiness of speech for which he was so eminently distinguished above all other
men. Mrs. Varden expressed her sympathy for her daughter’s distress by scolding
her roundly for being so late; and the honest locksmith divided himself between
condoling with and kissing Dolly, and shaking hands heartily with Joe, whom he
could not sufficiently praise or thank.
In reference to this
latter point, old John was far from agreeing with his friend; for besides that
he by no means approved of an adventurous spirit in the abstract, it occurred
to him that if his son and heir had been seriously damaged in a scuffle, the
consequences would assuredly have been expensive and inconvenient, and might
perhaps have proved detrimental to the Maypole business. Wherefore, and because
he looked with no favourable eye upon young girls, but rather considered that
they and the whole female sex were a kind of nonsensical mistake on the part of
Nature, he took occasion to retire and shake his head in private at the boiler;
inspired by which silent oracle, he was moved to give Joe various stealthy
nudges with his elbow, as a parental reproof and gentle admonition to mind his
own business and not make a fool of himself.
Joe, however, took down
the lantern and lighted it; and arming himself with a stout stick, asked
whether Hugh was in the stable.
"He’s lying asleep
before the kitchen fire, sir," said Mr. Willet. "What do you want him
for?"
"I want him to
come with me to look after this bracelet and letter," answered Joe.
"Halloa there! Hugh!"
Dolly turned pale as
death, and felt as if she must faint forthwith. After a few moments, Hugh came
staggering in, stretching himself and yawning according to custom, and
presenting every appearance of having been roused from a sound nap.
"Here,
sleepy-head," said Joe, giving him the lantern. "Carry this, and
bring the dog, and that small cudgel of yours. And woe betide the fellow if we
come upon him."
"What
fellow?" growled Hugh, rubbing his eyes and shaking himself.
"What
fellow?" returned Joe, who was in a state of great valour and bustle;
"a fellow you ought to know of and be more alive about. It’s well for the
like of you, lazy giant that you are, to be snoring your time away in
chimney-corners, when honest men’s daughters can’t cross even our quiet meadows
at nightfall without being set upon by footpads, and frightened out of their
precious lives."
"They never rob
me," cried Hugh with a laugh. "I have got nothing to lose. But I’d as
lief knock them at head as any other men. How many are there?"
"Only one,"
said Dolly faintly, for everybody looked at her.
"And what was he
like, mistress?" said Hugh with a glance at young Willet, so slight and
momentary that the scowl it conveyed was lost on all but her. "About my
height?"
"Not--not so
tall," Dolly replied, scarce knowing what she said.
"His dress,"
said Hugh, looking at her keenly, "like--like any of ours now? I know all
the people hereabouts, and maybe could give a guess at the man, if I had
anything to guide me."
Dolly faltered and
turned paler yet; then answered that he was wrapped in a loose coat and had his
face hidden by a handkerchief and that she could give no other description of
him.
"You wouldn’t know
him if you saw him then, belike?" said Hugh with a malicious grin.
"I should
not," answered Dolly, bursting into tears again. "I don’t wish to see
him. I can’t bear to think of him. I can’t talk about him any more. Don’t go to
look for these things, Mr. Joe, pray don’t. I entreat you not to go with that
man."
"Not to go with
me!" cried Hugh. "I’m too rough for them all. They’re all afraid of
me. Why, bless you mistress, I’ve the tenderest heart alive. I love all the
ladies, ma’am," said Hugh, turning to the locksmith’s wife.
Mrs. Varden opined that
if he did, he ought to be ashamed of himself; such sentiments being more
consistent (so she argued) with a benighted Mussulman or wild Islander than
with a stanch Protestant. Arguing from this imperfect state of his morals, Mrs.
Varden further opined that he had never studied the Manual. Hugh admitting that
he never had, and moreover that he couldn’t read, Mrs. Varden declared with
much severity, that he ought to he even more ashamed of himself than before,
and strongly recommended him to save up his pocket-money for the purchase of
one, and further to teach himself the contents with all convenient diligence.
She was still pursuing this train of discourse, when Hugh, somewhat
unceremoniously and irreverently, followed his young master out, and left her
to edify the rest of the company. This she proceeded to do, and finding that
Mr. Willet’s eyes were fixed upon her with an appearance of deep attention,
gradually addressed the whole of her discourse to him, whom she entertained
with a moral and theological lecture of considerable length, in the conviction
that great workings were taking place in his spirit. The simple truth was,
however, that Mr. Willet, although his eyes were wide open and he saw a woman
before him whose head by long and steady looking at seemed to grow bigger and
bigger until it filled the whole bar, was to all other intents and purposes
fast asleep; and so sat leaning back in his chair with his hands in his pockets
until his son’s return caused him to wake up with a deep sigh, and a faint
impression that he had been dreaming about pickled pork and greens-- a vision
of his slumbers which was no doubt referable to the circumstance of Mrs. Varden’s
having frequently pronounced the word "Grace" with much emphasis;
which word, entering the portals of Mr. Willet’s brain as they stood ajar, and
coupling itself with the words "before meat," which were there
ranging about, did in time suggest a particular kind of meat together with that
description of vegetable which is usually its companion.
The search was wholly
unsuccessful. Joe had groped along the path a dozen times, and among the grass,
and in the dry ditch, and in the hedge, but all in vain. Dolly, who was quite
inconsolable for her loss, wrote a note to Miss Haredale giving her the same
account of it that she had given at the Maypole, which Joe undertook to deliver
as soon as the family were stirring next day. That done, they sat down to tea
in the bar, where there was an uncommon display of buttered toast, and--in
order that they might not grow faint for want of sustenance, and might have a
decent halting- place or halfway house between dinner and supper--a few savoury
trifles in the shape of great rashers of broiled ham, which being well cured,
done to a turn, and smoking hot, sent forth a tempting and delicious fragrance.
Mrs. Varden was seldom
very Protestant at meals, unless it happened that they were underdone, or
overdone, or indeed that anything occurred to put her out of humour. Her
spirits rose considerably on beholding these goodly preparations, and from the
nothingness of good works, she passed to the somethingness of ham and toast
with great cheerfulness. Nay, under the influence of these wholesome
stimulants, she sharply reproved her daughter for being low and despondent
(which she considered an unacceptable frame of mind), and remarked, as she held
her own plate for a fresh supply, that it would be well for Dolly, who pined
over the loss of a toy and a sheet of paper, if she would reflect upon the
voluntary sacrifices of the missionaries in foreign parts who lived chiefly on
salads.
The proceedings of such
a day occasion various fluctuations in the human thermometer, and especially in
instruments so sensitively and delicately constructed as Mrs. Varden. Thus, at
dinner Mrs. V. stood at summer heat; genial, smiling, and delightful. After
dinner, in the sunshine of the wine, she went up at least half-a-dozen degrees,
and was perfectly enchanting. As its effect subsided, she fell rapidly, went to
sleep for an hour or so at temperate, and woke at something below freezing. Now
she was at summer heat again, in the shade; and when tea was over, and old
John, producing a bottle of cordial from one of the oaken cases, insisted on
her sipping two glasses thereof in slow succession, she stood steadily at
ninety for one hour and a quarter. Profiting by experience, the locksmith took
advantage of this genial weather to smoke his pipe in the porch, and in
consequence of this prudent management, he was fully prepared, when the glass
went down again, to start homewards directly.
The horse was
accordingly put in, and the chaise brought round to the door. Joe, who would on
no account be dissuaded from escorting them until they had passed the most
dreary and solitary part of the road, led out the grey mare at the same time;
and having helped Dolly into her seat (more happiness!) sprung gaily into the
saddle. Then, after many good nights, and admonitions to wrap up, and glancing
of lights, and handing in of cloaks and shawls, the chaise rolled away, and Joe
trotted beside it--on Dolly’s side, no doubt, and pretty close to the wheel
too.
IT was a fine bright
night, and for all her lowness of spirits Dolly kept looking up at the stars in
a manner so bewitching (and SHE knew it!) that Joe was clean out of his senses,
and plainly showed that if ever a man were--not to say over head and ears, but
over the Monument and the top of Saint Paul’s in love, that man was himself.
The road was a very good one; not at all a jolting road, or an uneven one; and
yet Dolly held the side of the chaise with one little hand, all the way. If
there had been an executioner behind him with an uplifted axe ready to chop off
his head if he touched that hand, Joe couldn’t have helped doing it. From
putting his own hand upon it as if by chance, and taking it away again after a
minute or so, he got to riding along without taking it off at all; as if he,
the escort, were bound to do that as an important part of his duty, and had
come out for the purpose. The most curious circumstance about this little
incident was, that Dolly didn’t seem to know of it. She looked so innocent and
unconscious when she turned her eyes on Joe, that it was quite provoking.
She talked though;
talked about her fright, and about Joe’s coming up to rescue her, and about her
gratitude, and about her fear that she might not have thanked him enough, and
about their always being friends from that time forth--and about all that sort
of thing. And when Joe said, not friends he hoped, Dolly was quite surprised,
and said not enemies she hoped; and when Joe said, couldn’t they be something
much better than either, Dolly all of a sudden found out a star which was
brighter than all the other stars, and begged to call his attention to the
same, and was ten thousand times more innocent and unconscious than ever.
In this manner they
travelled along, talking very little above a whisper, and wishing the road could
be stretched out to some dozen times its natural length--at least that was Joe’s
desire--when, as they were getting clear of the forest and emerging on the more
frequented road, they heard behind them the sound of a horse’s feet at a round
trot, which growing rapidly louder as it drew nearer, elicited a scream from
Mrs. Varden, and the cry "a friend!" from the rider, who now came
panting up, and checked his horse beside them.
"This man
again!" cried Dolly, shuddering.
"Hugh!" said
Joe. "What errand are you upon?"
"I come to ride
back with you," he answered, glancing covertly at the locksmith’s
daughter. "He sent me."
"My father!"
said poor Joe; adding under his breath, with a very unfilial apostrophe,
"Will he never think me man enough to take care of myself!"
"Aye!"
returned Hugh to the first part of the inquiry. "The roads are not safe
just now, he says, and you’d better have a companion."
"Ride on
then," said Joe. "I’m not going to turn yet."
Hugh complied, and they
went on again. It was his whim or humour to ride immediately before the chaise,
and from this position he constantly turned his head, and looked back. Dolly
felt that he looked at her, but she averted her eyes and feared to raise them
once, so great was the dread with which he had inspired her.
This interruption, and
the consequent wakefulness of Mrs. Varden, who had been nodding in her sleep up
to this point, except for a minute or two at a time, when she roused herself to
scold the locksmith for audaciously taking hold of her to prevent her nodding
herself out of the chaise, put a restraint upon the whispered conversation, and
made it difficult of resumption. Indeed, before they had gone another mile,
Gabriel stopped at his wife’s desire, and that good lady protested she would
not hear of Joe’s going a step further on any account whatever. It was in vain
for Joe to protest on the other hand that he was by no means tired, and would
turn back presently, and would see them safely past such a point, and so forth.
Mrs. Varden was obdurate, and being so was not to be overcome by mortal agency.
"Good night--if I
must say it," said Joe, sorrowfully.
"Good night,"
said Dolly. She would have added, "Take care of that man, and pray don’t
trust him," but he had turned his horse’s head, and was standing close to
them. She had therefore nothing for it but to suffer Joe to give her hand a
gentle squeeze, and when the chaise had gone on for some distance, to look back
and wave it, as he still lingered on the spot where they had parted, with the tall
dark figure of Hugh beside him.
What she thought about,
going home; and whether the coach-maker held as favourable a place in her
meditations as he had occupied in the morning, is unknown. They reached home at
last--at last, for it was a long way, made none the shorter by Mrs. Varden’s
grumbling. Miggs hearing the sound of wheels was at the door immediately.
"Here they are,
Simmun! Here they are!" cried Miggs, clapping her hands, and issuing forth
to help her mistress to alight. "Bring a chair, Simmun. Now, an’t you the
better for it, mim? Don’t you feel more yourself than you would have done if
you’d have stopped at home? Oh, gracious! how cold you are! Goodness me, sir,
she’s a perfect heap of ice."
"I can’t help it,
my good girl. You had better take her in to the fire," said the locksmith.
"Master sounds
unfeeling, mim," said Miggs, in a tone of commiseration, "but such is
not his intentions, I’m sure. After what he has seen of you this day, I never
will believe but that he has a deal more affection in his heart than to speak
unkind. Come in and sit yourself down by the fire; there’s a good
dear--do."
Mrs. Varden complied.
The locksmith followed with his hands in his pockets, and Mr. Tappertit
trundled off with the chaise to a neighbouring stable.
"Martha, my
dear," said the locksmith, when they reached the parlour, "if you’ll
look to Dolly yourself or let somebody else do it, perhaps it will be only kind
and reasonable. She has been frightened, you know, and is not at all well
to-night."
In fact, Dolly had
thrown herself upon the sofa, quite regardless of all the little finery of
which she had been so proud in the morning, and with her face buried in her
hands was crying very much.
At first sight of this
phenomenon (for Dolly was by no means accustomed to displays of this sort,
rather learning from her mother’s example to avoid them as much as possible)
Mrs. Varden expressed her belief that never was any woman so beset as she; that
her life was a continued scene of trial; that whenever she was disposed to be
well and cheerful, so sure were the people around her to throw, by some means
or other, a damp upon her spirits; and that, as she had enjoyed herself that
day, and Heaven knew it was very seldom she did enjoy herself so she was now to
pay the penalty. To all such propositions Miggs assented freely. Poor Dolly,
however, grew none the better for these restoratives, but rather worse, indeed;
and seeing that she was really ill, both Mrs. Varden and Miggs were moved to
compassion, and tended her in earnest.
But even then, their
very kindness shaped itself into their usual course of policy, and though Dolly
was in a swoon, it was rendered clear to the meanest capacity, that Mrs. Varden
was the sufferer. Thus when Dolly began to get a little better, and passed into
that stage in which matrons hold that remonstrance and argument may be
successfully applied, her mother represented to her, with tears in her eyes,
that if she had been flurried and worried that day, she must remember it was
the common lot of humanity, and in especial of womankind, who through the whole
of their existence must expect no less, and were bound to make up their minds
to meek endurance and patient resignation. Mrs. Varden entreated her to
remember that one of these days she would, in all probability, have to do
violence to her feelings so far as to be married; and that marriage, as she
might see every day of her life (and truly she did) was a state requiring great
fortitude and forbearance. She represented to her in lively colours, that if
she (Mrs. V.) had not, in steering her course through this vale of tears, been
supported by a strong principle of duty which alone upheld and prevented her
from drooping, she must have been in her grave many years ago; in which case
she desired to know what would have become of that errant spirit (meaning the
locksmith), of whose eye she was the very apple, and in whose path she was, as
it were, a shining light and guiding star?
Miss Miggs also put in
her word to the same effect. She said that indeed and indeed Miss Dolly might
take pattern by her blessed mother, who, she always had said, and always would
say, though she were to be hanged, drawn, and quartered for it next minute, was
the mildest, amiablest, forgivingest-spirited, longest-sufferingest female as
ever she could have believed; the mere narration of whose excellencies had
worked such a wholesome change in the mind of her own sister-in-law, that,
whereas, before, she and her husband lived like cat and dog, and were in the
habit of exchanging brass candlesticks, pot-lids, flat-irons, and other such
strong resentments, they were now the happiest and affectionatest couple upon
earth; as could be proved any day on application at Golden Lion Court, number
twenty-sivin, second bell-handle on the right- hand doorpost. After glancing at
herself as a comparatively worthless vessel, but still as one of some desert,
she besought her to bear in mind that her aforesaid dear and only mother was of
a weakly constitution and excitable temperament, who had constantly to sustain
afflictions in domestic life, compared with which thieves and robbers were as
nothing, and yet never sunk down or gave way to despair or wrath, but, in
prize-fighting phraseology, always came up to time with a cheerful countenance,
and went in to win as if nothing had happened. When Miggs finished her solo,
her mistress struck in again, and the two together performed a duet to the same
purpose; the burden being, that Mrs. Varden was persecuted perfection, and Mr.
Varden, as the representative of mankind in that apartment, a creature of
vicious and brutal habits, utterly insensible to the blessings he enjoyed. Of
so refined a character, indeed, was their talent of assault under the mask of
sympathy, that when Dolly, recovering, embraced her father tenderly, as in
vindication of his goodness, Mrs. Varden expressed her solemn hope that this
would be a lesson to him for the remainder of his life, and that he would do
some little justice to a woman’s nature ever afterwards--in which aspiration Miss
Miggs, by divers sniffs and coughs, more significant than the longest oration,
expressed her entire concurrence.
But the great joy of
Miggs’s heart was, that she not only picked up a full account of what had
happened, but had the exquisite delight of conveying it to Mr. Tappertit for
his jealousy and torture. For that gentleman, on account of Dolly’s
indisposition, had been requested to take his supper in the workshop, and it
was conveyed thither by Miss Miggs’s own fair hands.
"Oh Simmun!"
said the young lady, "such goings on to-day! Oh, gracious me,
Simmun!"
Mr. Tappertit, who was
not in the best of humours, and who disliked Miss Miggs more when she laid her
hand on her heart and panted for breath than at any other time, as her
deficiency of outline was most apparent under such circumstances, eyed her over
in his loftiest style, and deigned to express no curiosity whatever.
"I never heard the
like, nor nobody else," pursued Miggs. "The idea of interfering with
her. What people can see in her to make it worth their while to do so, that’s
the joke--he he he!"
Finding there was a
lady in the case, Mr. Tappertit haughtily requested his fair friend to be more
explicit, and demanded to know what she meant by "her."
"Why, that
Dolly," said Miggs, with an extremely sharp emphasis on the name.
"But, oh upon my word and honour, young Joseph Willet is a brave one; and
he do deserve her, that he do."
"Woman!" said
Mr. Tappertit, jumping off the counter on which he was seated;
"beware!"
"My stars,
Simmun!" cried Miggs, in affected astonishment. "You frighten me to
death! What’s the matter?"
"There are
strings," said Mr. Tappertit, flourishing his bread-and- cheese knife in
the air, "in the human heart that had better not be wibrated. That’s what’s
the matter."
"Oh, very well--if
you’re in a huff," cried Miggs, turning away.
"Huff or no
huff," said Mr. Tappertit, detaining her by the wrist. "What do you
mean, Jezebel? What were you going to say? Answer me!"
Notwithstanding this
uncivil exhortation, Miggs gladly did as she was required; and told him how
that their young mistress, being alone in the meadows after dark, had been
attacked by three or four tall men, who would have certainly borne her away and
perhaps murdered her, but for the timely arrival of Joseph Willet, who with his
own single hand put them all to flight, and rescued her; to the lasting
admiration of his fellow-creatures generally, and to the eternal love and
gratitude of Dolly Varden.
"Very good,"
said Mr. Tappertit, fetching a long breath when the tale was told, and rubbing
his hair up till it stood stiff and straight on end all over his head.
"His days are numbered."
"Oh, Simmun!"
"I tell you,"
said the ’prentice, "his days are numbered. Leave me. Get along with
you."
Miggs departed at his
bidding, but less because of his bidding than because she desired to chuckle in
secret. When she had given vent to her satisfaction, she returned to the
parlour; where the locksmith, stimulated by quietness and Toby, had become
talkative, and was disposed to take a cheerful review of the occurrences of the
day. But Mrs. Varden, whose practical religion (as is not uncommon) was usually
of the retrospective order, cut him short by declaiming on the sinfulness of
such junketings, and holding that it was high time to go to bed. To bed
therefore she withdrew, with an aspect as grim and gloomy as that of the
Maypole’s own state couch; and to bed the rest of the establishment soon
afterwards repaired.
TWILIGHT had given
place to night some hours, and it was high noon in those quarters of the town
in which "the world" condescended to dwell--the world being then, as
now, of very limited dimensions and easily lodged--when Mr. Chester reclined
upon a sofa in his dressing-room in the Temple, entertaining himself with a
book.
He was dressing, as it
seemed, by easy stages, and having performed half the journey was taking a long
rest. Completely attired as to his legs and feet in the trimmest fashion of the
day, he had yet the remainder of his toilet to perform. The coat was stretched,
like a refined scarecrow, on its separate horse; the waistcoat was displayed to
the best advantage; the various ornamental articles of dress were severally set
out in most alluring order; and yet he lay dangling his legs between the sofa
and the ground, as intent upon his book as if there were nothing but bed before
him.
"Upon my
honour," he said, at length raising his eyes to the ceiling with the air
of a man who was reflecting seriously on what he had read; "upon my honour,
the most masterly composition, the most delicate thoughts, the finest code of
morality, and the most gentlemanly sentiments in the universe! Ah Ned, Ned, if
you would but form your mind by such precepts, we should have but one common
feeling on every subject that could possibly arise between us!"
This apostrophe was
addressed, like the rest of his remarks, to empty air: for Edward was not
present, and the father was quite alone.
"My Lord
Chesterfield," he said, pressing his hand tenderly upon the book as he
laid it down, "if I could but have profited by your genius soon enough to
have formed my son on the model you have left to all wise fathers, both he and
I would have been rich men. Shakespeare was undoubtedly very fine in his way;
Milton good, though prosy; Lord Bacon deep, and decidedly knowing; but the
writer who should be his country’s pride, is my Lord Chesterfield."
He became thoughtful
again, and the toothpick was in requisition.
"I thought I was
tolerably accomplished as a man of the world," he continued, "I
flattered myself that I was pretty well versed in all those little arts and
graces which distinguish men of the world from boors and peasants, and separate
their character from those intensely vulgar sentiments which are called the
national character. Apart from any natural prepossession in my own favour, I
believed I was. Still, in every page of this enlightened writer, I find some
captivating hypocrisy which has never occurred to me before, or some
superlative piece of selfishness to which I was utterly a stranger. I should
quite blush for myself before this stupendous creature, if remembering his
precepts, one might blush at anything. An amazing man! a nobleman indeed! any
King or Queen may make a Lord, but only the Devil himself--and the Graces--can
make a Chesterfield."
Men who are thoroughly
false and hollow, seldom try to hide those vices from themselves; and yet in
the very act of avowing them, they lay claim to the virtues they feign most to
despise. "For," say they, "this is honesty, this is truth. All
mankind are like us, but they have not the candour to avow it." The more
they affect to deny the existence of any sincerity in the world, the more they
would be thought to possess it in its boldest shape; and this is an unconscious
compliment to Truth on the part of these philosophers, which will turn the
laugh against them to the Day of Judgment.
Mr. Chester, having
extolled his favourite author, as above recited, took up the book again in the
excess of his admiration and was composing himself for a further perusal of its
sublime morality, when he was disturbed by a noise at the outer door;
occasioned as it seemed by the endeavours of his servant to obstruct the
entrance of some unwelcome visitor.
"A late hour for
an importunate creditor," he said, raising his eyebrows with as indolent
an expression of wonder as if the noise were in the street, and one with which
he had not the smallest possible concern. "Much after their accustomed
time. The usual pretence I suppose. No doubt a heavy payment to make up
tomorrow. Poor fellow, he loses time, and time is money as the good proverb
says--I never found it out though. Well. What now? You know I am not at
home."
"A man, sir,"
replied the servant, who was to the full as cool and negligent in his way as
his master, "has brought home the riding- whip you lost the other day. I
told him you were out, but he said he was to wait while I brought it in, and
wouldn’t go till I did."
"He was quite
right," returned his master, "and you’re a blockhead, possessing no
judgment or discretion whatever. Tell him to come in, and see that he rubs his
shoes for exactly five minutes first."
The man laid the whip
on a chair, and withdrew. The master, who had only heard his foot upon the
ground and had not taken the trouble to turn round and look at him, shut his
book, and pursued the train of ideas his entrance had disturbed.
"If time were
money," he said, handling his snuff-box, "I would compound with my
creditors, and give them--let me see--how much a day? There’s my nap after
dinner--an hour--they’re extremely welcome to that, and to make the most of it.
In the morning, between my breakfast and the paper, I could spare them another
hour; in the evening before dinner say another. Three hours a day. They might
pay themselves in calls, with interest, in twelve months. I think I shall
propose it to them. Ah, my centaur, are you there?"
"Here I am,"
replied Hugh, striding in, followed by a dog, as rough and sullen as himself;
"and trouble enough I’ve had to get here. What do you ask me to come for,
and keep me out when I do come?"
"My good
fellow," returned the other, raising his head a little from the cushion
and carelessly surveying him from top to toe, "I am delighted to see you,
and to have, in your being here, the very best proof that you are not kept out.
How are you?"
"I’m well
enough," said Hugh impatiently.
"You look a
perfect marvel of health. Sit down."
"I’d rather
stand," said Hugh.
"Please yourself
my good fellow," returned Mr. Chester rising, slowly pulling off the loose
robe he wore, and sitting down before the dressing-glass. "Please yourself
by all means."
Having said this in the
politest and blandest tone possible, he went on dressing, and took no further
notice of his guest, who stood in the same spot as uncertain what to do next,
eyeing him sulkily from time to time.
"Are you going to
speak to me, master?" he said, after a long silence.
"My worthy
creature," returned Mr. Chester, "you are a little ruffled and out of
humour. I’ll wait till you’re quite yourself again. I am in no hurry."
This behaviour had its
intended effect. It humbled and abashed the man, and made him still more
irresolute and uncertain. Hard words he could have returned, violence he would
have repaid with interest; but this cool, complacent, contemptuous,
self-possessed reception, caused him to feel his inferiority more completely
than the most elaborate arguments. Everything contributed to this effect. His
own rough speech, contrasted with the soft persuasive accents of the other; his
rude bearing, and Mr. Chester’s polished manner; the disorder and negligence of
his ragged dress, and the elegant attire he saw before him; with all the
unaccustomed luxuries and comforts of the room, and the silence that gave him
leisure to observe these things, and feel how ill at ease they made him; all
these influences, which have too often some effect on tutored minds and become
of almost resistless power when brought to bear on such a mind as his, quelled
Hugh completely. He moved by little and little nearer to Mr. Chester’s chair,
and glancing over his shoulder at the reflection of his face in the glass, as
if seeking for some encouragement in its expression, said at length, with a
rough attempt at conciliation,
"Are you going to
speak to me, master, or am I to go away?"
"Speak you,"
said Mr. Chester, "speak you, good fellow. I have spoken, have I not? I am
waiting for you."
"Why, look’ee,
sir," returned Hugh with increased embarrassment, "am I the man that
you privately left your whip with before you rode away from the Maypole, and
told to bring it back whenever he might want to see you on a certain
subject?"
"No doubt the
same, or you have a twin brother," said Mr. Chester, glancing at the
reflection of his anxious face; "which is not probable, I should
say."
"Then I have come,
sir," said Hugh, "and I have brought it back, and something else
along with it. A letter, sir, it is, that I took from the person who had charge
of it." As he spoke, he laid upon the dressing-table, Dolly’s lost
epistle. The very letter that had cost her so much trouble.
"Did you obtain
this by force, my good fellow?" said Mr. Chester, casting his eye upon it
without the least perceptible surprise or pleasure.
"Not quite,"
said Hugh. "Partly."
"Who was the messenger
from whom you took it?"
"A woman. One
Varden’s daughter."
"Oh indeed!"
said Mr. Chester gaily. "What else did you take from her?"
"What else?"
"Yes," said
the other, in a drawling manner, for he was fixing a very small patch of
sticking plaster on a very small pimple near the corner of his mouth.
"What else?"
"Well a
kiss," replied Hugh, after some hesitation.
"And what
else?"
"Nothing."
"I think,"
said Mr. Chester, in the same easy tone, and smiling twice or thrice to try if
the patch adhered--"I think there was something else. I have heard a
trifle of jewellery spoken of--a mere trifle--a thing of such little value,
indeed, that you may have forgotten it. Do you remember anything of the
kind--such as a bracelet now, for instance?"
Hugh with a muttered
oath thrust his hand into his breast, and drawing the bracelet forth, wrapped
in a scrap of hay, was about to lay it on the table likewise, when his patron
stopped his hand and bade him put it up again.
"You took that for
yourself my excellent friend," he said, "and may keep it. I am
neither a thief nor a receiver. Don’t show it to me. You had better hide it
again, and lose no time. Don’t let me see where you put it either," he
added, turning away his head.
"You’re not a
receiver!" said Hugh bluntly, despite the increasing awe in which he held
him. "What do you call that, master?" striking the letter with his
heavy hand.
"I call that quite
another thing," said Mr. Chester coolly. "I shall prove it presently,
as you will see. You are thirsty, I suppose?"
Hugh drew his sleeve
across his lips, and gruffly answered yes.
"Step to that
closet and bring me a bottle you will see there, and a glass."
He obeyed. His patron
followed him with his eyes, and when his back was turned, smiled as he had never
done when he stood beside the mirror. On his return he filled the glass, and
bade him drink. That dram despatched, he poured him out another, and another.
"How many can you
bear?" he said, filling the glass again.
"As many as you
like to give me. Pour on. Fill high. A bumper with a bead in the middle! Give
me enough of this," he added, as he tossed it down his hairy throat,
"and I’ll do murder if you ask me!"
"As I don’t mean
to ask you, and you might possibly do it without being invited if you went on
much further," said Mr. Chester with great composure, "we will stop,
if agreeable to you, my good friend, at the next glass. You were drinking
before you came here."
"I always am when
I can get it," cried Hugh boisterously, waving the empty glass above his
head, and throwing himself into a rude dancing attitude. "I always am. Why
not? Ha ha ha! What’s so good to me as this? What ever has been? What else has
kept away the cold on bitter nights, and driven hunger off in starving times?
What else has given me the strength and courage of a man, when men would have
left me to die, a puny child? I should never have had a man’s heart but for
this. I should have died in a ditch. Where’s he who when I was a weak and
sickly wretch, with trembling legs and fading sight, bade me cheer up, as this
did? I never knew him; not I. I drink to the drink, master. Ha ha ha!"
"You are an
exceedingly cheerful young man," said Mr. Chester, putting on his cravat
with great deliberation, and slightly moving his head from side to side to
settle his chin in its proper place. "Quite a boon companion."
"Do you see this
hand, master," said Hugh, "and this arm?" baring the brawny limb
to the elbow. "It was once mere skin and bone, and would have been dust in
some poor churchyard by this time, but for the drink."
"You may cover
it," said Mr. Chester, "it’s sufficiently real in your sleeve."
"I should never
have been spirited up to take a kiss from the proud little beauty, master, but
for the drink," cried Hugh. "Ha ha ha! It was a good one. As sweet as
honeysuckle, I warrant you. I thank the drink for it. I’ll drink to the drink
again, master. Fill me one more. Come. One more!"
"You are such a
promising fellow," said his patron, putting on his waistcoat with great
nicety, and taking no heed of this request, "that I must caution you
against having too many impulses from the drink, and getting hung before your
time. What’s your age?"
"I don’t
know."
"At any
rate," said Mr. Chester, "you are young enough to escape what I may
call a natural death for some years to come. How can you trust yourself in my
hands on so short an acquaintance, with a halter round your neck? What a
confiding nature yours must be!"
Hugh fell back a pace
or two and surveyed him with a look of mingled terror, indignation, and
surprise. Regarding himself in the glass with the same complacency as before,
and speaking as smoothly as if he were discussing some pleasant chit-chat of
the town, his patron went on:
"Robbery on the
king’s highway, my young friend, is a very dangerous and ticklish occupation.
It is pleasant, I have no doubt, while it lasts; but like many other pleasures
in this transitory world, it seldom lasts long. And really if in the
ingenuousness of youth, you open your heart so readily on the subject, I am
afraid your career will be an extremely short one."
"How’s this?"
said Hugh. "What do you talk of master? Who was it set me on?"
"Who?" said
Mr. Chester, wheeling sharply round, and looking full at him for the first
time. "I didn’t hear you. Who was it?"
Hugh faltered, and
muttered something which was not audible.
"Who was it? I am
curious to know," said Mr. Chester, with surpassing affability. "Some
rustic beauty perhaps? But be cautious, my good friend. They are not always to
be trusted. Do take my advice now, and be careful of yourself." With these
words he turned to the glass again, and went on with his toilet.
Hugh would have
answered him that he, the questioner himself had set him on, but the words
stuck in his throat. The consummate art with which his patron had led him to
this point, and managed the whole conversation, perfectly baffled him. He did
not doubt that if he had made the retort which was on his lips when Mr. Chester
turned round and questioned him so keenly, he would straightway have given him
into custody and had him dragged before a justice with the stolen property upon
him; in which case it was as certain he would have been hung as it was that he
had been born. The ascendency which it was the purpose of the man of the world
to establish over this savage instrument, was gained from that time. Hugh’s
submission was complete. He dreaded him beyond description; and felt that
accident and artifice had spun a web about him, which at a touch from such a
master-hand as his, would bind him to the gallows.
With these thoughts
passing through his mind, and yet wondering at the very same time how he who
came there rioting in the confidence of this man (as he thought), should be so
soon and so thoroughly subdued, Hugh stood cowering before him, regarding him
uneasily from time to time, while he finished dressing. When he had done so, he
took up the letter, broke the seal, and throwing himself back in his chair,
read it leisurely through.
"Very neatly
worded upon my life! Quite a woman’s letter, full of what people call
tenderness, and disinterestedness, and heart, and all that sort of thing!"
As he spoke, he twisted
it up, and glancing lazily round at Hugh as though he would say "You see
this?" held it in the flame of the candle. When it was in a full blaze, he
tossed it into the grate, and there it smouldered away.
"It was directed
to my son," he said, turning to Hugh, "and you did quite right to
bring it here. I opened it on my own responsibility, and you see what I have
done with it. Take this, for your trouble."
Hugh stepped forward to
receive the piece of money he held out to him. As he put it in his hand, he
added:
"If you should
happen to find anything else of this sort, or to pick up any kind of
information you may think I would like to have, bring it here, will you, my
good fellow?"
This was said with a
smile which implied--or Hugh thought it did-- "fail to do so at your
peril!" He answered that he would.
"And don’t,"
said his patron, with an air of the very kindest patronage, "don’t be at
all downcast or uneasy respecting that little rashness we have been speaking
of. Your neck is as safe in my hands, my good fellow, as though a baby’s
fingers clasped it, I assure you.--Take another glass. You are quieter
now."
Hugh accepted it from his
hand, and looking stealthily at his smiling face, drank the contents in
silence.
"Don’t you--ha,
ha!--don’t you drink to the drink any more?" said Mr. Chester, in his most
winning manner.
"To you,
sir," was the sullen answer, with something approaching to a bow. "I
drink to you."
"Thank you. God
bless you. By the bye, what is your name, my good soul? You are called Hugh, I
know, of course--your other name?"
"I have no other
name."
"A very strange
fellow! Do you mean that you never knew one, or that you don’t choose to tell
it? Which?"
"I’d tell it if I
could," said Hugh, quickly. "I can’t. I have been always called Hugh;
nothing more. I never knew, nor saw, nor thought about a father; and I was a
boy of six--that’s not very old--when they hung my mother up at Tyburn for a
couple of thousand men to stare at. They might have let her live. She was poor
enough."
"How very
sad!" exclaimed his patron, with a condescending smile. "I have no
doubt she was an exceedingly fine woman."
"You see that dog
of mine?" said Hugh, abruptly.
"Faithful, I dare
say?" rejoined his patron, looking at him through his glass; "and
immensely clever? Virtuous and gifted animals, whether man or beast, always are
so very hideous."
"Such a dog as
that, and one of the same breed, was the only living thing except me that
howled that day," said Hugh. "Out of the two thousand odd--there was
a larger crowd for its being a woman--the dog and I alone had any pity. If he’d
have been a man, he’d have been glad to be quit of her, for she had been forced
to keep him lean and half-starved; but being a dog, and not having a man’s
sense, he was sorry."
"It was dull of
the brute, certainly," said Mr. Chester, "and very like a
brute."
Hugh made no rejoinder,
but whistling to his dog, who sprung up at the sound and came jumping and
sporting about him, bade his sympathising friend good night.
"Good night,"
he returned. "Remember; you’re safe with me--quite safe. So long as you
deserve it, my good fellow, as I hope you always will, you have a friend in me,
on whose silence you may rely. Now do be careful of yourself, pray do, and
consider what jeopardy you might have stood in. Good night! bless you!"
Hugh truckled before
the hidden meaning of these words as much as such a being could, and crept out
of the door so submissively and subserviently--with an air, in short, so
different from that with which he had entered--that his patron on being left
alone, smiled more than ever.
"And yet," he
said, as he took a pinch of snuff, "I do not like their having hanged his
mother. The fellow has a fine eye, and I am sure she was handsome. But very
probably she was coarse--red- nosed perhaps, and had clumsy feet. Ay, it was
all for the best, no doubt."
With this comforting
reflection, he put on his coat, took a farewell glance at the glass, and
summoned his man, who promptly attended, followed by a chair and its two
bearers.
"Foh!" said
Mr. Chester. "The very atmosphere that centaur has breathed, seems tainted
with the cart and ladder. Here, Peak. Bring some scent and sprinkle the floor;
and take away the chair he sat upon, and air it; and dash a little of that
mixture upon me. I am stifled!"
The man obeyed; and the
room and its master being both purified, nothing remained for Mr. Chester but
to demand his hat, to fold it jauntily under his arm, to take his seat in the
chair and be carried off; humming a fashionable tune.
HOW the accomplished
gentleman spent the evening in the midst of a dazzling and brilliant circle;
how he enchanted all those with whom he mingled by the grace of his deportment,
the politeness of his manner, the vivacity of his conversation, and the
sweetness of his voice; how it was observed in every corner, that Chester was a
man of that happy disposition that nothing ruffled him, that he was one on whom
the world’s cares and errors sat lightly as his dress, and in whose smiling
face a calm and tranquil mind was constantly reflected; how honest men, who by
instinct knew him better, bowed down before him nevertheless, deferred to his
every word, and courted his favourable notice; how people, who really had good
in them, went with the stream, and fawned and flattered, and approved, and
despised themselves while they did so, and yet had not the courage to resist;
how, in short, he was one of those who are received and cherished in society
(as the phrase is) by scores who individually would shrink from and be repelled
by the object of their lavish regard; are things of course, which will suggest
themselves. Matter so commonplace needs but a passing glance, and there an end.
The despisers of
mankind--apart from the mere fools and mimics, of that creed--are of two sorts.
They who believe their merit neglected and unappreciated, make up one class;
they who receive adulation and flattery, knowing their own worthlessness,
compose the other. Be sure that the coldest-hearted misanthropes are ever of
this last order.
Mr. Chester sat up in
bed next morning, sipping his coffee, and remembering with a kind of
contemptuous satisfaction how he had shone last night, and how he had been
caressed and courted, when his servant brought in a very small scrap of dirty
paper, tightly sealed in two places, on the inside whereof was inscribed in
pretty large text these words: "A friend. Desiring of a conference.
Immediate. Private. Burn it when you’ve read it."
"Where in the name
of the Gunpowder Plot did you pick up this?" said his master.
It was given him by a
person then waiting at the door, the man replied.
"With a cloak and
dagger?" said Mr. Chester.
With nothing more
threatening about him, it appeared, than a leather apron and a dirty face.
"Let him come in." In he came--Mr. Tappertit; with his hair still on
end, and a great lock in his hand, which he put down on the floor in the middle
of the chamber as if he were about to go through some performances in which it
was a necessary agent.
"Sir," said
Mr. Tappertit with a low bow, "I thank you for this condescension, and am
glad to see you. Pardon the menial office in which I am engaged, sir, and extend
your sympathies to one, who, humble as his appearance is, has inn’ard workings
far above his station."
Mr. Chester held the
bed-curtain farther back, and looked at him with a vague impression that he was
some maniac, who had not only broken open the door of his place of confinement,
but had brought away the lock. Mr. Tappertit bowed again, and displayed his
legs to the best advantage.
"You have heard,
sir," said Mr. Tappertit, laying his hand upon his breast, "of G.
Varden Locksmith and bell-hanger and repairs neatly executed in town and
country, Clerkenwell, London?"
"What then?"
asked Mr. Chester.
"I’m his ’prentice,
sir."
"What then?"
"Ahem!" said
Mr. Tappertit. "Would you permit me to shut the door, sir, and will you
further, sir, give me your honour bright, that what passes between us is in the
strictest confidence?"
Mr. Chester laid
himself calmly down in bed again, and turning a perfectly undisturbed face
towards the strange apparition, which had by this time closed the door, begged
him to speak out, and to be as rational as he could, without putting himself to
any very great personal inconvenience.
"In the first
place, sir," said Mr. Tappertit, producing a small pocket-handkerchief and
shaking it out of the folds, "as I have not a card about me (for the envy
of masters debases us below that level) allow me to offer the best substitute
that circumstances will admit of. If you will take that in your own hand, sir,
and cast your eye on the right-hand corner," said Mr. Tappertit, offering
it with a graceful air, "you will meet with my credentials."
"Thank you,"
answered Mr. Chester, politely accepting it, and turning to some blood-red
characters at one end. "’Four. Simon Tappertit. One.’ Is that the--"
"Without the
numbers, sir, that is my name," replied the ’prentice. "They are
merely intended as directions to the washerwoman, and have no connection with
myself or family. Your name, sir," said Mr. Tappertit, looking very hard
at his nightcap, "is Chester, I suppose? You needn’t pull it off, sir,
thank you. I observe E. C. from here. We will take the rest for granted."
"Pray, Mr.
Tappertit," said Mr. Chester, "has that complicated piece of
ironmongery which you have done me the favour to bring with you, any immediate
connection with the business we are to discuss?"
"It has not,
sir," rejoined the ’prentice. "It’s going to be fitted on a ware’us-door
in Thames Street."
"Perhaps, as that
is the case," said Mr. Chester, "and as it has a stronger flavour of
oil than I usually refresh my bedroom with, you will oblige me so far as to put
it outside the door?"
"By all means,
sir," said Mr. Tappertit, suiting the action to the word.
"You’ll excuse my
mentioning it, I hope?"
"Don’t apologise,
sir, I beg. And now, if you please, to business."
During the whole of
this dialogue, Mr. Chester had suffered nothing but his smile of unvarying
serenity and politeness to appear upon his face. Sim Tappertit, who had far too
good an opinion of himself to suspect that anybody could be playing upon him,
thought within himself that this was something like the respect to which he was
entitled, and drew a comparison from this courteous demeanour of a stranger, by
no means favourable to the worthy locksmith.
"From what passes
in our house," said Mr. Tappertit, "I am aware, sir, that your son
keeps company with a young lady against your inclinations. Sir, your son has
not used me well."
"Mr.
Tappertit," said the other, "you grieve me beyond description."
"Thank you,
sir," replied the ’prentice. "I’m glad to hear you say so. He’s very
proud, sir, is your son; very haughty."
"I am afraid he is
haughty," said Mr. Chester. "Do you know I was really afraid of that
before; and you confirm me?"
"To recount the
menial offices I’ve had to do for your son, sir," said Mr. Tappertit;
"the chairs I’ve had to hand him, the coaches I’ve had to call for him,
the numerous degrading duties, wholly unconnected with my indenters, that I’ve
had to do for him, would fill a family Bible. Besides which, sir, he is but a
young man himself and I do not consider ’thank’ee Sim,’ a proper form of
address on those occasions."
"Mr. Tappertit,
your wisdom is beyond your years. Pray go on."
"I thank you for
your good opinion, sir," said Sim, much gratified, "and will
endeavour so to do. Now sir, on this account (and perhaps for another reason or
two which I needn’t go into) I am on your side. And what I tell you is
this--that as long as our people go backwards and forwards, to and fro, up and
down, to that there jolly old Maypole, lettering, and messaging, and fetching
and carrying, you couldn’t help your son keeping company with that young lady
by deputy,--not if he was minded night and day by all the Horse Guards, and
every man of ’em in the very fullest uniform."
Mr. Tappertit stopped
to take breath after this, and then started fresh again.
"Now, sir, I am a
coming to the point. You will inquire of me, ’how is this to he prevented?’ I’ll
tell you how. If an honest, civil, smiling gentleman like you--"
"Mr.
Tappertit--really--"
"No, no, I’m serious,"
rejoined the ’prentice, "I am, upon my soul. If an honest, civil, smiling
gentleman like you, was to talk but ten minutes to our old woman--that’s Mrs.
Varden--and flatter her up a bit, you’d gain her over for ever. Then there’s
this point got-- that her daughter Dolly,"--here a flush came over Mr.
Tappertit’s face--"wouldn’t be allowed to be a go-between from that time
forward; and till that point’s got, there’s nothing ever will prevent her. Mind
that."
"Mr. Tappertit,
your knowledge of human nature--"
"Wait a
minute," said Sim, folding his arms with a dreadful calmness. "Now I
come to THE point. Sir, there is a villain at that Maypole, a monster in human
shape, a vagabond of the deepest dye, that unless you get rid of and have
kidnapped and carried off at the very least--nothing less will do--will marry
your son to that young woman, as certainly and as surely as if he was the
Archbishop of Canterbury himself. He will, sir, for the hatred and malice that
he bears to you; let alone the pleasure of doing a bad action, which to him is
its own reward. If you knew how this chap, this Joseph Willet--that’s his
name--comes backwards and forwards to our house, libelling, and denouncing, and
threatening you, and how I shudder when I hear him, you’d hate him worse than I
do,-- worse than I do, sir," said Mr. Tappertit wildly, putting his hair
up straighter, and making a crunching noise with his teeth; "if sich a
thing is possible."
"A little private
vengeance in this, Mr. Tappertit?"
"Private
vengeance, sir, or public sentiment, or both combined-- destroy him," said
Mr. Tappertit. "Miggs says so too. Miggs and me both say so. We can’t bear
the plotting and undermining that takes place. Our souls recoil from it.
Barnaby Rudge and Mrs. Rudge are in it likewise; but the villain, Joseph
Willet, is the ringleader. Their plottings and schemes are known to me and
Miggs. If you want information of ’em, apply to us. Put Joseph Willet down,
sir. Destroy him. Crush him. And be happy."
With these words, Mr.
Tappertit, who seemed to expect no reply, and to hold it as a necessary
consequence of his eloquence that his hearer should be utterly stunned,
dumbfoundered, and overwhelmed, folded his arms so that the palm of each hand
rested on the opposite shoulder, and disappeared after the manner of those
mysterious warners of whom he had read in cheap story-books.
"That
fellow," said Mr. Chester, relaxing his face when he was fairly gone,
"is good practice. I have some command of my features, beyond all doubt.
He fully confirms what I suspected, though; and blunt tools are sometimes found
of use, where sharper instruments would fail. I fear I may be obliged to make
great havoc among these worthy people. A troublesome necessity! I quite feel
for them."
With that he fell into
a quiet slumber:--subsided into such a gentle, pleasant sleep, that it was
quite infantine.
LEAVING the favoured,
and well-received, and flattered of the world; him of the world most worldly,
who never compromised himself by an ungentlemanly action, and never was guilty
of a manly one; to lie smilingly asleep--for even sleep, working but little
change in his dissembling face, became with him a piece of cold, conventional
hypocrisy--we follow in the steps of two slow travellers on foot, making towards
Chigwell.
Barnaby and his mother.
Grip in their company, of course.
The widow, to whom each
painful mile seemed longer than the last, toiled wearily along; while Barnaby,
yielding to every inconstant impulse, fluttered here and there, now leaving her
far behind, now lingering far behind himself, now darting into some by-lane or
path and leaving her to pursue her way alone, until he stealthily emerged again
and came upon her with a wild shout of merriment, as his wayward and capricious
nature prompted. Now he would call to her from the topmost branch of some high
tree by the roadside; now using his tall staff as a leaping-pole, come flying
over ditch or hedge or five-barred gate; now run with surprising swiftness for
a mile or more on the straight road, and halting, sport upon a patch of grass
with Grip till she came up. These were his delights; and when his patient
mother heard his merry voice, or looked into his flushed and healthy face, she
would not have abated them by one sad word or murmur, though each had been to
her a source of suffering in the same degree as it was to him of pleasure.
It is something to look
upon enjoyment, so that it be free and wild and in the face of nature, though
it is but the enjoyment of an idiot. It is something to know that Heaven has
left the capacity of gladness in such a creature’s breast; it is something to
be assured that, however lightly men may crush that faculty in their fellows,
the Great Creator of mankind imparts it even to his despised and slighted work.
Who would not rather see a poor idiot happy in the sunlight, than a wise man
pining in a darkened jail!
Ye men of gloom and
austerity, who paint the face of Infinite Benevolence with an eternal frown;
read in the Everlasting Book, wide open to your view, the lesson it would
teach. Its pictures are not in black and sombre hues, but bright and glowing
tints; its music--save when ye drown it--is not in sighs and groans, but songs
and cheerful sounds. Listen to the million voices in the summer air, and find
one dismal as your own. Remember, if ye can, the sense of hope and pleasure
which every glad return of day awakens in the breast of all your kind who have
not changed their nature; and learn some wisdom even from the witless, when
their hearts are lifted up they know not why, by all the mirth and happiness it
brings.
The widow’s breast was
full of care, was laden heavily with secret dread and sorrow; but her boy’s
gaiety of heart gladdened her, and beguiled the long journey. Sometimes he
would bid her lean upon his arm, and would keep beside her steadily for a short
distance; but it was more his nature to be rambling to and fro, and she better
liked to see him free and happy, even than to have him near her, because she
loved him better than herself.
She had quitted the
place to which they were travelling, directly after the event which had changed
her whole existence; and for two- and-twenty years had never had courage to
revisit it. It was her native village. How many recollections crowded on her
mind when it appeared in sight!
Two-and-twenty years.
Her boy’s whole life and history. The last time she looked back upon those
roofs among the trees, she carried him in her arms, an infant. How often since
that time had she sat beside him night and day, watching for the dawn of mind
that never came; how had she feared, and doubted, and yet hoped, long after
conviction forced itself upon her! The little stratagems she had devised to try
him, the little tokens he had given in his childish way--not of dulness but of
something infinitely worse, so ghastly and unchildlike in its cunning--came
back as vividly as if but yesterday had intervened. The room in which they used
to be; the spot in which his cradle stood; he, old and elfin-like in face, but
ever dear to her, gazing at her with a wild and vacant eye, and crooning some
uncouth song as she sat by and rocked him; every circumstance of his infancy
came thronging back, and the most trivial, perhaps, the most distinctly.
His older childhood,
too; the strange imaginings he had; his terror of certain senseless
things--familiar objects he endowed with life; the slow and gradual breaking
out of that one horror, in which, before his birth, his darkened intellect
began; how, in the midst of all, she had found some hope and comfort in his
being unlike another child, and had gone on almost believing in the slow
development of his mind until he grew a man, and then his childhood was
complete and lasting; one after another, all these old thoughts sprung up
within her, strong after their long slumber and bitterer than ever.
She took his arm and
they hurried through the village street. It was the same as it was wont to be
in old times, yet different too, and wore another air. The change was in
herself, not it; but she never thought of that, and wondered at its alteration,
and where it lay, and what it was.
The people all knew
Barnaby, and the children of the place came flocking round him--as she
remembered to have done with their fathers and mothers round some silly
beggarman, when a child herself. None of them knew her; they passed each
well-remembered house, and yard, and homestead; and striking into the fields,
were soon alone again.
The Warren was the end
of their journey. Mr. Haredale was walking in the garden, and seeing them as they
passed the iron gate, unlocked it, and bade them enter that way.
"At length you
have mustered heart to visit the old place," he said to the widow. "I
am glad you have."
"For the first
time, and the last, sir," she replied.
"The first for
many years, but not the last?"
"The very
last."
"You mean,"
said Mr. Haredale, regarding her with some surprise, "that having made
this effort, you are resolved not to persevere and are determined to relapse?
This is unworthy of you. I have often told you, you should return here. You
would be happier here than elsewhere, I know. As to Barnaby, it’s quite his
home."
"And Grip’s,"
said Barnaby, holding the basket open. The raven hopped gravely out, and
perching on his shoulder and addressing himself to Mr. Haredale, cried--as a
hint, perhaps, that some temperate refreshment would be acceptable--"Polly
put the ket-tle on, we’ll all have tea!"
"Hear me,
Mary," said Mr. Haredale kindly, as he motioned her to walk with him
towards the house. "Your life has been an example of patience and
fortitude, except in this one particular which has often given me great pain.
It is enough to know that you were cruelly involved in the calamity which
deprived me of an only brother, and Emma of her father, without being obliged
to suppose (as I sometimes am) that you associate us with the author of our
joint misfortunes."
"Associate you
with him, sir!" she cried.
"Indeed,"
said Mr. Haredale, "I think you do. I almost believe that because your
husband was bound by so many ties to our relation, and died in his service and
defence, you have come in some sort to connect us with his murder."
"Alas!" she
answered. "You little know my heart, sir. You little know the truth!"
"It is natural you
should do so; it is very probable you may, without being conscious of it,"
said Mr. Haredale, speaking more to himself than her. "We are a fallen
house. Money, dispensed with the most lavish hand, would be a poor recompense
for sufferings like yours; and thinly scattered by hands so pinched and tied as
ours, it becomes a miserable mockery. I feel it so, God knows," he added,
hastily. "Why should I wonder if she does!"
"You do me wrong,
dear sir, indeed," she rejoined with great earnestness; "and yet when
you come to hear what I desire your leave to say--"
"I shall find my
doubts confirmed?" he said, observing that she faltered and became
confused. "Well!"
He quickened his pace
for a few steps, but fell back again to her side, and said:
"And have you come
all this way at last, solely to speak to me?"
She answered,
"Yes."
"A curse," he
muttered, "upon the wretched state of us proud beggars, from whom the poor
and rich are equally at a distance; the one being forced to treat us with a
show of cold respect; the other condescending to us in their every deed and
word, and keeping more aloof, the nearer they approach us.--Why, if it were
pain to you (as it must have been) to break for this slight purpose the chain
of habit forged through two-and-twenty years, could you not let me know your
wish, and beg me to come to you?"
"There was not
time, sir," she rejoined. "I took my resolution but last night, and
taking it, felt that I must not lose a day--a day! an hour--in having speech
with you."
They had by this time
reached the house. Mr. Haredale paused for a moment, and looked at her as if
surprised by the energy of her manner. Observing, however, that she took no
heed of him, but glanced up, shuddering, at the old walls with which such
horrors were connected in her mind, he led her by a private stair into his library,
where Emma was seated in a window, reading.
The young lady, seeing
who approached, hastily rose and laid aside her book, and with many kind words,
and not without tears, gave her a warm and earnest welcome. But the widow
shrunk from her embrace as though she feared her, and sunk down trembling on a
chair.
"It is the return
to this place after so long an absence," said Emma gently. "Pray
ring, dear uncle--or stay--Barnaby will run himself and ask for wine--"
"Not for the
world," she cried. "It would have another taste--I could not touch
it. I want but a minute’s rest. Nothing but that."
Miss Haredale stood
beside her chair, regarding her with silent pity. She remained for a little
time quite still; then rose and turned to Mr. Haredale, who had sat down in his
easy chair, and was contemplating her with fixed attention.
The tale connected with
the mansion borne in mind, it seemed, as has been already said, the chosen
theatre for such a deed as it had known. The room in which this group were now
assembled--hard by the very chamber where the act was done--dull, dark, and
sombre; heavy with worm-eaten books; deadened and shut in by faded hangings,
muffling every sound; shadowed mournfully by trees whose rustling boughs gave
ever and anon a spectral knocking at the glass; wore, beyond all others in the
house, a ghostly, gloomy air. Nor were the group assembled there, unfitting
tenants of the spot. The widow, with her marked and startling face and downcast
eyes; Mr. Haredale stern and despondent ever; his niece beside him, like, yet
most unlike, the picture of her father, which gazed reproachfully down upon
them from the blackened wall; Barnaby, with his vacant look and restless eye;
were all in keeping with the place, and actors in the legend. Nay, the very
raven, who had hopped upon the table and with the air of some old necromancer
appeared to be profoundly studying a great folio volume that lay open on a
desk, was strictly in unison with the rest, and looked like the embodied spirit
of evil biding his time of mischief.
"I scarcely
know," said the widow, breaking silence, "how to begin. You will
think my mind disordered."
"The whole tenor
of your quiet and reproachless life since you were last here," returned
Mr. Haredale, mildly, "shall bear witness for you. Why do you fear to
awaken such a suspicion? You do not speak to strangers. You have not to claim
our interest or consideration for the first time. Be more yourself. Take heart.
Any advice or assistance that I can give you, you know is yours of right, and
freely yours."
"What if I came,
sir," she rejoined, "I who have but one other friend on earth, to
reject your aid from this moment, and to say that henceforth I launch myself
upon the world, alone and unassisted, to sink or swim as Heaven may decree!"
"You would have,
if you came to me for such a purpose," said Mr. Haredale calmly,
"some reason to assign for conduct so extraordinary, which--if one may
entertain the possibility of anything so wild and strange--would have its
weight, of course."
"That, sir,"
she answered, "is the misery of my distress. I can give no reason
whatever. My own bare word is all that I can offer. It is my duty, my
imperative and bounden duty. If I did not discharge it, I should be a base and
guilty wretch. Having said that, my lips are sealed, and I can say no
more."
As though she felt
relieved at having said so much, and had nerved herself to the remainder of her
task, she spoke from this time with a firmer voice and heightened courage.
"Heaven is my
witness, as my own heart is--and yours, dear young lady, will speak for me, I
know--that I have lived, since that time we all have bitter reason to remember,
in unchanging devotion, and gratitude to this family. Heaven is my witness that
go where I may, I shall preserve those feelings unimpaired. And it is my
witness, too, that they alone impel me to the course I must take, and from
which nothing now shall turn me, as I hope for mercy."
"These are strange
riddles," said Mr. Haredale.
"In this world,
sir," she replied, "they may, perhaps, never be explained. In
another, the Truth will be discovered in its own good time. And may that
time," she added in a low voice, "be far distant!"
"Let me be
sure," said Mr. Haredale, "that I understand you, for I am doubtful
of my own senses. Do you mean that you are resolved voluntarily to deprive
yourself of those means of support you have received from us so long--that you
are determined to resign the annuity we settled on you twenty years ago--to
leave house, and home, and goods, and begin life anew--and this, for some
secret reason or monstrous fancy which is incapable of explanation, which only
now exists, and has been dormant all this time? In the name of God, under what
delusion are you labouring?"
"As I am deeply
thankful," she made answer, "for the kindness of those, alive and
dead, who have owned this house; and as I would not have its roof fall down and
crush me, or its very walls drip blood, my name being spoken in their hearing;
I never will again subsist upon their bounty, or let it help me to subsistence.
You do not know," she added, suddenly, "to what uses it may be
applied; into what hands it may pass. I do, and I renounce it."
"Surely,"
said Mr. Haredale, "its uses rest with you."
"They did. They
rest with me no longer. It may be--it IS--devoted to purposes that mock the
dead in their graves. It never can prosper with me. It will bring some other
heavy judgement on the head of my dear son, whose innocence will suffer for his
mother’s guilt."
"What words are
these!" cried Mr. Haredale, regarding her with wonder. "Among what
associates have you fallen? Into what guilt have you ever been betrayed?"
"I am guilty, and
yet innocent; wrong, yet right; good in intention, though constrained to shield
and aid the bad. Ask me no more questions, sir; but believe that I am rather to
be pitied than condemned. I must leave my house to-morrow, for while I stay
there, it is haunted. My future dwelling, if I am to live in peace, must be a
secret. If my poor boy should ever stray this way, do not tempt him to disclose
it or have him watched when he returns; for if we are hunted, we must fly
again. And now this load is off my mind, I beseech you--and you, dear Miss
Haredale, too--to trust me if you can, and think of me kindly as you have been
used to do. If I die and cannot tell my secret even then (for that may come to
pass), it will sit the lighter on my breast in that hour for this day’s work;
and on that day, and every day until it comes, I will pray for and thank you
both, and trouble you no more.
With that, she would
have left them, but they detained her, and with many soothing words and kind
entreaties, besought her to consider what she did, and above all to repose more
freely upon them, and say what weighed so sorely on her mind. Finding her deaf
to their persuasions, Mr. Haredale suggested, as a last resource, that she
should confide in Emma, of whom, as a young person and one of her own sex, she
might stand in less dread than of himself. From this proposal, however, she
recoiled with the same indescribable repugnance she had manifested when they
met. The utmost that could be wrung from her was, a promise that she would
receive Mr. Haredale at her own house next evening, and in the mean time
reconsider her determination and their dissuasions--though any change on her
part, as she told them, was quite hopeless. This condition made at last, they
reluctantly suffered her to depart, since she would neither eat nor drink
within the house; and she, and Barnaby, and Grip, accordingly went out as they
had come, by the private stair and garden-gate; seeing and being seen of no one
by the way.
It was remarkable in
the raven that during the whole interview he had kept his eye on his book with
exactly the air of a very sly human rascal, who, under the mask of pretending
to read hard, was listening to everything. He still appeared to have the
conversation very strongly in his mind, for although, when they were alone
again, he issued orders for the instant preparation of innumerable kettles for
purposes of tea, he was thoughtful, and rather seemed to do so from an abstract
sense of duty, than with any regard to making himself agreeable, or being what
is commonly called good company.
They were to return by
the coach. As there was an interval of full two hours before it started, and
they needed rest and some refreshment, Barnaby begged hard for a visit to the
Maypole. But his mother, who had no wish to be recognised by any of those who
had known her long ago, and who feared besides that Mr. Haredale might, on
second thoughts, despatch some messenger to that place of entertainment in
quest of her, proposed to wait in the churchyard instead. As it was easy for
Barnaby to buy and carry thither such humble viands as they required, he
cheerfully assented, and in the churchyard they sat down to take their frugal
dinner.
Here again, the raven
was in a highly reflective state; walking up and down when he had dined, with
an air of elderly complacency which was strongly suggestive of his having his
hands under his coat-tails; and appearing to read the tombstones with a very
critical taste. Sometimes, after a long inspection of an epitaph, he would
strop his beak upon the grave to which it referred, and cry in his hoarse
tones, "I’m a devil, I’m a devil, I’m a devil!" but whether he
addressed his observations to any supposed person below, or merely threw them
off as a general remark, is matter of uncertainty.
It was a quiet pretty
spot, but a sad one for Barnaby’s mother; for Mr. Reuben Haredale lay there,
and near the vault in which his ashes rested, was a stone to the memory of her
own husband, with a brief inscription recording how and when he had lost his
life. She sat here, thoughtful and apart, until their time was out, and the
distant horn told that the coach was coming.
Barnaby, who had been
sleeping on the grass, sprung up quickly at the sound; and Grip, who appeared
to understand it equally well, walked into his basket straightway, entreating
society in general (as though he intended a kind of satire upon them in
connection with churchyards) never to say die on any terms. They were soon on
the coach-top and rolling along the road.
It went round by the
Maypole, and stopped at the door. Joe was from home, and Hugh came sluggishly
out to hand up the parcel that it called for. There was no fear of old John
coming out. They could see him from the coach-roof fast asleep in his cosy bar.
It was a part of John’s character. He made a point of going to sleep at the
coach’s time. He despised gadding about; he looked upon coaches as things that
ought to be indicted; as disturbers of the peace of mankind; as restless,
bustling, busy, horn-blowing contrivances, quite beneath the dignity of men,
and only suited to giddy girls that did nothing but chatter and go a-shopping. "We
know nothing about
coaches here,
sir," John would say, if any unlucky stranger made inquiry touching the
offensive vehicles; "we don’t book for ’em; we’d rather not; they’re more
trouble than they’re worth, with their noise and rattle. If you like to wait
for ’em you can; but we don’t know anything about ’em; they may call and they
may not--there’s a carrier--he was looked upon as quite good enough for us,
when I was a boy."
She dropped her veil as
Hugh climbed up, and while he hung behind, and talked to Barnaby in whispers.
But neither he nor any other person spoke to her, or noticed her, or had any
curiosity about her; and so, an alien, she visited and left the village where
she had been born, and had lived a merry child, a comely girl, a happy wife--where
she had known all her enjoyment of life, and had entered on its hardest
sorrows.
"AND you’re not
surprised to hear this, Varden?" said Mr. Haredale. "Well! You and
she have always been the best friends, and you should understand her if anybody
does."
"I ask your
pardon, sir," rejoined the locksmith. "I didn’t say I understood her.
I wouldn’t have the presumption to say that of any woman. It’s not so easily
done. But I am not so much surprised, sir, as you expected me to be, certainly."
"May I ask why
not, my good friend?"
"I have seen,
sir," returned the locksmith with evident reluctance, "I have seen in
connection with her, something that has filled me with distrust and uneasiness.
She has made bad friends, how, or when, I don’t know; but that her house is a
refuge for one robber and cut-throat at least, I am certain. There, sir! Now it’s
out."
"Varden!"
"My own eyes, sir,
are my witnesses, and for her sake I would be willingly half-blind, if I could
but have the pleasure of mistrusting ’em. I have kept the secret till now, and
it will go no further than yourself, I know; but I tell you that with my own
eyes--broad awake--I saw, in the passage of her house one evening after dark,
the highwayman who robbed and wounded Mr. Edward Chester, and on the same night
threatened me."
"And you made no
effort to detain him?" said Mr. Haredale quickly.
"Sir,"
returned the locksmith, "she herself prevented me--held me, with all her
strength, and hung about me until he had got clear off." And having gone
so far, he related circumstantially all that had passed upon the night in
question.
This dialogue was held
in a low tone in the locksmith’s little parlour, into which honest Gabriel had
shown his visitor on his arrival. Mr. Haredale had called upon him to entreat
his company to the widow’s, that he might have the assistance of his persuasion
and influence; and out of this circumstance the conversation had arisen.
"I forbore,"
said Gabriel, "from repeating one word of this to anybody, as it could do
her no good and might do her great harm. I thought and hoped, to say the truth,
that she would come to me, and talk to me about it, and tell me how it was; but
though I have purposely put myself in her way more than once or twice, she has
never touched upon the subject--except by a look. And indeed," said the
good-natured locksmith, "there was a good deal in the look, more than
could have been put into a great many words. It said among other matters ’Don’t
ask me anything’ so imploringly, that I didn’t ask her anything. You’ll think
me an old fool, I know, sir. If it’s any relief to call me one, pray do."
"I am greatly
disturbed by what you tell me," said Mr. Haredale, after a silence.
"What meaning do you attach to it?"
The locksmith shook his
head, and looked doubtfully out of window at the failing light.
"She cannot have
married again," said Mr. Haredale.
"Not without our
knowledge surely, sir."
"She may have done
so, in the fear that it would lead, if known, to some objection or
estrangement. Suppose she married incautiously-- it is not improbable, for her
existence has been a lonely and monotonous one for many years--and the man
turned out a ruffian, she would be anxious to screen him, and yet would revolt
from his crimes. This might be. It bears strongly on the whole drift of her
discourse yesterday, and would quite explain her conduct. Do you suppose
Barnaby is privy to these circumstances?"
"Quite impossible
to say, sir," returned the locksmith, shaking his head again: "and
next to impossible to find out from him. If what you suppose is really the
case, I tremble for the lad--a notable person, sir, to put to bad uses--"
"It is not
possible, Varden," said Mr. Haredale, in a still lower tone of voice than
he had spoken yet, "that we have been blinded and deceived by this woman
from the beginning? It is not possible that this connection was formed in her
husband’s lifetime, and led to his and my brother’s--"
"Good God,
sir," cried Gabriel, interrupting him, "don’t entertain such dark
thoughts for a moment. Five-and-twenty years ago, where was there a girl like
her? A gay, handsome, laughing, bright-eyed damsel! Think what she was, sir. It
makes my heart ache now, even now, though I’m an old man, with a woman for a
daughter, to think what she was and what she is. We all change, but that’s with
Time; Time does his work honestly, and I don’t mind him. A fig for Time, sir.
Use him well, and he’s a hearty fellow, and scorns to have you at a
disadvantage. But care and suffering (and those have changed her) are devils,
sir--secret, stealthy, undermining devils-- who tread down the brightest
flowers in Eden, and do more havoc in a month than Time does in a year. Picture
to yourself for one minute what Mary was before they went to work with her
fresh heart and face--do her that justice--and say whether such a thing is
possible."
"You’re a good
fellow, Varden," said Mr. Haredale, "and are quite right. I have
brooded on that subject so long, that every breath of suspicion carries me back
to it. You are quite right."
"It isn’t,
sir," cried the locksmith with brightened eyes, and sturdy, honest voice;
"it isn’t because I courted her before Rudge, and failed, that I say she
was too good for him. She would have been as much too good for me. But she was
too good for him; he wasn’t free and frank enough for her. I don’t reproach his
memory with it, poor fellow; I only want to put her before you as she really
was. For myself, I’ll keep her old picture in my mind; and thinking of that,
and what has altered her, I’ll stand her friend, and try to win her back to
peace. And damme, sir," cried Gabriel, "with your pardon for the
word, I’d do the same if she had married fifty highwaymen in a twelvemonth; and
think it in the Protestant Manual too, though Martha said it wasn’t, tooth and
nail, till doomsday!"
If the dark little
parlour had been filled with a dense fog, which, clearing away in an instant,
left it all radiance and brightness, it could not have been more suddenly
cheered than by this outbreak on the part of the hearty locksmith. In a voice
nearly as full and round as his own, Mr. Haredale cried "Well said!"
and bade him come away without more parley. The locksmith complied right
willingly; and both getting into a hackney coach which was waiting at the door,
drove off straightway.
They alighted at the
street corner, and dismissing their conveyance, walked to the house. To their
first knock at the door there was no response. A second met with the like
result. But in answer to the third, which was of a more vigorous kind, the
parlour window-sash was gently raised, and a musical voice cried:
"Haredale, my dear
fellow, I am extremely glad to see you. How very much you have improved in your
appearance since our last meeting! I never saw you looking better. How do you
do?"
Mr. Haredale turned his
eyes towards the casement whence the voice proceeded, though there was no need
to do so, to recognise the speaker, and Mr. Chester waved his hand, and smiled
a courteous welcome.
"The door will be
opened immediately," he said. "There is nobody but a very dilapidated
female to perform such offices. You will excuse her infirmities? If she were in
a more elevated station of society, she would be gouty. Being but a hewer of
wood and drawer of water, she is rheumatic. My dear Haredale, these are natural
class distinctions, depend upon it."
Mr. Haredale, whose
face resumed its lowering and distrustful look the moment he heard the voice,
inclined his head stiffly, and turned his back upon the speaker.
"Not opened
yet," said Mr. Chester. "Dear me! I hope the aged soul has not caught
her foot in some unlucky cobweb by the way. She is there at last! Come in, I
beg!"
Mr. Haredale entered,
followed by the locksmith. Turning with a look of great astonishment to the old
woman who had opened the door, he inquired for Mrs. Rudge--for Barnaby. They
were both gone, she replied, wagging her ancient head, for good. There was a
gentleman in the parlour, who perhaps could tell them more. That was all she
knew.
"Pray, sir,"
said Mr. Haredale, presenting himself before this new tenant, "where is
the person whom I came here to see?"
"My dear
friend," he returned, "I have not the least idea."
"Your trifling is
ill-timed," retorted the other in a suppressed tone and voice, "and
its subject ill-chosen. Reserve it for those who are your friends, and do not
expend it on me. I lay no claim to the distinction, and have the self-denial to
reject it."
"My dear, good
sir," said Mr. Chester, "you are heated with walking. Sit down, I
beg. Our friend is--"
"Is but a plain
honest man," returned Mr. Haredale, "and quite unworthy of your
notice."
"Gabriel Varden by
name, sir," said the locksmith bluntly.
"A worthy English
yeoman!" said Mr. Chester. "A most worthy yeoman, of whom I have
frequently heard my son Ned--darling fellow-- speak, and have often wished to
see. Varden, my good friend, I am glad to know you. You wonder now," he
said, turning languidly to Mr. Haredale, "to see me here. Now, I am sure
you do."
Mr. Haredale glanced at
him--not fondly or admiringly--smiled, and held his peace.
"The mystery is
solved in a moment," said Mr. Chester; "in a moment. Will you step
aside with me one instant. You remember our little compact in reference to Ned,
and your dear niece, Haredale? You remember the list of assistants in their
innocent intrigue? You remember these two people being among them? My dear
fellow, congratulate yourself, and me. I have bought them off."
"You have done
what?" said Mr. Haredale.
"Bought them
off," returned his smiling friend. "I have found it necessary to take
some active steps towards setting this boy and girl attachment quite at rest,
and have begun by removing these two agents. You are surprised? Who can
withstand the influence of a little money! They wanted it, and have been bought
off. We have nothing more to fear from them. They are gone."
"Gone!"
echoed Mr. Haredale. "Where?"
"My dear
fellow--and you must permit me to say again, that you never looked so young; so
positively boyish as you do to-night--the Lord knows where; I believe Columbus
himself wouldn’t find them. Between you and me they have their hidden reasons,
but upon that point I have pledged myself to secrecy. She appointed to see you
here to-night, I know, but found it inconvenient, and couldn’t wait. Here is
the key of the door. I am afraid you’ll find it inconveniently large; but as
the tenement is yours, your good- nature will excuse that, Haredale, I am
certain."
MR. HAREDALE stood in
the widow’s parlour with the door-key in his hand, gazing by turns at Mr.
Chester and at Gabriel Varden, and occasionally glancing downward at the key as
in the hope that of its own accord it would unlock the mystery; until Mr.
Chester, putting on his hat and gloves, and sweetly inquiring whether they were
walking in the same direction, recalled him to himself.
"No," he
said. "Our roads diverge--widely, as you know. For the present, I shall
remain here."
"You will be
hipped, Haredale; you will be miserable, melancholy, utterly wretched,"
returned the other. "It’s a place of the very last description for a man
of your temper. I know it will make you very miserable."
"Let it,"
said Mr. Haredale, sitting down; "and thrive upon the thought. Good
night!"
Feigning to be wholly
unconscious of the abrupt wave of the hand which rendered this farewell
tantamount to a dismissal, Mr. Chester retorted with a bland and heartfelt
benediction, and inquired of Gabriel in what direction he was going.
"Yours, sir, would
be too much honour for the like of me," replied the locksmith, hesitating.
"I wish you to
remain here a little while, Varden," said Mr. Haredale, without looking
towards them. "I have a word or two to say to you."
"I will not
intrude upon your conference another moment," said Mr. Chester with
inconceivable politeness. "May it be satisfactory to you both! God bless
you!" So saying, and bestowing upon the locksmith a most refulgent smile,
he left them.
"A deplorably
constituted creature, that rugged person," he said, as he walked along the
street; "he is an atrocity that carries its own punishment along with
it--a bear that gnaws himself. And here is one of the inestimable advantages of
having a perfect command over one’s inclinations. I have been tempted in these
two short interviews, to draw upon that fellow, fifty times. Five men in six
would have yielded to the impulse. By suppressing mine, I wound him deeper and
more keenly than if I were the best swordsman in all Europe, and he the worst.
You are the wise man’s very last resource," he said, tapping the hilt of
his weapon; "we can but appeal to you when all else is said and done. To
come to you before, and thereby spare our adversaries so much, is a barbarian
mode of warfare, quite unworthy of any man with the remotest pretensions to
delicacy of feeling, or refinement."
He smiled so very
pleasantly as he communed with himself after this manner, that a beggar was
emboldened to follow for alms, and to dog his footsteps for some distance. He
was gratified by the circumstance, feeling it complimentary to his power of
feature, and as a reward suffered the man to follow him until he called a
chair, when he graciously dismissed him with a fervent blessing.
"Which is as easy
as cursing," he wisely added, as he took his seat, "and more becoming
to the face.--To Clerkenwell, my good creatures, if you please!" The
chairmen were rendered quite vivacious by having such a courteous burden, and
to Clerkenwell they went at a fair round trot.
Alighting at a certain
point he had indicated to them upon the road, and paying them something less
than they expected from a fare of such gentle speech, he turned into the street
in which the locksmith dwelt, and presently stood beneath the shadow of the
Golden Key. Mr. Tappertit, who was hard at work by lamplight, in a corner of
the workshop, remained unconscious of his presence until a hand upon his
shoulder made him start and turn his head.
"Industry,"
said Mr. Chester, "is the soul of business, and the keystone of
prosperity. Mr. Tappertit, I shall expect you to invite me to dinner when you
are Lord Mayor of London."
"Sir,"
returned the ’prentice, laying down his hammer, and rubbing his nose on the
back of a very sooty hand, "I scorn the Lord Mayor and everything that
belongs to him. We must have another state of society, sir, before you catch me
being Lord Mayor. How de do, sir?"
"The better, Mr.
Tappertit, for looking into your ingenuous face once more. I hope you are
well."
"I am as well,
sir," said Sim, standing up to get nearer to his ear, and whispering
hoarsely, "as any man can be under the aggrawations to which I am exposed.
My life’s a burden to me. If it wasn’t for wengeance, I’d play at pitch and
toss with it on the losing hazard."
"Is Mrs. Varden at
home?" said Mr. Chester.
"Sir,"
returned Sim, eyeing him over with a look of concentrated
expression,--"she is. Did you wish to see her?"
Mr. Chester nodded.
"Then come this
way, sir," said Sim, wiping his face upon his apron. "Follow me,
sir.--Would you permit me to whisper in your ear, one half a second?"
"By all
means."
Mr. Tappertit raised
himself on tiptoe, applied his lips to Mr. Chester’s ear, drew back his head
without saying anything, looked hard at him, applied them to his ear again,
again drew back, and finally whispered--"The name is Joseph Willet. Hush!
I say no more."
Having said that much,
he beckoned the visitor with a mysterious aspect to follow him to the
parlour-door, where he announced him in the voice of a gentleman-usher.
"Mr. Chester."
"And not Mr. Ed’dard,
mind," said Sim, looking into the door again, and adding this by way of
postscript in his own person; "it’s his father."
"But do not let
his father," said Mr. Chester, advancing hat in hand, as he observed the
effect of this last explanatory announcement, "do not let his father be
any check or restraint on your domestic occupations, Miss Varden."
"Oh! Now! There!
An’t I always a-saying it!" exclaimed Miggs, clapping her hands. "If
he an’t been and took Missis for her own daughter. Well, she do look like it,
that she do. Only think of that, mim!"
"Is it possible,"
said Mr. Chester in his softest tones, "that this is Mrs. Varden! I am
amazed. That is not your daughter, Mrs. Varden? No, no. Your sister."
"My daughter,
indeed, sir," returned Mrs. V., blushing with great juvenility.
"Ah, Mrs.
Varden!" cried the visitor. "Ah, ma’am--humanity is indeed a happy
lot, when we can repeat ourselves in others, and still be young as they. You
must allow me to salute you--the custom of the country, my dear madam--your
daughter too."
Dolly showed some
reluctance to perform this ceremony, but was sharply reproved by Mrs. Varden,
who insisted on her undergoing it that minute. For pride, she said with great
severity, was one of the seven deadly sins, and humility and lowliness of heart
were virtues. Wherefore she desired that Dolly would be kissed immediately, on
pain of her just displeasure; at the same time giving her to understand that
whatever she saw her mother do, she might safely do herself, without being at
the trouble of any reasoning or reflection on the subject--which, indeed, was
offensive and undutiful, and in direct contravention of the church catechism.
Thus admonished, Dolly
complied, though by no means willingly; for there was a broad, bold look of
admiration in Mr. Chester’s face, refined and polished though it sought to be,
which distressed her very much. As she stood with downcast eyes, not liking to
look up and meet his, he gazed upon her with an approving air, and then turned
to her mother.
"My friend Gabriel
(whose acquaintance I only made this very evening) should be a happy man, Mrs.
Varden."
"Ah!" sighed
Mrs. V., shaking her head.
"Ah!" echoed
Miggs.
"Is that the
case?" said Mr. Chester, compassionately. "Dear me!"
"Master has no
intentions, sir," murmured Miggs as she sidled up to him, "but to be
as grateful as his natur will let him, for everythink he owns which it is in
his powers to appreciate. But we never, sir"--said Miggs, looking sideways
at Mrs. Varden, and interlarding her discourse with a sigh--"we never know
the full value of some wines and fig-trees till we lose ’em. So much the worse,
sir, for them as has the slighting of ’em on their consciences when they’re
gone to be in full blow elsewhere." And Miss Miggs cast up her eyes to
signify where that might be.
As Mrs. Varden
distinctly heard, and was intended to hear, all that Miggs said, and as these
words appeared to convey in metaphorical terms a presage or foreboding that she
would at some early period droop beneath her trials and take an easy flight
towards the stars, she immediately began to languish, and taking a volume of
the Manual from a neighbouring table, leant her arm upon it as though she were
Hope and that her Anchor. Mr. Chester perceiving this, and seeing how the
volume was lettered on the back, took it gently from her hand, and turned the
fluttering leaves.
"My favourite
book, dear madam. How often, how very often in his early life--before he can
remember"--(this clause was strictly true) "have I deduced little
easy moral lessons from its pages, for my dear son Ned! You know Ned?"
Mrs. Varden had that
honour, and a fine affable young gentleman he was.
"You’re a mother,
Mrs. Varden," said Mr. Chester, taking a pinch of snuff, "and you
know what I, as a father, feel, when he is praised. He gives me some
uneasiness--much uneasiness--he’s of a roving nature, ma’am--from flower to
flower--from sweet to sweet--but his is the butterfly time of life, and we must
not be hard upon such trifling."
He glanced at Dolly.
She was attending evidently to what he said. Just what he desired!
"The only thing I
object to in this little trait of Ned’s, is," said Mr. Chester,
"--and the mention of his name reminds me, by the way, that I am about to
beg the favour of a minute’s talk with you alone--the only thing I object to in
it, is, that it does partake of insincerity. Now, however I may attempt to
disguise the fact from myself in my affection for Ned, still I always revert to
this-- that if we are not sincere, we are nothing. Nothing upon earth. Let us
be sincere, my dear madam--"
"--and Protestant,"
murmured Mrs. Varden.
"--and Protestant
above all things. Let us be sincere and Protestant, strictly moral, strictly
just (though always with a leaning towards mercy), strictly honest, and
strictly true, and we gain--it is a slight point, certainly, but still it is
something tangible; we throw up a groundwork and foundation, so to speak, of
goodness, on which we may afterwards erect some worthy superstructure."
Now, to be sure, Mrs.
Varden thought, here is a perfect character. Here is a meek, righteous,
thoroughgoing Christian, who, having mastered all these qualities, so difficult
of attainment; who, having dropped a pinch of salt on the tails of all the
cardinal virtues, and caught them every one; makes light of their possession,
and pants for more morality. For the good woman never doubted (as many good men
and women never do), that this slighting kind of profession, this setting so
little store by great matters, this seeming to say, "I am not proud, I am
what you hear, but I consider myself no better than other people; let us change
the subject, pray"--was perfectly genuine and true. He so contrived it,
and said it in that way that it appeared to have been forced from him, and its
effect was marvellous.
Aware of the impression
he had made--few men were quicker than he at such discoveries--Mr. Chester
followed up the blow by propounding certain virtuous maxims, somewhat vague and
general in their nature, doubtless, and occasionally partaking of the character
of truisms, worn a little out at elbow, but delivered in so charming a voice
and with such uncommon serenity and peace of mind, that they answered as well
as the best. Nor is this to be wondered at; for as hollow vessels produce a far
more musical sound in falling than those which are substantial, so it will
oftentimes be found that sentiments which have nothing in them make the loudest
ringing in the world, and are the most relished.
Mr. Chester, with the
volume gently extended in one hand, and with the other planted lightly on his
breast, talked to them in the most delicious manner possible; and quite
enchanted all his hearers, notwithstanding their conflicting interests and
thoughts. Even Dolly, who, between his keen regards and her eyeing over by Mr.
Tappertit, was put quite out of countenance, could not help owning within
herself that he was the sweetest-spoken gentleman she had ever seen. Even Miss
Miggs, who was divided between admiration of Mr. Chester and a mortal jealousy
of her young mistress, had sufficient leisure to be propitiated. Even Mr.
Tappertit, though occupied as we have seen in gazing at his heart’s delight,
could not wholly divert his thoughts from the voice of the other charmer. Mrs.
Varden, to her own private thinking, had never been so improved in all her
life; and when Mr. Chester, rising and craving permission to speak with her
apart, took her by the hand and led her at arm’s length upstairs to the best
sitting-room, she almost deemed him something more than human.
"Dear madam,"
he said, pressing her hand delicately to his lips; "be seated."
Mrs. Varden called up
quite a courtly air, and became seated.
"You guess my
object?" said Mr. Chester, drawing a chair towards her. "You divine
my purpose? I am an affectionate parent, my dear Mrs. Varden."
"That I am sure
you are, sir," said Mrs. V.
"Thank you,"
returned Mr. Chester, tapping his snuff-box lid. "Heavy moral
responsibilities rest with parents, Mrs. Varden."
Mrs. Varden slightly
raised her hands, shook her head, and looked at the ground as though she saw
straight through the globe, out at the other end, and into the immensity of
space beyond.
"I may confide in
you," said Mr. Chester, "without reserve. I love my son, ma’am,
dearly; and loving him as I do, I would save him from working certain misery.
You know of his attachment to Miss Haredale. You have abetted him in it, and
very kind of you it was to do so. I am deeply obliged to you--most deeply
obliged to you-- for your interest in his behalf; but my dear ma’am, it is a
mistaken one, I do assure you."
Mrs. Varden stammered
that she was sorry--
"Sorry, my dear ma’am,"
he interposed. "Never be sorry for what is so very amiable, so very good
in intention, so perfectly like yourself. But there are grave and weighty
reasons, pressing family considerations, and apart even from these, points of
religious difference, which interpose themselves, and render their union
impossible; utterly im-possible. I should have mentioned these circumstances to
your husband; but he has--you will excuse my saying this so freely--he has not
your quickness of apprehension or depth of moral sense. What an extremely airy
house this is, and how beautifully kept! For one like myself--a widower so
long--these tokens of female care and superintendence have inexpressible
charms."
Mrs. Varden began to
think (she scarcely knew why) that the young Mr. Chester must be in the wrong
and the old Mr. Chester must he in the right.
"My son Ned,"
resumed her tempter with his most winning air, "has had, I am told, your
lovely daughter’s aid, and your open-hearted husband’s."
"--Much more than
mine, sir," said Mrs. Varden; "a great deal more. I have often had my
doubts. It’s a--"
"A bad
example," suggested Mr. Chester. "It is. No doubt it is. Your
daughter is at that age when to set before her an encouragement for young
persons to rebel against their parents on this most important point, is
particularly injudicious. You are quite right. I ought to have thought of that
myself, but it escaped me, I confess--so far superior are your sex to ours,
dear madam, in point of penetration and sagacity."
Mrs. Varden looked as
wise as if she had really said something to deserve this compliment--firmly
believed she had, in short--and her faith in her own shrewdness increased
considerably.
"My dear ma’am,"
said Mr. Chester, "you embolden me to be plain with you. My son and I are
at variance on this point. The young lady and her natural guardian differ upon
it, also. And the closing point is, that my son is bound by his duty to me, by
his honour, by every solemn tie and obligation, to marry some one else."
"Engaged to marry
another lady!" quoth Mrs. Varden, holding up her hands.
"My dear madam,
brought up, educated, and trained, expressly for that purpose. Expressly for
that purpose.--Miss Haredale, I am told, is a very charming creature."
"I am her
foster-mother, and should know--the best young lady in the world," said
Mrs. Varden.
"I have not the
smallest doubt of it. I am sure she is. And you, who have stood in that tender
relation towards her, are bound to consult her happiness. Now, can I--as I have
said to Haredale, who quite agrees--can I possibly stand by, and suffer her to
throw herself away (although she is of a Catholic family), upon a young fellow
who, as yet, has no heart at all? It is no imputation upon him to say he has
not, because young men who have plunged deeply into the frivolities and
conventionalities of society, very seldom have. Their hearts never grow, my
dear ma’am, till after thirty. I don’t believe, no, I do not believe, that I
had any heart myself when I was Ned’s age."
"Oh sir,"
said Mrs. Varden, "I think you must have had. It’s impossible that you,
who have so much now, can ever have been without any."
"I hope," he
answered, shrugging his shoulders meekly, "I have a little; I hope, a very
little--Heaven knows! But to return to Ned; I have no doubt you thought, and
therefore interfered benevolently in his behalf, that I objected to Miss
Haredale. How very natural! My dear madam, I object to him--to
him--emphatically to Ned himself."
Mrs. Varden was
perfectly aghast at the disclosure.
"He has, if he
honourably fulfils this solemn obligation of which I have told you--and he must
be honourable, dear Mrs. Varden, or he is no son of mine--a fortune within his
reach. He is of most expensive, ruinously expensive habits; and if, in a moment
of caprice and wilfulness, he were to marry this young lady, and so deprive
himself of the means of gratifying the tastes to which he has been so long
accustomed, he would--my dear madam, he would break the gentle creature’s
heart. Mrs. Varden, my good lady, my dear soul, I put it to you--is such a
sacrifice to be endured? Is the female heart a thing to be trifled with in this
way? Ask your own, my dear madam. Ask your own, I beseech you."
"Truly,"
thought Mrs. Varden, "this gentleman is a saint. But," she added
aloud, and not unnaturally, "if you take Miss Emma’s lover away, sir, what
becomes of the poor thing’s heart then?"
"The very
point," said Mr. Chester, not at all abashed, "to which I wished to
lead you. A marriage with my son, whom I should be compelled to disown, would
be followed by years of misery; they would be separated, my dear madam, in a
twelvemonth. To break off this attachment, which is more fancied than real, as
you and I know very well, will cost the dear girl but a few tears, and she is
happy again. Take the case of your own daughter, the young lady downstairs, who
is your breathing image"--Mrs. Varden coughed and simpered--"there is
a young man (I am sorry to say, a dissolute fellow, of very indifferent
character) of whom I have heard Ned speak--Bullet was
it--Pullet--Mullet--"
"There is a young
man of the name of Joseph Willet, sir," said Mrs. Varden, folding her
hands loftily.
"That’s he,"
cried Mr. Chester. "Suppose this Joseph Willet now, were to aspire to the
affections of your charming daughter, and were to engage them."
"It would be like
his impudence," interposed Mrs. Varden, bridling, "to dare to think
of such a thing!"
"My dear madam,
that’s the whole case. I know it would be like his impudence. It is like Ned’s
impudence to do as he has done; but you would not on that account, or because
of a few tears from your beautiful daughter, refrain from checking their
inclinations in their birth. I meant to have reasoned thus with your husband
when I saw him at Mrs. Rudge’s this evening--"
"My husband,"
said Mrs. Varden, interposing with emotion, "would be a great deal better
at home than going to Mrs. Rudge’s so often. I don’t know what he does there. I
don’t see what occasion he has to busy himself in her affairs at all,
sir."
"If I don’t appear
to express my concurrence in those last sentiments of yours," returned Mr.
Chester, "quite so strongly as you might desire, it is because his being
there, my dear madam, and not proving conversational, led me hither, and
procured me the happiness of this interview with one, in whom the whole
management, conduct, and prosperity of her family are centred, I
perceive."
With that he took Mrs.
Varden’s hand again, and having pressed it to his lips with the highflown
gallantry of the day--a little burlesqued to render it the more striking in the
good lady’s unaccustomed eyes--proceeded in the same strain of mingled
sophistry, cajolery, and flattery, to entreat that her utmost influence might
be exerted to restrain her husband and daughter from any further promotion of
Edward’s suit to Miss Haredale, and from aiding or abetting either party in any
way. Mrs. Varden was but a woman, and had her share of vanity, obstinacy, and
love of power. She entered into a secret treaty of alliance, offensive and
defensive, with her insinuating visitor; and really did believe, as many others
would have done who saw and heard him, that in so doing she furthered the ends
of truth, justice, and morality, in a very uncommon degree.
Overjoyed by the
success of his negotiation, and mightily amused within himself, Mr. Chester
conducted her downstairs in the same state as before; and having repeated the
previous ceremony of salutation, which also as before comprehended Dolly, took his
leave; first completing the conquest of Miss Miggs’s heart, by inquiring if
"this young lady" would light him to the door.
"Oh, mim,"
said Miggs, returning with the candle. "Oh gracious me, mim, there’s a
gentleman! Was there ever such an angel to talk as he is--and such a
sweet-looking man! So upright and noble, that he seems to despise the very
ground he walks on; and yet so mild and condescending, that he seems to say
"but I will take notice on it too." And to think of his taking you
for Miss Dolly, and Miss Dolly for your sister--Oh, my goodness me, if I was
master wouldn’t I be jealous of him!"
Mrs. Varden reproved
her handmaid for this vain-speaking; but very gently and mildly--quite
smilingly indeed--remarking that she was a foolish, giddy, light-headed girl,
whose spirits carried her beyond all bounds, and who didn’t mean half she said,
or she would be quite angry with her.
"For my
part," said Dolly, in a thoughtful manner, "I half believe Mr.
Chester is something like Miggs in that respect. For all his politeness and
pleasant speaking, I am pretty sure he was making game of us, more than
once."
"If you venture to
say such a thing again, and to speak ill of people behind their backs in my
presence, miss," said Mrs. Varden, "I shall insist upon your taking a
candle and going to bed directly. How dare you, Dolly? I’m astonished at you.
The rudeness of your whole behaviour this evening has been disgraceful. Did
anybody ever hear," cried the enraged matron, bursting into tears,
"of a daughter telling her own mother she has been made game of!"
What a very uncertain
temper Mrs. Varden’s was!
REPAIRING to a noted
coffee-house in Covent Garden when he left the locksmith’s, Mr. Chester sat
long over a late dinner, entertaining himself exceedingly with the whimsical
recollection of his recent proceedings, and congratulating himself very much on
his great cleverness. Influenced by these thoughts, his face wore an expression
so benign and tranquil, that the waiter in immediate attendance upon him felt
he could almost have died in his defence, and settled in his own mind (until
the receipt of the bill, and a very small fee for very great trouble disabused
it of the idea) that such an apostolic customer was worth half-a-dozen of the
ordinary run of visitors, at least.
A visit to the
gaming-table--not as a heated, anxious venturer, but one whom it was quite a
treat to see staking his two or three pieces in deference to the follies of
society, and smiling with equal benevolence on winners and losers--made it late
before he reached home. It was his custom to bid his servant go to bed at his
own time unless he had orders to the contrary, and to leave a candle on the
common stair. There was a lamp on the landing by which he could always light it
when he came home late, and having a key of the door about him he could enter
and go to bed at his pleasure.
He opened the glass of
the dull lamp, whose wick, burnt up and swollen like a drunkard’s nose, came
flying off in little carbuncles at the candle’s touch, and scattering hot
sparks about, rendered it matter of some difficulty to kindle the lazy taper;
when a noise, as of a man snoring deeply some steps higher up, caused him to
pause and listen. It was the heavy breathing of a sleeper, close at hand. Some
fellow had lain down on the open staircase, and was slumbering soundly. Having
lighted the candle at length and opened his own door, he softly ascended,
holding the taper high above his head, and peering cautiously about; curious to
see what kind of man had chosen so comfortless a shelter for his lodging.
With his head upon the
landing and his great limbs flung over half- a-dozen stairs, as carelessly as
though he were a dead man whom drunken bearers had thrown down by chance, there
lay Hugh, face uppermost, his long hair drooping like some wild weed upon his
wooden pillow, and his huge chest heaving with the sounds which so unwontedly
disturbed the place and hour.
He who came upon him so
unexpectedly was about to break his rest by thrusting him with his foot, when,
glancing at his upturned face, he arrested himself in the very action, and
stooping down and shading the candle with his hand, examined his features
closely. Close as his first inspection was, it did not suffice, for he passed
the light, still carefully shaded as before, across and across his face, and
yet observed him with a searching eye.
While he was thus
engaged, the sleeper, without any starting or turning round, awoke. There was a
kind of fascination in meeting his steady gaze so suddenly, which took from the
other the presence of mind to withdraw his eyes, and forced him, as it were, to
meet his look. So they remained staring at each other, until Mr. Chester at
last broke silence, and asked him in a low voice, why he lay sleeping there.
"I thought,"
said Hugh, struggling into a sitting posture and gazing at him intently, still,
"that you were a part of my dream. It was a curious one. I hope it may
never come true, master."
"What makes you
shiver?"
"The--the cold, I
suppose," he growled, as he shook himself and rose. "I hardly know
where I am yet."
"Do you know
me?" said Mr. Chester.
"Ay, I know
you," he answered. "I was dreaming of you--we’re not where I thought
we were. That’s a comfort."
He looked round him as
he spoke, and in particular looked above his head, as though he half expected
to be standing under some object which had had existence in his dream. Then he
rubbed his eyes and shook himself again, and followed his conductor into his
own rooms.
Mr. Chester lighted the
candles which stood upon his dressing-table, and wheeling an easy-chair towards
the fire, which was yet burning, stirred up a cheerful blaze, sat down before
it, and bade his uncouth visitor "Come here," and draw his boots off.
"You have been
drinking again, my fine fellow," he said, as Hugh went down on one knee,
and did as he was told.
"As I’m alive,
master, I’ve walked the twelve long miles, and waited here I don’t know how
long, and had no drink between my lips since dinner-time at noon."
"And can you do nothing
better, my pleasant friend, than fall asleep, and shake the very building with
your snores?" said Mr. Chester. "Can’t you dream in your straw at
home, dull dog as you are, that you need come here to do it?--Reach me those
slippers, and tread softly."
Hugh obeyed in silence.
"And harkee, my
dear young gentleman," said Mr. Chester, as he put them on, "the next
time you dream, don’t let it be of me, but of some dog or horse with whom you
are better acquainted. Fill the glass once--you’ll find it and the bottle in
the same place--and empty it to keep yourself awake."
Hugh obeyed again even
more zealously--and having done so, presented himself before his patron.
"Now," said
Mr. Chester, "what do you want with me?"
"There was news
to-day," returned Hugh. "Your son was at our house--came down on
horseback. He tried to see the young woman, but couldn’t get sight of her. He
left some letter or some message which our Joe had charge of, but he and the
old one quarrelled about it when your son had gone, and the old one wouldn’t
let it be delivered. He says (that’s the old one does) that none of his people
shall interfere and get him into trouble. He’s a landlord, he says, and lives
on everybody’s custom."
"He’s a
jewel," smiled Mr. Chester, "and the better for being a dull
one.--Well?"
"Varden’s
daughter--that’s the girl I kissed--"
"--and stole the
bracelet from upon the king’s highway," said Mr. Chester, composedly.
"Yes; what of her?"
"She wrote a note
at our house to the young woman, saying she lost the letter I brought to you,
and you burnt. Our Joe was to carry it, but the old one kept him at home all
next day, on purpose that he shouldn’t. Next morning he gave it to me to take;
and here it is."
"You didn’t
deliver it then, my good friend?" said Mr. Chester, twirling Dolly’s note
between his finger and thumb, and feigning to be surprised.
"I supposed you’d
want to have it," retorted Hugh. "Burn one, burn all, I
thought."
"My devil-may-care
acquaintance," said Mr. Chester--"really if you do not draw some
nicer distinctions, your career will be cut short with most surprising
suddenness. Don’t you know that the letter you brought to me, was directed to
my son who resides in this very place? And can you descry no difference between
his letters and those addressed to other people?"
"If you don’t want
it," said Hugh, disconcerted by this reproof, for he had expected high
praise, "give it me back, and I’ll deliver it. I don’t know how to please
you, master."
"I shall deliver
it," returned his patron, putting it away after a moment’s consideration,
"myself. Does the young lady walk out, on fine mornings?"
"Mostly--about
noon is her usual time."
"Alone?"
"Yes, alone."
"Where?"
"In the grounds
before the house.--Them that the footpath crosses."
"If the weather
should be fine, I may throw myself in her way to- morrow, perhaps," said
Mr. Chester, as coolly as if she were one of his ordinary acquaintance.
"Mr. Hugh, if I should ride up to the Maypole door, you will do me the
favour only to have seen me once. You must suppress your gratitude, and
endeavour to forget my forbearance in the matter of the bracelet. It is natural
it should break out, and it does you honour; but when other folks are by, you
must, for your own sake and safety, be as like your usual self as though you
owed me no obligation whatever, and had never stood within these walls. You
comprehend me?"
Hugh understood him
perfectly. After a pause he muttered that he hoped his patron would involve him
in no trouble about this last letter; for he had kept it back solely with the
view of pleasing him. He was continuing in this strain, when Mr. Chester with a
most beneficent and patronising air cut him short by saying:
"My good fellow,
you have my promise, my word, my sealed bond (for a verbal pledge with me is
quite as good), that I will always protect you so long as you deserve it. Now,
do set your mind at rest. Keep it at ease, I beg of you. When a man puts
himself in my power so thoroughly as you have done, I really feel as though he
had a kind of claim upon me. I am more disposed to mercy and forbearance under
such circumstances than I can tell you, Hugh. Do look upon me as your
protector, and rest assured, I entreat you, that on the subject of that
indiscretion, you may preserve, as long as you and I are friends, the lightest
heart that ever beat within a human breast. Fill that glass once more to cheer
you on your road homewards--I am really quite ashamed to think how far you have
to go--and then God bless you for the night."
"They think,"
said Hugh, when he had tossed the liquor down, "that I am sleeping soundly
in the stable. Ha ha ha! The stable door is shut, but the steed’s gone,
master."
"You are a most
convivial fellow," returned his friend, "and I love your humour of
all things. Good night! Take the greatest possible care of yourself, for my
sake!"
It was remarkable that
during the whole interview, each had endeavoured to catch stolen glances of the
other’s face, and had never looked full at it. They interchanged one brief and
hasty glance as Hugh went out, averted their eyes directly, and so separated.
Hugh closed the double doors behind him, carefully and without noise; and Mr.
Chester remained in his easy-chair, with his gaze intently fixed upon the fire.
"Well!" he
said, after meditating for a long time--and said with a deep sigh and an uneasy
shifting of his attitude, as though he dismissed some other subject from his
thoughts, and returned to that which had held possession of them all the
day--"the plot thickens; I have thrown the shell; it will explode, I
think, in eight-and-forty hours, and should scatter these good folks amazingly.
We shall see!"
He went to bed and fell
asleep, but had not slept long when he started up and thought that Hugh was at
the outer door, calling in a strange voice, very different from his own, to be
admitted. The delusion was so strong upon him, and was so full of that vague
terror of the night in which such visions have their being, that he rose, and
taking his sheathed sword in his hand, opened the door, and looked out upon the
staircase, and towards the spot where Hugh had lain asleep; and even spoke to
him by name. But all was dark and quiet, and creeping back to bed again, he
fell, after an hour’s uneasy watching, into a second sleep, and woke no more till
morning.
THE thoughts of worldly
men are for ever regulated by a moral law of gravitation, which, like the
physical one, holds them down to earth. The bright glory of day, and the silent
wonders of a starlit night, appeal to their minds in vain. There are no signs
in the sun, or in the moon, or in the stars, for their reading. They are like
some wise men, who, learning to know each planet by its Latin name, have quite
forgotten such small heavenly constellations as Charity, Forbearance, Universal
Love, and Mercy, although they shine by night and day so brightly that the
blind may see them; and who, looking upward at the spangled sky, see nothing
there but the reflection of their own great wisdom and book- learning.
It is curious to imagine
these people of the world, busy in thought, turning their eyes towards the
countless spheres that shine above us, and making them reflect the only images
their minds contain. The man who lives but in the breath of princes, has
nothing his sight but stars for courtiers’ breasts. The envious man beholds his
neighbours’ honours even in the sky; to the money- hoarder, and the mass of
worldly folk, the whole great universe above glitters with sterling coin--fresh
from the mint--stamped with the sovereign’s head--coming always between them
and heaven, turn where they may. So do the shadows of our own desires stand
between us and our better angels, and thus their brightness is eclipsed.
Everything was fresh
and gay, as though the world were but that morning made, when Mr. Chester rode
at a tranquil pace along the Forest road. Though early in the season, it was
warm and genial weather; the trees were budding into leaf, the hedges and the
grass were green, the air was musical with songs of birds, and high above them
all the lark poured out her richest melody. In shady spots, the morning dew
sparkled on each young leaf and blade of grass; and where the sun was shining,
some diamond drops yet glistened brightly, as in unwillingness to leave so fair
a world, and have such brief existence. Even the light wind, whose rustling was
as gentle to the ear as softly-falling water, had its hope and promise; and,
leaving a pleasant fragrance in its track as it went fluttering by, whispered
of its intercourse with Summer, and of his happy coming.
The solitary rider went
glancing on among the trees, from sunlight into shade and back again, at the
same even pace--looking about him, certainly, from time to time, but with no
greater thought of the day or the scene through which he moved, than that he
was fortunate (being choicely dressed) to have such favourable weather. He
smiled very complacently at such times, but rather as if he were satisfied with
himself than with anything else: and so went riding on, upon his chestnut cob,
as pleasant to look upon as his own horse, and probably far less sensitive to
the many cheerful influences by which he was surrounded.
In the course of time,
the Maypole’s massive chimneys rose upon his view: but he quickened not his
pace one jot, and with the same cool gravity rode up to the tavern porch. John
Willet, who was toasting his red face before a great fire in the bar, and who,
with surpassing foresight and quickness of apprehension, had been thinking, as
he looked at the blue sky, that if that state of things lasted much longer, it
might ultimately become necessary to leave off fires and throw the windows
open, issued forth to hold his stirrup; calling lustily for Hugh.
"Oh, you’re here,
are you, sir?" said John, rather surprised by the quickness with which he
appeared. "Take this here valuable animal into the stable, and have more
than particular care of him if you want to keep your place. A mortal lazy
fellow, sir; he needs a deal of looking after."
"But you have a
son," returned Mr. Chester, giving his bridle to Hugh as he dismounted,
and acknowledging his salute by a careless motion of his hand towards his hat.
"Why don’t you make him useful?"
"Why, the truth
is, sir," replied John with great importance, "that my son--what, you’re
a-listening are you, villain?"
"Who’s
listening?" returned Hugh angrily. "A treat, indeed, to hear you
speak! Would you have me take him in till he’s cool?"
"Walk him up and
down further off then, sir," cried old John, "and when you see me and
a noble gentleman entertaining ourselves with talk, keep your distance. If you
don’t know your distance, sir," added Mr. Willet, after an enormously long
pause, during which he fixed his great dull eyes on Hugh, and waited with
exemplary patience for any little property in the way of ideas that might come
to him, "we’ll find a way to teach you, pretty soon."
Hugh shrugged his
shoulders scornfully, and in his reckless swaggering way, crossed to the other
side of the little green, and there, with the bridle slung loosely over his
shoulder, led the horse to and fro, glancing at his master every now and then
from under his bushy eyebrows, with as sinister an aspect as one would desire
to see.
Mr. Chester, who,
without appearing to do so, had eyed him attentively during this brief dispute,
stepped into the porch, and turning abruptly to Mr. Willet, said,
"You keep strange
servants, John."
"Strange enough to
look at, sir, certainly," answered the host; "but out of doors; for
horses, dogs, and the likes of that; there an’t a better man in England than is
that Maypole Hugh yonder. He an’t fit for indoors," added Mr. Willet, with
the confidential air of a man who felt his own superior nature. "I do
that; but if that chap had only a little imagination, sir--"
"He’s an active
fellow now, I dare swear," said Mr. Chester in a musing tone, which seemed
to suggest that he would have said the same had there been nobody to hear him.
"Active,
sir!" retorted John, with quite an expression in his face; "that
chap! Hallo there! You, sir! Bring that horse here, and go and hang my wig on
the weathercock, to show this gentleman whether you’re one of the lively sort
or not."
Hugh made no answer,
but throwing the bridle to his master, and snatching his wig from his head, in
a manner so unceremonious and hasty that the action discomposed Mr. Willet not
a little, though performed at his own special desire, climbed nimbly to the
very summit of the maypole before the house, and hanging the wig upon the
weathercock, sent it twirling round like a roasting jack. Having achieved this
performance, he cast it on the ground, and sliding down the pole with
inconceivable rapidity, alighted on his feet almost as soon as it had touched
the earth.
"There, sir,"
said John, relapsing into his usual stolid state, "you won’t see that at
many houses, besides the Maypole, where there’s good accommodation for man and
beast--nor that neither, though that with him is nothing."
This last remark bore
reference to his vaulting on horseback, as upon Mr. Chester’s first visit, and
quickly disappearing by the stable gate.
"That with him is
nothing," repeated Mr. Willet, brushing his wig with his wrist, and
inwardly resolving to distribute a small charge for dust and damage to that
article of dress, through the various items of his guest’s bill; "he’ll
get out of a’most any winder in the house. There never was such a chap for
flinging himself about and never hurting his bones. It’s my opinion, sir, that
it’s pretty nearly allowing to his not having any imagination; and that if
imagination could be (which it can’t) knocked into him, he’d never be able to
do it any more. But we was a-talking, sir, about my son."
"True, Willet,
true," said his visitor, turning again towards the landlord with his
accustomed serenity of face. "My good friend, what about him?"
It has been reported
that Mr. Willet, previously to making answer, winked. But as he was never known
to be guilty of such lightness of conduct either before or afterwards, this may
be looked upon as a malicious invention of his enemies--founded, perhaps, upon
the undisputed circumstance of his taking his guest by the third breast button
of his coat, counting downwards from the chin, and pouring his reply into his
ear:
"Sir,"
whispered John, with dignity, "I know my duty. We want no love-making
here, sir, unbeknown to parents. I respect a certain young gentleman, taking
him in the light of a young gentleman; I respect a certain young lady, taking
her in the light of a young lady; but of the two as a couple, I have no
knowledge, sir, none whatever. My son, sir, is upon his patrole."
"I thought I saw
him looking through the corner window but this moment," said Mr. Chester,
who naturally thought that being on patrole, implied walking about somewhere.
"No doubt you did,
sir," returned John. "He is upon his patrole of honour, sir, not to
leave the premises. Me and some friends of mine that use the Maypole of an
evening, sir, considered what was best to be done with him, to prevent his
doing anything unpleasant in opposing your desires; and we’ve put him on his
patrole. And what’s more, sir, he won’t be off his patrole for a pretty long
time to come, I can tell you that."
When he had
communicated this bright idea, which had its origin in the perusal by the
village cronies of a newspaper, containing, among other matters, an account of
how some officer pending the sentence of some court-martial had been enlarged
on parole, Mr. Willet drew back from his guest’s ear, and without any visible
alteration of feature, chuckled thrice audibly. This nearest approach to a
laugh in which he ever indulged (and that but seldom and only on extreme
occasions), never even curled his lip or effected the smallest change in--no,
not so much as a slight wagging of--his great, fat, double chin, which at these
times, as at all others, remained a perfect desert in the broad map of his
face; one changeless, dull, tremendous blank.
Lest it should be
matter of surprise to any, that Mr. Willet adopted this bold course in
opposition to one whom he had often entertained, and who had always paid his
way at the Maypole gallantly, it may be remarked that it was his very
penetration and sagacity in this respect, which occasioned him to indulge in
those unusual demonstrations of jocularity, just now recorded. For Mr. Willet,
after carefully balancing father and son in his mental scales, had arrived at
the distinct conclusion that the old gentleman was a better sort of a customer
than the young one. Throwing his landlord into the same scale, which was
already turned by this consideration, and heaping upon him, again, his strong
desires to run counter to the unfortunate Joe, and his opposition as a general
principle to all matters of love and matrimony, it went down to the very ground
straightway, and sent the light cause of the younger gentleman flying upwards
to the ceiling. Mr. Chester was not the kind of man to be by any means
dim-sighted to Mr. Willet’s motives, but he thanked him as graciously as if he
had been one of the most disinterested martyrs that ever shone on earth; and leaving
him, with many complimentary reliances on his great taste and judgment, to
prepare whatever dinner he might deem most fitting the occasion, bent his steps
towards the Warren.
Dressed with more than
his usual elegance; assuming a gracefulness of manner, which, though it was the
result of long study, sat easily upon him and became him well; composing his
features into their most serene and prepossessing expression; and setting in
short that guard upon himself, at every point, which denoted that he attached
no slight importance to the impression he was about to make; he entered the
bounds of
Miss Haredale’s usual
walk. He had not gone far, or looked about him long, when he descried coming
towards him, a female figure. A glimpse of the form and dress as she crossed a
little wooden bridge which lay between them, satisfied him that he had found
her whom he desired to see. He threw himself in her way, and a very few paces
brought them close together.
He raised his hat from
his head, and yielding the path, suffered her to pass him. Then, as if the idea
had but that moment occurred to him, he turned hastily back and said in an
agitated voice:
"I beg pardon--do
I address Miss Haredale?"
She stopped in some
confusion at being so unexpectedly accosted by a stranger; and answered
"Yes."
"Something told
me," he said, looking a compliment to her beauty, "that it could be
no other. Miss Haredale, I bear a name which is not unknown to you--which it is
a pride, and yet a pain to me to know, sounds pleasantly in your ears. I am a
man advanced in life, as you see. I am the father of him whom you honour and
distinguish above all other men. May I for weighty reasons which fill me with
distress, beg but a minute’s conversation with you here?"
Who that was
inexperienced in deceit, and had a frank and youthful heart, could doubt the
speaker’s truth--could doubt it too, when the voice that spoke, was like the
faint echo of one she knew so well, and so much loved to hear? She inclined her
head, and stopping, cast her eyes upon the ground.
"A little more
apart--among these trees. It is an old man’s hand, Miss Haredale; an honest
one, believe me."
She put hers in it as
he said these words, and suffered him to lead her to a neighbouring seat.
"You alarm me,
sir," she said in a low voice. "You are not the bearer of any ill
news, I hope?"
"Of none that you
anticipate," he answered, sitting down beside her. "Edward is
well--quite well. It is of him I wish to speak, certainly; but I have no
misfortune to communicate."
She bowed her head
again, and made as though she would have begged him to proceed; but said
nothing.
"I am sensible
that I speak to you at a disadvantage, dear Miss Haredale. Believe me that I am
not so forgetful of the feelings of my younger days as not to know that you are
little disposed to view me with favour. You have heard me described as
cold-hearted, calculating, selfish--"
"I have never,
sir,"--she interposed with an altered manner and a firmer voice; "I
have never heard you spoken of in harsh or disrespectful terms. You do a great
wrong to Edward’s nature if you believe him capable of any mean or base
proceeding."
"Pardon me, my
sweet young lady, but your uncle--"
"Nor is it my
uncle’s nature either," she replied, with a heightened colour in her
cheek. "It is not his nature to stab in the dark, nor is it mine to love
such deeds."
She rose as she spoke,
and would have left him; but he detained her with a gentle hand, and besought
her in such persuasive accents to hear him but another minute, that she was
easily prevailed upon to comply, and so sat down again.
"And it is,"
said Mr. Chester, looking upward, and apostrophising the air; "it is this
frank, ingenuous, noble nature, Ned, that you can wound so lightly.
Shame--shame upon you, boy!"
She turned towards him
quickly, and with a scornful look and flashing eyes. There were tears in Mr.
Chester’s eyes, but he dashed them hurriedly away, as though unwilling that his
weakness should be known, and regarded her with mingled admiration and
compassion.
"I never until
now," he said, "believed, that the frivolous actions of a young man
could move me like these of my own son. I never knew till now, the worth of a
woman’s heart, which boys so lightly win, and lightly fling away. Trust me,
dear young lady, that I never until now did know your worth; and though an
abhorrence of deceit and falsehood has impelled me to seek you out, and would
have done so had you been the poorest and least gifted of your sex, I should
have lacked the fortitude to sustain this interview could I have pictured you
to my imagination as you really are."
Oh! If Mrs. Varden
could have seen the virtuous gentleman as he said these words, with indignation
sparkling from his eyes--if she could have heard his broken, quavering
voice--if she could have beheld him as he stood bareheaded in the sunlight, and
with unwonted energy poured forth his eloquence!
With a haughty face,
but pale and trembling too, Emma regarded him in silence. She neither spoke nor
moved, but gazed upon him as though she would look into his heart.
"I throw
off," said Mr. Chester, "the restraint which natural affection would
impose on some men, and reject all bonds but those of truth and duty. Miss
Haredale, you are deceived; you are deceived by your unworthy lover, and my unworthy
son."
Still she looked at him
steadily, and still said not one word.
"I have ever
opposed his professions of love for you; you will do me the justice, dear Miss
Haredale, to remember that. Your uncle and myself were enemies in early life,
and if I had sought retaliation, I might have found it here. But as we grow
older, we grow wiser--bitter, I would fain hope--and from the first, I have
opposed him in this attempt. I foresaw the end, and would have spared you, if I
could."
"Speak plainly,
sir," she faltered. "You deceive me, or are deceived yourself. I do
not believe you--I cannot--I should not."
"First," said
Mr. Chester, soothingly, "for there may be in your mind some latent angry
feeling to which I would not appeal, pray take this letter. It reached my hands
by chance, and by mistake, and should have accounted to you (as I am told) for
my son’s not answering some other note of yours. God forbid, Miss
Haredale," said the good gentleman, with great emotion, "that there
should be in your gentle breast one causeless ground of quarrel with him. You
should know, and you will see, that he was in no fault here."
There appeared
something so very candid, so scrupulously honourable, so very truthful and just
in this course something which rendered the upright person who resorted to it,
so worthy of belief--that Emma’s heart, for the first time, sunk within her.
She turned away and burst into tears.
"I would,"
said Mr. Chester, leaning over her, and speaking in mild and quite venerable
accents; "I would, dear girl, it were my task to banish, not increase,
those tokens of your grief. My son, my erring son,--I will not call him
deliberately criminal in this, for men so young, who have been inconstant twice
or thrice before, act without reflection, almost without a knowledge of the
wrong they do,--will break his plighted faith to you; has broken it even now.
Shall I stop here, and having given you this warning, leave it to be fulfilled;
or shall I go on?"
"You will go on,
sir," she answered, "and speak more plainly yet, in justice both to
him and me."
"My dear
girl," said Mr. Chester, bending over her more affectionately still;
"whom I would call my daughter, but the Fates forbid, Edward seeks to
break with you upon a false and most unwarrantable pretence. I have it on his
own showing; in his own hand. Forgive me, if I have had a watch upon his
conduct; I am his father; I had a regard for your peace and his honour, and no
better resource was left me. There lies on his desk at this present moment,
ready for transmission to you, a letter, in which he tells you that our
poverty--our poverty; his and mine, Miss Haredale-- forbids him to pursue his
claim upon your hand; in which he offers, voluntarily proposes, to free you
from your pledge; and talks magnanimously (men do so, very commonly, in such
cases) of being in time more worthy of your regard--and so forth. A letter, to
be plain, in which he not only jilts you--pardon the word; I would summon to
your aid your pride and dignity--not only jilts you, I fear, in favour of the
object whose slighting treatment first inspired his brief passion for yourself
and gave it birth in wounded vanity, but affects to make a merit and a virtue
of the act."
She glanced proudly at
him once more, as by an involuntary impulse, and with a swelling breast
rejoined, "If what you say be true, he takes much needless trouble, sir,
to compass his design. He’s very tender of my peace of mind. I quite thank
him."
"The truth of what
I tell you, dear young lady," he replied, "you will test by the
receipt or non-receipt of the letter of which I speak. Haredale, my dear
fellow, I am delighted to see you, although we meet under singular
circumstances, and upon a melancholy occasion. I hope you are very well."
At these words the
young lady raised her eyes, which were filled with tears; and seeing that her
uncle indeed stood before them, and being quite unequal to the trial of hearing
or of speaking one word more, hurriedly withdrew, and left them. They stood
looking at each other, and at her retreating figure, and for a long time
neither of them spoke.
"What does this
mean? Explain it," said Mr. Haredale at length. "Why are you here,
and why with her?"
"My dear
friend," rejoined the other, resuming his accustomed manner with infinite
readiness, and throwing himself upon the bench with a weary air, "you told
me not very long ago, at that delightful old tavern of which you are the
esteemed proprietor (and a most charming establishment it is for persons of
rural pursuits and in robust health, who are not liable to take cold), that I
had the head and heart of an evil spirit in all matters of deception. I thought
at the time; I really did think; you flattered me. But now I begin to wonder at
your discernment, and vanity apart, do honestly believe you spoke the truth.
Did you ever counterfeit extreme ingenuousness and honest indignation? My dear
fellow, you have no conception, if you never did, how faint the effort makes
one."
Mr. Haredale surveyed
him with a look of cold contempt. "You may evade an explanation, I
know," he said, folding his arms. "But I must have it. I can
wait."
"Not at all. Not
at all, my good fellow. You shall not wait a moment," returned his friend,
as he lazily crossed his legs. "The simplest thing in the world. It lies
in a nutshell. Ned has written her a letter--a boyish, honest, sentimental
composition, which remains as yet in his desk, because he hasn’t had the heart
to send it. I have taken a liberty, for which my parental affection and anxiety
are a sufficient excuse, and possessed myself of the contents. I have described
them to your niece (a most enchanting person, Haredale; quite an angelic
creature), with a little colouring and description adapted to our purpose. It’s
done. You may be quite easy. It’s all over. Deprived of their adherents and
mediators; her pride and jealousy roused to the utmost; with nobody to
undeceive her, and you to confirm me; you will find that their intercourse will
close with her answer. If she receives Ned’s letter by to-morrow noon, you may
date their parting from to-morrow night. No thanks, I beg; you owe me none. I
have acted for myself; and if I have forwarded our compact with all the ardour
even you could have desired, I have done so selfishly, indeed."
"I curse the
compact, as you call it, with my whole heart and soul," returned the
other. "It was made in an evil hour. I have bound myself to a lie; I have
leagued myself with you; and though I did so with a righteous motive, and
though it cost me such an effort as haply few men know, I hate and despise
myself for the deed."
"You are very
warm," said Mr. Chester with a languid smile.
"I am warm. I am
maddened by your coldness. "Death, Chester, if your blood ran warmer in
your veins, and there were no restraints upon me, such as those that hold and
drag me back--well; it is done; you tell me so, and on such a point I may
believe you. When I am most remorseful for this treachery, I will think of you
and your marriage, and try to justify myself in such remembrances, for having
torn asunder Emma and your son, at any cost. Our bond is cancelled now, and we
may part."
Mr. Chester kissed his
hand gracefully; and with the same tranquil face he had preserved
throughout--even when he had seen his companion so tortured and transported by
his passion that his whole frame was shaken--lay in his lounging posture on the
seat and watched him as he walked away.
"My scapegoat and
my drudge at school," he said, raising his head to look after him;
"my friend of later days, who could not keep his mistress when he had won
her, and threw me in her way to carry off the prize; I triumph in the present
and the past. Bark on, ill- favoured, ill-conditioned cur; fortune has ever
been with me--I like to hear you."
The spot where they had
met, was in an avenue of trees. Mr. Haredale not passing out on either hand,
had walked straight on. He chanced to turn his head when at some considerable
distance, and seeing that his late companion had by that time risen and was
looking after him, stood still as though he half expected him to follow and
waited for his coming up.
"It may come to
that one day, but not yet," said Mr. Chester, waving his hand, as though
they were the best of friends, and turning away. "Not yet, Haredale. Life
is pleasant enough to me; dull and full of heaviness to you. No. To cross
swords with such a man--to indulge his humour unless upon extremity--would be
weak indeed."
For all that, he drew
his sword as he walked along, and in an absent humour ran his eye from hilt to
point full twenty times. But thoughtfulness begets wrinkles; remembering this,
he soon put it up, smoothed his contracted brow, hummed a gay tune with greater
gaiety of manner, and was his unruffled self again.
A HOMELY proverb
recognises the existence of a troublesome class of persons who, having an inch
conceded them, will take an ell. Not to quote the illustrious examples of those
heroic scourges of mankind, whose amiable path in life has been from birth to
death through blood, and fire, and ruin, and who would seem to have existed for
no better purpose than to teach mankind that as the absence of pain is
pleasure, so the earth, purged of their presence, may be deemed a blessed
place--not to quote such mighty instances, it will be sufficient to refer to
old John Willet.
Old John having long
encroached a good standard inch, full measure, on the liberty of Joe, and
having snipped off a Flemish ell in the matter of the parole, grew so despotic
and so great, that his thirst for conquest knew no bounds. The more young Joe
submitted, the more absolute old John became. The ell soon faded into nothing.
Yards, furlongs, miles arose; and on went old John in the pleasantest manner
possible, trimming off an exuberance in this place, shearing away some liberty
of speech or action in that, and conducting himself in his small way with as
much high mightiness and majesty, as the most glorious tyrant that ever had his
statue reared in the public ways, of ancient or of modern times.
As great men are urged
on to the abuse of power (when they need urging, which is not often), by their
flatterers and dependents, so old John was impelled to these exercises of
authority by the applause and admiration of his Maypole cronies, who, in the
intervals of their nightly pipes and pots, would shake their heads and say that
Mr. Willet was a father of the good old English sort; that there were no
new-fangled notions or modern ways in him; that he put them in mind of what
their fathers were when they were boys; that there was no mistake about him;
that it would be well for the country if there were more like him, and more was
the pity that there were not; with many other original remarks of that nature.
Then they would condescendingly give Joe to understand that it was all for his
good, and he would be thankful for it one day; and in particular, Mr. Cobb
would acquaint him, that when he was his age, his father thought no more of
giving him a parental kick, or a box on the ears, or a cuff on the head, or
some little admonition of that sort, than he did of any other ordinary duty of
life; and he would further remark, with looks of great significance, that but
for this judicious bringing up, he might have never been the man he was at that
present speaking; which was probable enough, as he was, beyond all question,
the dullest dog of the party. In short, between old John and old John’s
friends, there never was an unfortunate young fellow so bullied, badgered,
worried, fretted, and brow-beaten; so constantly beset, or made so tired of his
life, as poor Joe Willet.
This had come to be the
recognised and established state of things; but as John was very anxious to
flourish his supremacy before the eyes of Mr. Chester, he did that day exceed
himself, and did so goad and chafe his son and heir, that but for Joe’s having
made a solemn vow to keep his hands in his pockets when they were not otherwise
engaged, it is impossible to say what he might have done with them. But the
longest day has an end, and at length Mr. Chester came downstairs to mount his
horse, which was ready at the door.
As old John was not in
the way at the moment, Joe, who was sitting in the bar ruminating on his dismal
fate and the manifold perfections of Dolly Varden, ran out to hold the guest’s
stirrup and assist him to mount. Mr. Chester was scarcely in the saddle, and
Joe was in the very act of making him a graceful
bow, when old John came
diving out of the porch, and collared him.
"None of that,
sir," said John, "none of that, sir. No breaking of patroles. How
dare you come out of the door, sir, without leave? You’re trying to get away,
sir, are you, and to make a traitor of yourself again? What do you mean,
sir?"
"Let me go,
father," said Joe, imploringly, as he marked the smile upon their visitor’s
face, and observed the pleasure his disgrace afforded him. "This is too
bad. Who wants to get away?"
"Who wants to get
away!" cried John, shaking him. "Why you do, sir, you do. You’re the
boy, sir," added John, collaring with one band, and aiding the effect of a
farewell bow to the visitor with the other, "that wants to sneak into
houses, and stir up differences between noble gentlemen and their sons, are
you, eh? Hold your tongue, sir."
Joe made no effort to
reply. It was the crowning circumstance of his degradation. He extricated
himself from his father’s grasp, darted an angry look at the departing guest,
and returned into the house.
"But for
her," thought Joe, as he threw his arms upon a table in the common room,
and laid his head upon them, "but for Dolly, who I couldn’t bear should
think me the rascal they would make me out to be if I ran away, this house and
I should part to-night."
It being evening by
this time, Solomon Daisy, Tom Cobb, and Long Parkes, were all in the common
room too, and had from the window been witnesses of what had just occurred. Mr.
Willet joining them soon afterwards, received the compliments of the company
with great composure, and lighting his pipe, sat down among them.
"We’ll see,
gentlemen," said John, after a long pause, "who’s the master of this
house, and who isn’t. We’ll see whether boys are to govern men, or men are to
govern boys."
"And quite right
too," assented Solomon Daisy with some approving nods; "quite right,
Johnny. Very good, Johnny. Well said, Mr. Willet. Brayvo, sir."
John slowly brought his
eyes to bear upon him, looked at him for a long time, and finally made answer,
to the unspeakable consternation of his hearers, "When I want
encouragement from you, sir, I’ll ask you for it. You let me alone, sir. I can
get on without you, I hope. Don’t you tackle me, sir, if you please."
"Don’t take it
ill, Johnny; I didn’t mean any harm," pleaded the little man.
"Very good,
sir," said John, more than usually obstinate after his late success.
"Never mind, sir. I can stand pretty firm of myself, sir, I believe,
without being shored up by you." And having given utterance to this
retort, Mr. Willet fixed his eyes upon the boiler, and fell into a kind of
tobacco-trance.
The spirits of the
company being somewhat damped by this embarrassing line of conduct on the part
of their host, nothing more was said for a long time; but at length Mr. Cobb
took upon himself to remark, as he rose to knock the ashes out of his pipe,
that he hoped Joe would thenceforth learn to obey his father in all things;
that he had found, that day, he was not one of the sort of men who were to be
trifled with; and that he would recommend him, poetically speaking, to mind his
eye for the future.
"I’d recommend
you, in return," said Joe, looking up with a flushed face, "not to
talk to me."
"Hold your tongue,
sir," cried Mr. Willet, suddenly rousing himself, and turning round.
"I won’t,
father," cried Joe, smiting the table with his fist, so that the jugs and
glasses rung again; "these things are hard enough to bear from you; from
anybody else I never will endure them any more. Therefore I say, Mr. Cobb, don’t
talk to me."
"Why, who are
you," said Mr. Cobb, sneeringly, "that you’re not to be talked to,
eh, Joe?"
To which Joe returned
no answer, but with a very ominous shake of the head, resumed his old position,
which he would have peacefully preserved until the house shut up at night, but
that Mr. Cobb, stimulated by the wonder of the company at the young man’s
presumption, retorted with sundry taunts, which proved too much for flesh and
blood to bear. Crowding into one moment the vexation and the wrath of years,
Joe started up, overturned the table, fell upon his long enemy, pummelled him
with all his might and main, and finished by driving him with surprising
swiftness against a heap of spittoons in one corner; plunging into which, head
foremost, with a tremendous crash, he lay at full length among the ruins,
stunned and motionless. Then, without waiting to receive the compliments of the
bystanders on the victory be had won, he retreated to his own bedchamber, and
considering himself in a state of siege, piled all the portable furniture
against the door by way of barricade.
"I have done it
now," said Joe, as he sat down upon his bedstead and wiped his heated
face. "I knew it would come at last. The Maypole and I must part company.
I’m a roving vagabond--she hates me for evermore--it’s all over!"
PONDERING on his
unhappy lot, Joe sat and listened for a long time, expecting every moment to
hear their creaking footsteps on the stairs, or to be greeted by his worthy
father with a summons to capitulate unconditionally, and deliver himself up
straightway. But neither voice nor footstep came; and though some distant
echoes, as of closing doors and people hurrying in and out of rooms, resounding
from time to time through the great passages, and penetrating to his remote
seclusion, gave note of unusual commotion downstairs, no nearer sound disturbed
his place of retreat, which seemed the quieter for these far-off noises, and
was as dull and full of gloom as any hermit’s cell.
It came on darker and
darker. The old-fashioned furniture of the chamber, which was a kind of
hospital for all the invalided movables in the house, grew indistinct and
shadowy in its many shapes; chairs and tables, which by day were as honest
cripples as need be, assumed a doubtful and mysterious character; and one old
leprous screen of faded India leather and gold binding, which had kept out many
a cold breath of air in days of yore and shut in many a jolly face, frowned on
him with a spectral aspect, and stood at full height in its allotted corner,
like some gaunt ghost who waited to be questioned. A portrait opposite the
window--a queer, old grey-eyed general, in an oval frame--seemed to wink and
doze as the light decayed, and at length, when the last faint glimmering speck
of day went out, to shut its eyes in good earnest, and fall sound asleep. There
was such a hush and mystery about everything, that Joe could not help following
its example; and so went off into a slumber likewise, and dreamed of Dolly,
till the clock of Chigwell church struck two.
Still nobody came. The
distant noises in the house had ceased, and out of doors all was quiet; save
for the occasional barking of some deep-mouthed dog, and the shaking of the
branches by the night wind. He gazed mournfully out of window at each
well-known object as it lay sleeping in the dim light of the moon; and creeping
back to his former seat, thought about the late uproar, until, with long
thinking of, it seemed to have occurred a month ago. Thus, between dozing, and
thinking, and walking to the window and looking out, the night wore away; the
grim old screen, and the kindred chairs and tables, began slowly to reveal
themselves in their accustomed forms; the grey-eyed general seemed to wink and
yawn and rouse himself; and at last he was broad awake again, and very
uncomfortable and cold and haggard he looked, in the dull grey light of
morning.
The sun had begun to
peep above the forest trees, and already flung across the curling mist bright
bars of gold, when Joe dropped from his window on the ground below, a little
bundle and his trusty stick, and prepared to descend himself.
It was not a very
difficult task; for there were so many projections and gable ends in the way,
that they formed a series of clumsy steps, with no greater obstacle than a jump
of some few feet at last. Joe, with his stick and bundle on his shoulder,
quickly stood on the firm earth, and looked up at the old Maypole, it might be
for the last time.
He didn’t apostrophise
it, for he was no great scholar. He didn’t curse it, for he had little ill-will
to give to anything on earth. He felt more affectionate and kind to it than
ever he had done in all his life before, so said with all his heart, "God
bless you!" as a parting wish, and turned away.
He walked along at a
brisk pace, big with great thoughts of going for a soldier and dying in some
foreign country where it was very hot and sandy, and leaving God knows what
unheard-of wealth in prize-money to Dolly, who would be very much affected when
she came to know of it; and full of such youthful visions, which were sometimes
sanguine and sometimes melancholy, but always had her for their main point and
centre, pushed on vigorously until the noise of London sounded in his ears, and
the Black Lion hove in sight.
It was only eight o’clock
then, and very much astonished the Black Lion was, to see him come walking in
with dust upon his feet at that early hour, with no grey mare to bear him
company. But as he ordered breakfast to be got ready with all speed, and on its
being set before him gave indisputable tokens of a hearty appetite, the Lion
received him, as usual, with a hospitable welcome; and treated him with those
marks of distinction, which, as a regular customer, and one within the
freemasonry of the trade, he had a right to claim.
This Lion or
landlord,--for he was called both man and beast, by reason of his having
instructed the artist who painted his sign, to convey into the features of the
lordly brute whose effigy it bore, as near a counterpart of his own face as his
skill could compass and devise,--was a gentleman almost as quick of
apprehension, and of almost as subtle a wit, as the mighty John himself. But
the difference between them lay in this: that whereas Mr. Willet’s extreme
sagacity and acuteness were the efforts of unassisted nature, the Lion stood
indebted, in no small amount, to beer; of which he swigged such copious
draughts, that most of his faculties were utterly drowned and washed away,
except the one great faculty of sleep, which he retained in surprising
perfection. The creaking Lion over the house-door was, therefore, to say the
truth, rather a drowsy, tame, and feeble lion; and as these social
representatives of a savage class are usually of a conventional character
(being depicted, for the most part, in impossible attitudes and of unearthly
colours), he was frequently supposed, by the more ignorant and uninformed among
the neighbours, to be the veritable portrait of the host as he appeared on the
occasion of some great funeral ceremony or public mourning.
"What noisy fellow
is that in the next room?" said Joe, when he had disposed of his
breakfast, and had washed and brushed himself.
"A recruiting
sergeant," replied the Lion.
Joe started involuntarily.
Here was the very thing he had been dreaming of, all the way along.
"And I wish,"
said the Lion, "he was anywhere else but here. The party make noise
enough, but don’t call for much. There’s great cry there, Mr. Willet, but very
little wool. Your father wouldn’t like ’em, I know."
Perhaps not much under
any circumstances. Perhaps if he could have known what was passing at that
moment in Joe’s mind, he would have liked them still less.
"Is he recruiting
for a--for a fine regiment?" said Joe, glancing at a little round mirror
that hung in the bar.
"I believe he
is," replied the host. "It’s much the same thing, whatever regiment
he’s recruiting for. I’m told there an’t a deal of difference between a fine
man and another one, when they’re shot through and through."
"They’re not all
shot," said Joe.
"No," the
Lion answered, "not all. Those that are--supposing it’s done easy--are the
best off in my opinion."
"Ah!"
retorted Joe, "but you don’t care for glory."
"For what?"
said the Lion.
"Glory."
"No,"
returned the Lion, with supreme indifference. "I don’t. You’re right in
that, Mr. Willet. When Glory comes here, and calls for anything to drink and
changes a guinea to pay for it, I’ll give it him for nothing. It’s my belief,
sir, that the Glory’s arms wouldn’t do a very strong business."
These remarks were not
at all comforting. Joe walked out, stopped at the door of the next room, and
listened. The sergeant was describing a military life. It was all drinking, he
said, except that there were frequent intervals of eating and love-making. A
battle was the finest thing in the world--when your side won it--and Englishmen
always did that. "Supposing you should be killed, sir?" said a timid
voice in one corner. "Well, sir, supposing you should be," said the
sergeant, "what then? Your country loves you, sir; his Majesty King George
the Third loves you; your memory is honoured, revered, respected; everybody’s
fond of you, and grateful to you; your name’s wrote down at full length in a
book in the War Office. Damme, gentlemen, we must all die some time, or
another, eh?"
The voice coughed, and
said no more.
Joe walked into the
room. A group of half-a-dozen fellows had gathered together in the taproom, and
were listening with greedy ears. One of them, a carter in a smockfrock, seemed
wavering and disposed to enlist. The rest, who were by no means disposed,
strongly urged him to do so (according to the custom of mankind), backed the
sergeant’s arguments, and grinned among themselves. "I say nothing,
boys," said the sergeant, who sat a little apart, drinking his liquor.
"For lads of spirit"--here he cast an eye on Joe--"this is the
time. I don’t want to inveigle you. The king’s not come to that, I hope. Brisk
young blood is what we want; not milk and water. We won’t take five men out of
six. We want top- sawyers, we do. I’m not a-going to tell tales out of school,
but, damme, if every gentleman’s son that carries arms in our corps, through
being under a cloud and having little differences with his relations, was
counted up’--here his eye fell on Joe again, and so good-naturedly, that Joe
beckoned him out. He came directly.
"You’re a
gentleman, by G--!" was his first remark, as he slapped him on the back.
"You’re a gentleman in disguise. So am I. Let’s swear a friendship."
Joe didn’t exactly do
that, but he shook hands with him, and thanked him for his good opinion.
"You want to
serve," said his new friend. "You shall. You were made for it. You’re
one of us by nature. What’ll you take to drink?"
"Nothing just
now," replied Joe, smiling faintly. "I haven’t quite made up my
mind."
"A mettlesome
fellow like you, and not made up his mind!" cried the sergeant.
"Here--let me give the bell a pull, and you’ll make up your mind in half a
minute, I know."
"You’re right so
far"--answered Joe, "for if you pull the bell here, where I’m known,
there’ll be an end of my soldiering inclinations in no time. Look in my face.
You see me, do you?"
"I do,"
replied the sergeant with an oath, "and a finer young fellow or one better
qualified to serve his king and country, I never set my--" he used an
adjective in this place--"eyes on."
"Thank you,"
said Joe, "I didn’t ask you for want of a compliment, but thank you all
the same. Do I look like a sneaking fellow or a liar?"
The sergeant rejoined
with many choice asseverations that he didn’t; and that if his (the sergeant’s)
own father were to say he did, he would run the old gentleman through the body
cheerfully, and consider it a meritorious action.
Joe expressed his
obligations, and continued, "You can trust me then, and credit what I say.
I believe I shall enlist in your regiment to-night. The reason I don’t do so
now is, because I don’t want until to-night, to do what I can’t recall. Where
shall I find you, this evening?"
His friend replied with
some unwillingness, and after much ineffectual entreaty having for its object
the immediate settlement of the business, that his quarters would be at the
Crooked Billet in Tower Street; where he would be found waking until midnight,
and sleeping until breakfast time to-morrow.
"And if I do
come--which it’s a million to one, I shall--when will you take me out of
London?" demanded Joe.
"To-morrow
morning, at half after eight o’clock," replied the sergeant. "You’ll
go abroad--a country where it’s all sunshine and plunder--the finest climate in
the world."
"To go
abroad," said Joe, shaking hands with him, "is the very thing I want.
You may expect me."
"You’re the kind
of lad for us," cried the sergeant, holding Joe’s hand in his, in the excess
of his admiration. "You’re the boy to push your fortune. I don’t say it
because I bear you any envy, or would take away from the credit of the rise you’ll
make, but if I had been bred and taught like you, I’d have been a colonel by
this time."
"Tush, man!"
said Joe, "I’m not so young as that. Needs must when the devil drives; and
the devil that drives me is an empty pocket and an unhappy home. For the
present, good-bye."
"For king and
country!" cried the sergeant, flourishing his cap.
"For bread and
meat!" cried Joe, snapping his fingers. And so they parted.
He had very little
money in his pocket; so little indeed, that after paying for his breakfast
(which he was too honest and perhaps too proud to score up to his father’s
charge) he had but a penny left. He had courage, notwithstanding, to resist all
the affectionate importunities of the sergeant, who waylaid him at the door
with many protestations of eternal friendship, and did in particular request
that he would do him the favour to accept of only one shilling as a temporary
accommodation. Rejecting his offers both of cash and credit, Joe walked away
with stick and bundle as before, bent upon getting through the day as he best
could, and going down to the locksmith’s in the dusk of the evening; for it
should go hard, he had resolved, but he would have a parting word with charming
Dolly Varden.
He went out by
Islington and so on to Highgate, and sat on many stones and gates, but there
were no voices in the bells to bid him turn. Since the time of noble
Whittington, fair flower of merchants, bells have come to have less sympathy
with humankind. They only ring for money and on state occasions. Wanderers have
increased in number; ships leave the Thames for distant regions, carrying from
stem to stern no other cargo; the bells are silent; they ring out no entreaties
or regrets; they are used to it and have grown worldly.
Joe bought a roll, and
reduced his purse to the condition (with a difference) of that celebrated purse
of Fortunatus, which, whatever were its favoured owner’s necessities, had one
unvarying amount in it. In these real times, when all the Fairies are dead and
buried, there are still a great many purses which possess that quality. The
sum-total they contain is expressed in arithmetic by a circle, and whether it
be added to or multiplied by its own amount, the result of the problem is more
easily stated than any known in figures.
Evening drew on at
last. With the desolate and solitary feeling of one who had no home or shelter,
and was alone utterly in the world for the first time, he bent his steps
towards the locksmith’s house. He had delayed till now, knowing that Mrs.
Varden sometimes went out alone, or with Miggs for her sole attendant, to
lectures in the evening; and devoutly hoping that this might be one of her
nights of moral culture.
He had walked up and
down before the house, on the opposite side of the way, two or three times,
when as he returned to it again, he caught a glimpse of a fluttering skirt at
the door. It was Dolly’s--to whom else could it belong? no dress but hers had
such a flow as that. He plucked up his spirits, and followed it into the
workshop of the Golden Key.
His darkening the door
caused her to look round. Oh that face! "If it hadn’t been for that,"
thought Joe, "I should never have walked into poor Tom Cobb. She’s twenty
times handsomer than ever. She might marry a Lord!"
He didn’t say this. He
only thought it--perhaps looked it also. Dolly was glad to see him, and was so
sorry her father
and mother were away
from home. Joe begged she wouldn’t mention it on any account.
Dolly hesitated to lead
the way into the parlour, for there it was nearly dark; at the same time she
hesitated to stand talking in the workshop, which was yet light and open to the
street. They had got by some means, too, before the little forge; and Joe
having her hand in his (which he had no right to have, for Dolly only gave it
him to shake), it was so like standing before some homely altar being married,
that it was the most embarrassing state of things in the world.
"I have
come," said Joe, "to say good-bye--to say good-bye for I don’t know
how many years; perhaps for ever. I am going abroad."
Now this was exactly
what he should not have said. Here he was, talking like a gentleman at large
who was free to come and go and roam about the world at pleasure, when that
gallant coachmaker had vowed but the night before that Miss Varden held him
bound in adamantine chains; and had positively stated in so many words that she
was killing him by inches, and that in a fortnight more or thereabouts he
expected to make a decent end and leave the business to his mother.
Dolly released her hand
and said "Indeed!" She remarked in the same breath that it was a fine
night, and in short, betrayed no more emotion than the forge itself.
"I couldn’t
go," said Joe, "without coming to see you. I hadn"t the heart
to."
Dolly was more sorry
than she could tell, that he should have taken so much trouble. It was such a
long way, and he must have such a deal to do. And how was Mr. Willet--that dear
old gentleman--
"Is this all you
say!" cried Joe.
All! Good gracious,
what did the man expect! She was obliged to take her apron in her hand and run
her eyes along the hem from corner to corner, to keep herself from laughing in
his face;--not because his gaze confused her--not at all.
Joe had small
experience in love affairs, and had no notion how different young ladies are at
different times; he had expected to take Dolly up again at the very point where
he had left her after that delicious evening ride, and was no more prepared for
such an alteration than to see the sun and moon change places. He had buoyed
himself up all day with an indistinct idea that she would certainly say
"Don’t go," or "Don’t leave us," or "Why do you
go?" or "Why do you leave us?" or would give him some little
encouragement of that sort; he had even entertained the possibility of her
bursting into tears, of her throwing herself into his arms, of her falling down
in a fainting fit without previous word or sign; but any approach to such a
line of conduct as this, had been so far from his thoughts that he could only
look at her in silent wonder.
Dolly in the meanwhile,
turned to the corners of her apron, and measured the sides, and smoothed out the
wrinkles, and was as silent as he. At last after a long pause, Joe said
good-bye. "Good-bye"--said Dolly--with as pleasant a smile as if he
were going into the next street, and were coming back to supper; "good-
bye."
"Come," said
Joe, putting out both hands, "Dolly, dear Dolly, don’t let us part like
this. I love you dearly, with all my heart and soul; with as much truth and
earnestness as ever man loved woman in this world, I do believe. I am a poor
fellow, as you know--poorer now than ever, for I have fled from home, not being
able to bear it any longer, and must fight my own way without help. You are
beautiful, admired, are loved by everybody, are well off and happy; and may you
ever be so! Heaven forbid I should ever make you otherwise; but give me a word
of comfort. Say something kind to me. I have no right to expect it of you, I
know, but I ask it because I love you, and shall treasure the slightest word
from you all through my life. Dolly, dearest, have you nothing to say to
me?"
No. Nothing. Dolly was
a coquette by nature, and a spoilt child. She had no notion of being carried by
storm in this way. The coachmaker would have been dissolved in tears, and would
have knelt down, and called himself names, and clasped his hands, and beat his
breast, and tugged wildly at his cravat, and done all kinds of poetry. Joe had
no business to be going abroad. He had no right to be able to do it. If he was
in adamantine chains, he couldn’t.
"I have said
good-bye," said Dolly, "twice. Take your arm away directly, Mr.
Joseph, or I’ll call Miggs."
"I’ll not reproach
you," answered Joe, "it’s my fault, no doubt. I have thought
sometimes that you didn’t quite despise me, but I was a fool to think so. Every
one must, who has seen the life I have led--you most of all. God bless
you!"
He was gone, actually
gone. Dolly waited a little while, thinking he would return, peeped out at the
door, looked up the street and down as well as the increasing darkness would
allow, came in again, waited a little longer, went upstairs humming a tune,
bolted herself in, laid her head down on her bed, and cried as if her heart
would break. And yet such natures are made up of so many contradictions, that
if Joe Willet had come back that night, next day, next week, next month, the
odds are a hundred to one she would have treated him in the very same manner,
and have wept for it afterwards with the very same distress.
She had no sooner left
the workshop than there cautiously peered out from behind the chimney of the
forge, a face which had already emerged from the same concealment twice or
thrice, unseen, and which, after satisfying itself that it was now alone, was
followed by a leg, a shoulder, and so on by degrees, until the form of Mr.
Tappertit stood confessed, with a brown-paper cap stuck negligently on one side
of its head, and its arms very much a-kimbo.
"Have my ears
deceived me," said the ’prentice, "or do I dream! am I to thank thee,
Fortun’, or to cus thee--which?"
He gravely descended
from his elevation, took down his piece of looking-glass, planted it against
the wall upon the usual bench, twisted his head round, and looked closely at
his legs.
"If they’re a
dream," said Sim, "let sculptures have such wisions, and chisel ’em
out when they wake. This is reality. Sleep has no such limbs as them. Tremble,
Willet, and despair. She’s mine! She’s mine!"
With these triumphant
expressions, he seized a hammer and dealt a heavy blow at a vice, which in his
mind’s eye represented the sconce or head of Joseph Willet. That done, he burst
into a peal of laughter which startled Miss Miggs even in her distant kitchen,
and dipping his head into a bowl of water, had recourse to a jack- towel inside
the closet door, which served the double purpose of smothering his feelings and
drying his face.
Joe, disconsolate and
down-hearted, but full of courage too, on leaving the locksmith’s house made
the best of his way to the Crooked Billet, and there inquired for his friend
the sergeant, who, expecting no man less, received him with open arms. In the
course of five minutes after his arrival at that house of entertainment, he was
enrolled among the gallant defenders of his native land; and within half an
hour, was regaled with a steaming supper of boiled tripe and onions, prepared,
as his friend assured him more than once, at the express command of his most
Sacred Majesty the King. To this meal, which tasted very savoury after his long
fasting, he did ample justice; and when he had followed it up, or down, with a
variety of loyal and patriotic toasts, he was conducted to a straw mattress in
a loft over the stable, and locked in there for the night.
The next morning, he
found that the obliging care of his martial friend had decorated his hat with
sundry particoloured streamers, which made a very lively appearance; and in
company with that officer, and three other military gentlemen newly enrolled,
who were under a cloud so dense that it only left three shoes, a boot, and a
coat and a half visible among them, repaired to the riverside. Here they were
joined by a corporal and four more heroes, of whom two were drunk and daring,
and two sober and penitent, but each of whom, like Joe, had his dusty stick and
bundle. The party embarked in a passage-boat bound for Gravesend, whence they
were to proceed on foot to Chatham; the wind was in their favour, and they soon
left London behind them, a mere dark mist--a giant phantom in the air.
MISFORTUNES, saith the
adage, never come singly. There is little doubt that troubles are exceedingly
gregarious in their nature, and flying in flocks, are apt to perch
capriciously; crowding on the heads of some poor wights until there is not an
inch of room left on their unlucky crowns, and taking no more notice of others
who offer as good resting-places for the soles of their feet, than if they had
no existence. It may have happened that a flight of troubles brooding over
London, and looking out for Joseph Willet, whom they couldn’t find, darted down
haphazard on the first young man that caught their fancy, and settled on him
instead. However this may be, certain it is that on the very day of Joe’s
departure they swarmed about the ears of Edward Chester, and did so buzz and
flap their wings, and persecute him, that he was most profoundly wretched.
It was evening, and
just eight o’clock, when he and his father, having wine and dessert set before
them, were left to themselves for the first time that day. They had dined
together, but a third person had been present during the meal, and until they
met at table they had not seen each other since the previous night.
Edward was reserved and
silent. Mr. Chester was more than usually gay; but not caring, as it seemed, to
open a conversation with one whose humour was so different, he vented the
lightness of his spirit in smiles and sparkling looks, and made no effort to
awaken his attention. So they remained for some time: the father lying on a
sofa with his accustomed air of graceful negligence; the son seated opposite to
him with downcast eyes, busied, it was plain, with painful and uneasy thoughts.
"My dear
Edward," said Mr. Chester at length, with a most engaging laugh, "do
not extend your drowsy influence to the decanter. Suffer that to circulate, let
your spirits be never so stagnant."
Edward begged his
pardon, passed it, and relapsed into his former state.
"You do wrong not
to fill your glass," said Mr. Chester, holding up his own before the
light. "Wine in moderation--not in excess, for that makes men ugly--has a
thousand pleasant influences. It brightens the eye, improves the voice, imparts
a new vivacity to one’s thoughts and conversation: you should try it,
Ned."
"Ah father!"
cried his son, "if--"
"My good
fellow," interposed the parent hastily, as he set down his glass, and
raised his eyebrows with a startled and horrified expression, "for Heaven’s
sake don’t call me by that obsolete and ancient name. Have some regard for
delicacy. Am I grey, or wrinkled, do I go on crutches, have I lost my teeth,
that you adopt such a mode of address? Good God, how very coarse!"
"I was about to
speak to you from my heart, sir," returned Edward, "in the confidence
which should subsist between us; and you check me in the outset."
"Now do, Ned, do
not," said Mr. Chester, raising his delicate hand imploringly, "talk
in that monstrous manner. About to speak from your heart. Don’t you know that
the heart is an ingenious part of our formation--the centre of the
blood-vessels and all that sort of thing--which has no more to do with what you
say or think, than your knees have? How can you be so very vulgar and absurd?
These anatomical allusions should be left to gentlemen of the medical
profession. They are really not agreeable in society. You quite surprise me,
Ned."
"Well! there are
no such things to wound, or heal, or have regard for. I know your creed, sir,
and will say no more," returned his son.
"There
again," said Mr. Chester, sipping his wine, "you are wrong. I
distinctly say there are such things. We know there are. The hearts of
animals--of bullocks, sheep, and so forth--are cooked and devoured, as I am
told, by the lower classes, with a vast deal of relish. Men are sometimes
stabbed to the heart, shot to the heart; but as to speaking from the heart, or
to the heart, or being warm- hearted, or cold-hearted, or broken-hearted, or
being all heart, or having no heart--pah! these things are nonsense, Ned."
"No doubt,
sir," returned his son, seeing that he paused for him to speak. "No
doubt."
"There’s Haredale’s
niece, your late flame," said Mr. Chester, as a careless illustration of
his meaning. "No doubt in your mind she was all heart once. Now she has
none at all. Yet she is the same person, Ned, exactly."
"She is a changed
person, sir," cried Edward, reddening; "and changed by vile means, I
believe."
"You have had a
cool dismissal, have you?" said his father. "Poor Ned! I told you
last night what would happen.--May I ask you for the nutcrackers?"
"She has been
tampered with, and most treacherously deceived," cried Edward, rising from
his seat. "I never will believe that the knowledge of my real position,
given her by myself, has worked this change. I know she is beset and tortured.
But though our contract is at an end, and broken past all redemption; though I
charge upon her want of firmness and want of truth, both to herself and me; I do
not now, and never will believe, that any sordid motive, or her own unbiassed
will, has led her to this course--never!"
"You make me
blush," returned his father gaily, "for the folly of your nature, in
which--but we never know ourselves--I devoutly hope there is no reflection of
my own. With regard
to the young lady
herself, she has done what is very natural and proper, my dear fellow; what you
yourself proposed, as I learn from Haredale; and what I predicted--with no
great exercise of sagacity--she would do. She supposed you to be rich, or at
least quite rich enough; and found you poor. Marriage is a civil contract;
people marry to better their worldly condition and improve appearances; it is
an affair of house and furniture, of liveries, servants, equipage, and so
forth. The lady being poor and you poor also, there is an end of the matter.
You cannot enter upon these considerations, and have no manner of business with
the ceremony. I drink her health in this glass, and respect and honour her for
her extreme good sense. It is a lesson to you. Fill yours, Ned."
"It is a
lesson," returned his son, "by which I hope I may never profit, and
if years and experience impress it on--"
"Don’t say on the
heart," interposed his father.
"On men whom the
world and its hypocrisy have spoiled," said Edward warmly, "Heaven
keep me from its knowledge."
"Come, sir,"
returned his father, raising himself a little on the sofa, and looking straight
towards him; "we have had enough of this. Remember, if you please, your interest,
your duty, your moral obligations, your filial affections, and all that sort of
thing, which it is so very delightful and charming to reflect upon; or you will
repent it."
"I shall never
repent the preservation of my self-respect, sir," said Edward.
"Forgive me if I say that I will not sacrifice it at your bidding, and
that I will not pursue the track which you would have me take, and to which the
secret share you have had in this late separation tends."
His father rose a
little higher still, and looking at him as though curious to know if he were
quite resolved and earnest, dropped gently down again, and said in the calmest
voice--eating his nuts meanwhile,
"Edward, my father
had a son, who being a fool like you, and, like you, entertaining low and
disobedient sentiments, he disinherited and cursed one morning after breakfast.
The circumstance occurs to me with a singular clearness of recollection this
evening. I remember eating muffins at the time, with marmalade. He led a
miserable life (the son, I mean) and died early; it was a happy release on all
accounts; he degraded the family very much. It is a sad circumstance, Edward,
when a father finds it necessary to resort to such strong measures."
"It is,"
replied Edward, "and it is sad when a son, proffering him his love and
duty in their best and truest sense, finds himself repelled at every turn, and
forced to disobey. Dear father," he added, more earnestly though in a
gentler tone, "I have reflected many times on what occurred between us
when we first discussed this subject. Let there be a confidence between us; not
in terms, but truth. Hear what I have to say."
"As I anticipate
what it is, and cannot fail to do so, Edward," returned his father coldly,
"I decline. I couldn’t possibly. I am sure it would put me out of temper,
which is a state of mind I can’t endure. If you intend to mar my plans for your
establishment in life, and the preservation of that gentility and becoming
pride, which our family have so long sustained--if, in short, you are resolved
to take your own course, you must take it, and my curse with it. I am very
sorry, but there’s really no alternative."
"The curse may
pass your lips," said Edward, "but it will be but empty breath. I do
not believe that any man on earth has greater power to call one down upon his
fellow--least of all, upon his own child--than he has to make one drop of rain
or flake of snow fall from the clouds above us at his impious bidding. Beware,
sir, what you do."
"You are so very
irreligious, so exceedingly undutiful, so horribly profane," rejoined his
father, turning his face lazily towards him, and cracking another nut,
"that I positively must interrupt you here. It is quite impossible we can
continue to go on, upon such terms as these. If you will do me the favour to
ring the bell, the servant will show you to the door. Return to this roof no
more, I beg you. Go, sir, since you have no moral sense remaining; and go to
the Devil, at my express desire. Good day."
Edward left the room
without another word or look, and turned his back upon the house for ever.
The father’s face was
slightly flushed and heated, but his manner was quite unchanged, as he rang the
bell again, and addressed the servant on his entrance.
"Peak--if that
gentleman who has just gone out--"
"I beg your
pardon, sir, Mr. Edward?"
"Were there more
than one, dolt, that you ask the question? --If that gentleman should send here
for his wardrobe, let him have it, do you hear? If he should call himself at
any time, I’m not at home. You’ll tell him so, and shut the door."
So, it soon got
whispered about, that Mr. Chester was very unfortunate in his son, who had
occasioned him great grief and sorrow. And the good people who heard this and
told it again, marvelled the more at his equanimity and even temper, and said
what an amiable nature that man must have, who, having undergone so much, could
be so placid and so calm. And when Edward’s name was spoken, Society shook its
head, and laid its finger on its lip, and sighed, and looked very grave; and
those who had sons about his age, waxed wrathful and indignant, and hoped, for
Virtue’s sake, that he was dead. And the world went on turning round, as usual,
for five years, concerning which this Narrative is silent.
ONE wintry evening,
early in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and eighty, a keen
north wind arose as it grew dark, and night came on with black and dismal
looks. A bitter storm of sleet, sharp, dense, and icy-cold, swept the wet
streets, and rattled on the trembling windows. Signboards, shaken past
endurance in their creaking frames, fell crashing on the pavement; old
tottering chimneys reeled and staggered in the blast; and many a steeple rocked
again that night, as though the earth were troubled.
It was not a time for
those who could by any means get light and warmth, to brave the fury of the
weather. In coffee-houses of the better sort, guests crowded round the fire,
forgot to be political, and told each other with a secret gladness that the
blast grew fiercer every minute. Each humble tavern by the water-side, had its
group of uncouth figures round the hearth, who talked of vessels foundering at
sea, and all hands lost; related many a dismal tale of shipwreck and drowned
men, and hoped that some they knew were safe, and shook their heads in doubt.
In private dwellings, children clustered near the blaze; listening with timid
pleasure to tales of ghosts and goblins, and tall figures clad in white
standing by bed-sides, and people who had gone to sleep in old churches and
being overlooked had found themselves alone there at the dead hour of the
night: until they shuddered at the thought of the dark rooms upstairs, yet
loved to hear the wind moan too, and hoped it would continue bravely. From time
to time these happy indoor people stopped to listen, or one held up his finger
and cried "Hark!" and then, above the rumbling in the chimney, and
the fast pattering on the glass, was heard a wailing, rushing sound, which
shook the walls as though a giant’s hand were on them; then a hoarse roar as if
the sea had risen; then such a whirl and tumult that the air seemed mad; and
then, with a lengthened howl, the waves of wind swept on, and left a moment’s
interval of rest.
Cheerily, though there
were none abroad to see it, shone the Maypole light that evening. Blessings on
the red--deep, ruby, glowing red--old curtain of the window; blending into one
rich stream of brightness, fire and candle, meat, drink, and company, and
gleaming like a jovial eye upon the bleak waste out of doors! Within, what
carpet like its crunching sand, what music merry as its crackling logs, what
perfume like its kitchen’s dainty breath, what weather genial as its hearty
warmth! Blessings on the old house, how sturdily it stood! How did the vexed wind
chafe and roar about its stalwart roof; how did it pant and strive with its
wide chimneys, which still poured forth from their hospitable throats, great
clouds of smoke, and puffed defiance in its face; how, above all, did it drive
and rattle at the casement, emulous to extinguish that cheerful glow, which
would not be put down and seemed the brighter for the conflict!
The profusion too, the
rich and lavish bounty, of that goodly tavern! It was not enough that one fire
roared and sparkled on its spacious hearth; in the tiles which paved and
compassed it, five hundred flickering fires burnt brightly also. It was not
enough that one red curtain shut the wild night out, and shed its cheerful
influence on the room. In every saucepan lid, and candlestick, and vessel of
copper, brass, or tin that hung upon the walls, were countless ruddy hangings,
flashing and gleaming with every motion of the blaze, and offering, let the eye
wander where it might, interminable vistas of the same rich colour. The old oak
wainscoting, the beams, the chairs, the seats, reflected it in a deep, dull
glimmer. There were fires and red curtains in the very eyes of the drinkers, in
their buttons, in their liquor, in the pipes they smoked.
Mr. Willet sat in what
had been his accustomed place five years before, with his eyes on the eternal
boiler; and had sat there since the clock struck eight, giving no other signs
of life than breathing with a loud and constant snore (though he was wide
awake), and from time to time putting his glass to his lips, or knocking the
ashes out of his pipe, and filling it anew. It was now half-past ten. Mr. Cobb
and long Phil Parkes were his companions, as of old, and for two mortal hours
and a half, none of the company had pronounced one word.
Whether people, by dint
of sitting together in the same place and the same relative positions, and
doing exactly the same things for a great many years, acquire a sixth sense, or
some unknown power of influencing each other which serves them in its stead, is
a question for philosophy to settle. But certain it is that old John Willet,
Mr. Parkes, and Mr. Cobb, were one and all firmly of opinion that they were
very jolly companions--rather choice spirits than otherwise; that they looked
at each other every now and then as if there were a perpetual interchange of
ideas going on among them; that no man considered himself or his neighbour by
any means silent; and that each of them nodded occasionally when he caught the
eye of another, as if he would say, "You have expressed yourself extremely
well, sir, in relation to that sentiment, and I quite agree with you."
The room was so very
warm, the tobacco so very good, and the fire so very soothing, that Mr. Willet
by degrees began to doze; but as he had perfectly acquired, by dint of long
habit, the art of smoking in his sleep, and as his breathing was pretty much
the same, awake or asleep, saving that in the latter case he sometimes
experienced a slight difficulty in respiration (such as a carpenter meets with
when he is planing and comes to a knot), neither of his companions was aware of
the circumstance, until he met with one of these impediments and was obliged to
try again.
"Johnny’s dropped
off," said Mr. Parkes in a whisper.
"Fast as a
top," said Mr. Cobb.
Neither of them said
any more until Mr. Willet came to another knot-- one of surpassing
obduracy--which bade fair to throw him into convulsions, but which he got over
at last without waking, by an effort quite superhuman.
"He sleeps
uncommon hard," said Mr. Cobb.
Mr. Parkes, who was
possibly a hard-sleeper himself, replied with some disdain, "Not a bit on
it;" and directed his eyes towards a handbill pasted over the
chimney-piece, which was decorated at the top with a woodcut representing a
youth of tender years running away very fast, with a bundle over his shoulder
at the end of a stick, and--to carry out the idea--a finger-post and a
milestone beside him. Mr. Cobb likewise turned his eyes in the same direction,
and surveyed the placard as if that were the first time he had ever beheld it.
Now, this was a document which Mr. Willet had himself indited on the
disappearance of his son Joseph, acquainting the nobility and gentry and the
public in general with the circumstances of his having left his home;
describing his dress and appearance; and offering a reward of five pounds to
any person or persons who would pack him up and return him safely to the
Maypole at Chigwell, or lodge him in any of his Majesty’s jails until such time
as his father should come and claim him. In this advertisement Mr. Willet had
obstinately persisted, despite the advice and entreaties of his friends, in
describing his son as a "young boy;" and furthermore as being from
eighteen inches to a couple of feet shorter than he really was; two circumstances
which perhaps accounted, in some degree, for its never having been productive
of any other effect than the transmission to Chigwell at various times and at a
vast expense, of some five-and-forty runaways varying from six years old to
twelve.
Mr. Cobb and Mr. Parkes
looked mysteriously at this composition, at each other, and at old John. From
the time he had pasted it up with his own hands, Mr. Willet had never by word
or sign alluded to the subject, or encouraged any one else to do so. Nobody had
the least notion what his thoughts or opinions were, connected with it; whether
he remembered it or forgot it; whether he had any idea that such an event had
ever taken place. Therefore, even while he slept, no one ventured to refer to
it in his presence; and for such sufficient reasons, these his chosen friends
were silent now.
Mr. Willet had got by
this time into such a complication of knots, that it was perfectly clear he
must wake or die. He chose the former alternative, and opened his eyes.
"If he don’t come
in five minutes," said John, "I shall have supper without him."
The antecedent of this
pronoun had been mentioned for the last time at eight o’clock. Messrs Parkes
and Cobb being used to this style of conversation, replied without difficulty
that to be sure Solomon was very late, and they wondered what had happened to
detain him.
"He an’t blown
away, I suppose," said Parkes. "It’s enough to carry a man of his
figure off his legs, and easy too. Do you hear it? It blows great guns, indeed.
There’ll be many a crash in the Forest to-night, I reckon, and many a broken
branch upon the ground to-morrow."
"It won’t break
anything in the Maypole, I take it, sir," returned old John. "Let it
try. I give it leave--what’s that?"
"The wind,"
cried Parkes. "It’s howling like a Christian, and has been all night
long."
"Did you ever,
sir," asked John, after a minute’s contemplation, "hear the wind say ’Maypole’?"
"Why, what man
ever did?" said Parkes.
"Nor ’ahoy,’
perhaps?" added John.
"No. Nor that
neither."
"Very good,
sir," said Mr. Willet, perfectly unmoved; "then if that was the wind
just now, and you’ll wait a little time without speaking, you’ll hear it say
both words very plain."
Mr. Willet was right.
After listening for a few moments, they could clearly hear, above the roar and
tumult out of doors, this shout repeated; and that with a shrillness and
energy, which denoted that it came from some person in great distress or
terror. They looked at each other, turned pale, and held their breath. No man
stirred.
It was in this
emergency that Mr. Willet displayed something of that strength of mind and
plenitude of mental resource, which rendered him the admiration of all his
friends and neighbours. After looking at Messrs Parkes and Cobb for some time
in silence, he clapped his two hands to his cheeks, and sent forth a roar which
made the glasses dance and rafters ring--a long-sustained, discordant bellow,
that rolled onward with the wind, and startling every echo, made the night a
hundred times more boisterous--a deep, loud, dismal bray, that sounded like a
human gong. Then, with every vein in his head and face swollen with the great
exertion, and his countenance suffused with a lively purple, he drew a little
nearer to the fire, and turning his back upon it, said with dignity:
"If that’s any
comfort to anybody, they’re welcome to it. If it an’t, I’m sorry for ’em. If
either of you two gentlemen likes to go out and see what’s the matter, you can.
I’m not curious, myself."
While he spoke the cry
drew nearer and nearer, footsteps passed the window, the latch of the door was
raised, it opened, was violently shut again, and Solomon Daisy, with a lighted
lantern in his hand, and the rain streaming from his disordered dress, dashed
into the room.
A more complete picture
of terror than the little man presented, it would be difficult to imagine. The
perspiration stood in beads upon his face, his knees knocked together, his
every
limb trembled, the
power of articulation was quite gone; and there he stood, panting for breath,
gazing on them with such livid ashy looks, that they were infected with his
fear, though ignorant of its occasion, and, reflecting his dismayed and
horror-stricken visage, stared back again without venturing to question him;
until old John Willet, in a fit of temporary insanity, made a dive at his
cravat, and, seizing him by that portion of his dress, shook him to and fro
until his very teeth appeared to rattle in his head.
"Tell us what’s
the matter, sir," said John, "or I’ll kill you. Tell us what’s the
matter, sir, or in another second I’ll have your head under the biler. How dare
you look like that? Is anybody a- following of you? What do you mean? Say
something, or I’ll be the death of you, I will."
Mr. Willet, in his
frenzy, was so near keeping his word to the very letter (Solomon Daisy’s eyes
already beginning to roll in an alarming manner, and certain guttural sounds,
as of a choking man, to issue from his throat), that the two bystanders,
recovering in some degree, plucked him off his victim by main force, and placed
the little clerk of Chigwell in a chair. Directing a fearful gaze all round the
room, he implored them in a faint voice to give him some drink; and above all
to lock the house-door and close and bar the shutters of the room, without a
moment’s loss of time. The latter request did not tend to reassure his hearers,
or to fill them with the most comfortable sensations; they complied with it,
however, with the greatest expedition; and having handed him a bumper of
brandy-and-water, nearly boiling hot, waited to hear what he might have to tell
them.
"Oh, Johnny,"
said Solomon, shaking him by the hand. "Oh, Parkes. Oh, Tommy Cobb. Why
did I leave this house to-night! On the nineteenth of March--of all nights in
the year, on the nineteenth of March!"
They all drew closer to
the fire. Parkes, who was nearest to the door, started and looked over his
shoulder. Mr. Willet, with great indignation, inquired what the devil he meant
by that--and then said, "God forgive me," and glanced over his own
shoulder, and came a little nearer.
"When I left here
to-night," said Solomon Daisy, "I little thought what day of the
month it was. I have never gone alone into the church after dark on this day,
for seven-and-twenty years. I have heard it said that as we keep our birthdays
when we are alive, so the ghosts of dead people, who are not easy in their
graves, keep the day they died upon.--How the wind roars!"
Nobody spoke. All eyes
were fastened on Solomon.
"I might have
known," he said, "what night it was, by the foul weather. There’s no
such night in the whole year round as this is, always. I never sleep quietly in
my bed on the nineteenth of March."
"Go on," said
Tom Cobb, in a low voice. "Nor I neither."
Solomon Daisy raised
his glass to his lips; put it down upon the floor with such a trembling hand
that the spoon tinkled in it like a little bell; and continued thus:
"Have I ever said
that we are always brought back to this subject in some strange way, when the
nineteenth of this month comes round? Do you suppose it was by accident, I
forgot to wind up the church- clock? I never forgot it at any other time,
though it’s such a clumsy thing that it has to be wound up every day. Why
should it escape my memory on this day of all others?
"I made as much
haste down there as I could when I went from here, but I had to go home first
for the keys; and the wind and rain being dead against me all the way, it was
pretty well as much as I could do at times to keep my legs. I got there at
last, opened the church-door, and went in. I had not met a soul all the way,
and you may judge whether it was dull or not. Neither of you would bear me
company. If you could have known what was to come, you’d have been in the
right.
"The wind was so
strong, that it was as much as I could do to shut the church-door by putting my
whole weight against it; and even as it was, it burst wide open twice, with
such strength that any of you would have sworn, if you had been leaning against
it, as I was, that somebody was pushing on the other side. However, I got the
key turned, went into the belfry, and wound up the clock--which was very near
run down, and would have stood stock-still in half an hour.
"As I took up my
lantern again to leave the church, it came upon me all at once that this was
the nineteenth of March. It came upon me with a kind of shock, as if a hand had
struck the thought upon my forehead; at the very same moment, I heard a voice
outside the tower--rising from among the graves."
Here old John
precipitately interrupted the speaker, and begged that if Mr. Parkes (who was
seated opposite to him and was staring directly over his head) saw anything, he
would have the goodness to mention it. Mr. Parkes apologised, and remarked that
he was only listening; to which Mr. Willet angrily retorted, that his listening
with that kind of expression in his face was not agreeable, and that if he
couldn’t look like other people, he had better put his pocket-handkerchief over
his head. Mr. Parkes with great submission pledged himself to do so, if again
required, and John Willet turning to Solomon desired him to proceed. After
waiting until a violent gust of wind and rain, which seemed to shake even that
sturdy house to its foundation, had passed away, the little man complied:
"Never tell me that
it was my fancy, or that it was any other sound which I mistook for that I tell
you of. I heard the wind whistle through the arches of the church. I heard the
steeple strain and creak. I heard the rain as it came driving against the
walls. I felt the bells shake. I saw the ropes sway to and fro. And I heard
that voice."
"What did it
say?" asked Tom Cobb.
"I don’t know
what; I don’t know that it spoke. It gave a kind of cry, as any one of us might
do, if something dreadful followed us in a dream, and came upon us unawares;
and then it died off: seeming to pass quite round the church."
"I don’t see much
in that," said John, drawing a long breath, and looking round him like a
man who felt relieved.
"Perhaps
not," returned his friend, "but that’s not all."
"What more do you
mean to say, sir, is to come?" asked John, pausing in the act of wiping
his face upon his apron. "What are you a-going to tell us of next?"
"What I saw."
"Saw!" echoed
all three, bending forward.
"When I opened the
church-door to come out," said the little man, with an expression of face
which bore ample testimony to the sincerity of his conviction, "when I
opened the church-door to come out, which I did suddenly, for I wanted to get
it shut again before another gust of wind came up, there crossed me--so close,
that by stretching out my finger I could have touched it--something in the
likeness of a man. It was bare-headed to the storm. It turned its face without
stopping, and fixed its eyes on mine. It was a ghost--a spirit."
"Whose?" they
all three cried together.
In the excess of his
emotion (for he fell back trembling in his chair, and waved his hand as if
entreating them to question him no further), his answer was lost on all but old
John Willet, who happened to be seated close beside him.
"Who!" cried
Parkes and Tom Cobb, looking eagerly by turns at Solomon Daisy and at Mr.
Willet. "Who was it?"
"Gentlemen,"
said Mr. Willet after a long pause, "you needn’t ask. The likeness of a
murdered man. This is the nineteenth of March."
A profound silence
ensued.
"If you’ll take my
advice," said John, "we had better, one and all, keep this a secret.
Such tales would not be liked at the Warren. Let us keep it to ourselves for
the present time at all events, or we may get into trouble, and Solomon may
lose his place. Whether it was really as he says, or whether it wasn’t, is no
matter. Right or wrong, nobody would believe him. As to the probabilities, I
don’t myself think," said Mr. Willet, eyeing the corners of the room in a
manner which showed that, like some other philosophers, he was not quite easy
in his theory, "that a ghost as had been a man of sense in his lifetime,
would be out a-walking in such weather--I only know that I wouldn’t, if I was
one."
But this heretical
doctrine was strongly opposed by the other three, who quoted a great many
precedents to show that bad weather was the very time for such appearances; and
Mr. Parkes (who had had a ghost in his family, by the mother’s side) argued the
matter with so much ingenuity and force of illustration, that John was only
saved from having to retract his opinion by the opportune appearance of supper,
to which they applied themselves with a dreadful relish. Even Solomon Daisy
himself, by dint of the elevating influences of fire, lights, brandy, and good
company, so far recovered as to handle his knife and fork in a highly
creditable manner, and to display a capacity both of eating and drinking, such
as banished all fear of his having sustained any lasting injury from his
fright.
Supper done, they
crowded round the fire again, and, as is common on such occasions, propounded
all manner of leading questions calculated to surround the story with new
horrors and surprises. But Solomon Daisy, notwithstanding these temptations,
adhered so steadily to his original account, and repeated it so often, with
such slight variations, and with such solemn asseverations of its truth and
reality, that his hearers were (with good reason) more astonished than at
first. As he took John Willet’s view of the matter in regard to the propriety
of not bruiting the tale abroad, unless the spirit should appear to him again,
in which case it would be necessary to take immediate counsel with the
clergyman, it was solemnly resolved that it should be hushed up and kept quiet.
And as most men like to have a secret to tell which may exalt their own
importance, they arrived at this conclusion with perfect unanimity.
As it was by this time
growing late, and was long past their usual hour of separating, the cronies
parted for the night. Solomon Daisy, with a fresh candle in his lantern,
repaired homewards under the escort of long Phil Parkes and Mr. Cobb, who were
rather more nervous than himself. Mr. Willet, after seeing them to the door,
returned to collect his thoughts with the assistance of the boiler, and to
listen to the storm of wind and rain, which had not yet abated one jot of its
fury.
BEFORE old John had
looked at the boiler quite twenty minutes, he got his ideas into a focus, and
brought them to bear upon Solomon Daisy’s story. The more he thought of it, the
more impressed he became with a sense of his own wisdom, and a desire that Mr.
Haredale should be impressed with it likewise. At length, to the end that he
might sustain a principal and important character in the affair; and might have
the start of Solomon and his two friends, through whose means he knew the
adventure, with a variety of exaggerations, would be known to at least a score
of people, and most likely to Mr. Haredale himself, by breakfast-time
to-morrow; he determined to repair to the Warren before going to bed.
"He’s my
landlord," thought John, as he took a candle in his hand, and setting it
down in a corner out of the wind’s way, opened a casement in the rear of the
house, looking towards the stables. "We haven’t met of late years so often
as we used to do--changes are taking place in the family--it’s desirable that I
should stand as well with them, in point of dignity, as possible--the
whispering about of this here tale will anger him--it’s good to have
confidences with a gentleman of his natur’, and set one’s-self right besides.
Halloa there! Hugh--Hugh. Hal-loa!"
When he had repeated
this shout a dozen times, and startled every pigeon from its slumbers, a door
in one of the ruinous old buildings opened, and a rough voice demanded what was
amiss now, that a man couldn’t even have his sleep in quiet.
"What! Haven’t you
sleep enough, growler, that you’re not to be knocked up for once?" said
John.
"No," replied
the voice, as the speaker yawned and shook himself. "Not half
enough."
"I don’t know how
you can sleep, with the wind a bellowsing and roaring about you, making the
tiles fly like a pack of cards," said John; "but no matter for that.
Wrap yourself up in something or another, and come here, for you must go as far
as the Warren with me. And look sharp about it."
Hugh, with much low
growling and muttering, went back into his lair; and presently reappeared,
carrying a lantern and a cudgel, and enveloped from head to foot in an old,
frowzy, slouching horse- cloth. Mr. Willet received this figure at the
back-door, and ushered him into the bar, while he wrapped himself in sundry
greatcoats and capes, and so tied and knotted his face in shawls and
handkerchiefs, that how he breathed was a mystery.
"You don’t take a
man out of doors at near midnight in such weather, without putting some heart
into him, do you, master?" said Hugh.
"Yes I do,
sir," returned Mr. Willet. "I put the heart (as you call it) into him
when he has brought me safe home again, and his standing steady on his legs an’t
of so much consequence. So hold that light up, if you please, and go on a step
or two before, to show the way."
Hugh obeyed with a very
indifferent grace, and a longing glance at the bottles. Old John, laying strict
injunctions on his cook to keep the doors locked in his absence, and to open to
nobody but himself on pain of dismissal, followed him into the blustering
darkness out of doors.
The way was wet and
dismal, and the night so black, that if Mr. Willet had been his own pilot, he
would have walked into a deep horsepond within a few hundred yards of his own
house, and would certainly have terminated his career in that ignoble sphere of
action. But Hugh, who had a sight as keen as any hawk’s, and, apart from that
endowment, could have found his way blindfold to any place within a dozen
miles, dragged old John along, quite deaf to his remonstrances, and took his
own course without the slightest reference to, or notice of, his master. So
they made head against the wind as they best could; Hugh crushing the wet grass
beneath his heavy tread, and stalking on after his ordinary savage fashion;
John Willet following at arm’s length, picking his steps, and looking about
him, now for bogs and ditches, and now for such stray ghosts as might be
wandering abroad, with looks of as much dismay and uneasiness as his immovable
face was capable of expressing.
At length they stood
upon the broad gravel-walk before the Warren- house. The building was
profoundly dark, and none were moving near it save themselves. From one
solitary turret-chamber, however, there shone a ray of light; and towards this
speck of comfort in the cold, cheerless, silent scene, Mr. Willet bade his
pilot lead him.
"The old
room," said John, looking timidly upward; "Mr. Reuben’s own
apartment, God be with us! I wonder his brother likes to sit there, so late at
night--on this night too."
"Why, where else
should he sit?" asked Hugh, holding the lantern to his breast, to keep the
candle from the wind, while he trimmed it with his fingers. "It’s snug
enough, an’t it?"
"Snug!" said
John indignantly. "You have a comfortable idea of snugness, you have, sir.
Do you know what was done in that room, you ruffian?"
"Why, what is it
the worse for that!" cried Hugh, looking into John’s fat face. "Does
it keep out the rain, and snow, and wind, the less for that? Is it less warm or
dry, because a man was killed there? Ha, ha, ha! Never believe it, master. One
man’s no such matter as that comes to."
Mr. Willet fixed his
dull eyes on his follower, and began--by a species of inspiration--to think it
just barely possible that he was something of a dangerous character, and that
it might be advisable to get rid of him one of these days. He was too prudent
to say anything, with the journey home before him; and therefore turned to the
iron gate before which this brief dialogue had passed, and pulled the handle of
the bell that hung beside it. The turret in which the light appeared being at
one corner of the building, and only divided from the path by one of the
garden-walks, upon which this gate opened, Mr. Haredale threw up the window
directly, and demanded who was there.
"Begging pardon,
sir," said John, "I knew you sat up late, and made bold to come
round, having a word to say to you."
"Willet--is it
not?"
"Of the
Maypole--at your service, sir."
Mr. Haredale closed the
window, and withdrew. He presently appeared at a door in the bottom of the
turret, and coming across the garden-walk, unlocked the gate and let them in.
"You are a late
visitor, Willet. What is the matter?"
"Nothing to speak
of, sir," said John; "an idle tale, I thought you ought to know of;
nothing more."
"Let your man go
forward with the lantern, and give me your hand. The stairs are crooked and narrow.
Gently with your light, friend. You swing it like a censer."
Hugh, who had already
reached the turret, held it more steadily, and ascended first, turning round
from time to time to shed his light downward on the steps. Mr. Haredale
following next, eyed his lowering face with no great favour; and Hugh, looking
down on him, returned his glances with interest, as they climbed the winding
stairs.
It terminated in a
little ante-room adjoining that from which they had seen the light. Mr.
Haredale entered first, and led the way through it into the latter chamber,
where he seated himself at a writing-table from which he had risen when they
had rung the bell.
"Come in," he
said, beckoning to old John, who remained bowing at the door. "Not you,
friend," he added hastily to Hugh, who entered also. "Willet, why do
you bring that fellow here?"
"Why, sir,"
returned John, elevating his eyebrows, and
lowering his voice to
the tone in which the question had been asked him, "he’s a good guard, you
see."
"Don’t be too sure
of that," said Mr. Haredale, looking towards him as he spoke. "I
doubt it. He has an evil eye."
"There’s no
imagination in his eye," returned Mr. Willet, glancing over his shoulder
at the organ in question, "certainly."
"There is no good
there, be assured," said Mr. Haredale. "Wait in that little room,
friend, and close the door between us."
Hugh shrugged his
shoulders, and with a disdainful look, which showed, either that he had
overheard, or that he guessed the purport of their whispering, did as he was
told. When he was shut out, Mr. Haredale turned to John, and bade him go on
with what he had to say, but not to speak too loud, for there were quick ears
yonder.
Thus cautioned, Mr.
Willet, in an oily whisper, recited all that he had heard and said that night;
laying particular stress upon his own sagacity, upon his great regard for the
family, and upon his solicitude for their peace of mind and happiness. The
story moved his auditor much more than he had expected. Mr. Haredale often
changed his attitude, rose and paced the room, returned again, desired him to
repeat, as nearly as he could, the very words that Solomon had used, and gave
so many other signs of being disturbed and ill at ease, that even Mr. Willet
was surprised.
"You did quite
right," he said, at the end of a long conversation, "to bid them keep
this story secret. It is a foolish fancy on the part of this weak-brained man,
bred in his fears and superstition. But Miss Haredale, though she would know it
to be so, would be disturbed by it if it reached her ears; it is too nearly
connected with a subject very painful to us all, to be heard with indifference.
You were most prudent, and have laid me under a great obligation. I thank you
very much."
This was equal to John’s
most sanguine expectations; but he would have preferred Mr. Haredale’s looking
at him when he spoke, as if he really did thank him, to his walking up and
down, speaking by fits and starts, often stopping with his eyes fixed on the
ground, moving hurriedly on again, like one distracted, and seeming almost
unconscious of what he said or did.
This, however, was his
manner; and it was so embarrassing to John that he sat quite passive for a long
time, not knowing what to do. At length he rose. Mr. Haredale stared at him for
a moment as though he had quite forgotten his being present, then shook hands
with him, and opened the door. Hugh, who was, or feigned to be, fast asleep on
the ante-chamber floor, sprang up on their entrance, and throwing his cloak
about him, grasped his stick and lantern, and prepared to descend the stairs.
"Stay," said
Mr. Haredale. "Will this man drink?"
"Drink! He’d drink
the Thames up, if it was strong enough, sir," replied John Willet.
"He’ll have something when he gets home. He’s better without it, now,
sir."
"Nay. Half the
distance is done," said Hugh. "What a hard master you are! I shall go
home the better for one glassful, halfway. Come!"
As John made no reply,
Mr. Haredale brought out a glass of liquor, and gave it to Hugh, who, as he took
it in his hand, threw part of it upon the floor.
"What do you mean
by splashing your drink about a gentleman’s house, sir?" said John.
"I’m drinking a
toast," Hugh rejoined, holding the glass above his head, and fixing his
eyes on Mr. Haredale’s face; "a toast to this house and its master."
With that he muttered something to himself, and drank the rest, and setting
down the glass, preceded them without another word.
John was a good deal
scandalised by this observance, but seeing that Mr. Haredale took little heed
of what Hugh said or did, and that his thoughts were otherwise employed, he
offered no apology, and went in silence down the stairs, across the walk, and
through the garden-gate. They stopped upon the outer side for Hugh to hold the
light while Mr. Haredale locked it on the inner; and then John saw with wonder
(as he often afterwards related), that he was very pale, and that his face had
changed so much and grown so haggard since their entrance, that he almost
seemed another man.
They were in the open
road again, and John Willet was walking on behind his escort, as he had come,
thinking very steadily of what be had just now seen, when Hugh drew him
suddenly aside, and almost at the same instant three horsemen swept past--the
nearest brushed his shoulder even then--who, checking their steeds as suddenly
as they could, stood still, and waited for their coming up.
WHEN John Willet saw
that the horsemen wheeled smartly round, and drew up three abreast in the
narrow road, waiting for him and his man to join them, it occurred to him with
unusual precipitation that they must be highwaymen; and had Hugh been armed
with a blunderbuss, in place of his stout cudgel, he would certainly have
ordered him to fire it off at a venture, and would, while the word of command
was obeyed, have consulted his own personal safety in immediate flight. Under
the circumstances of disadvantage, however, in which he and his guard were
placed, he deemed it prudent to adopt a different style of generalship, and therefore
whispered his attendant to address them in the most peaceable and courteous
terms. By way of acting up to the spirit and letter of this instruction, Hugh
stepped forward, and flourishing his staff before the very eyes of the rider
nearest to him, demanded roughly what he and his fellows meant by so nearly
galloping over them, and why they scoured the king’s highway at that late hour
of night.
The man whom be
addressed was beginning an angry reply in the same strain, when be was checked
by the horseman in the centre, who, interposing with an air of authority,
inquired in a somewhat loud but not harsh or unpleasant voice:
"Pray, is this the
London road?"
"If you follow it
right, it is," replied Hugh roughly.
"Nay,
brother," said the same person, "you’re but a churlish Englishman, if
Englishman you be--which I should much doubt but for your tongue. Your
companion, I am sure, will answer me more civilly. How say you, friend?"
"I say it is the
London road, sir," answered John. "And I wish," he added in a
subdued voice, as he turned to Hugh, "that you was in any other road, you
vagabond. Are you tired of your life, sir, that you go a-trying to provoke
three great neck-or-nothing chaps, that could keep on running over us, back’ards
and for’ards, till we was dead, and then take our bodies up behind ’em, and
drown us ten miles off?"
"How far is it to
London?" inquired the same speaker.
"Why, from here,
sir," answered John, persuasively, "it’s thirteen very easy
mile."
The adjective was
thrown in, as an inducement to the travellers to ride away with all speed; but
instead of having the desired effect, it elicited from the same person, the
remark, "Thirteen miles! That’s a long distance!" which was followed
by a short pause of indecision.
"Pray," said
the gentleman, "are there any inns hereabouts?" At the word
"inns," John plucked up his spirit in a surprising manner; his fears
rolled off like smoke; all the landlord stirred within him.
"There are no
inns," rejoined Mr. Willet, with a strong emphasis on the plural number;
"but there’s a Inn--one Inn--the Maypole Inn. That’s a Inn indeed. You won’t
see the like of that Inn often."
"You keep it,
perhaps?" said the horseman, smiling.
"I do, sir,"
replied John, greatly wondering how he had found this out.
"And how far is
the Maypole from here?"
"About a
mile"--John was going to add that it was the easiest mile in all the
world, when the third rider, who had hitherto kept a little in the rear,
suddenly interposed:
"And have you one
excellent bed, landlord? Hem! A bed that you can recommend--a bed that you are
sure is well aired--a bed that has been slept in by some perfectly respectable
and unexceptionable person?"
"We don’t take in
no tagrag and bobtail at our house, sir," answered John. "And as to
the bed itself--"
"Say, as to three
beds," interposed the gentleman who had spoken before; "for we shall
want three if we stay, though my friend only speaks of one."
"No, no, my lord;
you are too good, you are too kind; but your life is of far too much importance
to the nation in these portentous times, to be placed upon a level with one so
useless and so poor as mine. A great cause, my lord, a mighty cause, depends on
you. You are its leader and its champion, its advanced guard and its van. It is
the cause of our altars and our homes, our country and our faith. Let me sleep
on a chair--the carpet--anywhere. No one will repine if I take cold or fever.
Let John Grueby pass the night beneath the open sky--no one will repine for
him. But forty thousand men of this our island in the wave (exclusive of women
and children) rivet their eyes and thoughts on Lord George Gordon; and every
day, from the rising up of the sun to the going down of the same, pray for his
health and vigour. My lord," said the speaker, rising in his stirrups,
"it is a glorious cause, and must not be forgotten. My lord, it is a
mighty cause, and must not be endangered. My lord, it is a holy cause, and must
not be deserted."
"It is a holy
cause," exclaimed his lordship, lifting up his hat with great solemnity.
"Amen."
"John
Grueby," said the long-winded gentleman, in a tone of mild reproof,
"his lordship said Amen."
"I heard my lord,
sir," said the man, sitting like a statue on his horse.
"And do not you
say Amen, likewise?"
To which John Grueby made
no reply at all, but sat looking straight before him.
"You surprise me,
Grueby," said the gentleman. "At a crisis like the present, when
Queen Elizabeth, that maiden monarch, weeps within her tomb, and Bloody Mary,
with a brow of gloom and shadow, stalks triumphant--"
"Oh, sir,"
cied the man, gruffly, "where’s the use of talking of Bloody Mary, under
such circumstances as the present, when my lord’s wet through, and tired with
hard riding? Let’s either go on to London, sir, or put up at once; or that unfort’nate
Bloody Mary will have more to answer for--and she’s done a deal more harm in
her grave than she ever did in her lifetime, I believe."
By this time Mr.
Willet, who had never beard so many words spoken together at one time, or
delivered with such volubility and emphasis as by the long-winded gentleman;
and whose brain, being wholly unable to sustain or compass them, had quite
given itself up for lost; recovered so far as to observe that there was ample
accommodation at the Maypole for all the party: good beds; neat wines;
excellent entertainment for man and beast; private rooms for large and small
parties; dinners dressed upon the shortest notice; choice stabling, and a
lock-up coach-house; and, in short, to run over such recommendatory scraps of language
as were painted up on various portions of the building, and which in the course
of some forty years he had learnt to repeat with tolerable correctness. He was
considering whether it was at all possible to insert any novel sentences to the
same purpose, when the gentleman who had spoken first, turning to him of the
long wind, exclaimed, "What say you, Gashford? Shall we tarry at this
house he speaks of, or press forward? You shall decide."
"I would submit,
my lord, then," returned the person he appealed to, in a silky tone,
"that your health and spirits--so important, under Providence, to our
great cause, our pure and truthful cause"-- here his lordship pulled off
his hat again, though it was raining hard--"require refreshment and repose."
"Go on before,
landlord, and show the way," said Lord George Gordon; "we will follow
at a footpace."
"If you’ll give me
leave, my lord," said John Grueby, in a low voice, "I’ll change my
proper place, and ride before you. The looks of the landlord’s friend are not
over honest, and it may be as well to be cautious with him."
"John Grueby is
quite right," interposed Mr. Gashford, falling back hastily. "My
lord, a life so precious as yours must not be put in peril. Go forward, John,
by all means. If you have any reason to suspect the fellow, blow his brains
out."
John made no answer,
but looking straight before him, as his custom seemed to be when the secretary
spoke, bade Hugh push on, and followed close behind him. Then came his
lordship, with Mr. Willet at his bridle rein; and, last of all, his lordship’s
secretary--for that, it seemed, was Gashford’s office.
Hugh strode briskly on,
often looking back at the servant, whose horse was close upon his heels, and
glancing with a leer at his bolster case of pistols, by which he seemed to set
great store. He was a square-built, strong-made, bull-necked fellow, of the
true English breed; and as Hugh measured him with his eye, he measured Hugh,
regarding him meanwhile with a look of bluff disdain. He was much older than the
Maypole man, being to all appearance five-and- forty; but was one of those
self-possessed, hard-headed, imperturbable fellows, who, if they are ever
beaten at fisticuffs, or other kind of warfare, never know it, and go on coolly
till they win.
"If I led you
wrong now," said Hugh, tauntingly, "you’d--ha ha ha!-- you’d shoot me
through the head, I suppose."
John Grueby took no
more notice of this remark than if he had been deaf and Hugh dumb; but kept
riding on quite comfortably, with his eyes fixed on the horizon.
"Did you ever try
a fall with a man when you were young, master?" said Hugh. "Can you
make any play at single-stick?"
John Grueby looked at
him sideways with the same contented air, but deigned not a word in answer.
"--Like
this?" said Hugh, giving his cudgel one of those skilful flourishes, in
which the rustic of that time delighted. "Whoop!"
"--Or that,"
returned John Grueby, beating down his guard with his whip, and striking him on
the head with its butt end. "Yes, I played a little once. You wear your
hair too long; I should have cracked your crown if it had been a little
shorter."
It was a pretty smart,
loud-sounding rap, as it was, and evidently astonished Hugh; who, for the
moment, seemed disposed to drag his new acquaintance from his saddle. But his
face betokening neither malice, triumph, rage, nor any lingering idea that he
had given him offence; his eyes gazing steadily in the old direction, and his
manner being as careless and composed as if he had merely brushed away a fly;
Hugh was so puzzled, and so disposed to look upon him as a customer of almost
supernatural toughness, that he merely laughed, and cried "Well
done!" then, sheering off a little, led the way in silence.
Before the lapse of
many minutes the party halted at the Maypole door. Lord George and his
secretary quickly dismounting, gave their horses to their servant, who, under
the guidance of Hugh, repaired to the stables. Right glad to escape from the
inclemency of the night, they followed Mr. Willet into the common room, and
stood warming themselves and drying their clothes before the cheerful fire,
while he busied himself with such orders and preparations as his guest’s high
quality required.
As he bustled in and
out of the room, intent on these arrangements, he had an opportunity of
observing the two travellers, of whom, as yet, he knew nothing but the voice.
The lord, the great personage who did the Maypole so much honour, was about the
middle height, of a slender make, and sallow complexion, with an aquiline nose,
and long hair of a reddish brown, combed perfectly straight and smooth about
his ears, and slightly powdered, but without the faintest vestige of a curl. He
was attired, under his greatcoat, in a full suit of black, quite free from any
ornament, and of the most precise and sober cut. The gravity of his dress,
together with a certain lankness of cheek and stiffness of deportment, added
nearly ten years to his age, but his figure was that of one not yet past
thirty. As he stood musing in the red glow of the fire, it was striking to
observe his very bright large eye, which betrayed a restlessness of thought and
purpose, singularly at variance with the studied composure and sobriety of his
mien, and with his quaint and sad apparel. It had nothing harsh or cruel in its
expression; neither had his face, which was thin and mild, and wore an air of
melancholy; but it was suggestive of an indefinable uneasiness; which infected
those who looked upon him, and filled them with a kind of pity for the man:
though why it did so, they would have had some trouble to explain.
Gashford, the
secretary, was taller, angularly made, high- shouldered, bony, and ungraceful.
His dress, in imitation of his superior, was demure and staid in the extreme;
his manner, formal and constrained. This gentleman had an overhanging brow,
great hands and feet and ears, and a pair of eyes that seemed to have made an
unnatural retreat into his head, and to have dug themselves a cave to hide in.
His manner was smooth and humble, but very sly and slinking. He wore the aspect
of a man who was always lying in wait for something that wouldn’t come to pass;
but he looked patient--very patient--and fawned like a spaniel dog. Even now,
while he warmed and rubbed his hands before the blaze, he had the air of one
who only presumed to enjoy it in his degree as a commoner; and though he knew
his lord was not regarding him, he looked into his face from time to time, and
with a meek and deferential manner, smiled as if for practice.
Such were the guests
whom old John Willet, with a fixed and leaden eye, surveyed a hundred times,
and to whom he now advanced with a state candlestick in each hand, beseeching
them to follow him into a worthier chamber. "For my lord," said
John--it is odd enough, but certain people seem to have as great a pleasure in
pronouncing titles as their owners have in wearing them--"this room, my
lord, isn’t at all the sort of
place for your
lordship, and I have to beg your lordship’s pardon for keeping you here, my
lord, one minute."
With this address, John
ushered them upstairs into the state apartment, which, like many other things
of state, was cold and comfortless. Their own footsteps, reverberating through
the spacious room, struck upon their hearing with a hollow sound; and its damp
and chilly atmosphere was rendered doubly cheerless by contrast with the homely
warmth they had deserted.
It was of no use,
however, to propose a return to the place they had quitted, for the
preparations went on so briskly that there was no time to stop them. John, with
the tall candlesticks in his hands, bowed them up to the fireplace; Hugh,
striding in with a lighted brand and pile of firewood, cast it down upon the
hearth, and set it in a blaze; John Grueby (who had a great blue cockade in his
hat, which he appeared to despise mightily) brought in the portmanteau he had
carried on his horse, and placed it on the floor; and presently all three were
busily engaged in drawing out the screen, laying the cloth, inspecting the
beds, lighting fires in the bedrooms, expediting the supper, and making
everything as cosy and as snug as might be, on so short a notice. In less than
an hour’s time, supper had been served, and ate, and cleared away; and Lord
George and his secretary, with slippered feet, and legs stretched out before
the fire, sat over some hot mulled wine together.
"So ends, my
lord," said Gashford, filling his glass with great complacency, "the
blessed work of a most blessed day."
"And of a blessed
yesterday," said his lordship, raising his head.
"Ah!"--and
here the secretary clasped his hands--"a blessed yesterday indeed! The
Protestants of Suffolk are godly men and true. Though others of our countrymen
have lost their way in darkness, even as we, my lord, did lose our road
to-night, theirs is the light and glory."
"Did I move them,
Gashford ?" said Lord George.
"Move them, my
lord! Move them! They cried to be led on against the Papists, they vowed a
dreadful vengeance on their heads, they roared like men possessed--"
"But not by
devils," said his lord.
"By devils! my
lord! By angels."
"Yes--oh
surely--by angels, no doubt," said Lord George, thrusting his hands into
his pockets, taking them out again to bite his nails, and looking uncomfortably
at the fire. "Of course by angels--eh Gashford?"
"You do not doubt
it, my lord?" said the secretary.
"No--No,"
returned his lord. "No. Why should I? I suppose it would be decidedly
irreligious to doubt it--wouldn’t it, Gashford? Though there certainly
were," he added, without waiting for an answer, "some plaguy
ill-looking characters among them."
"When you
warmed," said the secretary, looking sharply at the other’s downcast eyes,
which brightened slowly as he spoke; "when you warmed into that noble
outbreak; when you told them that you were never of the lukewarm or the timid
tribe, and bade them take heed that they were prepared to follow one who would
lead them on, though to the very death; when you spoke of a hundred and twenty
thousand men across the Scottish border who would take their own redress at any
time, if it were not conceded; when you cried "Perish the Pope and all his
base adherents; the penal laws against them shall never be repealed while
Englishmen have hearts and hands"--and waved your own and touched your
sword; and when they cried "No Popery!" and you cried "No; not
even if we wade in blood," and they threw up their hats and cried
"Hurrah! not even if we wade in blood; No Popery! Lord George! Down with
the Papists-- Vengeance on their heads:" when this was said and done, and
a word from you, my lord, could raise or still the tumult--ah! then I felt what
greatness was indeed, and thought, When was there ever power like this of Lord
George Gordon’s!"
"It’s a great
power. You’re right. It is a great power!" he cried with sparkling eyes.
"But--dear Gashford--did I really say all that?"
"And how much
more!" cried the secretary, looking upwards. "Ah! how much
more!"
"And I told them
what you say, about the one hundred and forty thousand men in Scotland, did
I!" he asked with evident delight. "That was bold."
"Our cause is
boldness. Truth is always bold."
"Certainly. So is
religion. She’s bold, Gashford?"
"The true religion
is, my lord."
"And that’s
ours," he rejoined, moving uneasily in his seat, and biting his nails as
though he would pare them to the quick. "There can be no doubt of ours
being the true one. You feel as certain of that as I do, Gashford, don’t
you?"
"Does my lord ask
me," whined Gashford, drawing his chair nearer with an injured air, and
laying his broad flat hand upon the table; "me," he repeated, bending
the dark hollows of his eyes upon him with an unwholesome smile, "who,
stricken by the magic of his eloquence in Scotland but a year ago, abjured the
errors of the Romish church, and clung to him as one whose timely hand had
plucked me from a pit?"
"True. No--No.
I--I didn’t mean it," replied the other, shaking him by the hand, rising
from his seat, and pacing restlessly about the room. "It’s a proud thing
to lead the people, Gashford," he added as he made a sudden halt.
"By force of
reason too," returned the pliant secretary.
"Ay, to be sure.
They may cough and jeer, and groan in Parliament, and call me fool and madman,
but which of them can raise this human sea and make it swell and roar at
pleasure? Not one."
"Not one,"
repeated Gashford.
"Which of them can
say for his honesty, what I can say for mine; which of them has refused a
minister’s bribe of one thousand pounds a year, to resign his seat in favour of
another? Not one."
"Not one,"
repeated Gashford again--taking the lion’s share of the mulled wine between
whiles.
"And as we are
honest, true, and in a sacred cause, Gashford," said Lord George with a
heightened colour and in a louder voice, as he laid his fevered hand upon his
shoulder, "and are the only men who regard the mass of people out of
doors, or are regarded by them, we will uphold them to the last; and will raise
a cry against these un-English Papists which shall re-echo through the country,
and roll with a noise like thunder. I will be worthy of the motto on my coat of
arms, ’Called and chosen and faithful.’"
"Called,"
said the secretary, "by Heaven."
"I am."
"Chosen by the
people."
"Yes."
"Faithful to
both."
"To the
block!"
It would be difficult
to convey an adequate idea of the excited manner in which he gave these answers
to the secretary’s promptings; of the rapidity of his utterance, or the
violence of his tone and gesture; in which, struggling through his Puritan’s
demeanour, was something wild and ungovernable which broke through all restraint.
For some minutes he walked rapidly up and down the room, then stopping
suddenly, exclaimed,
"Gashford--You
moved them yesterday too. Oh yes! You did."
"I shone with a
reflected light, my lord," replied the humble secretary, laying his hand
upon his heart. "I did my best."
"You did
well," said his master, "and are a great and worthy instrument. If
you will ring for John Grueby to carry the portmanteau into my room, and will
wait here while I undress, we will dispose of business as usual, if you’re not too
tired."
"Too tired, my
lord!--But this is his consideration! Christian from head to foot." With
which soliloquy, the secretary tilted the jug, and looked very hard into the
mulled wine, to see how much remained.
John Willet and John
Grueby appeared together. The one bearing the great candlesticks, and the other
the portmanteau, showed the deluded lord into his chamber; and left the
secretary alone, to yawn and shake himself, and finally to fall asleep before
the fire.
"Now, Mr. Gashford
sir," said John Grueby in his ear, after what appeared to him a moment of
unconsciousness; "my lord’s abed."
"Oh. Very good,
John," was his mild reply. "Thank you, John. Nobody need sit up. I
know my room."
"I hope you’re not
a-going to trouble your head to-night, or my lord’s head neither, with anything
more about Bloody Mary," said John. "I wish the blessed old creetur
had never been born."
"I said you might
go to bed, John," returned the secretary. "You didn’t hear me, I
think."
"Between Bloody
Marys, and blue cockades, and glorious Queen Besses, and no Poperys, and
Protestant associations, and making of speeches," pursued John Grueby,
looking, as usual, a long way off, and taking no notice of this hint, "my
lord’s half off his head. When we go out o’ doors, such a set of ragamuffins
comes a- shouting after us, ’Gordon forever!’ that I’m ashamed of myself and
don’t know where to look. When we’re indoors, they come a- roaring and
screaming about the house like so many devils; and my lord instead of ordering
them to be drove away, goes out into the balcony and demeans himself by making
speeches to ’em, and calls ’em ’Men of England,’ and ’Fellow-countrymen,’ as if
he was fond of ’em and thanked ’em for coming. I can’t make it out, but they’re
all mixed up somehow or another with that unfort’nate Bloody Mary, and call her
name out till they’re hoarse. They’re all Protestants too--every man and boy
among ’em: and Protestants are very fond of spoons, I find, and silver-plate in
general, whenever area-gates is left open accidentally. I wish that was the
worst of it, and that no more harm might be to come; but if you don’t stop
these ugly customers in time, Mr. Gashford (and I know you; you’re the man that
blows the fire), you’ll find ’em grow a little bit too strong for you. One of
these evenings, when the weather gets warmer and Protestants are thirsty, they’ll
be pulling London down,--and I never heard that Bloody Mary went as far as
that."
Gashford had vanished
long ago, and these remarks had been bestowed on empty air. Not at all
discomposed by the discovery, John Grueby fixed his hat on, wrongside foremost
that he might be unconscious of the shadow of the obnoxious cockade, and
withdrew to bed; shaking his head in a very gloomy and prophetic manner until
he reached his chamber.
GASHFORD, with a
smiling face, but still with looks of profound deference and humility, betook
himself towards his master’s room, smoothing his hair down as he went, and
humming a psalm tune. As he approached Lord George’s door, he cleared his
throat and hummed more vigorously.
There was a remarkable
contrast between this man’s occupation at the moment, and the expression of his
countenance, which was singularly repulsive and malicious. His beetling brow
almost obscured his eyes; his lip was curled contemptuously; his very shoulders
seemed to sneer in stealthy whisperings with his great flapped ears.
"Hush!" he
muttered softly, as he peeped in at the chamber-door. "He seems to be
asleep. Pray Heaven he is! Too much watching, too much care, too much
thought--ah! Lord preserve him for a martyr! He is a saint, if ever saint drew
breath on this bad earth."
Placing his light upon
a table, he walked on tiptoe to the fire, and sitting in a chair before it with
his back towards the bed, went on communing with himself like one who thought
aloud:
"The saviour of
his country and his country’s religion, the friend of his poor countrymen, the
enemy of the proud and harsh; beloved of the rejected and oppressed, adored by
forty thousand bold and loyal English hearts--what happy slumbers his should
be!" And here he sighed, and warmed his hands, and shook his head as men
do when their hearts are full, and heaved another sigh, and warmed his hands
again.
"Why,
Gashford?" said Lord George, who was lying broad awake, upon his side, and
had been staring at him from his entrance.
"My--my
lord," said Gashford, starting and looking round as though in great
surprise. "I have disturbed you!"
"I have not been
sleeping."
"Not
sleeping!" he repeated, with assumed confusion. "What can I say for
having in your presence given utterance to thoughts--but they were
sincere--they were sincere!" exclaimed the secretary, drawing his sleeve
in a hasty way across his eyes; "and why should I regret your having heard
them?"
"Gashford,"
said the poor lord, stretching out his hand with manifest emotion. "Do not
regret it. You love me well, I know-- too well. I don’t deserve such
homage."
Gashford made no reply,
but grasped the hand and pressed it to his lips. Then rising, and taking from
the trunk a little desk, he placed it on a table near the fire, unlocked it
with a key he carried in his pocket, sat down before it, took out a pen, and,
before dipping it in the inkstand, sucked it--to compose the fashion of his
mouth perhaps, on which a smile was hovering yet.
"How do our
numbers stand since last enrolling-night?" inquired Lord George. "Are
we really forty thousand strong, or do we still speak in round numbers when we
take the Association at that amount?"
"Our total now
exceeds that number by a score and three," Gashford replied, casting his
eyes upon his papers.
"The funds?"
"Not very
improving; but there is some manna in the wilderness, my lord. Hem! On Friday
night the widows’ mites dropped in. ’Forty scavengers, three and fourpence. An
aged pew-opener of St Martin’s parish, sixpence. A bell-ringer of the
established church, sixpence. A Protestant infant, newly born, one halfpenny.
The United Link Boys, three shillings--one bad. The anti-Popish prisoners in
Newgate, five and fourpence. A friend in Bedlam, half-a-crown. Dennis the
hangman, one shilling.’"
"That
Dennis," said his lordship, "is an earnest man. I marked him in the
crowd in Welbeck Street, last Friday."
"A good man,"
rejoined the secretary, "a staunch, sincere, and truly zealous man."
"He should be
encouraged," said Lord George. "Make a note of Dennis. I’ll talk with
him."
Gashford obeyed, and
went on reading from his list:
"’The Friends of
Reason, half-a-guinea. The Friends of Liberty, half-a-guinea. The Friends of
Peace, half-a-guinea. The Friends of Charity, half-a-guinea. The Friends of
Mercy, half-a-guinea. The Associated Rememberers of Bloody Mary, half-a-guinea.
The United Bulldogs, half-a-guinea.’"
"The United
Bulldogs," said Lord George, biting his nails most horribly, "are a
new society, are they not?"
"Formerly the ’Prentice
Knights, my lord. The indentures of the old members expiring by degrees, they
changed their name, it seems, though they still have ’prentices among them, as
well as workmen."
"What is their
president’s name?" inquired Lord George.
"President,"
said Gashford, reading, "Mr. Simon Tappertit."
"I remember him.
The little man, who sometimes brings an elderly sister to our meetings, and
sometimes another female too, who is conscientious, I have no doubt, but not
well-favoured?"
"The very same, my
lord."
"Tappertit is an
earnest man," said Lord George, thoughtfully. "Eh, Gashford?"
"One of the
foremost among them all, my lord. He snuffs the battle from afar, like the
war-horse. He throws his hat up in the street as if he were inspired, and makes
most stirring speeches from the shoulders of his friends."
"Make a note of
Tappertit," said Lord George Gordon. "We may advance him to a place
of trust."
"That,"
rejoined the secretary, doing as he was told, "is all-- except Mrs. Varden’s
box (fourteenth time of opening), seven shillings and sixpence in silver and
copper, and half-a-guinea in gold; and Miggs (being the saving of a quarter’s
wages), one-and- threepence."
"Miggs," said
Lord George. "Is that a man?"
"The name is
entered on the list as a woman," replied the secretary. "I think she
is the tall spare female of whom you spoke just now, my lord, as not being
well-favoured, who sometimes comes to hear the speeches--along with Tappertit
and Mrs. Varden."
"Mrs. Varden is
the elderly lady then, is she?"
The secretary nodded,
and rubbed the bridge of his nose with the feather of his pen.
"She is a zealous
sister," said Lord George. "Her collection goes on prosperously, and
is pursued with fervour. Has her husband joined?"
"A
malignant," returned the secretary, folding up his papers. "Unworthy
such a wife. He remains in outer darkness and steadily refuses."
"The consequences
be upon his own head!--Gashford!"
"My lord!"
"You don’t
think," he turned restlessly in his bed as he spoke, "these people
will desert me, when the hour arrives? I have spoken boldly for them, ventured
much, suppressed nothing. They’ll not fall off, will they?"
"No fear of that,
my lord," said Gashford, with a meaning look, which was rather the
involuntary expression of his own thoughts than intended as any confirmation of
his words, for the other’s face was turned away. "Be sure there is no fear
of that."
"Nor," he
said with a more restless motion than before, "of their-- but they can
sustain no harm from leaguing for this purpose. Right is on our side, though
Might may be against us. You feel as sure of that as I--honestly, you do?"
The secretary was
beginning with "You do not doubt," when the other interrupted him,
and impatiently rejoined:
"Doubt. No. Who
says I doubt? If I doubted, should I cast away relatives, friends, everything,
for this unhappy country’s sake; this unhappy country," he cried,
springing up in bed, after repeating the phrase "unhappy country’s
sake" to himself, at least a dozen times, "forsaken of God and man,
delivered over to a dangerous confederacy of Popish powers; the prey of
corruption, idolatry, and despotism! Who says I doubt? Am I called, and chosen,
and faithful? Tell me. Am I, or am I not?"
"To God, the
country, and yourself," cried Gashford.
"I am. I will be.
I say again, I will be: to the block. Who says as much! Do you? Does any man
alive?"
The secretary drooped
his head with an expression of perfect acquiescence in anything that had been
said or might be; and Lord George gradually sinking down upon his pillow, fell
asleep.
Although there was
something very ludicrous in his vehement manner, taken in conjunction with his
meagre aspect and ungraceful presence, it would scarcely have provoked a smile
in any man of kindly feeling; or even if it had, he would have felt sorry and
almost angry with himself next moment, for yielding to the impulse. This lord
was sincere in his violence and in his wavering. A nature prone to false
enthusiasm, and the vanity of being a leader, were the worst qualities apparent
in his composition. All the rest was weakness--sheer weakness; and it is the
unhappy lot of thoroughly weak men, that their very sympathies, affections,
confidences--all the qualities which in better constituted minds are
virtues--dwindle into foibles, or turn into downright vices.
Gashford, with many a
sly look towards the bed, sat chuckling at his master’s folly, until his deep
and heavy breathing warned him that he might retire. Locking his desk, and
replacing it within the trunk (but not before he had taken from a secret lining
two printed handbills), he cautiously withdrew; looking back, as he went, at
the pale face of the slumbering man, above whose head the dusty plumes that
crowned the Maypole couch, waved drearily and sadly as though it were a bier.
Stopping on the
staircase to listen that all was quiet, and to take off his shoes lest his
footsteps should alarm any light sleeper who might be near at hand, he descended
to the ground floor, and thrust one of his bills beneath the great door of the
house. That done, he crept softly back to his own chamber, and from the window
let another fall--carefully wrapt round a stone to save it from the wind--into
the yard below.
They were addressed on
the back "To every Protestant into whose hands this shall come," and
bore within what follows:
"Men and Brethren.
Whoever shall find this letter, will take it as a warning to join, without
delay, the friends of Lord George Gordon. There are great events at hand; and
the times are dangerous and troubled. Read this carefully, keep it clean, and
drop it somewhere else. For King and Country. Union."
"More seed, more
seed," said Gashford as he closed the window. "When will the harvest
come?"
TO surround anything,
however monstrous or ridiculous, with an air of mystery, is to invest it with a
secret charm, and power of attraction which to the crowd is irresistible. False
priests, false prophets, false doctors, false patriots, false prodigies of
every kind, veiling their proceedings in mystery, have always addressed
themselves at an immense advantage to the popular credulity, and have been,
perhaps, more indebted to that resource in gaining and keeping for a time the upper
hand of Truth and Common Sense, than to any half-dozen items in the whole
catalogue of imposture. Curiosity is, and has been from the creation of the
world, a master-passion. To awaken it, to gratify it by slight degrees, and yet
leave something always in suspense, is to establish the surest hold that can be
had, in wrong, on the unthinking portion of mankind.
If a man had stood on
London Bridge, calling till he was hoarse, upon the passers-by, to join with
Lord George Gordon, although for an object which no man understood, and which
in that very incident had a charm of its own,--the probability is, that he
might have influenced a score of people in a month. If all zealous Protestants
had been publicly urged to join an association for the avowed purpose of
singing a hymn or two occasionally, and hearing some indifferent speeches made,
and ultimately of petitioning Parliament not to pass an act for abolishing the
penal laws against Roman Catholic priests, the penalty of perpetual
imprisonment denounced against those who educated children in that persuasion,
and the disqualification of all members of the Romish church to inherit real
property in the United Kingdom by right of purchase or descent,--matters so far
removed from the business and bosoms of the mass, might perhaps have called
together a hundred people. But when vague rumours got abroad, that in this
Protestant association a secret power was mustering against the government for
undefined and mighty purposes; when the air was filled with whispers of a
confederacy among the Popish powers to degrade and enslave England, establish
an inquisition in London, and turn the pens of Smithfield market into stakes
and cauldrons; when terrors and alarms which no man understood were perpetually
broached, both in and out of Parliament, by one enthusiast who did not
understand himself, and bygone bugbears which had lain quietly in their graves
for centuries, were raised again to haunt the ignorant and credulous; when all
this was done, as it were, in the dark, and secret invitations to join the
Great Protestant Association in defence of religion, life, and liberty, were
dropped in the public ways, thrust under the house-doors, tossed in at windows,
and pressed into the hands of those who trod the streets by night; when they
glared from every wall, and shone on every post and pillar, so that stocks and
stones appeared infected with the common fear, urging all men to join together
blindfold in resistance of they knew not what, they knew not why;--then the
mania spread indeed, and the body, still increasing every day, grew forty
thousand strong.
So said, at least, in
this month of March, 1780, Lord George Gordon, the Association’s president.
Whether it was the fact or otherwise, few men knew or cared to ascertain. It
had never made any public demonstration; had scarcely ever been heard of, save
through him; had never been seen; and was supposed by many to be the mere
creature of his disordered brain. He was accustomed to talk largely about
numbers of men--stimulated, as it was inferred, by certain successful
disturbances, arising out of the same subject, which had occurred in Scotland
in the previous year; was looked upon as a cracked-brained member of the lower
house, who attacked all parties and sided with none, and was very little
regarded. It was known that there was discontent abroad--there always is; he
had been accustomed to address the people by placard, speech, and pamphlet,
upon other questions; nothing had come, in England, of his past exertions, and
nothing was apprehended from his present. Just as he has come upon the reader,
he had come, from time to time, upon the public, and been forgotten in a day;
as suddenly as he appears in these pages, after a blank of five long years, did
he and his proceedings begin to force themselves, about this period, upon the
notice of thousands of people, who had mingled in active life during the whole
interval, and who, without being deaf or blind to passing events, had scarcely
ever thought of him before.
"My lord,"
said Gashford in his ear, as he drew the curtains of his bed betimes; "my
lord!"
"Yes--who’s that?
What is it?"
"The clock has
struck nine," returned the secretary, with meekly folded hands. "You
have slept well? I hope you have slept well? If my prayers are heard, you are
refreshed indeed."
"To say the truth,
I have slept so soundly," said Lord George, rubbing his eyes and looking
round the room, "that I don’t remember quite--what place is this?"
"My lord!"
cried Gashford, with a smile.
"Oh!"
returned his superior. "Yes. You’re not a Jew then?"
"A Jew!"
exclaimed the pious secretary, recoiling.
"I dreamed that we
were Jews, Gashford. You and I--both of us-- Jews with long beards."
"Heaven forbid, my
lord! We might as well be Papists."
"I suppose we
might," returned the other, very quickly. "Eh? You really think so,
Gashford?"
"Surely I
do," the secretary cried, with looks of great surprise.
"Humph!" he
muttered. "Yes, that seems reasonable."
"I hope my
lord--" the secretary began.
"Hope!" he
echoed, interrupting him. "Why do you say, you hope? There’s no harm in
thinking of such things."
"Not in
dreams," returned the Secretary.
"In dreams! No,
nor waking either."
"--’Called, and
chosen, and faithful,’" said Gashford, taking up Lord George’s watch which
lay upon a chair, and seeming to read the inscription on the seal,
abstractedly.
It was the slightest
action possible, not obtruded on his notice, and apparently the result of a
moment’s absence of mind, not worth remark. But as the words were uttered, Lord
George, who had been going on impetuously, stopped short, reddened, and was
silent. Apparently quite unconscious of this change in his demeanour, the wily
Secretary stepped a little apart, under pretence of pulling up the
window-blind, and returning when the other had had time to recover, said:
"The holy cause
goes bravely on, my lord. I was not idle, even last night. I dropped two of the
handbills before I went to bed, and both are gone this morning. Nobody in the
house has mentioned the circumstance of finding them, though I have been
downstairs full half-an-hour. One or two recruits will be their first fruit, I
predict; and who shall say how many more, with Heaven’s blessing on your
inspired exertions!"
"It was a famous
device in the beginning," replied Lord George; "an excellent device,
and did good service in Scotland. It was quite worthy of you. You remind me not
to be a sluggard, Gashford, when the vineyard is menaced with destruction, and
may be trodden down by Papist feet. Let the horses be saddled in half-an-hour.
We must be up and doing!"
He said this with a
heightened colour, and in a tone of such enthusiasm, that the secretary deemed
all further prompting needless, and withdrew.
"--Dreamed he was
a Jew," he said thoughtfully, as he closed the bedroom door. "He may
come to that before he dies. It’s like enough. Well! After a time, and provided
I lost nothing by it, I don’t see why that religion shouldn’t suit me as well
as any other. There are rich men among the Jews; shaving is very troublesome;--yes,
it would suit me well enough. For the present, though, we must be Christian to
the core. Our prophetic motto will suit all creeds in their turn, that’s a
comfort." Reflecting on this source of consolation, he reached the
sitting-room, and rang the bell for breakfast.
Lord George was quickly
dressed (for his plain toilet was easily made), and as he was no less frugal in
his repasts than in his Puritan attire, his share of the meal was soon
dispatched. The secretary, however, more devoted to the good things of this
world, or more intent on sustaining his strength and spirits for the sake of
the Protestant cause, ate and drank to the last minute, and required indeed
some three or four reminders from John Grueby, before he could resolve to tear
himself away from Mr. Willet’s plentiful providing.
At length he came
downstairs, wiping his greasy mouth, and having paid John Willet’s bill,
climbed into his saddle. Lord George, who had been walking up and down before
the house talking to himself with earnest gestures, mounted his horse; and
returning old John Willet’s stately bow, as well as the parting salutation of a
dozen idlers whom the rumour of a live lord being about to leave the Maypole
had gathered round the porch, they rode away, with stout John Grueby in the
rear.
If Lord George Gordon
had appeared in the eyes of Mr. Willet, overnight, a nobleman of somewhat
quaint and odd exterior, the impression was confirmed this morning, and
increased a hundredfold. Sitting bolt upright upon his bony steed, with his
long, straight hair, dangling about his face and fluttering in the wind; his
limbs all angular and rigid, his elbows stuck out on either side ungracefully,
and his whole frame jogged and shaken at every motion of his horse’s feet; a
more grotesque or more ungainly figure can hardly be conceived. In lieu of
whip, he carried in his hand a great gold-headed cane, as large as any footman
carries in these days, and his various modes of holding this unwieldy
weapon--now upright before his face like the sabre of a horse-soldier, now over
his shoulder like a musket, now between his finger and thumb, but always in
some uncouth and awkward fashion--contributed in no small degree to the
absurdity of his appearance. Stiff, lank, and solemn, dressed in an unusual manner,
and ostentatiously exhibiting--whether by design or accident--all his
peculiarities of carriage, gesture, and conduct, all the qualities, natural and
artificial, in which he differed from other men; he might have moved the
sternest looker-on to laughter, and fully provoked the smiles and whispered
jests which greeted his departure from the Maypole inn.
Quite unconscious,
however, of the effect he produced, he trotted on beside his secretary, talking
to himself nearly all the way, until they came within a mile or two of London,
when now and then some passenger went by who knew him by sight, and pointed him
out to some one else, and perhaps stood looking after him, or cried in jest or
earnest as it might be, "Hurrah Geordie! No Popery!" At which he would
gravely pull off his hat, and bow. When they reached the town and rode along
the streets, these notices became more frequent; some laughed, some hissed,
some turned their heads and smiled, some wondered who he was, some ran along
the pavement by his side and cheered. When this happened in a crush of carts
and chairs and coaches, he would make a dead stop, and pulling off his hat,
cry, "Gentlemen, No Popery!" to which the gentlemen would respond
with lusty voices, and with three times three; and then, on he would go again
with a score or so of the raggedest, following at his horse’s heels, and
shouting till their throats were parched.
The old ladies
too--there were a great many old ladies in the streets, and these all knew him.
Some of them--not those of the highest rank, but such as sold fruit from
baskets and carried burdens--clapped their shrivelled hands, and raised a
weazen, piping, shrill "Hurrah, my lord." Others waved their hands or
handkerchiefs, or shook their fans or parasols, or threw up windows and called
in haste to those within, to come and see. All these marks of popular esteem,
he received with profound gravity and respect; bowing very low, and so
frequently that his hat was more off his head than on; and looking up at the
houses as he passed along, with the air of one who was making a public entry,
and yet was not puffed up or proud.
So they rode (to the
deep and unspeakable disgust of John Grueby) the whole length of Whitechapel,
Leadenhall Street, and Cheapside, and into St Paul’s Churchyard. Arriving close
to the cathedral, he halted; spoke to Gashford; and looking upward at its lofty
dome, shook his head, as though he said, "The Church in Danger!" Then
to be sure, the bystanders stretched their throats indeed; and he went on again
with mighty acclamations from the mob, and lower bows than ever.
So along the Strand, up
Swallow Street, into the Oxford Road, and thence to his house in Welbeck
Street, near Cavendish Square, whither he was attended by a few dozen idlers;
of whom he took leave on the steps with this brief parting, "Gentlemen, No
Popery. Good day. God bless you." This being rather a shorter address than
they expected, was received with some displeasure, and cries of "A speech!
a speech!" which might have been complied with, but that John Grueby,
making a mad charge upon them with all three horses, on his way to the stables,
caused them to disperse into the adjoining fields, where they presently fell to
pitch and toss, chuck-farthing, odd or even, dog-fighting, and other Protestant
recreations.
In the afternoon Lord
George came forth again, dressed in a black velvet coat, and trousers and
waistcoat of the Gordon plaid, all of the same Quaker cut; and in this costume,
which made him look a dozen times more strange and singular than before, went
down on foot to Westminster. Gashford, meanwhile, bestirred himself in business
matters; with which he was still engaged when, shortly after dusk, John Grueby
entered and announced a visitor.
"Let him come
in," said Gashford.
"Here! come in!"
growled John to somebody without; "You’re a Protestant, an’t you?"
"I should think
so," replied a deep, gruff voice.
"You’ve the looks
of it," said John Grueby. "I’d have known you for one,
anywhere." With which remark he gave the visitor admission, retired, and
shut the door.
The man who now
confronted Gashford, was a squat, thickset personage, with a low, retreating
forehead, a coarse shock head of hair, and eyes so small and near together,
that his broken nose alone seemed to prevent their meeting and fusing into one
of the usual size. A dingy handkerchief twisted like a cord about his neck,
left its great veins exposed to view, and they were swollen and starting, as
though with gulping down strong passions, malice, and ill-will. His dress was of
threadbare velveteen--a faded, rusty, whitened black, like the ashes of a pipe
or a coal fire after a day’s extinction; discoloured with the soils of many a
stale debauch, and reeking yet with pot-house odours. In lieu of buckles at his
knees, he wore unequal loops of packthread; and in his grimy hands he held a
knotted stick, the knob of which was carved into a rough likeness of his own
vile face. Such was the visitor who doffed his three-cornered hat in Gashford’s
presence, and waited, leering, for his notice.
"Ah! Dennis!"
cried the secretary. "Sit down."
"I see my lord
down yonder--" cried the man, with a jerk of his thumb towards the quarter
that he spoke of, "and he says to me, says my lord, ’If you’ve nothing to
do, Dennis, go up to my house and talk with Muster Gashford.’ Of course I’d
nothing to do, you know. These an’t my working hours. Ha ha! I was a-taking the
air when I see my lord, that’s what I was doing. I takes the air by night, as
the howls does, Muster Gashford."
"And sometimes in
the day-time, eh?" said the secretary--"when you go out in state, you
know."
"Ha ha!"
roared the fellow, smiting his leg; "for a gentleman as ’ull say a
pleasant thing in a pleasant way, give me Muster Gashford agin all London and
Westminster! My lord an’t a bad ’un at that, but he’s a fool to you. Ah to be
sure,--when I go out in state."
"And have your
carriage," said the secretary; "and your chaplain, eh? and all the
rest of it?"
"You’ll be the
death of me," cried Dennis, with another roar, "you will. But what’s
in the wind now, Muster Gashford," he asked hoarsely, "Eh? Are we to
be under orders to pull down one of them Popish chapels--or what?"
"Hush!" said
the secretary, suffering the faintest smile to play upon his face. "Hush!
God bless me, Dennis! We associate, you know, for strictly peaceable and lawful
purposes."
"I know, bless
you," returned the man, thrusting his tongue into his cheek; "I
entered a’ purpose, didn’t I!"
"No doubt,"
said Gashford, smiling as before. And when he said so, Dennis roared again, and
smote his leg still harder, and falling into fits of laughter, wiped his eyes
with the corner of his neckerchief, and cried, "Muster Gashford agin’ all
England hollow!"
"Lord George and I
were talking of you last night," said Gashford, after a pause. "He
says you are a very earnest fellow."
"So I am,"
returned the hangman.
"And that you
truly hate the Papists."
"So I do,"
and he confirmed it with a good round oath. "Lookye here, Muster
Gashford," said the fellow, laying his hat and stick upon the floor, and
slowly beating the palm of one hand with the fingers of the other;
"Ob-serve. I’m a constitutional officer that works for my living, and does
my work creditable. Do I, or do I not?"
"Unquestionably."
"Very good. Stop a
minute. My work, is sound, Protestant, constitutional, English work. Is it, or
is it not?"
"No man alive can
doubt it."
"Nor dead neither.
Parliament says this here--says Parliament, ’If any man, woman, or child, does
anything which goes again a certain number of our acts--’ How many hanging laws
may there be at this present time, Muster Gashford? Fifty?"
"I don’t exactly
know how many," replied Gashford, leaning back in his chair and yawning;
"a great number though."
"Well, say fifty.
Parliament says, ’If any man, woman, or child, does anything again any one of
them fifty acts, that man, woman, or child, shall be worked off by Dennis.’
George the Third steps in when they number very strong at the end of a
sessions, and says, ’These are too many for Dennis. I’ll have half for myself
and Dennis shall have half for himself;’ and sometimes he throws me in one over
that I don’t expect, as he did three year ago, when I got Mary Jones, a young
woman of nineteen who come up to Tyburn with a infant at her breast, and was
worked off for taking a piece of cloth off the counter of a shop in Ludgate
Hill, and putting it down again when the shopman see her; and who had never
done any harm before, and only tried to do that, in consequence of her husband
having been pressed three weeks previous, and she being left to beg, with two
young children--as was proved upon the trial. Ha ha!--Well! That being the law
and the practice of England, is the glory of England, an’t it, Muster
Gashford?"
"Certainly,"
said the secretary.
"And in times to come,"
pursued the hangman, "if our grandsons should think of their grandfathers’
times, and find these things altered, they’ll say, ’Those were days indeed, and
we’ve been going down hill ever since.’ Won’t they, Muster Gashford?"
"I have no doubt
they will," said the secretary.
"Well then, look
here," said the hangman. "If these Papists gets into power, and
begins to boil and roast instead of hang, what becomes of my work! If they
touch my work that’s a part of so many laws, what becomes of the laws in general,
what becomes of the religion, what becomes of the country!--Did you ever go to
church, Muster Gashford?"
"Ever!"
repeated the secretary with some indignation; "of course."
"Well," said
the ruffian, "I’ve been once--twice, counting the time I was
christened--and when I heard the Parliament prayed for, and thought how many
new hanging laws they made every sessions, I considered that I was prayed for.
Now mind, Muster Gashford," said the fellow, taking up his stick and
shaking it with a ferocious air, "I mustn’t have my Protestant work
touched, nor this here Protestant state of things altered in no degree, if I
can help it; I mustn’t have no Papists interfering with me, unless they come to
be worked off in course of law; I mustn’t have no biling, no roasting, no
frying--nothing but hanging. My lord may well call me an earnest fellow. In
support of the great Protestant principle of having plenty of that, I’ll,"
and here he beat his club upon the ground, "burn, fight, kill--do anything
you bid me, so that it’s bold and devilish--though the end of it was, that I
got hung myself.--There, Muster Gashford!"
He appropriately
followed up this frequent prostitution of a noble word to the vilest purposes,
by pouring out in a kind of ecstasy at least a score of most tremendous oaths;
then wiped his heated face upon his neckerchief, and cried, "No Popery! I’m
a religious man, by G--!"
Gashford had leant back
in his chair, regarding him with eyes so sunken, and so shadowed by his heavy
brows, that for aught the hangman saw of them, he might have been stone blind.
He remained smiling in silence for a short time longer, and then said, slowly
and distinctly:
"You are indeed an
earnest fellow, Dennis--a most valuable fellow-- the staunchest man I know of
in our ranks. But you must calm yourself; you must be peaceful, lawful, mild as
any lamb. I am sure you will be though."
"Ay, ay, we shall
see, Muster Gashford, we shall see. You won’t have to complain of me,"
returned the other, shaking his head.
"I am sure I shall
not," said the secretary in the same mild tone, and with the same
emphasis. "We shall have, we think, about next month, or May, when this
Papist relief bill comes before the house, to convene our whole body for the
first time. My lord has thoughts of our walking in procession through the
streets--just as an innocent display of strength--and accompanying our petition
down to the door of the House of Commons."
"The sooner the
better," said Dennis, with another oath.
"We shall have to
draw up in divisions, our numbers being so large; and, I believe I may venture
to say," resumed Gashford, affecting not to hear the interruption,
"though I have no direct instructions to that effect--that Lord George has
thought of you as an excellent leader for one of these parties. I have no doubt
you would be an admirable one."
"Try me,"
said the fellow, with an ugly wink.
"You would be
cool, I know," pursued the secretary, still smiling, and still managing
his eyes so that he could watch him closely, and really not be seen in turn,
"obedient to orders, and perfectly temperate. You would lead your party
into no danger, I am certain."
"I’d lead them,
Muster Gashford,"--the hangman was beginning in a reckless way, when
Gashford started forward, laid his finger on his lips, and feigned to write,
just as the door was opened by John Grueby.
"Oh!" said
John, looking in; "here’s another Protestant."
"Some other room,
John," cried Gashford in his blandest voice. "I am engaged just
now."
But John had brought
this new visitor to the door, and he walked in unbidden, as the words were
uttered; giving to view the form and features, rough attire, and reckless air
of Hugh.
THE secretary put his
hand before his eyes to shade them from the glare of the lamp, and for some
moments looked at Hugh with a frowning brow, as if he remembered to have seen
him lately, but could not call to mind where, or on what occasion. His
uncertainty was very brief, for before Hugh had spoken a word, he said, as his
countenance cleared up:
"Ay, ay, I
recollect. It’s quite right, John, you needn’t wait. Don’t go, Dennis."
"Your servant,
master," said Hugh, as Grueby disappeared.
"Yours,
friend," returned the secretary in his smoothest manner. "What brings
you here? We left nothing behind us, I hope?"
Hugh gave a short
laugh, and thrusting his hand into his breast, produced one of the handbills,
soiled and dirty from lying out of doors all night, which he laid upon the
secretary’s desk after flattening it upon his knee, and smoothing out the wrinkles
with his heavy palm.
"Nothing but that,
master. It fell into good hands, you see."
"What is
this!" said Gashford, turning it over with an air of perfectly natural
surprise. "Where did you get it from, my good fellow; what does it mean? I
don’t understand this at all."
A little disconcerted
by this reception, Hugh looked from the secretary to Dennis, who had risen and
was standing at the table too, observing the stranger by stealth, and seeming
to derive the utmost satisfaction from his manners and appearance. Considering
himself silently appealed to by this action, Mr. Dennis shook his head thrice,
as if to say of Gashford, "No. He don’t know anything at all about it. I
know he don’t. I’ll take my oath he don’t;" and hiding his profile from
Hugh with one long end of his frowzy neckerchief, nodded and chuckled behind
this screen in extreme approval of the secretary’s proceedings.
"It tells the man
that finds it, to come here, don’t it?" asked Hugh. "I’m no scholar,
myself, but I showed it to a friend, and he said it did."
"It certainly
does," said Gashford, opening his eyes to their utmost width; "really
this is the most remarkable circumstance I have ever known. How did you come by
this piece of paper, my good friend?"
"Muster
Gashford," wheezed the hangman under his breath, "agin all
Newgate!"
Whether Hugh heard him,
or saw by his manner that he was being played upon, or perceived the secretary’s
drift of himself, he came in his blunt way to the point at once.
"Here!" he
said, stretching out his hand and taking it back; "never mind the bill, or
what it says, or what it don’t say. You don’t know anything about it,
master,--no more do I,--no more does he," glancing at Dennis. "None
of us know what it means, or where it comes from: there’s an end of that. Now I
want to make one against the Catholics, I’m a No-Popery man, and ready to be
sworn in. That’s what I’ve come here for."
"Put him down on
the roll, Muster Gashford," said Dennis approvingly. "That’s the way
to go to work--right to the end at once, and no palaver."
"What’s the use of
shooting wide of the mark, eh, old boy!" cried Hugh.
"My sentiments all
over!" rejoined the hangman. "This is the sort of chap for my
division, Muster Gashford. Down with him, sir. Put him on the roll. I’d stand
godfather to him, if he was to be christened in a bonfire, made of the ruins of
the Bank of England."
With these and other
expressions of confidence of the like flattering kind, Mr. Dennis gave him a
hearty slap on the back, which Hugh was not slow to return.
"No Popery,
brother!" cried the hangman.
"No Property,
brother!" responded Hugh.
"Popery,
Popery," said the secretary with his usual mildness.
"It’s all the
same!" cried Dennis. "It’s all right. Down with him, Muster Gashford.
Down with everybody, down with everything! Hurrah for the Protestant religion!
That’s the time of day, Muster Gashford!"
The secretary regarded
them both with a very favourable expression of countenance, while they gave
loose to these and other demonstrations of their patriotic purpose; and was
about to make some remark aloud, when Dennis, stepping up to him, and shading
his mouth with his hand, said, in a hoarse whisper, as he nudged him with his
elbow:
"Don’t split upon
a constitutional officer’s profession, Muster Gashford. There are popular
prejudices, you know, and he mightn’t like it. Wait till he comes to be more
intimate with me. He’s a fine-built chap, an’t he?"
"A powerful fellow
indeed!"
"Did you ever,
Muster Gashford," whispered Dennis, with a horrible kind of admiration,
such as that with which a cannibal might regard his intimate friend, when
hungry,--"did you ever--and here he drew still closer to his ear, and
fenced his mouth with both his open bands--"see such a throat as his? Do
but cast your eye upon it. There’s a neck for stretching, Muster
Gashford!"
The secretary assented
to this proposition with the best grace he could assume--it is difficult to
feign a true professional relish: which is eccentric sometimes--and after
asking the candidate a few unimportant questions, proceeded to enrol him a
member of the Great Protestant Association of England. If anything could have
exceeded Mr. Dennis’s joy on the happy conclusion of this ceremony, it would
have been the rapture with which he received the announcement that the new
member could neither read nor write: those two arts being (as Mr. Dennis swore)
the greatest possible curse a civilised community could know, and militating
more against the professional emoluments and usefulness of the great
constitutional office he had the honour to hold, than any adverse circumstances
that could present themselves to his imagination.
The enrolment being
completed, and Hugh having been informed by Gashford, in his peculiar manner,
of the peaceful and strictly lawful objects contemplated by the body to which
he now belonged-- during which recital Mr. Dennis nudged him very much with his
elbow, and made divers remarkable faces--the secretary gave them both to
understand that he desired to be alone. Therefore they took their leaves
without delay, and came out of the house together.
"Are you walking,
brother?" said Dennis.
"Ay!"
returned Hugh. "Where you will."
"That’s
social," said his new friend. "Which way shall we take? Shall we go
and have a look at doors that we shall make a pretty good clattering at, before
long--eh, brother?"
Hugh answering in the
affirmative, they went slowly down to Westminster, where both houses of
Parliament were then sitting. Mingling in the crowd of carriages, horses,
servants, chairmen, link-boys, porters, and idlers of all kinds, they lounged
about; while Hugh’s new friend pointed out to him significantly the weak parts
of the building, how easy it was to get into the lobby, and so to the very door
of the House of Commons; and how plainly, when they marched down there in grand
array, their roars and shouts would be heard by the members inside; with a
great deal more to the same purpose, all of which Hugh received with manifest
delight.
He told him, too, who
some of the Lords and Commons were, by name, as they came in and out; whether
they were friendly to the Papists or otherwise; and bade him take notice of
their liveries and equipages, that he might be sure of them, in case of need.
Sometimes he drew him close to the windows of a passing carriage, that he might
see its master’s face by the light of the lamps; and, both in respect of people
and localities, he showed so much acquaintance with everything around, that it
was plain he had often studied there before; as indeed, when they grew a little
more confidential, he confessed he had.
Perhaps the most
striking part of all this was, the number of people--never in groups of more
than two or three together--who seemed to be skulking about the crowd for the
same purpose. To the greater part of these, a slight nod or a look from Hugh’s
companion was sufficient greeting; but, now and then, some man would come and
stand beside him in the throng, and, without turning his head or appearing to
communicate with him, would say a word or two in a low voice, which he would
answer in the same cautious manner. Then they would part, like strangers. Some
of these men often reappeared again unexpectedly in the crowd close to Hugh,
and, as they passed by, pressed his hand, or looked him sternly in the face;
but they never spoke to him, nor he to them; no, not a word.
It was remarkable, too,
that whenever they happened to stand where there was any press of people, and
Hugh chanced to be looking downward, he was sure to see an arm stretched
out--under his own perhaps, or perhaps across him--which thrust some paper into
the hand or pocket of a bystander, and was so suddenly withdrawn that it was
impossible to tell from whom it came; nor could he see in any face, on glancing
quickly round, the least confusion or surprise. They often trod upon a paper
like the one he carried in his breast, but his companion whispered him not to
touch it or to take it up,--not even to look towards it,--so there they let
them lie, and passed on.
When they had paraded
the street and all the avenues of the building in this manner for near two
hours, they turned away, and his friend asked him what he thought of what he
had seen, and whether he was prepared for a good hot piece of work if it should
come to that. "The hotter the better," said Hugh, "I’m prepared
for anything."--"So am I," said his friend, "and so are
many of us;" and they shook hands upon it with a great oath, and with many
terrible imprecations on the Papists.
As they were thirsty by
this time, Dennis proposed that they should repair together to The Boot, where
there was good company and strong liquor. Hugh yielding a ready assent, they
bent their steps that way with no loss of time.
This Boot was a lone
house of public entertainment, situated in the fields at the back of the Foundling
Hospital; a very solitary spot at that period, and quite deserted after dark.
The tavern stood at some distance from any high road, and was approachable only
by a dark and narrow lane; so that Hugh was much surprised to find several
people drinking there, and
great merriment going
on. He was still more surprised to find among them almost every face that had
caught his attention in the crowd; but his companion having whispered him
outside the door, that it was not considered good manners at The Boot to appear
at all curious about the company, he kept his own counsel, and made no show of
recognition.
Before putting his lips
to the liquor which was brought for them, Dennis drank in a loud voice the
health of Lord George Gordon, President of the Great Protestant Association;
which toast Hugh pledged likewise, with corresponding enthusiasm. A fiddler who
was present, and who appeared to act as the appointed minstrel of the company,
forthwith struck up a Scotch reel; and that in tones so invigorating, that Hugh
and his friend (who had both been drinking before) rose from their seats as by
previous concert, and, to the great admiration of the assembled guests,
performed an extemporaneous No-Popery Dance.
THE applause which the
performance of Hugh and his new friend elicited from the company at The Boot,
had not yet subsided, and the two dancers were still panting from their
exertions, which had been of a rather extreme and violent character, when the
party was reinforced by the arrival of some more guests, who, being a
detachment of United Bulldogs, were received with very flattering marks of
distinction and respect.
The leader of this
small party--for, including himself, they were but three in number--was our old
acquaintance, Mr. Tappertit, who seemed, physically speaking, to have grown
smaller with years (particularly as to his legs, which were stupendously
little), but who, in a moral point of view, in personal dignity and
self-esteem, had swelled into a giant. Nor was it by any means difficult for
the most unobservant person to detect this state of feeling in the quondam ’prentice,
for it not only proclaimed itself impressively and beyond mistake in his
majestic walk and kindling eye, but found a striking means of revelation in his
turned-up nose, which scouted all things of earth with deep disdain, and sought
communion with its kindred skies.
Mr. Tappertit, as chief
or captain of the Bulldogs, was attended by his two lieutenants; one, the tall
comrade of his younger life; the other, a ’Prentice Knight in days of
yore--Mark Gilbert, bound in the olden time to Thomas Curzon of the Golden
Fleece. These gentlemen, like himself, were now emancipated from their ’prentice
thraldom, and served as journeymen; but they were, in humble emulation of his
great example, bold and daring spirits, and aspired to a distinguished state in
great political events. Hence their connection with the Protestant Association
of England, sanctioned by the name of Lord George Gordon; and hence their
present visit to The Boot.
"Gentlemen!"
said Mr. Tappertit, taking off his hat as a great general might in addressing
his troops. "Well met. My lord does me and you the honour to send his
compliments per self."
"You’ve seen my
lord too, have you?" said Dennis. "I see him this afternoon."
"My duty called me
to the Lobby when our shop shut up; and I saw him there, sir," Mr.
Tappertit replied, as he and his lieutenants took their seats. "How do you
do?"
"Lively, master,
lively," said the fellow. "Here’s a new brother, regularly put down
in black and white by Muster Gashford; a credit to the cause; one of the
stick-at-nothing sort; one arter my own heart. D’ye see him? Has he got the
looks of a man that’ll do, do you think?" he cried, as he slapped Hugh on
the back.
"Looks or no
looks," said Hugh, with a drunken flourish of his arm, "I’m the man
you want. I hate the Papists, every one of ’em. They hate me and I hate them.
They do me all the harm they can, and I’ll do them all the harm I can.
Hurrah!"
"Was there
ever," said Dennis, looking round the room, when the echo of his
boisterous voice bad died away; "was there ever such a game boy! Why, I
mean to say, brothers, that if Muster Gashford had gone a hundred mile and got
together fifty men of the common run, they wouldn’t have been worth this
one."
The greater part of the
company implicitly subscribed to this opinion, and testified their faith in
Hugh by nods and looks of great significance. Mr. Tappertit sat and
contemplated him for a long time in silence, as if he suspended his judgment;
then drew a little nearer to him, and eyed him over more carefully; then went
close up to him, and took him apart into a dark corner.
"I say," he
began, with a thoughtful brow, "haven’t I seen you before?"
"It’s like you
may," said Hugh, in his careless way. "I don’t know; shouldn’t
wonder."
"No, but it’s very
easily settled," returned Sim. "Look at me. Did you ever see me
before? You wouldn’t be likely to forget it, you know, if you ever did. Look at
me. Don’t be afraid; I won’t do you any harm. Take a good look--steady
now."
The encouraging way in
which Mr. Tappertit made this request, and coupled it with an assurance that he
needn’t be frightened, amused Hugh mightily--so much indeed, that he saw
nothing at all of the small man before him, through closing his eyes in a fit
of hearty laughter, which shook his great broad sides until they ached again.
"Come!" said
Mr. Tappertit, growing a little impatient under this disrespectful treatment.
"Do you know me, feller?"
"Not I,"
cried Hugh. "Ha ha ha! Not I! But I should like to."
"And yet I’d have
wagered a seven-shilling piece," said Mr. Tappertit, folding his arms, and
confronting him with his legs wide apart and firmly planted on the ground,
"that you once were hostler at the Maypole."
Hugh opened his eyes on
hearing this, and looked at him in great surprise.
"--And so you
were, too," said Mr. Tappertit, pushing him away with a condescending
playfulness. "When did my eyes ever deceive--unless it was a young woman!
Don’t you know me now?"
"Why it an’t--"
Hugh faltered.
"An’t it?"
said Mr. Tappertit. "Are you sure of that? You remember G. Varden, don’t
you?"
Certainly Hugh did, and
he remembered D. Varden too; but that he didn’t tell him.
"You remember
coming down there, before I was out of my time, to ask after a vagabond that
had bolted off, and left his disconsolate father a prey to the bitterest
emotions, and all the rest of it-- don’t you?" said Mr. Tappertit.
"Of course I
do!" cried Hugh. "And I saw you there."
"Saw me there!"
said Mr. Tappertit. "Yes, I should think you did see me there. The place
would be troubled to go on without me. Don’t you remember my thinking you liked
the vagabond, and on that account going to quarrel with you; and then finding
you detested him worse than poison, going to drink with you? Don’t you remember
that?"
"To be sure!"
cried Hugh.
"Well! and are you
in the same mind now?" said Mr. Tappertit.
"Yes!" roared
Hugh.
"You speak like a
man," said Mr. Tappertit, "and I’ll shake hands with you." With
these conciliatory expressions he suited the action to the word; and Hugh
meeting his advances readily, they performed the ceremony with a show of great
heartiness.
"I find,"
said Mr. Tappertit, looking round on the assembled guests, "that brother What’s-his-name
and I are old acquaintance.--You never heard anything more of that rascal, I
suppose, eh?"
"Not a
syllable," replied Hugh. "I never want to. I don’t believe I ever
shall. He’s dead long ago, I hope."
"It’s to be hoped,
for the sake of mankind in general and the happiness of society, that he
is," said Mr. Tappertit, rubbing his palm upon his legs, and looking at it
between whiles. "Is your other hand at all cleaner? Much the same. Well, I’ll
owe you another shake. We’ll suppose it done, if you’ve no objection."
Hugh laughed again, and
with such thorough abandonment to his mad humour, that his limbs seemed
dislocated, and his whole frame in danger of tumbling to pieces; but Mr.
Tappertit, so far from receiving this extreme merriment with any irritation,
was pleased to regard it with the utmost favour, and even to join in it, so far
as one of his gravity and station could, with any regard to that decency and
decorum which men in high places are expected to maintain.
Mr. Tappertit did not
stop here, as many public characters might have done, but calling up his brace
of lieutenants, introduced Hugh to them with high commendation; declaring him
to be a man who, at such times as those in which they lived, could not be too
much cherished. Further, he did him the honour to remark, that he would be an
acquisition of which even the United Bulldogs might be proud; and finding, upon
sounding him, that he was quite ready and willing to enter the society (for he
was not at all particular, and would have leagued himself that night with
anything, or anybody, for any purpose whatsoever), caused the necessary
preliminaries to be gone into upon the spot. This tribute to his great merit
delighted no man more than Mr. Dennis, as he himself proclaimed with several rare
and surprising oaths; and indeed it gave unmingled satisfaction to the whole
assembly.
"Make anything you
like of me!" cried Hugh, flourishing the can he had emptied more than
once. "Put me on any duty you please. I’m your man. I’ll do it. Here’s my
captain--here’s my leader. Ha ha ha! Let him give me the word of command, and I’ll
fight the whole Parliament House single-handed, or set a lighted torch to the
King’s Throne itself!" With that, he smote Mr. Tappertit on the back, with
such violence that his little body seemed to shrink into a mere nothing; and
roared again until the very foundlings near at hand were startled in their
beds.
In fact, a sense of
something whimsical in their companionship seemed to have taken entire
possession of his rude brain. The bare fact of being patronised by a great man
whom he could have crushed with one hand, appeared in his eyes so eccentric and
humorous, that a kind of ferocious merriment gained the mastery over him, and
quite subdued his brutal nature. He roared and roared again; toasted Mr.
Tappertit a hundred times; declared himself a Bulldog to the core; and vowed to
be faithful to him to the last drop of blood in his veins.
All these compliments
Mr. Tappertit received as matters of course-- flattering enough in their way,
but entirely attributable to his vast superiority. His dignified
self-possession only delighted Hugh the more; and in a word, this giant and
dwarf struck up a friendship which bade fair to be of long continuance, as the
one held it to be his right to command, and the other considered it an
exquisite pleasantry to obey. Nor was Hugh by any means a passive follower, who
scrupled to act without precise and definite orders; for when Mr. Tappertit
mounted
on an empty cask which
stood by way of rostrum in the room, and volunteered a speech upon the alarming
crisis then at hand, he placed himself beside the orator, and though he grinned
from ear to ear at every word he said, threw out such expressive hints to
scoffers in the management of his cudgel, that those who were at first the most
disposed to interrupt, became remarkably attentive, and were the loudest in
their approbation.
It was not all noise
and jest, however, at The Boot, nor were the whole party listeners to the
speech. There were some men at the other end of the room (which was a long,
low-roofed chamber) in earnest conversation all the time; and when any of this
group went out, fresh people were sure to come in soon afterwards and sit down
in their places, as though the others had relieved them on some watch or duty;
which it was pretty clear they did, for these changes took place by the clock,
at intervals of half an hour. These persons whispered very much among
themselves, and kept aloof, and often looked round, as jealous of their speech
being overheard; some two or three among them entered in books what seemed to
be reports from the others; when they were not thus employed) one of them would
turn to the newspapers which were strewn upon the table, and from the St James’s
Chronicle, the Herald, Chronicle, or Public Advertiser, would read to the rest
in a low voice some passage having reference to the topic in which they were
all so deeply interested. But the great attraction was a pamphlet called The
Thunderer, which espoused their own opinions, and was supposed at that time to
emanate directly from the Association. This was always in request; and whether
read aloud, to an eager knot of listeners, or by some solitary man, was certain
to be followed by stormy talking and excited looks.
In the midst of all his
merriment, and admiration of his captain, Hugh was made sensible by these and
other tokens, of the presence of an air of mystery, akin to that which had so
much impressed him out of doors. It was impossible to discard a sense that something
serious was going on, and that under the noisy revel of the public- house,
there lurked unseen and dangerous matter. Little affected by this, however, he
was perfectly satisfied with his quarters and would have remained there till
morning, but that his conductor rose soon after midnight, to go home; Mr.
Tappertit following his example, left him no excuse to stay. So they all three
left the house together: roaring a No-Popery song until the fields resounded
with the dismal noise.
"Cheer up,
captain!" cried Hugh, when they had roared themselves out of breath.
"Another stave!"
Mr. Tappertit, nothing
loath, began again; and so the three went staggering on, arm-in-arm, shouting
like madmen, and defying the watch with great valour. Indeed this did not require
any unusual bravery or boldness, as the watchmen of that time, being selected
for the office on account of excessive age and extraordinary infirmity, had a
custom of shutting themselves up tight in their boxes on the first symptoms of
disturbance, and remaining there until they disappeared. In these proceedings,
Mr. Dennis, who had a gruff voice and lungs of considerable power,
distinguished himself very much, and acquired great credit with his two
companions.
"What a queer
fellow you are!" said Mr. Tappertit. "You’re so precious sly and
close. Why don’t you ever tell what trade you’re of?"
"Answer the
captain instantly," cried Hugh, beating his hat down on his head;
"why don’t you ever tell what trade you’re of?"
"I’m of as
gen-teel a calling, brother, as any man in England--as light a business as any
gentleman could desire."
"Was you ’prenticed
to it?" asked Mr. Tappertit.
"No. Natural
genius," said Mr. Dennis. "No ’prenticing. It come by natur’. Muster
Gashford knows my calling. Look at that hand of mine--many and many a job that
hand has done, with a neatness and dex-terity, never known afore. When I look
at that hand," said Mr. Dennis, shaking it in the air, "and remember
the helegant bits of work it has turned off, I feel quite molloncholy to think
it should ever grow old and feeble. But sich is life!"
He heaved a deep sigh
as he indulged in these reflections, and putting his fingers with an absent air
on Hugh’s throat, and particularly under his left ear, as if he were studying
the anatomical development of that part of his frame, shook his head in a
despondent manner and actually shed tears.
"You’re a kind of
artist, I suppose--eh!" said Mr. Tappertit.
"Yes,"
rejoined Dennis; "yes--I may call myself a artist--a fancy workman--art
improves natur’--that’s my motto."
"And what do you
call this?" said Mr. Tappertit taking his stick out of his hand.
"That’s my
portrait atop," Dennis replied; "D’ye think it’s like?"
"Why--it’s a
little too handsome," said Mr. Tappertit. "Who did it? You?"
"I!" repeated
Dennis, gazing fondly on his image. "I wish I had the talent. That was
carved by a friend of mine, as is now no more. The very day afore he died, he
cut that with his pocket- knife from memory! ’I’ll die game,’ says my friend, ’and
my last moments shall be dewoted to making Dennis’s picter.’ That’s it."
"That was a queer
fancy, wasn’t it?" said Mr. Tappertit.
"It was a queer
fancy," rejoined the other, breathing on his fictitious nose, and
polishing it with the cuff of his coat, "but he was a queer subject
altogether--a kind of gipsy--one of the finest, stand-up men, you ever see. Ah!
He told me some things that would startle you a bit, did that friend of mine,
on the morning when he died."
"You were with him
at the time, were you?" said Mr. Tappertit.
"Yes," he
answered with a curious look, "I was there. Oh! yes certainly, I was
there. He wouldn’t have gone off half as comfortable without me. I had been
with three or four of his family under the same circumstances. They were all
fine fellows."
"They must have
been fond of you," remarked Mr. Tappertit, looking at him sideways.
"I don’t know that
they was exactly fond of me," said Dennis, with a little hesitation,
"but they all had me near ’em when they departed. I come in for their
wardrobes too. This very handkecher that you see round my neck, belonged to him
that I’ve been speaking of--him as did that likeness."
Mr. Tappertit glanced
at the article referred to, and appeared to think that the deceased’s ideas of
dress were of a peculiar and by no means an expensive kind. He made no remark
upon the point, however, and suffered his mysterious companion to proceed
without interruption.
"These
smalls," said Dennis, rubbing his legs; "these very smalls--they
belonged to a friend of mine that’s left off sich incumbrances for ever: this
coat too--I’ve often walked behind this coat, in the street, and wondered
whether it would ever come to me: this pair of shoes have danced a hornpipe for
another man, afore my eyes, full half-a-dozen times at least: and as to my
hat," he said, taking it off, and whirling it round upon his
fist--"Lord! I’ve seen this hat go up Holborn on the box of a
hackney-coach--ah, many and many a day!"
"You don’t mean to
say their old wearers are all dead, I hope?" said Mr. Tappertit, falling a
little distance from him as he spoke.
"Every one of ’em,"
replied Dennis. "Every man Jack!"
There was something so
very ghastly in this circumstance, and it appeared to account, in such a very
strange and dismal manner, for his faded dress--which, in this new aspect,
seemed discoloured by the earth from graves--that Mr. Tappertit abruptly found
he was going another way, and, stopping short, bade him good night with the
utmost heartiness. As they happened to be near the Old Bailey, and Mr. Dennis
knew there were turnkeys in the lodge with whom he could pass the night, and
discuss professional subjects of common interest among them before a rousing
fire, and over a social glass, he separated from his companions without any
great regret, and warmly shaking hands with Hugh, and making an early
appointment for their meeting at The Boot, left them to pursue their road.
"That’s a strange
sort of man," said Mr. Tappertit, watching the hackney-coachman’s hat as
it went bobbing down the street. "I don’t know what to make of him. Why
can’t he have his smalls made to order, or wear live clothes at any rate?"
"He’s a lucky man,
captain," cried Hugh. "I should like to have such friends as
his."
"I hope he don’t
get ’em to make their wills, and then knock ’em on the head," said Mr.
Tappertit, musing. "But come. The United B.’s expect me. On!--What’s the
matter?"
"I quite
forgot," said Hugh, who had started at the striking of a neighbouring
clock. "I have somebody to see to-night--I must turn back directly. The
drinking and singing put it out of my head. It’s well I remembered it!"
Mr. Tappertit looked at
him as though he were about to give utterance to some very majestic sentiments
in reference to this act of desertion, but as it was clear, from Hugh’s hasty
manner, that the engagement was one of a pressing nature, he graciously
forbore, and gave him his permission to depart immediately, which Hugh
acknowledged with a roar of laughter.
"Good night,
captain!" he cried. "I am yours to the death, remember!"
"Farewell!"
said Mr. Tappertit, waving his hand. "Be bold and vigilant!"
"No Popery,
captain!" roared Hugh.
"England in blood
first!" cried his desperate leader. Whereat Hugh cheered and laughed, and
ran off like a greyhound.
"That man will
prove a credit to my corps," said Simon, turning thoughtfully upon his
heel. "And let me see. In an altered state of society--which must ensue if
we break out and are victorious-- when the locksmith’s child is mine, Miggs
must be got rid of somehow, or she’ll poison the tea-kettle one evening when I’m
out. He might marry Miggs, if he was drunk enough. It shall be done. I’ll make
a note of it."
LITTLE thinking of the
plan for his happy settlement in life which had suggested itself to the teeming
brain of his provident commander, Hugh made no pause until Saint Dunstan’s
giants struck the hour above him, when he worked the handle of a pump which
stood hard by, with great vigour, and thrusting his head under the spout, let
the water gush upon him until a little stream ran down from every uncombed
hair, and he was wet to the waist. Considerably refreshed by this ablution,
both in mind and body, and almost sobered for the time, he dried himself as he
best could; then crossed the road, and plied the knocker of the Middle Temple
gate.
The night-porter looked
through a small grating in the portal with a surly eye, and cried
"Halloa!" which greeting Hugh returned in kind, and bade him open
quickly.
"We don’t sell
beer here," cried the man; "what else do you want?"
"To come in,"
Hugh replied, with a kick at the door.
"Where to
go?"
"Paper
Buildings."
"Whose
chambers?"
"Sir John Chester’s."
Each of which answers, he emphasised with another kick.
After a little growling
on the other side, the gate was opened, and he passed in: undergoing a close
inspection from the porter as he did so.
"You wanting Sir
John, at this time of night!" said the man.
"Ay!" said
Hugh. "I! What of that?"
"Why, I must go
with you and see that you do, for I don’t believe it."
"Come along
then."
Eyeing him with
suspicious looks, the man, with key and lantern, walked on at his side, and
attended him to Sir John Chester’s door, at which Hugh gave one knock, that
echoed through the dark staircase like a ghostly summons, and made the dull light
tremble in the drowsy lamp.
"Do you think he
wants me now?" said Hugh.
Before the man had time
to answer, a footstep was heard within, a light appeared, and Sir John, in his
dressing-gown and slippers, opened the door.
"I ask your
pardon, Sir John," said the porter, pulling off his hat. "Here’s a
young man says he wants to speak to you. It’s late for strangers. I thought it
best to see that all was right."
"Aha!" cried
Sir John, raising his eyebrows. "It’s you, messenger, is it? Go in. Quite
right, friend. I commend your prudence highly. Thank you. God bless you. Good
night."
To be commended,
thanked, God-blessed, and bade good night by one who carried "Sir"
before his name, and wrote himself M.P. to boot, was something for a porter. He
withdrew with much humility and reverence. Sir John followed his late visitor
into the dressing- room, and sitting in his easy-chair before the fire, and
moving it so that he could see him as he stood, hat in hand, beside the door,
looked at him from head to foot.
The old face, calm and
pleasant as ever; the complexion, quite juvenile in its bloom and clearness;
the same smile; the wonted precision and elegance of dress; the white,
well-ordered teeth; the delicate hands; the composed and quiet manner;
everything as it used to be: no mark of age or passion, envy, hate, or
discontent: all unruffled and serene, and quite delightful to behold.
He wrote himself
M.P.--but how? Why, thus. It was a proud family-- more proud, indeed, than
wealthy. He had stood in danger of arrest; of bailiffs, and a jail--a vulgar
jail, to which the common people with small incomes went. Gentlemen of ancient
houses have no privilege of exemption from such cruel laws--unless they are of
one great house, and then they have. A proud man of his stock and kindred had
the means of sending him there. He offered--not indeed to pay his debts, but to
let him sit for a close borough until his own son came of age, which, if he
lived, would come to pass in twenty years. It was quite as good as an Insolvent
Act, and infinitely more genteel. So Sir John Chester was a member of
Parliament.
But how Sir John?
Nothing so simple, or so easy. One touch with a sword of state, and the
transformation was effected. John Chester, Esquire, M.P., attended court--went
up with an address--headed a deputation. Such elegance of manner, so many
graces of deportment, such powers of conversation, could never pass unnoticed.
Mr. was too common for such merit. A man so gentlemanly should have been-- but
Fortune is capricious--born a Duke: just as some dukes should have been born
labourers. He caught the fancy of the king, knelt down a grub, and rose a
butterfly. John Chester, Esquire, was knighted and became Sir John.
"I thought when
you left me this evening, my esteemed acquaintance," said Sir John after a
pretty long silence, "that you intended to return with all despatch?"
"So I did,
master."
"And so you
have?" he retorted, glancing at his watch. "Is that what you would
say?"
Instead of replying,
Hugh changed the leg on which he leant, shuffled his cap from one hand to the
other, looked at the ground, the wall, the ceiling, and finally at Sir John
himself; before whose pleasant face he lowered his eyes again, and fixed them
on the floor.
"And how have you
been employing yourself in the meanwhile?" quoth Sir John, lazily crossing
his legs. "Where have you been? what harm have you been doing?"
"No harm at all,
master," growled Hugh, with humility. "I have only done as you
ordered."
"As I what?"
returned Sir John.
"Well then,"
said Hugh uneasily, "as you advised, or said I ought, or said I might, or
said that you would do, if you was me. Don’t be so hard upon me, master."
Something like an
expression of triumph in the perfect control he had established over this rough
instrument appeared in the knight’s face for an instant; but it vanished
directly, as he said--paring his nails while speaking:
"When you say I
ordered you, my good fellow, you imply that I directed you to do something for
me--something I wanted done-- something for my own ends and purposes--you see?
Now I am sure I needn’t enlarge upon the extreme absurdity of such an idea,
however unintentional; so please--" and here he turned his eyes upon him--
"to be more guarded. Will you?"
"I meant to give
you no offence," said Hugh. "I don’t know what to say. You catch me
up so very short."
"You will be
caught up much shorter, my good friend--infinitely shorter--one of these days,
depend upon it," replied his patron calmly. "By-the-bye, instead of
wondering why you have been so long, my wonder should be why you came at all.
Why did you?"
"You know,
master," said Hugh, "that I couldn’t read the bill I found, and that
supposing it to be something particular from the way it was wrapped up, I
brought it here."
"And could you ask
no one else to read it, Bruin?" said Sir John.
"No one that I
could trust with secrets, master. Since Barnaby Rudge was lost sight of for
good and all--and that’s five years ago--I haven’t talked with any one but
you."
"You have done me
honour, I am sure."
"I have come to
and fro, master, all through that time, when there was anything to tell,
because I knew that you’d be angry with me if I stayed away," said Hugh,
blurting the words out, after an embarrassed silence; "and because I
wished to please you if I could, and not to have you go against me. There. That’s
the true reason why I came to-night. You know that, master, I am sure."
"You are a
specious fellow," returned Sir John, fixing his eyes upon him, "and
carry two faces under your hood, as well as the best. Didn’t you give me in
this room, this evening, any other reason; no dislike of anybody who has
slighted you lately, on all occasions, abused you, treated you with rudeness;
acted towards you, more as if you were a mongrel dog than a man like himself?"
"To be sure I
did!" cried Hugh, his passion rising, as the other meant it should;
"and I say it all over now, again. I’d do anything to have some revenge on
him--anything. And when you told me that he and all the Catholics would suffer
from those who joined together under that handbill, I said I’d make one of ’em,
if their master was the devil himself. I am one of ’em. See whether I am as
good as my word and turn out to be among the foremost, or no. I mayn’t have
much head, master, but I’ve head enough to remember those that use me ill. You
shall see, and so shall he, and so shall hundreds more, how my spirit backs me
when the time comes. My bark is nothing to my bite. Some that I know had better
have a wild lion among ’em than me, when I am fairly loose--they had!"
The knight looked at
him with a smile of far deeper meaning than ordinary; and pointing to the old
cupboard, followed him with his eyes while he filled and drank a glass of
liquor; and smiled when his back was turned, with deeper meaning yet.
"You are in a
blustering mood, my friend," he said, when Hugh confronted him again.
"Not I,
master!" cried Hugh. "I don’t say half I mean. I can’t. I haven’t got
the gift. There are talkers enough among us; I’ll be one of the doers."
"Oh! you have
joined those fellows then?" said Sir John, with an air of most profound
indifference.
"Yes. I went up to
the house you told me of; and got put down upon the muster. There was another
man there, named Dennis--"
"Dennis, eh!"
cried Sir John, laughing. "Ay, ay! a pleasant fellow, I believe?"
"A roaring dog,
master--one after my own heart--hot upon the matter too--red hot."
"So I have
heard," replied Sir John, carelessly. "You don’t happen to know his
trade, do you?"
"He wouldn’t
say," cried Hugh. "He keeps it secret."
"Ha ha!"
laughed Sir John. "A strange fancy--a weakness with some persons--you’ll
know it one day, I dare swear."
"We’re intimate
already," said Hugh.
"Quite natural!
And have been drinking together, eh?" pursued Sir John. "Did you say
what place you went to in company, when you left Lord George’s?"
Hugh had not said or
thought of saying, but he told him; and this inquiry being followed by a long
train of questions, he related all that had passed both in and out of doors,
the kind of people he had seen, their numbers, state of feeling, mode of
conversation, apparent expectations and intentions. His questioning was so
artfully contrived, that he seemed even in his own eyes to volunteer all this
information rather than to have it wrested from him; and he was brought to this
state of feeling so naturally, that when Mr. Chester yawned at length and
declared himself quite wearied out, he made a rough kind of excuse for having
talked so much.
"There--get you
gone," said Sir John, holding the door open in his hand. "You have
made a pretty evening’s work. I told you not to do this. You may get into
trouble. You’ll have an opportunity of revenging yourself on your proud friend
Haredale, though, and for that, you’d hazard anything, I suppose?"
"I would,"
retorted Hugh, stopping in his passage out and looking back; "but what do
I risk! What do I stand a chance of losing, master? Friends, home? A fig for ’em
all; I have none; they are nothing to me. Give me a good scuffle; let me pay
off old scores in a bold riot where there are men to stand by me; and then use
me as you like--it don’t matter much to me what the end is!"
"What have you
done with that paper?" said Sir John.
"I have it here,
master."
"Drop it again as
you go along; it’s as well not to keep such things about you."
Hugh nodded, and
touching his cap with an air of as much respect as he could summon up,
departed.
Sir John, fastening the
doors behind him, went back to his dressing-room, and sat down once again
before the fire, at which he gazed for a long time, in earnest meditation.
"This happens
fortunately," he said, breaking into a smile, "and promises well. Let
me see. My relative and I, who are the most Protestant fellows in the world,
give our worst wishes to the Roman Catholic cause; and to Saville, who
introduces their bill, I have a personal objection besides; but as each of us
has himself for the first article in his creed, we cannot commit ourselves by
joining with a very extravagant madman, such as this Gordon most undoubtedly
is. Now really, to foment his disturbances in secret, through the medium of
such a very apt instrument as my savage friend here, may further our real ends;
and to express at all becoming seasons, in moderate and polite terms, a
disapprobation of his proceedings, though we agree with him in principle, will
certainly be to gain a character for honesty and uprightness of purpose, which
cannot fail to do us infinite service, and to raise us into some importance.
Good! So much for public grounds. As to private considerations, I confess that
if these vagabonds would make some riotous demonstration (which does not appear
impossible), and would inflict some little chastisement on Haredale as a not
inactive man among his sect, it would be extremely agreeable to my feelings,
and would amuse me beyond measure. Good again! Perhaps better!"
When he came to this
point, he took a pinch of snuff; then beginning slowly to undress, he resumed
his meditations, by saying with a smile:
"I fear, I do fear
exceedingly, that my friend is following fast in the footsteps of his mother.
His intimacy with Mr. Dennis is very ominous. But I have no doubt he must have
come to that end any way. If I lend him a helping hand, the only difference is,
that he may, upon the whole, possibly drink a few gallons, or puncheons, or
hogsheads, less in this life than he otherwise would. It’s no business of mine.
It’s a matter of very small importance!"
So he took another
pinch of snuff, and went to bed.
FROM the workshop of
the Golden Key there issued forth a tinkling sound, so merry and good-humoured,
that it suggested the idea of some one working blithely, and made quite
pleasant music. No man who hammered on at a dull monotonous duty, could have
brought such cheerful notes from steel and iron; none but a chirping, healthy,
honest-hearted fellow, who made the best of everything, and felt kindly towards
everybody, could have done it for an instant. He might have been a coppersmith,
and still been musical. If he had sat in a jolting waggon, full of rods of
iron, it seemed as if he would have brought some harmony out of it.
Tink, tink, tink--clear
as a silver bell, and audible at every pause of the streets’ harsher noises, as
though it said, "I don’t care; nothing puts me out; I am resolved to he
happy." Women scolded, children squalled, heavy carts went rumbling by,
horrible cries proceeded from the lungs of hawkers; still it struck in again,
no higher, no lower, no louder, no softer; not thrusting itself on people’s
notice a bit the more for having been outdone by louder sounds--tink, tink,
tink, tink, tink.
It was a perfect
embodiment of the still small voice, free from all cold, hoarseness, huskiness,
or unhealthiness of any kind; foot- passengers slackened their pace, and were
disposed to linger near it; neighbours who had got up splenetic that morning,
felt good- humour stealing on them as they heard it, and by degrees became
quite sprightly; mothers danced their babies to its ringing; still the same
magical tink, tink, tink, came gaily from the workshop of the Golden Key.
Who but the locksmith
could have made such music? A gleam of sun shining through the unsashed window,
and chequering the dark workshop with a broad patch of light, fell full upon
him, as though attracted by his sunny heart. There he stood working at his
anvil, his face all radiant with exercise and gladness, his sleeves turned up,
his wig pushed off his shining forehead--the easiest, freest, happiest man in
all the world. Beside him sat a sleek cat, purring and winking in the light,
and falling every now and then into an idle doze, as from excess of comfort.
Toby looked on from a tall bench hard by; one beaming smile, from his broad
nut-brown face down to the slack-baked buckles in his shoes. The very locks
that hung around had something jovial in their rust, and seemed like gouty
gentlemen of hearty natures, disposed to joke on their infirmities. There was
nothing surly or severe in the whole scene. It seemed impossible that any one
of the innumerable keys could fit a churlish strong-box or a prison-door.
Cellars of beer and wine, rooms where there were fires, books, gossip, and
cheering laughter--these were their proper sphere of action. Places of distrust
and cruelty, and restraint, they would have left quadruple-locked for ever.
Tink, tink, tink. The
locksmith paused at last, and wiped his brow. The silence roused the cat, who,
jumping softly down, crept to the door, and watched with tiger eyes a bird-cage
in an opposite window. Gabriel lifted Toby to his mouth, and took a hearty
draught.
Then, as he stood
upright, with his head flung back, and his portly chest thrown out, you would
have seen that Gabriel’s lower man was clothed in military gear. Glancing at
the wall beyond, there might have been espied, hanging on their several pegs, a
cap and feather, broadsword, sash, and coat of scarlet; which any man learned
in such matters would have known from their make and pattern to be the uniform
of a sergeant in the Royal East London Volunteers.
As the locksmith put
his mug down, empty, on the bench whence it had smiled on him before, he
glanced at these articles with a laughing eye, and looking at them with his
head a little on one side, as though he would get them all into a focus, said,
leaning on his hammer:
"Time was, now, I
remember, when I was like to run mad with the desire to wear a coat of that
colour. If any one (except my father) had called me a fool for my pains, how I
should have fired and fumed! But what a fool I must have been, sure-ly!"
"Ah!" sighed
Mrs. Varden, who had entered unobserved. "A fool indeed. A man at your
time of life, Varden, should know better now."
"Why, what a
ridiculous woman you are, Martha," said the locksmith, turning round with
a smile.
"Certainly,"
replied Mrs. V. with great demureness. "Of course I am. I know that,
Varden. Thank you."
"I mean--"
began the locksmith.
"Yes," said
his wife, "I know what you mean. You speak quite plain enough to be
understood, Varden. It’s very kind of you to adapt yourself to my capacity, I
am sure."
"Tut, tut,
Martha," rejoined the locksmith; "don’t take offence at nothing. I
mean, how strange it is of you to run down volunteering, when it’s done to
defend you and all the other women, and our own fireside and everybody else’s,
in case of need."
"It’s
unchristian," cried Mrs. Varden, shaking her head.
"Unchristian!"
said the locksmith. "Why, what the devil--"
Mrs. Varden looked at
the ceiling, as in expectation that the consequence of this profanity would be
the immediate descent of the four-post bedstead on the second floor, together
with the best sitting-room on the first; but no visible judgment occurring, she
heaved a deep sigh, and begged her husband, in a tone of resignation, to go on,
and by all means to blaspheme as much as possible, because he knew she liked
it.
The locksmith did for a
moment seem disposed to gratify her, but he gave a great gulp, and mildly
rejoined:
"I was going to
say, what on earth do you call it unchristian for? Which would be most
unchristian, Martha--to sit quietly down and let our houses be sacked by a
foreign army, or to turn out like men and drive ’em off? Shouldn’t I be a nice
sort of a Christian, if I crept into a corner of my own chimney and looked on
while a parcel of whiskered savages bore off Dolly--or you?"
When he said "or
you," Mrs. Varden, despite herself, relaxed into a smile. There was
something complimentary in the idea. "In such a state of things as that,
indeed--" she simpered.
"As that!"
repeated the locksmith. "Well, that would be the state of things directly.
Even Miggs would go. Some black tambourine- player, with a great turban on,
would be bearing her off, and, unless the tambourine-player was proof against
kicking and scratching, it’s my belief he’d have the worst of it. Ha ha ha! I’d
forgive the tambourine-player. I wouldn’t have him interfered with on any
account, poor fellow." And here the locksmith laughed again so heartily,
that tears came into his eyes--much to Mrs. Varden’s indignation, who thought
the capture of so sound a Protestant and estimable a private character as Miggs
by a pagan negro, a circumstance too shocking and awful for contemplation.
The picture Gabriel had
drawn, indeed, threatened serious consequences, and would indubitably have led
to them, but luckily at that moment a light footstep crossed the threshold, and
Dolly, running in, threw her arms round her old father’s neck and hugged him
tight.
"Here she is at
last!" cried Gabriel. "And how well you look, Doll, and how late you
are, my darling!"
How well she looked?
Well? Why, if he had exhausted every laudatory adjective in the dictionary, it
wouldn’t have been praise enough. When and where was there ever such a plump,
roguish, comely, bright-eyed, enticing, bewitching, captivating, maddening
little puss in all this world, as Dolly! What was the Dolly of five years ago,
to the Dolly of that day! How many coachmakers, saddlers, cabinet-makers, and
professors of other useful arts, had deserted their fathers, mothers, sisters,
brothers, and, most of all, their cousins, for the love of her! How many
unknown gentlemen--supposed to be of mighty fortunes, if not titles--had waited
round the corner after dark, and tempted Miggs the incorruptible, with golden
guineas, to deliver offers of marriage folded up in love-letters! How many
disconsolate fathers and substantial tradesmen had waited on the locksmith for
the same purpose, with dismal tales of how their sons had lost their appetites,
and taken to shut themselves up in dark bedrooms, and wandering in desolate
suburbs with pale faces, and all because of Dolly Varden’s loveliness and
cruelty! How many young men, in all previous times of unprecedented steadiness,
had turned suddenly wild and wicked for the same reason, and, in an ecstasy of
unrequited love, taken to wrench off door-knockers, and invert the boxes of
rheumatic watchmen! How had she recruited the king’s service, both by sea and
land, through rendering desperate his loving subjects between the ages of
eighteen and twenty-five! How many young ladies had publicly professed, with
tears in their eyes, that for their tastes she was much too short, too tall,
too bold, too cold, too stout, too thin, too fair, too dark--too everything but
handsome! How many old ladies, taking counsel together, had thanked Heaven
their daughters were not like her, and had hoped she might come to no harm, and
had thought she would come to no good, and had wondered what people saw in her,
and had arrived at the conclusion that she was "going off" in her
looks, or had never come on in them, and that she was a thorough imposition and
a populard mistake!
And yet here was this
same Dolly Varden, so whimsical and hard to please that she was Dolly Varden
still, all smiles and dimples and pleasant looks, and caring no more for the
fifty or sixty young fellows who at that very moment were breaking their hearts
to marry her, than if so many oysters had been crossed in love and opened
afterwards.
Dolly hugged her father
as has been already stated, and having hugged her mother also, accompanied both
into the little parlour where the cloth was already laid for dinner, and where
Miss Miggs-- a trifle more rigid and bony than of yore--received her with a
sort of hysterical gasp, intended for a smile. Into the hands of that young
virgin, she delivered her bonnet and walking dress (all of a dreadful, artful,
and designing kind), and then said with a laugh, which rivalled the locksmith’s
music, "How glad I always am to be at home again!"
"And how glad we
always are, Doll," said her father, putting back the dark hair from her
sparkling eyes, "to have you at home. Give me a kiss."
If there had been
anybody of the male kind there to see her do it-- but there was not--it was a
mercy.
"I don’t like your
being at the Warren," said the locksmith, "I can’t bear to have you
out of my sight. And what is the news over yonder, Doll?"
"What news there
is, I think you know already," replied his daughter. "I am sure you
do though."
"Ay?" cried
the locksmith. "What’s that?"
"Come, come,"
said Dolly, "you know very well. I want you to tell me why Mr.
Haredale--oh, how gruff he is again, to be sure!--has been away from home for
some days past, and why he is travelling about (we know he is travelling,
because of his letters) without telling his own niece why or wherefore."
"Miss Emma doesn’t
want to know, I’ll swear," returned the locksmith.
"I don’t know
that," said Dolly; "but I do, at any rate. Do tell me. Why is he so
secret, and what is this ghost story, which nobody is to tell Miss Emma, and
which seems to be mixed up with his going away? Now I see you know by your
colouring so."
"What the story
means, or is, or has to do with it, I know no more than you, my dear,"
returned the locksmith, "except that it’s some foolish fear of little
Solomon’s--which has, indeed, no meaning in it, I suppose. As to Mr. Haredale’s
journey, he goes, as I believe--"
"Yes," said
Dolly.
"As I
believe," resumed the locksmith, pinching her cheek, "on business,
Doll. What it may be, is quite another matter. Read Blue Beard, and don’t be
too curious, pet; it’s no business of yours or mine, depend upon that; and here’s
dinner, which is much more to the purpose."
Dolly might have
remonstrated against this summary dismissal of the subject, notwithstanding the
appearance of dinner, but at the mention of Blue Beard Mrs. Varden interposed,
protesting she could not find it in her conscience to sit tamely by, and hear
her child recommended to peruse the adventures of a Turk and Mussulman--far
less of a fabulous Turk, which she considered that potentate to be. She held
that, in such stirring and tremendous times as those in which they lived, it
would be much more to the purpose if Dolly became a regular subscriber to the
Thunderer, where she would have an opportunity of reading Lord George Gordon’s
speeches word for word, which would be a greater comfort and solace to her,
than a hundred and fifty Blue Beards ever could impart. She appealed in support
of this proposition to Miss Miggs, then in waiting, who said that indeed the
peace of mind she had derived from the perusal of that paper generally, but
especially of one article of the very last week as ever was, entitled
"Great Britain drenched in gore," exceeded all belief; the same
composition, she added, had also wrought such a comforting effect on the mind of
a married sister of hers, then resident at Golden Lion Court, number
twenty-sivin, second bell-handle on the right-hand door-post, that, being in a
delicate state of health, and in fact expecting an addition to her family, she
had been seized with fits directly after its perusal, and had raved of the
Inquisition ever since; to the great improvement of her husband and friends.
Miss Miggs went on to say that she would recommend all those whose hearts were
hardened to hear Lord George themselves, whom she commended first, in respect
of his steady Protestantism, then of his oratory, then of his eyes, then of his
nose, then of his legs, and lastly of his figure generally, which she looked
upon as fit for any statue, prince, or angel, to which sentiment Mrs. Varden
fully subscribed.
Mrs. Varden having cut
in, looked at a box upon the mantelshelf, painted in imitation of a very
red-brick dwelling-house, with a yellow roof; having at top a real chimney,
down which voluntary subscribers dropped their silver, gold, or pence, into the
parlour; and on the door the counterfeit presentment of a brass plate, whereon
was legibly inscribed "Protestant Association:"--and looking at it,
said, that it was to her a source of poignant misery to think that Varden never
had, of all his substance, dropped anything into that temple, save once in
secret--as she afterwards discovered--two fragments of tobacco-pipe, which she
hoped would not be put down to his last account. That Dolly, she was grieved to
say, was no less backward in her contributions, better loving, as it seemed, to
purchase ribbons and such gauds, than to encourage the great cause, then in
such heavy tribulation; and that she did entreat her (her father she much
feared could not be moved) not to despise, but imitate, the bright example of
Miss Miggs, who flung her wages, as it were, into the very countenance of the
Pope, and bruised his features with her quarter’s money.
"Oh, mim,"
said Miggs, "don’t relude to that. I had no intentions, mim, that nobody
should know. Such sacrifices as I can make, are quite a widder’s mite. It’s all
I have," cried Miggs with a great burst of tears--for with her they never
came on by degrees--"but it’s made up to me in other ways; it’s well made
up."
This was quite true,
though not perhaps in the sense that Miggs intended. As she never failed to
keep her self-denial full in Mrs. Varden’s view, it drew forth so many gifts of
caps and gowns and other articles of dress, that upon the whole the red-brick
house was perhaps the best investment for her small capital she could possibly
have hit upon; returning her interest, at the rate of seven or eight per cent
in money, and fifty at least in personal repute and credit.
"You needn’t cry,
Miggs," said Mrs. Varden, herself in tears; "you needn’t be ashamed
of it, though your poor mistress IS on the same side."
Miggs howled at this
remark, in a peculiarly dismal way, and said she knowed that master hated her.
That it was a dreadful thing to live in families and have dislikes, and not
give satisfactions. That to make divisions was a thing she could not abear to
think of, neither could her feelings let her do it. That if it was master’s
wishes as she and him should part, it was best they should part, and she hoped
he might be the happier for it, and always wished him well, and that he might
find somebody as would meet his dispositions. It would be a hard trial, she
said, to part from such a missis, but she could meet any suffering when her
conscience told her she was in the rights, and therefore she was willing even
to go that lengths. She did not think, she added, that she could long survive
the separations, but, as she was hated and looked upon unpleasant, perhaps her
dying as soon as possible would be the best endings for all parties. With this
affecting conclusion, Miss Miggs shed more tears, and sobbed abundantly.
"Can you bear
this, Varden?" said his wife in a solemn voice, laying down her knife and
fork.
"Why, not very
well, my dear," rejoined the locksmith, "but I try to keep my
temper."
"Don’t let there
be words on my account, mim," sobbed Miggs. "It’s much the best that
we should part. I wouldn’t stay--oh, gracious me!--and make dissensions, not
for a annual gold mine, and found in tea and sugar."
Lest the reader should
be at any loss to discover the cause of Miss Miggs’s deep emotion, it may be
whispered apart that, happening to be listening, as her custom sometimes was,
when Gabriel and his wife conversed together, she had heard the locksmith’s
joke relative to the foreign black who played the tambourine, and bursting with
the spiteful feelings which the taunt awoke in her fair breast, exploded in the
manner we have witnessed. Matters having now arrived at a crisis, the
locksmith, as usual, and for the sake of peace and quietness, gave in.
"What are you
crying for, girl?" he said. "What’s the matter with you? What are you
talking about hatred for? I don’t hate you; I don’t hate anybody. Dry your eyes
and make yourself agreeable, in Heaven’s name, and let us all be happy while we
can."
The allied powers
deeming it good generalship to consider this a sufficient apology on the part
of the enemy, and confession of having been in the wrong, did dry their eyes
and take it in good part. Miss Miggs observed that she bore no malice, no not
to her greatest foe, whom she rather loved the more indeed, the greater
persecution she sustained. Mrs. Varden approved of this meek and forgiving
spirit in high terms, and incidentally declared as a closing article of
agreement, that Dolly should accompany her to the Clerkenwell branch of the
association, that very night. This was an extraordinary instance of her great
prudence and policy; having had this end in view from the first, and
entertaining a secret misgiving that the locksmith (who was bold when Dolly was
in question) would object, she had backed Miss Miggs up to this point, in order
that she might have him at a disadvantage. The manoeuvre succeeded so well that
Gabriel only made a wry face, and with the warning he had just had, fresh in
his mind, did not dare to say one word.
The difference ended,
therefore, in Miggs being presented with a gown by Mrs. Varden and half-a-crown
by Dolly, as if she had eminently distinguished herself in the paths of
morality and goodness. Mrs. V., according to custom, expressed her hope that
Varden would take a lesson from what had passed and learn more generous conduct
for the time to come; and the dinner being now cold and nobody’s appetite very
much
improved by what had
passed, they went on with it, as Mrs. Varden said, "like Christians."
As there was to be a
grand parade of the Royal East London Volunteers that afternoon, the locksmith
did no more work; but sat down comfortably with his pipe in his mouth, and his
arm round his pretty daughter’s waist, looking lovingly on Mrs. V., from time
to time, and exhibiting from the crown of his head to the sole of his foot, one
smiling surface of good humour. And to be sure, when it was time to dress him
in his regimentals, and Dolly, hanging about him in all kinds of graceful winning
ways, helped to button and buckle and brush him up and get him into one of the
tightest coats that ever was made by mortal tailor, he was the proudest father
in all England.
"What a handy jade
it is!" said the locksmith to Mrs. Varden, who stood by with folded
hands--rather proud of her husband too--while Miggs held his cap and sword at
arm’s length, as if mistrusting that the latter might run some one through the
body of its own accord; "but never marry a soldier, Doll, my dear."
Dolly didn’t ask why
not, or say a word, indeed, but stooped her head down very low to tie his sash.
"I never wear this
dress," said honest Gabriel, "but I think of poor Joe Willet. I loved
Joe; he was always a favourite of mine. Poor Joe!--Dear heart, my girl, don’t
tie me in so tight."
Dolly laughed--not like
herself at all--the strangest little laugh that could be--and held her head
down lower still.
"Poor Joe!"
resumed the locksmith, muttering to himself; "I always wish he had come to
me. I might have made it up between them, if he had. Ah! old John made a great
mistake in his way of acting by that lad--a great mistake.--Have you nearly
tied that sash, my dear?"
What an ill-made sash
it was! There it was, loose again and trailing on the ground. Dolly was obliged
to kneel down, and recommence at the beginning.
"Never mind young
Willet, Varden," said his wife frowning; "you might find some one
more deserving to talk about, I think."
Miss Miggs gave a great
sniff to the same effect.
"Nay,
Martha," cried the locksmith, "don’t let us bear too hard upon him.
If the lad is dead indeed, we’ll deal kindly by his memory."
"A runaway and a
vagabond!" said Mrs. Varden.
Miss Miggs expressed
her concurrence as before.
"A runaway, my
dear, but not a vagabond," returned the locksmith in a gentle tone.
"He behaved himself well, did Joe--always--and was a handsome, manly
fellow. Don’t call him a vagabond, Martha."
Mrs. Varden
coughed--and so did Miggs.
"He tried hard to
gain your good opinion, Martha, I can tell you," said the locksmith
smiling, and stroking his chin. "Ah! that he did. It seems but yesterday
that he followed me out to the Maypole door one night, and begged me not to say
how like a boy they used him--say here, at home, he meant, though at the time,
I recollect, I didn’t understand. ’And how’s Miss Dolly, sir?’ says Joe,"
pursued the locksmith, musing sorrowfully, "Ah! Poor Joe!"
"Well, I
declare," cried Miggs. "Oh! Goodness gracious me!"
"What’s the matter
now?" said Gabriel, turning sharply to her, "Why, if here an’t Miss
Dolly," said the handmaid, stooping down to look into her face,
"a-giving way to floods of tears. Oh mim! oh sir. Raly it’s give me such a
turn," cried the susceptible damsel, pressing her hand upon her side to
quell the palpitation of her heart, "that you might knock me down with a
feather."
The locksmith, after
glancing at Miss Miggs as if he could have wished to have a feather brought
straightway, looked on with a broad stare while Dolly hurried away, followed by
that sympathising young woman: then turning to his wife, stammered out,
"Is Dolly ill? Have I done anything? Is it my fault?"
"Your fault!"
cried Mrs. V. reproachfully. "There--you had better make haste out."
"What have I
done?" said poor Gabriel. "It was agreed that Mr. Edward’s name was
never to be mentioned, and I have not spoken of him, have I?"
Mrs. Varden merely
replied that she had no patience with him, and bounced off after the other two.
The unfortunate locksmith wound his sash about him, girded on his sword, put on
his cap, and walked out.
"I am not much of
a dab at my exercise," he said under his breath, "but I shall get
into fewer scrapes at that work than at this. Every man came into the world for
something; my department seems to be to make every woman cry without meaning
it. It’s rather hard!"
But he forgot it before
he reached the end of the street, and went on with a shining face, nodding to
the neighbours, and showering about his friendly greetings like mild spring
rain.
THE Royal East London
Volunteers made a brilliant sight that day: formed into lines, squares,
circles, triangles, and what not, to the beating of drums, and the streaming of
flags; and performed a vast number of complex evolutions, in all of which
Serjeant Varden bore a conspicuous share. Having displayed their military
prowess to the utmost in these warlike shows, they marched in glittering order
to the Chelsea Bun House, and regaled in the adjacent taverns until dark. Then
at sound of drum they fell in again, and returned amidst the shouting of His
Majesty’s lieges to the place from whence they came.
The homeward march
being somewhat tardy,--owing to the un- soldierlike behaviour of certain
corporals, who, being gentlemen of sedentary pursuits in private life and
excitable out of doors, broke several windows with their bayonets, and rendered
it imperative on the commanding officer to deliver them over to a strong guard,
with whom they fought at intervals as they came along,--it was nine o’clock
when the locksmith reached home. A hackney-coach was waiting near his door; and
as he passed it, Mr. Haredale looked from the window and called him by his
name.
"The sight of you
is good for sore eyes, sir," said the locksmith, stepping up to him.
"I wish you had walked in though, rather than waited here."
"There is nobody
at home, I find," Mr. Haredale answered; "besides, I desired to be as
private as I could."
"Humph!"
muttered the locksmith, looking round at his house. "Gone with Simon
Tappertit to that precious Branch, no doubt."
Mr. Haredale invited
him to come into the coach, and, if he were not tired or anxious to go home, to
ride with him a little way that they might have some talk together. Gabriel
cheerfully complied, and the coachman mounting his box drove off.
"Varden,"
said Mr. Haredale, after a minute’s pause, "you will be amazed to hear
what errand I am on; it will seem a very strange one."
"I have no doubt
it’s a reasonable one, sir, and has a meaning in it," replied the
locksmith; "or it would not be yours at all. Have you just come back to
town, sir?"
"But half an hour
ago."
"Bringing no news
of Barnaby, or his mother?" said the locksmith dubiously. "Ah! you
needn’t shake your head, sir. It was a wild- goose chase. I feared that, from
the first. You exhausted all reasonable means of discovery when they went away.
To begin again after so long a time has passed is hopeless, sir--quite
hopeless."
"Why, where are
they?" he returned impatiently. "Where can they be? Above
ground?"
"God knows,"
rejoined the locksmith, "many that I knew above it five years ago, have
their beds under the grass now. And the world is a wide place. It’s a hopeless
attempt, sir, believe me. We must leave the discovery of this mystery, like all
others, to time, and accident, and Heaven’s pleasure."
"Varden, my good
fellow," said Mr. Haredale, "I have a deeper meaning in my present
anxiety to find them out, than you can fathom. It is not a mere whim; it is not
the casual revival of my old wishes and desires; but an earnest, solemn
purpose. My thoughts and dreams all tend to it, and fix it in my mind. I have
no rest by day or night; I have no peace or quiet; I am haunted."
His voice was so
altered from its usual tones, and his manner bespoke so much emotion, that
Gabriel, in his wonder, could only sit and look towards him in the darkness,
and fancy the expression of his face.
"Do not ask
me," continued Mr. Haredale, "to explain myself. If I were to do so,
you would think me the victim of some hideous fancy. It is enough that this is
so, and that I cannot--no, I can not--lie quietly in my bed, without doing what
will seem to you incomprehensible."
"Since when,
sir," said the locksmith after a pause, "has this uneasy feeling been
upon you?"
Mr. Haredale hesitated
for some moments, and then replied: "Since the night of the storm. In
short, since the last nineteenth of March."
As though he feared
that Varden might express surprise, or reason with him, he hastily went on:
"You will think, I
know, I labour under some delusion. Perhaps I do. But it is not a morbid one;
it is a wholesome action of the mind, reasoning on actual occurrences. You know
the furniture remains in Mrs. Rudge’s house, and that it has been shut up, by
my orders, since she went away, save once a-week or so, when an old neighbour
visits it to scare away the rats. I am on my way there now."
"For what
purpose?" asked the locksmith.
"To pass the night
there," he replied; "and not to-night alone, but many nights. This is
a secret which I trust to you in case of any unexpected emergency. You will not
come, unless in case of strong necessity, to me; from dusk to broad day I shall
be there. Emma, your daughter, and the rest, suppose me out of London, as I
have been until within this hour. Do not undeceive them. This is the errand I
am bound upon. I know I may confide it to you, and I rely upon your questioning
me no more at this time."
With that, as if to
change the theme, he led the astounded locksmith back to the night of the
Maypole highwayman, to the robbery of Edward Chester, to the reappearance of
the man at Mrs. Rudge’s house, and to all the strange circumstances which
afterwards occurred. He even asked him carelessly about the man’s height, his
face, his figure, whether he was like any one he had ever seen--like Hugh, for
instance, or any man he had known at any time--and put many questions of that
sort, which the locksmith, considering them as mere devices to engage his
attention and prevent his expressing the astonishment he felt, answered pretty
much at random.
At length, they arrived
at the corner of the street in which the house stood, where Mr. Haredale,
alighting, dismissed the coach. "If you desire to see me safely
lodged," he said, turning to the locksmith with a gloomy smile, "you
can."
Gabriel, to whom all
former marvels had been nothing in comparison with this, followed him along the
narrow pavement in silence. When they reached the door, Mr. Haredale softly
opened it with a key he had about him, and closing it when Varden entered, they
were left in thorough darkness.
They groped their way
into the ground-floor room. Here Mr. Haredale struck a light, and kindled a
pocket taper he had brought with him for the purpose. It was then, when the
flame was full upon him, that the locksmith saw for the first time how haggard,
pale, and changed he looked; how worn and thin he was; how perfectly his whole
appearance coincided with all that he had said so strangely as they rode along.
It was not an unnatural impulse in Gabriel, after what he had heard, to note
curiously the expression of his eyes. It was perfectly collected and
rational;-- so much so, indeed, that he felt ashamed of his momentary
suspicion, and drooped his own when Mr. Haredale looked towards him, as if he
feared they would betray his thoughts.
"Will you walk
through the house?" said Mr. Haredale, with a glance towards the window,
the crazy shutters of which were closed and fastened. "Speak low."
There was a kind of awe
about the place, which would have rendered it difficult to speak in any other
manner. Gabriel whispered "Yes," and followed him up-stairs.
Everything was just as
they had seen it last. There was a sense of closeness from the exclusion of
fresh air, and a gloom and heaviness around, as though long imprisonment had
made the very silence sad. The homely hangings of the beds and windows had
begun to droop; the dust lay thick upon their dwindling folds; and damps had
made their way through ceiling, wall, and floor. The boards creaked beneath
their tread, as if resenting the unaccustomed intrusion; nimble spiders, paralysed
by the taper’s glare, checked the motion of their hundred legs upon the wall,
or dropped like lifeless things upon the ground; the death-watch ticked; and
the scampering feet of rats and mice rattled behind the wainscot.
As they looked about
them on the decaying furniture, it was strange to find how vividly it presented
those to whom it had belonged, and with whom it was once familiar. Grip seemed
to perch again upon his high-backed chair; Barnaby to crouch in his old
favourite corner by the fire; the mother to resume her usual seat, and watch
him as of old. Even when they could separate these objects from the phantoms of
the mind which they invoked, the latter only glided out of sight, but lingered
near them still; for then they seemed to lurk in closets and behind the doors,
ready to start out and suddenly accost them in well-remembered tones.
They went downstairs,
and again into the room they had just now left. Mr. Haredale unbuckled his
sword and laid it on the table, with a pair of pocket pistols; then told the
locksmith he would light him to the door.
"But this is a
dull place, sir," said Gabriel lingering; "may no one share your
watch?"
He shook his head, and
so plainly evinced his wish to be alone, that Gabriel could say no more. In
another moment the locksmith was standing in the street, whence he could see
that the light once more travelled upstairs, and soon returning to the room
below, shone brightly through the chinks of the shutters.
If ever man were sorely
puzzled and perplexed, the locksmith was, that night. Even when snugly seated
by his own fireside, with Mrs. Varden opposite in a nightcap and night-jacket,
and Dolly beside him (in a most distracting dishabille) curling her hair, and
smiling as if she had never cried in all her life and never could-- even then,
with Toby at his elbow and his pipe in his mouth, and Miggs (but that perhaps
was not much) falling asleep in the background, he could not quite discard his
wonder and uneasiness. So in his dreams--still there was Mr. Haredale, haggard
and careworn, listening in the solitary house to every sound that stirred, with
the taper shining through the chinks until the day should turn it pale and end
his lonely watching.
NEXT morning brought no
satisfaction to the locksmith’s thoughts, nor next day, nor the next, nor many
others. Often after nightfall he entered the street, and turned his eyes
towards the well-known house; and as surely as he did so, there was the
solitary light, still gleaming through the crevices of the window-shutter,
while all within was motionless, noiseless, cheerless, as a grave. Unwilling to
hazard Mr. Haredale’s favour by disobeying his strict injunction, he never
ventured to knock at the door or to make his presence known in any way. But
whenever strong interest and curiosity attracted him to the spot--which was not
seldom--the light was always there.
If he could have known
what passed within, the knowledge would have yielded him no clue to this
mysterious vigil. At twilight, Mr. Haredale shut himself up, and at daybreak he
came forth. He never missed a night, always came and went alone, and never
varied his proceedings in the least degree.
The manner of his watch
was this. At dusk, he entered the house in the same way as when the locksmith
bore him company, kindled a light, went through the rooms, and narrowly
examined them. That done, he returned to the chamber on the ground-floor, and
laying his sword and pistols on the table, sat by it until morning.
He usually had a book
with him, and often tried to read, but never fixed his eyes or thoughts upon it
for five minutes together. The slightest noise without doors, caught his ear; a
step upon the pavement seemed to make his heart leap.
He was not without some
refreshment during the long lonely hours; generally carrying in his pocket a
sandwich of bread and meat, and a small flask of wine. The latter diluted with
large quantities of water, he drank in a heated, feverish way, as though his
throat were dried; but he scarcely ever broke his fast, by so much as a crumb
of bread.
If this voluntary
sacrifice of sleep and comfort had its origin, as the locksmith on
consideration was disposed to think, in any superstitious expectation of the
fulfilment of a dream or vision connected with the event on which he had
brooded for so many years, and if he waited for some ghostly visitor who walked
abroad when men lay sleeping in their beds, he showed no trace of fear or
wavering. His stern features expressed inflexible resolution; his brows were
puckered, and his lips compressed, with deep and settled purpose; and when he
started at a noise and listened, it was not with the start of fear but hope,
and catching up his sword as though the hour had come at last, he would clutch
it in his tight- clenched hand, and listen with sparkling eyes and eager looks,
until it died away.
These disappointments
were numerous, for they ensued on almost every sound, but his constancy was not
shaken. Still, every night he was at his post, the same stern, sleepless,
sentinel; and still night passed, and morning dawned, and he must watch again.
This went on for weeks;
he had taken a lodging at Vauxhall in which to pass the day and rest himself;
and from this place, when the tide served, he usually came to London Bridge
from Westminster by water, in order that he might avoid the busy streets.
One evening, shortly
before twilight, he came his accustomed road upon the river’s bank, intending
to pass through Westminster Hall into Palace Yard, and there take boat to
London Bridge as usual. There was a pretty large concourse of people assembled
round the Houses of Parliament, looking at the members as they entered and
departed, and giving vent to rather noisy demonstrations of approval or
dislike, according to their known opinions. As he made his way among the
throng, he heard once or twice the No-Popery cry, which was then becoming
pretty familiar to the ears of most men; but holding it in very slight regard,
and observing that the idlers were of the lowest grade, he neither thought nor
cared about it, but made his way along, with perfect indifference.
There were many little
knots and groups of persons in Westminster Hall: some few looking upward at its
noble ceiling, and at the rays of evening light, tinted by the setting sun,
which streamed in aslant through its small windows, and growing dimmer by
degrees, were quenched in the gathering gloom below; some, noisy passengers,
mechanics going home from work, and otherwise, who hurried quickly through,
waking the echoes with their voices, and soon darkening the small door in the
distance, as they passed into the street beyond; some, in busy conference
together on political or private matters, pacing slowly up and down with eyes
that sought the ground, and seeming, by their attitudes, to listen earnestly
from head to foot. Here, a dozen squabbling urchins made a very Babel in the
air; there, a solitary man, half clerk, half mendicant, paced up and down with
hungry dejection in his look and gait; at his elbow passed an errand-lad,
swinging his basket round and round, and with his shrill whistle riving the
very timbers of the roof; while a more observant schoolboy, half-way through,
pocketed his ball, and eyed the distant beadle as he came looming on. It was
that time of evening when, if you shut your eyes and open them again, the
darkness of an hour appears to have gathered in a second. The smooth-worn
pavement, dusty with footsteps, still called upon the lofty walls to reiterate
the shuffle and the tread of feet unceasingly, save when the closing of some
heavy door resounded through the building like a clap of thunder, and drowned
all other noises in its rolling sound.
Mr. Haredale, glancing
only at such of these groups as he passed nearest to, and then in a manner
betokening that his thoughts were elsewhere, had nearly traversed the Hall,
when two persons before him caught his attention. One of these, a gentleman in
elegant attire, carried in his hand a cane, which he twirled in a jaunty manner
as he loitered on; the other, an obsequious, crouching, fawning figure,
listened to what he said--at times throwing in a humble word himself--and, with
his shoulders shrugged up to his ears, rubbed his hands submissively, or
answered at intervals by an inclination of the head, half-way between a nod of
acquiescence, and a bow of most profound respect.
In the abstract there
was nothing very remarkable in this pair, for servility waiting on a handsome
suit of clothes and a cane--not to speak of gold and silver sticks, or wands of
office--is common enough. But there was that about the well-dressed man, yes,
and about the other likewise, which struck Mr. Haredale with no pleasant
feeling. He hesitated, stopped, and would have stepped aside and turned out of
his path, but at the moment, the other two faced about quickly, and stumbled
upon him before he could avoid them.
The gentleman with the
cane lifted his hat and had begun to tender an apology, which Mr. Haredale had
begun as hastily to acknowledge and walk away, when he stopped short and cried,
"Haredale! Gad bless me, this is strange indeed!"
"It is," he
returned impatiently; "yes--a--"
"My dear
friend," cried the other, detaining him, "why such great speed? One
minute, Haredale, for the sake of old acquaintance."
"I am in
haste," he said. "Neither of us has sought this meeting. Let it be a
brief one. Good night!"
"Fie, fie!"
replied Sir John (for it was he), "how very churlish! We were speaking of
you. Your name was on my lips--perhaps you heard me mention it? No? I am sorry
for that. I am really sorry.--You know our friend here, Haredale? This is
really a most remarkable meeting!"
The friend, plainly
very ill at ease, had made bold to press Sir John’s arm, and to give him other
significant hints that he
was desirous of
avoiding this introduction. As it did not suit Sir John’s purpose, however,
that it should be evaded, he appeared quite unconscious of these silent
remonstrances, and inclined his hand towards him, as he spoke, to call
attention to him more particularly.
The friend, therefore,
had nothing for it, but to muster up the pleasantest smile he could, and to
make a conciliatory bow, as Mr. Haredale turned his eyes upon him. Seeing that
he was recognised, he put out his hand in an awkward and embarrassed manner,
which was not mended by its contemptuous rejection.
"Mr.
Gashford!" said Haredale, coldly. "It is as I have heard then. You
have left the darkness for the light, sir, and hate those whose opinions you
formerly held, with all the bitterness of a renegade. You are an honour, sir,
to any cause. I wish the one you espouse at present, much joy of the
acquisition it has made."
The secretary rubbed
his hands and bowed, as though he would disarm his adversary by humbling
himself before him. Sir John Chester again exclaimed, with an air of great gaiety,
"Now, really, this is a most remarkable meeting!" and took a pinch of
snuff with his usual self-possession.
"Mr.
Haredale," said Gashford, stealthily raising his eyes, and letting them
drop again when they met the other’s steady gaze, "is too conscientious,
too honourable, too manly, I am sure, to attach unworthy motives to an honest
change of opinions, even though it implies a doubt of those he holds himself.
Mr. Haredale is too just, too generous, too clear-sighted in his moral vision,
to--"
"Yes, sir?"
he rejoined with a sarcastic smile, finding the secretary stopped. "You
were saying"--
Gashford meekly
shrugged his shoulders, and looking on the ground again, was silent.
"No, but let us
really," interposed Sir John at this juncture, "let us really, for a
moment, contemplate the very remarkable character of this meeting. Haredale, my
dear friend, pardon me if I think you are not sufficiently impressed with its
singularity. Here we stand, by no previous appointment or arrangement, three
old schoolfellows, in Westminster Hall; three old boarders in a remarkably dull
and shady seminary at Saint Omer’s, where you, being Catholics and of necessity
educated out of England, were brought up; and where I, being a promising young
Protestant at that time, was sent to learn the French tongue from a native of
Paris!"
"Add to the
singularity, Sir John," said Mr. Haredale, "that some of you
Protestants of promise are at this moment leagued in yonder building, to
prevent our having the surpassing and unheard-of privilege of teaching our
children to read and write--here--in this land, where thousands of us enter
your service every year, and to preserve the freedom of which, we die in bloody
battles abroad, in heaps: and that others of you, to the number of some thousands
as I learn, are led on to look on all men of my creed as wolves and beasts of
prey, by this man Gashford. Add to it besides the bare fact that this man lives
in society, walks the streets in broad day--I was about to say, holds up his
head, but that he does not--and it will be strange, and very strange, I grant
you."
"Oh! you are hard
upon our friend," replied Sir John, with an engaging smile. "You are
really very hard upon our friend!"
"Let him go on,
Sir John," said Gashford, fumbling with his gloves. "Let him go on. I
can make allowances, Sir John. I am honoured with your good opinion, and I can
dispense with Mr. Haredale’s. Mr. Haredale is a sufferer from the penal laws,
and I can’t expect his favour."
"You have so much
of my favour, sir," retorted Mr. Haredale, with a bitter glance at the
third party in their conversation, "that I am glad to see you in such good
company. You are the essence of your great Association, in yourselves."
"Now, there you
mistake," said Sir John, in his most benignant way. "There--which is
a most remarkable circumstance for a man of your punctuality and exactness,
Haredale--you fall into error. I don’t belong to the body; I have an immense
respect for its members, but I don’t belong to it; although I am, it is certainly
true, the conscientious opponent of your being relieved. I feel it my duty to
be so; it is a most unfortunate necessity; and cost me a bitter struggle.--Will
you try this box? If you don’t object to a trifling infusion of a very chaste
scent, you’ll find its flavour exquisite."
"I ask your
pardon, Sir John," said Mr. Haredale, declining the proffer with a motion
of his hand, "for having ranked you among the humble instruments who are
obvious and in all men’s sight. I should have done more justice to your genius.
Men of your capacity plot in secrecy and safety, and leave exposed posts to the
duller wits."
"Don’t apologise,
for the world," replied Sir John sweetly; "old friends like you and
I, may be allowed some freedoms, or the deuce is in it."
Gashford, who had been
very restless all this time, but had not once looked up, now turned to Sir
John, and ventured to mutter something to the effect that he must go, or my
lord would perhaps be waiting.
"Don’t distress
yourself, good sir," said Mr. Haredale, "I’ll take my leave, and put
you at your ease--" which he was about to do without ceremony, when he was
stayed by a buzz and murmur at the upper end of the hall, and, looking in that
direction, saw Lord George Gordon coming in, with a crowd of people round him.
There was a lurking
look of triumph, though very differently expressed, in the faces of his two
companions, which made it a natural impulse on Mr. Haredale’s part not to give
way before this leader, but to stand there while he passed. He drew himself up
and, clasping his hands behind him, looked on with a proud and scornful aspect,
while Lord George slowly advanced (for the press was great about him) towards
the spot where they were standing.
He had left the House
of Commons but that moment, and had come straight down into the Hall, bringing
with him, as his custom was, intelligence of what had been said that night in
reference to the Papists, and what petitions had been presented in their
favour, and who had supported them, and when the bill was to be brought in, and
when it would be advisable to present their own Great Protestant petition. All
this he told the persons about him in a loud voice, and with great abundance of
ungainly gesture. Those who were nearest him made comments to each other, and vented
threats and murmurings; those who were outside the crowd cried,
"Silence," and "Stand back," or closed in upon the rest,
endeavouring to make a forcible exchange of places: and so they came driving on
in a very disorderly and irregular way, as it is the manner of a crowd to do.
When they were very
near to where the secretary, Sir John, and Mr. Haredale stood, Lord George
turned round and, making a few remarks of a sufliciently violent and incoherent
kind, concluded with the usual sentiment, and called for three cheers to back
it. While these were in the act of being given with great energy, he extricated
himself from the press, and stepped up to Gashford’s side. Both he and Sir John
being well known to the populace, they fell back a little, and left the four
standing together.
"Mr. Haredale,
Lord George," said Sir John Chester, seeing that the nobleman regarded him
with an inquisitive look. "A Catholic gentleman unfortunately--most
unhappily a Catholic--but an esteemed acquaintance of mine, and once of Mr.
Gashford’s. My dear Haredale, this is Lord George Gordon."
"I should have
known that, had I been ignorant of his lordship’s person," said Mr.
Haredale. "I hope there is but one gentleman in England who, addressing an
ignorant and excited throng, would speak of a large body of his fellow-subjects
in such injurious language as I heard this moment. For shame, my lord, for
shame!"
"I cannot talk to
you, sir," replied Lord George in a loud voice, and waving his hand in a
disturbed and agitated manner; "we have nothing in common."
"We have much in
common--many things--all that the Almighty gave us," said Mr. Haredale;
"and common charity, not to say common sense and common decency, should
teach you to refrain from these proceedings. If every one of those men had arms
in their hands at this moment, as they have them in their heads, I would not
leave this place without telling you that you disgrace your station."
"I don’t hear you,
sir," he replied in the same manner as before; "I can’t hear you. It
is indifferent to me what you say. Don’t retort, Gashford," for the
secretary had made a show of wishing to do so; "I can hold no communion
with the worshippers of idols."
As he said this, he
glanced at Sir John, who lifted his hands and eyebrows, as if deploring the
intemperate conduct of Mr. Haredale, and smiled in admiration of the crowd and
of their leader.
"He retort!"
cried Haredale. "Look you here, my lord. Do you know this man?"
Lord George replied by
laying his hand upon the shoulder of his cringing secretary, and viewing him
with a smile of confidence.
"This man,"
said Mr. Haredale, eyeing him from top to toe, "who in his boyhood was a
thief, and has been from that time to this, a servile, false, and truckling
knave: this man, who has crawled and crept through life, wounding the hands he
licked, and biting those he fawned upon: this sycophant, who never knew what
honour, truth, or courage meant; who robbed his benefactor’s daughter of her
virtue, and married her to break her heart, and did it, with stripes and
cruelty: this creature, who has whined at kitchen windows for the broken food,
and begged for halfpence at our chapel doors: this apostle of the faith, whose
tender conscience cannot bear the altars where his vicious life was publicly
denounced--Do you know this man?"
"Oh, really--you
are very, very hard upon our friend!" exclaimed Sir John.
"Let Mr. Haredale
go on," said Gashford, upon whose unwholesome face the perspiration had
broken out during this speech, in blotches of wet; "I don’t mind him, Sir
John; it’s quite as indifferent to me what he says, as it is to my lord. If he
reviles my lord, as you have heard, Sir John, how can I hope to escape?"
"Is it not enough,
my lord," Mr. Haredale continued, "that I, as good a gentleman as
you, must hold my property, such as it is, by a trick at which the state
connives because of these hard laws; and that we may not teach our youth in
schools the common principles of right and wrong; but must we be denounced and
ridden by such men as this! Here is a man to head your No-Popery cry! For
shame. For shame!"
The infatuated nobleman
had glanced more than once at Sir John Chester, as if to inquire whether there
was any truth in these statements concerning Gashford, and Sir John had as
often plainly answered by a shrug or look, "Oh dear me! no." He now
said, in the same loud key, and in the same strange manner as before:
"I have nothing to
say, sir, in reply, and no desire to hear anything more. I beg you won’t
obtrude your conversation, or these personal attacks, upon me. I shall not be
deterred from doing my duty to my country and my countrymen, by any such
attempts, whether they proceed from emissaries of the Pope or not, I assure
you. Come, Gashford!"
They had walked on a
few paces while speaking, and were now at the Hall-door, through which they
passed together. Mr. Haredale, without any leave-taking, turned away to the
river stairs, which were close at hand, and hailed the only boatman who
remained there.
But the throng of
people--the foremost of whom had heard every word that Lord George Gordon said,
and among all of whom the rumour had been rapidly dispersed that the stranger
was a Papist who was bearding him for his advocacy of the popular cause--came
pouring out pell-mell, and, forcing the nobleman, his secretary, and Sir John
Chester on before them, so that they appeared to be at their head, crowded to
the top of the stairs where Mr. Haredale waited until the boat was ready, and
there stood still, leaving him on a little clear space by himself.
They were not silent,
however, though inactive. At first some indistinct mutterings arose among them,
which were followed by a hiss or two, and these swelled by degrees into a
perfect storm. Then one voice said, "Down with the Papists!" and
there was a pretty general cheer, but nothing more. After a lull of a few
moments, one man cried out, "Stone him;" another, "Duck
him;" another, in a stentorian voice, "No Popery!" This
favourite cry the rest re-echoed, and the mob, which might have been two
hundred strong, joined in a general shout.
Mr. Haredale had stood
calmly on the brink of the steps, until they made this demonstration, when he
looked round contemptuously, and walked at a slow pace down the stairs. He was
pretty near the boat, when Gashford, as if without intention, turned about, and
directly afterwards a great stone was thrown by some hand, in the crowd, which
struck him on the head, and made him stagger like a drunken man.
The blood sprung freely
from the wound, and trickled down his coat. He turned directly, and rushing up
the steps with a boldness and passion which made them all fall back, demanded:
"Who did that?
Show me the man who hit me."
Not a soul moved;
except some in the rear who slunk off, and, escaping to the other side of the
way, looked on like indifferent spectators.
"Who did
that?" he repeated. "Show me the man who did it. Dog, was it you? It
was your deed, if not your hand--I know you."
He threw himself on
Gashford as he said the words, and hurled him to the ground. There was a sudden
motion in the crowd, and some laid hands upon him, but his sword was out, and
they fell off again.
"My lord--Sir
John,"--he cried, "draw, one of you--you are responsible for this
outrage, and I look to you. Draw, if you are gentlemen." With that he struck
Sir John upon the breast with the flat of his weapon, and with a burning face
and flashing eyes stood upon his guard; alone, before them all.
For an instant, for the
briefest space of time the mind can readily conceive, there was a change in Sir
John’s smooth face, such as no man ever saw there. The next moment, he stepped
forward, and laid one hand on Mr. Haredale’s arm, while with the other he
endeavoured to appease the crowd.
"My dear friend,
my good Haredale, you are blinded with passion-- it’s very natural, extremely
natural--but you don’t know friends from foes."
"I know them all,
sir, I can distinguish well--" he retorted,
almost mad with rage.
"Sir John, Lord George--do you hear me? Are you cowards?"
"Never mind,
sir," said a man, forcing his way between and pushing him towards the
stairs with friendly violence, "never mind asking that. For God’s sake,
get away. What can you do against this number? And there are as many more in
the next street, who’ll be round dfrectly,"--indeed they began to pour in
as he said the words--"you’d be giddy from that cut in the first heat of a
scuffle. Now do retire, sir, or take my word for it you’ll be worse used than
you would be if every man in the crowd was a woman, and that woman Bloody Mary.
Come, sir, make haste--as quick as you can."
Mr. Haredale, who began
to turn faint and sick, felt how sensible this advice was, and descended the
steps with his unknown friend’s assistance. John Grueby (for John it was)
helped him into the boat, and giving her a shove off, which sent her thirty
feet into the tide, bade the waterman pull away like a Briton; and walked up
again as composedly as if he had just landed.
There was at first a
slight disposition on the part of the mob to resent this interference; but John
looking particularly strong and cool, and wearing besides Lord George’s livery,
they thought better of it, and contented themselves with sending a shower of
small missiles after the boat, which plashed harmlessly in the water; for she
had by this time cleared the bridge, and was darting swiftly down the centre of
the stream.
From this amusement,
they proceeded to giving Protestant knocks at the doors of private houses,
breaking a few lamps, and assaulting some stray constables. But, it being
whispered that a detachment of Life Guards had been sent for, they took to
their heels with great expedition, and left the street quite clear.
WHEN the concourse
separated, and, dividing into chance clusters, drew off in various directions,
there still remained upon the scene of the late disturbance, one man. This man
was Gashford, who, bruised by his late fall, and hurt in a much greater degree
by the indignity he had undergone, and the exposure of which he had been the
victim, limped up and down, breathing curses and threats of vengeance.
It was not the
secretary’s nature to waste his wrath in words. While he vented the froth of
his malevolence in those effusions, he kept a steady eye on two men, who,
having disappeared with the rest when the alarm was spread, had since returned,
and were now visible in the moonlight, at no great distance, as they walked to
and fro, and talked together.
He made no move towards
them, but waited patiently on the dark side of the street, until they were
tired of strolling backwards and forwards and walked away in company. Then he
followed, but at some distance: keeping them in view, without appearing to have
that object, or being seen by them.
They went up Parliament
Street, past Saint Martin’s church, and away by Saint Giles’s to Tottenham
Court Road, at the back of which, upon the western side, was then a place
called the Green Lanes. This was a retired spot, not of the choicest kind,
leading into the fields. Great heaps of ashes; stagnant pools, overgrown with
rank grass and duckweed; broken turnstiles; and the upright posts of palings
long since carried off for firewood, which menaced all heedless walkers with
their jagged and rusty nails; were the leading features of the landscape; while
here and there a donkey, or a ragged horse, tethered to a stake, and cropping
off a wretched meal from the coarse stunted turf, were quite in keeping with
the scene, and would have suggested (if the houses had not done so,
sufficiently, of themselves) how very poor the people were who lived in the
crazy huts adjacent, and how foolhardy it might prove for one who carried
money, or wore decent clothes, to walk that way alone, unless by daylight.
Poverty has its whims
and shows of taste, as wealth has. Some of these cabins were turreted, some had
false windows painted on their rotten walls; one had a mimic clock, upon a
crazy tower of four feet high, which screened the chimney; each in its little
patch of ground had a rude seat or arbour. The population dealt in bones, in
rags, in broken glass, in old wheels, in birds, and dogs. These, in their
several ways of stowage, filled the gardens; and shedding a perfume, not of the
most delicious nature, in the air, filled it besides with yelps, and screams,
and howling.
Into this retreat, the
secretary followed the two men whom he had held in sight; and here he saw them
safely lodged, in one of the meanest houses, which was but a room, and that of
small dimensions. He waited without, until the sound of their voices, joined in
a discordant song, assured him they were making merry; and then approaching the
door, by means of a tottering plank which crossed the ditch in front, knocked
at it with his hand.
"Muster
Gashfordl" said the man who opened it, taking his pipe from his mouth, in
evident surprise. "Why, who’d have thought of this here honour! Walk in,
Muster Gashford--walk in, sir."
Gashford required no
second invitation, and entered with a gracious air. There was a fire in the
rusty grate (for though the spring was pretty far advanced, the nights were
cold), and on a stool beside it Hugh sat smoking. Dennis placed a chair, his
only one, for the secretary, in front of the hearth; and took his seat again
upon the stool he had left when he rose to give the visitor admission.
"What’s in the
wind now, Muster Gashford?" he said, as he resumed his pipe, and looked at
him askew. "Any orders from head-quarters? Are we going to begin? What is
it, Muster Gashford?"
"Oh, nothing,
nothing," rejoined the secretary, with a friendly nod to Hugh. "We
have broken the ice, though. We had a little spurt to-day--eh, Dennis?"
"A very little
one," growled the hangman. "Not half enough for me."
"Nor me
neither!" cried Hugh. "Give us something to do with life in it--with
life in it, master. Ha, ha!"
"Why, you wouldn’t,"
said the secretary, with his worst expression of face, and in his mildest
tones, "have anything to do, with--with death in it?"
"I don’t know
that," replied Hugh. "I’m open to orders. I don’t care; not I."
"Nor I!"
vociferated Dennis.
"Brave
fellows!" said the secretary, in as pastor-like a voice as if he were
commending them for some uncommon act of valour and generosity. "By the
bye"--and here he stopped and warmed his hands: then suddenly looked
up--"who threw that stone to-day?"
Mr. Dennis coughed and
shook his head, as who should say, "A mystery indeed!" Hugh sat and
smoked in silence.
"It was well
done!" said the secretary, warming his hands again. "I should like to
know that man."
"Would you?"
said Dennis, after looking at his face to assure himself that he was serious.
"Would you like to know that man, Muster Gashford?"
"I should
indeed," replied the secretary.
"Why then, Lord
love you," said the hangman, in his hoarest chuckle, as he pointed with
his pipe to Hugh, "there he sits. That’s the man. My stars and halters,
Muster Gashford," he added in a whisper, as he drew his stool close to him
and jogged him with his elbow, "what a interesting blade he is! He wants
as much holding in as a thorough-bred bulldog. If it hadn’t been for me to-day,
he’d have had that ’ere Roman down, and made a riot of it, in another
minute."
"And why
not?" cried Hugh in a surly voice, as he overheard this last remark.
"Where’s the good of putting things off? Strike while the iron’s hot; that’s
what I say."
"Ah!" retorted
Dennis, shaking his head, with a kind of pity for his friend’s ingenuous youth;
"but suppose the iron an’t hot, brother! You must get people’s blood up
afore you strike, and have ’em in the humour. There wasn’t quite enough to
provoke ’em to- day, I tell you. If you’d had your way, you’d have spoilt the
fun to come, and ruined us."
"Dennis is quite
right," said Gashford, smoothly. "He is perfectly correct. Dennis has
great knowledge of the world."
"I ought to have,
Muster Gashford, seeing what a many people I’ve helped out of it, eh?"
grinned the hangman, whispering the words behind his hand.
The secretary laughed
at this jest as much as Dennis could desire, and when he had done, said,
turning to Hugh:
"Dennis’s policy
was mine, as you may have observed. You saw, for instance, how I fell when I
was set upon. I made no resistance. I did nothing to provoke an outbreak. Oh
dear no!"
"No, by the Lord
Harry!" cried Dennis with a noisy laugh, "you went down very quiet,
Muster Gashford--and very flat besides. I thinks to myself at the time ’it’s
all up with Muster Gashford!’ I never see a man lay flatter nor more
still--with the life in him--than you did to-day. He’s a rough ’un to play
with, is that ’ere Papist, and that’s the fact."
The secretary’s face,
as Dennis roared with laughter, and turned his wrinkled eyes on Hugh who did
the like, might have furnished a study for the devil’s picture. He sat quite
silent until they were serious again, and then said, looking round:
"We are very
pleasant here; so very pleasant, Dennis, that but for my lord’s particular
desire that I should sup with him, and the time being very near at hand, I
should he inclined to stay, until it would be hardly safe to go homeward. I
come upon a little business--yes, I do--as you supposed. It’s very flattering
to you; being this. If we ever should be obliged--and we can’t tell, you
know--this is a very uncertain world"--
"I believe you,
Muster Gashford," interposed the hangman with a grave nod. "The
uncertainties as I’ve seen in reference to this here state of existence, the
unexpected contingencies as have come about!--Oh my eye!" Feeling the
subject much too vast for expression, he puffed at his pipe again, and looked
the rest.
"I say,"
resumed the secretary, in a slow, impressive way; "we can’t tell what may
come to pass; and if we should be obliged, against our wills, to have recourse
to violence, my lord (who has suffered terribly to-day, as far as words can go)
consigns to you two--bearing in mind my recommendation of you both, as good
staunch men, beyond all doubt and suspicion--the pleasant task of punishing
this Haredale. You may do as you please with him, or his, provided that you
show no mercy, and no quarter, and leave no two beams of his house standing
where the builder placed them. You may sack it, burn it, do with it as you
like, but it must come down; it must be razed to the ground; and he, and all
belonging to him, left as shelterless as new-born infants whom their mothers
have exposed. Do you understand me?" said Gashford, pausing, and pressing
his hands together gently.
"Understand you,
master!" cried Hugh. "You speak plain now. Why, this is hearty!"
"I knew you would
like it," said Gashford, shaking him by the hand; "I thought you
would. Good night! Don’t rise, Dennis: I would rather find my way alone. I may
have to make other visits here, and it’s pleasant to come and go without
disturbing you. I can find my way perfectly well. Good night!"
He was gone, and had
shut the door behind him. They looked at each other, and nodded approvingly:
Dennis stirred up the fire.
"This looks a
little more like business!" he said.
"Ay, indeed!"
cried Hugh; "this suits me!"
"I’ve heerd it
said of Muster Gashford," said the hangman, "that he’d a surprising
memory and wonderful firmness--that he never forgot, and never forgave.--Let’s
drink his health!"
Hugh readily
complied--pouring no liquor on the floor when he drank this toast--and they
pledged the secretary as a man after their own hearts, in a bumper.
WHILE the worst
passions of the worst men were thus working in the dark, and the mantle of
religion, assumed to cover the ugliest deformities, threatened to become the
shroud of all that was good and peaceful in society, a circumstance occurred
which once more altered the position of two persons from whom this history has
long been separated, and to whom it must now return.
In a small English
country town, the inhabitants of which supported themselves by the labour of
their hands in plaiting and preparing straw for those who made bonnets and
other articles of dress and ornament from that material,--concealed under an
assumed name, and living in a quiet poverty which knew no change, no pleasures,
and few cares but that of struggling on from day to day in one great toil for
bread,--dwelt Barnaby and his mother. Their poor cottage had known no stranger’s
foot since they sought the shelter of its roof five years before; nor had they
in all that time held any commerce or communication with the old world from
which they had fled. To labour in peace, and devote her labour and her life to
her poor son, was all the widow sought. If happiness can be said at any time to
be the lot of one on whom a secret sorrow preys, she was happy now.
Tranquillity, resignation, and her strong love of him who needed it so much,
formed the small circle of her quiet joys; and while that remained unbroken,
she was contented.
For Barnaby himself,
the time which had flown by, had passed him like the wind. The daily suns of
years had shed no brighter gleam of reason on his mind; no dawn had broken on
his long, dark night. He would sit sometimes--often for days together on a low
seat by the fire or by the cottage door, busy at work (for he had learnt the
art his mother plied), and listening, God help him, to the tales she would
repeat, as a lure to keep him in her sight. He had no recollection of these
little narratives; the tale of yesterday was new to him upon the morrow; but he
liked them at the moment; and when the humour held him, would remain patiently
within doors, hearing her stories like a little child, and working cheerfully
from sunrise until it was too dark to see.
At other times,--and
then their scanty earnings were barely sufficient to furnish them with food,
though of the coarsest sort,-- he would wander abroad from dawn of day until
the twilight deepened into night. Few in that place, even of the children,
could be idle, and he had no companions of his own kind. Indeed there were not
many who could have kept up with him in his rambles, had there been a legion.
But there were a score of vagabond dogs belonging to the neighbours, who served
his purpose quite as well. With two or three of these, or sometimes with a full
half-dozen barking at his heels, he would sally forth on some long expedition
that consumed the day; and though, on their return at nightfall, the dogs would
come home limping and sore-footed, and almost spent with their fatigue, Barnaby
was up and off again at sunrise with some new attendants of the same class,
with whom he would return in like manner. On all these travels, Grip, in his
little basket at his master’s back, was a constant member of the party, and
when they set off in fine weather and in high spirits, no dog barked louder
than the raven.
Their pleasures on these
excursions were simple enough. A crust of bread and scrap of meat, with water
from the brook or spring, sufficed for their repast. Barnaby’s enjoyments were,
to walk, and run, and leap, till he was tired; then to lie down in the long
grass, or by the growing corn, or in the shade of some tall tree, looking
upward at the light clouds as they floated over the blue surface of the sky,
and listening to the lark as she poured out her brilliant song. There were
wild-flowers to pluck--the bright red poppy, the gentle harebell, the cowslip,
and the rose. There were birds to watch; fish; ants; worms; hares or rabbits,
as they darted across the distant pathway in the wood and so were gone:
millions of living things to have an interest in, and lie in wait for, and clap
hands and shout in memory of, when they had disappeared. In default of these,
or when they wearied, there was the merry sunlight to hunt out, as it crept in
aslant through leaves and boughs of trees, and hid far down--deep, deep, in
hollow places-- like a silver pool, where nodding branches seemed to bathe and
sport; sweet scents of summer air breathing over fields of beans or clover; the
perfume of wet leaves or moss; the life of waving trees, and shadows always
changing. When these or any of them tired, or in excess of pleasing tempted him
to shut his eyes, there was slumber in the midst of all these soft delights,
with the gentle wind murmuring like music in his ears, and everything around
melting into one delicious dream.
Their hut--for it was
little more--stood on the outskirts of the town, at a short distance from the
high road, but in a secluded place, where few chance passengers strayed at any
season of the year. It had a plot of garden-ground attached, which Barnaby, in
fits and starts of working, trimmed, and kept in order. Within doors and
without, his mother laboured for their common good; and hail, rain, snow, or
sunshine, found no difference in her.
Though so far removed
from the scenes of her past life, and with so little thought or hope of ever
visiting them again, she seemed to have a strange desire to know what happened
in the busy world. Any old newspaper, or scrap of intelligence from London, she
caught at with avidity. The excitement it produced was not of a pleasurable
kind, for her manner at such times expressed the keenest anxiety and dread; but
it never faded in the least degree. Then, and in stormy winter nights, when the
wind blew loud and strong, the old expression came into her face, and she would
be seized with a fit of trembling, like one who had an ague. But Barnaby noted
little of this; and putting a great constraint upon herself, she usually
recovered her accustomed manner before the change had caught his observation.
Grip was by no means an
idle or unprofitable member of the humble household. Partly by dint of Barnaby’s
tuition, and partly by pursuing a species of self-instruction common to his
tribe, and exerting his powers of observation to the utmost, he had acquired a
degree of sagacity which rendered him famous for miles round. His
conversational powers and surprising performances were the universal theme: and
as many persons came to see the wonderful raven, and none left his exertions
unrewarded--when he condescended to exhibit, which was not always, for genius
is capricious--his earnings formed an important item in the common stock.
Indeed, the bird himself appeared to know his value well; for though he was
perfectly free and unrestrained in the presence of Barnaby and his mother, he
maintained in public an amazing gravity, and never stooped to any other
gratuitous performances than biting the ankles of vagabond boys (an exercise in
which he much delighted), killing a fowl or two occasionally, and swallowing
the dinners of various neighbouring dogs, of whom the boldest held him in great
awe and dread.
Time had glided on in
this way, and nothing had happened to disturb or change their mode of life,
when, one summer’s night in June, they were in their little garden, resting
from the labours of the day. The widow’s work was yet upon her knee, and strewn
upon the ground about her; and Barnaby stood leaning on his spade, gazing at
the brightness in the west, and singing softly to himself.
"A brave evening,
mother! If we had, chinking in our pockets, but a few specks of that gold which
is piled up yonder in the sky, we should be rich for life."
"We are better as
we are," returned the widow with a quiet
smile. "Let us be
contented, and we do not want and need not care to have it, though it lay
shining at our feet."
"Ay!" said
Barnaby, resting with crossed arms on his spade, and looking wistfully at the
sunset, "that’s well enough, mother; but gold’s a good thing to have. I
wish that I knew where to find it. Grip and I could do much with gold, be sure
of that."
"What would you
do?" she asked.
"What! A world of
things. We’d dress finely--you and I, I mean; not Grip--keep horses, dogs, wear
bright colours and feathers, do no more work, live delicately and at our ease.
Oh, we’d find uses for it, mother, and uses that would do us good. I would I
knew where gold was buried. How hard I’d work to dig it up!"
"You do not
know," said his mother, rising from her seat and laying her hand upon his
shoulder, "what men have done to win it, and how they have found, too
late, that it glitters brightest at a distance, and turns quite dim and dull
when handled."
"Ay, ay; so you
say; so you think," he answered, still looking eagerly in the same
direction. "For all that, mother, I should like to try."
"Do you not
see," she said, "how red it is? Nothing bears so many stains of
blood, as gold. Avoid it. None have such cause to hate its name as we have. Do
not so much as think of it, dear love. It has brought such misery and suffering
on your head and mine as few have known, and God grant few may have to undergo.
I would rather we were dead and laid down in our graves, than you should ever
come to love it."
For a moment Barnaby
withdrew his eyes and looked at her with wonder. Then, glancing from the
redness in the sky to the mark upon his wrist as if he would compare the two,
he seemed about to question her with earnestness, when a new object caught his
wandering attention, and made him quite forgetful of his purpose.
This was a man with
dusty feet and garments, who stood, bare- headed, behind the hedge that divided
their patch of garden from the pathway, and leant meekly forward as if he
sought to mingle with their conversation, and waited for his time to speak. His
face was turned towards the brightness, too, but the light that fell upon it showed
that he was blind, and saw it not.
"A blessing on
those voices!" said the wayfarer. "I feel the beauty of the night
more keenly, when I hear them. They are like eyes to me. Will they speak again,
and cheer the heart of a poor traveller?"
"Have you no
guide?" asked the widow, after a moment’s pause.
"None but
that," he answered, pointing with his staff towards the sun; "and
sometimes a milder one at night, but she is idle now."
"Have you
travelled far?"
"A weary way and
long," rejoined the traveller as he shook his head. "A weary, weary,
way. I struck my stick just now upon the bucket of your well--be pleased to let
me have a draught of water, lady."
"Why do you call
me lady?" she returned. "I am as poor as you."
"Your speech is
soft and gentle, and I judge by that," replied the man. "The coarsest
stuffs and finest silks, are--apart from the sense of touch--alike to me. I
cannot judge you by your dress."
"Come round this
way," said Barnaby, who had passed out at the garden-gate and now stood
close beside him. "Put your hand in mine. You’re blind and always in the
dark, eh? Are you frightened in the dark? Do you see great crowds of faces,
now? Do they grin and chatter?"
"Alas!"
returned the other, "I see nothing. Waking or sleeping, nothing."
Barnaby looked
curiously at his eyes, and touching them with his fingers, as an inquisitive
child might, led him towards the house.
"You have come a
long distance," said the widow, meeting him at the door. "How have
you found your way so far?"
"Use and necessity
are good teachers, as I have heard--the best of any," said the blind man,
sitting down upon the chair to which Barnaby had led him, and putting his hat
and stick upon the red- tiled floor. "May neither you nor your son ever
learn under them. They are rough masters."
"You have wandered
from the road, too," said the widow, in a tone of pity.
"Maybe,
maybe," returned the blind man with a sigh, and yet with something of a
smile upon his face, "that’s likely. Handposts and milestones are dumb,
indeed, to me. Thank you the more for this rest, and this refreshing
drink!"
As he spoke, he raised
the mug of water to his mouth. It was clear, and cold, and sparkling, but not
to his taste nevertheless, or his thirst was not very great, for he only wetted
his lips and put it down again.
He wore, hanging with a
long strap round his neck, a kind of scrip or wallet, in which to carry food.
The widow set some bread and cheese before him, but he thanked her, and said
that through the kindness of the charitable he had broken his fast once since
morning, and was not hungry. When he had made her this reply, he opened his
wallet, and took out a few pence, which was all it appeared to contain.
"Might I make bold
to ask," he said, turning towards where Barnaby stood looking on,
"that one who has the gift of sight, would lay this out for me in bread to
keep me on my way? Heaven’s blessing on the young feet that will bestir
themselves in aid of one so helpless as a sightless man!"
Barnaby looked at his
mother, who nodded assent; in another moment he was gone upon his charitable
errand. The blind man sat listening with an attentive face, until long after
the sound of his retreating footsteps was inaudible to the widow, and then
said, suddenly, and in a very altered tone:
"There are various
degrees and kinds of blindness, widow. There is the connubial blindness, ma’am,
which perhaps you may have observed in the course of your own experience, and
which is a kind of wilful and self-bandaging blindness. There is the blindness
of party, ma’am, and public men, which is the blindness of a mad bull in the
midst of a regiment of soldiers clothed in red. There is the blind confidence
of youth, which is the blindness of young kittens, whose eyes have not yet
opened on the world; and there is that physical blindness, ma’am, of which I
am, contrairy to my own desire, a most illustrious example. Added to these, ma’am,
is that blindness of the intellect, of which we have a specimen in your
interesting son, and which, having sometimes glimmerings and dawnings of the
light, is scarcely to be trusted as a total darkness. Therefore, ma’am, I have
taken the liberty to get him out of the way for a short time, while you and I
confer together, and this precaution arising out of the delicacy of my sentiments
towards yourself, you will excuse me, ma’am, I know."
Having delivered
himself of this speech with many flourishes of manner, he drew from beneath his
coat a flat stone bottle, and holding the cork between his teeth, qualified his
mug of water with a plentiful infusion of the liquor it contained. He politely
drained the bumper to her health, and the ladies, and setting it down empty,
smacked his lips with infinite relish.
"I am a citizen of
the world, ma’am," said the blind man, corking his bottle, "and if I
seem to conduct myself with freedom, it is therefore. You wonder who I am, ma’am,
and what has brought me here. Such experience of human nature as I have, leads
me to that conclusion, without the aid of eyes by which to read the movements
of your soul as depicted in your feminine features. I will satisfy your
curiosity immediately, ma’am; immediately." With that he slapped his
bottle on its broad back, and having put it under his garment as before,
crossed his legs and folded his hands, and settled himself in his chair,
previous to proceeding any further.
The change in his
manner was so unexpected, the craft and wickedness of his deportment were so
much aggravated by his condition--for we are accustomed to see in those who
have lost a human sense, something in its place almost divine--and this
alteration bred so many fears in her whom he addressed, that she could not
pronounce one word. After waiting, as it seemed, for some remark or answer, and
waiting in vain, the visitor resumed:
"Madam, my name is
Stagg. A friend of mine who has desired the honour of meeting with you any time
these five years past, has commissioned me to call upon you. I should be glad
to whisper that gentleman’s name in your ear.--Zounds, ma’am, are you deaf? Do
you hear me say that I should be glad to whisper my friend’s name in your
ear?"
"You need not
repeat it," said the widow, with a stifled groan; "I see too well
from whom you come."
"But as a man of
honour, ma’am," said the blind man, striking himself on the breast,
"whose credentials must not be disputed, I take leave to say that I will
mention that gentleman’s name. Ay, ay," he added, seeming to catch with
his quick ear the very motion of her hand, "but not aloud. With your
leave, ma’am, I desire the favour of a whisper."
She moved towards him,
and stooped down. He muttered a word in her ear; and, wringing her hands, she
paced up and down the room like one distracted. The blind man, with perfect
composure, produced his bottle again, mixed another glassful; put it up as before;
and, drinking from time to time, followed her with his face in silence.
"You are slow in
conversation, widow," he said after a time, pausing in his draught.
"We shall have to talk before your son."
"What would you
have me do?" she answered. "What do you want?"
"We are poor,
widow, we are poor," he retorted, stretching out his right hand, and
rubbing his thumb upon its palm.
"Poor!" she
cried. "And what am I?"
"Comparisons are
odious," said the blind man. "I don’t know, I don’t care. I say that
we are poor. My friend’s circumstances are indifferent, and so are mine. We
must have our rights, widow, or we must be bought off. But you know that, as
well as I, so where is the use of talking?"
She still walked wildly
to and fro. At length, stopping abruptly before him, she said:
"Is he near
here?"
"He is. Close at
hand."
"Then I am
lost!"
"Not lost,
widow," said the blind man, calmly; "only found. Shall I call
him?"
"Not for the
world," she answered, with a shudder.
"Very good,"
he replied, crossing his legs again, for he had made as though he would rise
and walk to the door. "As you please, widow. His presence is not necessary
that I know of. But both he and I must live; to live, we must eat and drink; to
eat and drink, we must have money:--I say no more."
"Do you know how
pinched and destitute I am?" she retorted. "I do not think you do, or
can. If you had eyes, and could look around you on this poor place, you would
have pity on me. Oh! let your heart be softened by your own affliction, friend,
and have some sympathy with mine."
The blind man snapped
his fingers as he answered:
"--Beside the
question, ma’am, beside the question. I have the softest heart in the world,
but I can’t live upon it. Many a gentleman lives well upon a soft head, who would
find a heart of the same quality a very great drawback. Listen to me. This is a
matter of business, with which sympathies and sentiments have nothing to do. As
a mutual friend, I wish to arrange it in a satisfactory manner, if possible;
and thus the case stands.--If you are very poor now, it’s your own choice. You
have friends who, in case of need, are always ready to help you. My friend is
in a more destitute and desolate situation than most men, and, you and he being
linked together in a common cause, he naturally looks to you to assist him. He
has boarded and lodged with me a long time (for as I said just now, I am very
soft-hearted), and I quite approve of his entertaining this opinion. You have
always had a roof over your head; he has always been an outcast. You have your
son to comfort and assist you; he has nobody at all. The advantages must not be
all one side. You are in the same boat, and we must divide the ballast a little
more equally."
She was about to speak,
but he checked her, and went on.
"The only way of
doing this, is by making up a little purse now and then for my friend; and that’s
what I advise. He bears you no malice that I know of, ma’am: so little, that
although you have treated him harshly more than once, and driven him, I may say,
out of doors, he has that regard for you that I believe even if you
disappointed him now, he would consent to take charge of your son, and to make
a man of him."
He laid a great stress
on these latter words, and paused as if to find out what effect they had
produced. She only answered by her tears.
"He is a likely
lad," said the blind man, thoughtfully, "for many purposes, and not
ill-disposed to try his fortune in a little change and bustle, if I may judge
from what I heard of his talk with you to-night.--Come. In a word, my friend
has pressing necessity for twenty pounds. You, who can give up an annuity, can
get that sum for him. It’s a pity you should be troubled. You seem very
comfortable here, and it’s worth that much to remain so. Twenty pounds, widow,
is a moderate demand. You know where to apply for it; a post will bring it
you.--Twenty pounds!"
She was about to answer
him again, but again he stopped her.
"Don’t say
anything hastily; you might be sorry for it. Think of it a little while. Twenty
pounds--of other people’s money--how easy! Turn it over in your mind. I’m in no
hurry. Night’s coming on, and if I don’t sleep here, I shall not go far. Twenty
pounds! Consider of it, ma’am, for twenty minutes; give each pound a minute;
that’s a fair allowance. I’ll enjoy the air the while, which is very mild and
pleasant in these parts."
With these words he
groped his way to the door, carrying his chair with him. Then seating himself,
under a spreading honeysuckle, and stretching his legs across the threshold so
that no person could pass in or out without his knowledge, he took from his
pocket a pipe, flint, steel and tinder-box, and began to smoke. It was a lovely
evening, of that gentle kind, and at that time of year, when the twilight is
most beautiful. Pausing now and then to let his smoke curl slowly off, and to
sniff the grateful fragrance of the flowers, he sat there at his ease--as
though the cottage were his proper dwelling, and he had held undisputed
possession of it all his life--waiting for the widow’s answer and for Barnaby’s
return.
WHEN Barnaby returned
with the bread, the sight of the pious old pilgrim smoking his pipe and making
himself so thoroughly at home, appeared to surprise even him; the more so, as
that worthy person, instead of putting up the loaf in his wallet as a scarce
and precious article, tossed it carelessly on the table, and producing his
bottle, bade him sit down and drink.
"For I carry some
comfort, you see," he said. "Taste that. Is it good?"
The water stood in
Barnaby’s eyes as he coughed from the strength of the draught, and answered in
the affirmative.
"Drink some
more," said the blind man; "don’t be afraid of it. You don’t taste
anything like that, often, eh?"
"Often!"
cried Barnaby. "Never!"
"Too poor?"
returned the blind man with a sigh. "Ay. That’s bad. Your mother, poor
soul, would be happier if she was richer, Barnaby."
"Why, so I tell
her--the very thing I told her just before you came to-night, when all that
gold was in the sky," said Barnaby, drawing his chair nearer to him, and
looking eagerly in his face. "Tell me. Is there any way of being rich,
that I could find out?"
"Any way! A
hundred ways."
"Ay, ay?" he
returned. "Do you say so? What are they?--Nay, mother, it’s for your sake
I ask; not mine;--for yours, indeed. What are they?"
The blind man turned
his face, on which there was a smile of triumph, to where the widow stood in
great distress; and answered,
"Why, they are not
to be found out by stay-at-homes, my good friend."
"By stay-at-homes!"
cried Barnaby, plucking at his sleeve. "But I am not one. Now, there you
mistake. I am often out before the sun, and travel home when he has gone to
rest. I am away in the woods before the day has reached the shady places, and
am often there when the bright moon is peeping through the boughs, and looking
down upon the other moon that lives in the water. As I walk along, I try to
find, among the grass and moss, some of that small money for which she works so
hard and used to shed so many tears. As I lie asleep in the shade, I dream of
it--dream of digging it up in heaps; and spying it out, hidden under bushes;
and seeing it sparkle, as the dew-drops do, among the leaves. But I never find
it. Tell me where it is. I’d go there, if the journey were a whole year long,
because I know she would be happier when I came home and brought some with me.
Speak again. I’ll listen to you if you talk all night."
The blind man passed
his hand lightly over the poor fellow’s face, and finding that his elbows were planted
on the table, that his chin rested on his two hands, that he leaned eagerly
forward, and that his whole manner expressed the utmost interest and anxiety,
paused for a minute as though he desired the widow to observe this fully, and
then made answer:
"It’s in the
world, bold Barnaby, the merry world; not in solitary places like those you
pass your time in, but in crowds, and where there’s noise and rattle."
"Good! good!"
cried Barnaby, rubbing his hands. "Yes! I love that. Grip loves it too. It
suits us both. That’s brave!"
"--The kind of
places," said the blind man, "that a young fellow likes, and in which
a good son may do more for his mother, and himself to boot, in a month, than he
could here in all his life--that is, if he had a friend, you know, and some one
to advise with."
"You hear this,
mother?" cried Barnaby, turning to her with delight. "Never tell me
we shouldn’t heed it, if it lay shining at out feet. Why do we heed it so much
now? Why do you toil from morning until night?"
"Surely,"
said the blind man, "surely. Have you no answer, widow? Is your
mind," he slowly added, "not made up yet?"
"Let me speak with
you," she answered, "apart."
"Lay your hand
upon my sleeve," said Stagg, arising from the table; "and lead me
where you will. Courage, bold Barnaby. We’ll talk more of this: I’ve a fancy
for you. Wait there till I come back. Now, widow."
She led him out at the
door, and into the little garden, where they stopped.
"You are a fit
agent," she said, in a half breathless manner, "and well represent
the man who sent you here."
"I’ll tell him
that you said so," Stagg retorted. "He has a regard for you, and will
respect me the more (if possible) for your praise. We must have our rights,
widow."
"Rights! Do you
know," she said, "that a word from me--"
"Why do you
stop?" returned the blind man calmly, after a long pause. "Do I know
that a word from you would place my friend in the last position of the dance of
life? Yes, I do. What of that? It will never be spoken, widow."
"You are sure of
that?"
"Quite--so sure,
that I don’t come here to discuss the question. I say we must have our rights,
or we must be bought off. Keep to that point, or let me return to my young
friend, for I have an interest in the lad, and desire to put him in the way of
making his fortune. Bah! you needn’t speak," he added hastily; "I
know what you would say: you have hinted at it once already. Have I no feeling
for you, because I am blind? No, I have not. Why do you expect me, being in
darkness, to be better than men who have their sight--why should you? Is the
hand of Heaven more manifest in my having no eyes, than in your having two? It’s
the cant of you folks to be horrified if a blind man robs, or lies, or steals;
oh yes, it’s far worse in him, who can barely live on the few halfpence that
are thrown to him in streets, than in you, who can see, and work, and are not
dependent on the mercies of the world. A curse on you! You who have five senses
may be wicked at your pleasure; we who have four, and want the most important,
are to live and be moral on our affliction. The true charity and justice of
rich to poor, all the world over!"
He paused a moment when
he had said these words, and caught the sound of money, jingling in her hand.
"Well?" he
cried, quickly resuming his former manner. "That should lead to something.
The point, widow?"
"First answer me
one question," she replied. "You say he is close at hand. Has he left
London?"
"Being close at
hand, widow, it would seem he has," returned the blind man.
"I mean, for good?
You know that."
"Yes, for good.
The truth is, widow, that his making a longer stay there might have had
disagreeable consequences. He has come away for that reason."
"Listen,"
said the widow, telling some money out, upon a bench beside them. "Count."
"Six," said
the blind man, listening attentively. "Any more?"
"They are the
savings," she answered, "of five years. Six guineas."
He put out his hand for
one of the coins; felt it carefully, put it between his teeth, rung it on the
bench; and nodded to her to proceed.
"These have been
scraped together and laid by, lest sickness or death should separate my son and
me. They have been purchased at the price of much hunger, hard labour, and want
of rest. If you can take them--do--on condition that you leave this place upon
the instant, and enter no more into that room, where he sits now, expecting
your return."
"Six
guineas," said the blind man, shaking his head, "though of the
fullest weight that were ever coined, fall very far short of twenty pounds,
widow."
"For such a sum,
as you know, I must write to a distant part of the country. To do that, and
receive an answer, I must have time."
"Two days?"
said Stagg.
"More."
"Four days?"
"A week. Return on
this day week, at the same hour, but not to the house. Wait at the corner of
the lane."
"Of course,"
said the blind man, with a crafty look, "I shall find you there?"
"Where else can I
take refuge? Is it not enough that you have made a beggar of me, and that I
have sacrificed my whole store, so hardly earned, to preserve this home?"
"Humph!" said
the blind man, after some consideration. "Set me with my face towards the
point you speak of, and in the middle of the road. Is this the spot?"
"It is."
"On this day week
at sunset. And think of him within doors.--For the present, good night."
She made him no answer,
nor did he stop for any. He went slowly away, turning his head from time to
time, and stopping to listen, as if he were curious to know whether he was
watched by any one. The shadows of night were closing fast around, and he was
soon lost in the gloom. It was not, however, until she had traversed the lane
from end to end, and made sure that he was gone, that she re- entered the
cottage, and hurriedly barred the door and window.
"Mother!" said
Barnaby. "What is the matter? Where is the blind man?"
"He is gone."
"Gone!" he
cried, starting up. "I must have more talk with him. Which way did he
take?"
"I don’t
know," she answered, folding her arms about him. "You must not go out
to-night. There are ghosts and dreams abroad."
"Ay?" said
Barnaby, in a frightened whisper.
"It is not safe to
stir. We must leave this place to-morrow."
"This place! This
cottage--and the little garden, mother!"
"Yes! To-morrow
morning at sunrise. We must travel to London; lose ourselves in that wide
place--there would be some trace of us in any other town--then travel on again,
and find some new abode."
Little persuasion was
required to reconcile Barnaby to anything that promised change. In another
minute, he was wild with delight; in another, full of grief at the prospect of
parting with his friends the dogs; in another, wild again; then he was fearful
of what she had said to prevent his wandering abroad that night, and full of
terrors and strange questions. His light-heartedness in the end surmounted all
his other feelings, and lying down in his clothes to the end that he might be
ready on the morrow, he soon fell fast asleep before the poor turf fire.
His mother did not
close her eyes, but sat beside him, watching. Every breath of wind sounded in
her ears like that dreaded footstep at the door, or like that hand upon the
latch, and made the calm summer night, a night of horror. At length the welcome
day appeared. When she had made the little preparations which were needful for
their journey, and had prayed upon her knees with many tears, she roused
Barnaby, who jumped up gaily at her summons.
His clothes were few
enough, and to carry Grip was a labour of love. As the sun shed his earliest
beams upon the earth, they closed the door of their deserted home, and turned
away. The sky was blue and bright. The air was fresh, and filled with a
thousand perfumes. Barnaby looked upward, and laughed with all his heart.
But it was a day he
usually devoted to a long ramble, and one of the dogs--the ugliest of them
all--came bounding up, and jumping round him in the fulness of his joy. He had
to bid him go back in a surly tone, and his heart smote him while he did so.
The dog retreated; turned with a half-incredulous, half-imploring look; came a
little back; and stopped.
It was the last appeal
of an old companion and a faithful friend-- cast off. Barnaby could bear no
more, and as he shook his head and waved his playmate home, he burst into
tears.
"Oh mother,
mother, how mournful he will be when he scratches at the door, and finds it
always shut!"
There was such a sense
of home in the thought, that though her own eyes overflowed she would not have
obliterated the recollection of it, either from her own mind or from his, for the
wealth of the whole wide world.
IN the exhaustless
catalogue of Heaven’s mercies to mankind, the power we have of finding some
germs of comfort in the hardest trials must ever occupy the foremost place; not
only because it supports and upholds us when we most require to be sustained,
but because in this source of consolation there is something, we have reason to
believe, of the divine spirit; something of that goodness which detects amidst
our own evil doings, a redeeming quality; something which, even in our fallen
nature, we possess in common with the angels; which had its being in the old
time when they trod the earth, and lingers on it yet, in pity.
How often, on their
journey, did the widow remember with a grateful heart, that out of his
deprivation Barnaby’s cheerfulness and affection sprung! How often did she call
to mind that but for that, he might have been sullen, morose, unkind, far
removed from her--vicious, perhaps, and cruel! How often had she cause for
comfort, in his strength, and hope, and in his simple nature! Those feeble
powers of mind which rendered him so soon forgetful of the past, save in brief
gleams and flashes,--even they were a comfort now. The world to him was full of
happiness; in every tree, and plant, and flower, in every bird, and beast, and
tiny insect whom a breath of summer wind laid low upon the ground, he had
delight. His delight was hers; and where many a wise son would have made her
sorrowful, this poor light-hearted idiot filled her breast with thankfulness
and love.
Their stock of money
was low, but from the hoard she had told into the blind man’s hand, the widow
had withheld one guinea. This, with the few pence she possessed besides, was to
two persons of their frugal habits, a goodly sum in bank. Moreover they had
Grip in company; and when they must otherwise have changed the guinea, it was
but to make him exhibit outside an alehouse door, or in a village street, or in
the grounds or gardens of a mansion of the better sort, and scores who would have
given nothing in charity, were ready to bargain for more amusement from the
talking bird.
One day--for they moved
slowly, and although they had many rides in carts and waggons, were on the road
a week--Barnaby, with Grip upon his shoulder and his mother following, begged
permission at a trim lodge to go up to the great house, at the other end of the
avenue, and show his raven. The man within was inclined to give them
admittance, and was indeed about to do so, when a stout gentleman with a long
whip in his hand, and a flushed face which seemed to indicate that he had had
his morning’s draught, rode up to the gate, and called in a loud voice and with
more oaths than the occasion seemed to warrant to have it opened directly.
"Who hast thou got
here?" said the gentleman angrily, as the man threw the gate wide open,
and pulled off his hat, "who are these? Eh? art a beggar, woman?"
The widow answered with
a curtsey, that they were poor travellers.
"Vagrants,"
said the gentleman, "vagrants and vagabonds. Thee wish to be made
acquainted with the cage, dost thee--the cage, the stocks, and the
whipping-post? Where dost come from?"
She told him in a timid
manner,--for he was very loud, hoarse, and red-faced,--and besought him not to
be angry, for they meant no harm, and would go upon their way that moment.
"Don’t he too sure
of that," replied the gentleman, "we don’t allow vagrants to roam
about this place. I know what thou want’st---stray linen drying on hedges, and
stray poultry, eh? What hast got in that basket, lazy hound?"
"Grip, Grip,
Grip--Grip the clever, Grip the wicked, Grip the knowing--Grip, Grip,
Grip," cried the raven, whom Barnaby had shut up on the approach of this
stern personage. "I’m a devil I’m a devil I’m a devil, Never say die
Hurrah Bow wow wow, Polly put the kettle on we’ll all have tea."
"Take the vermin
out, scoundrel," said the gentleman, "and let me see him."
Barnaby, thus
condescendingly addressed, produced his bird, but not without much fear and
trembling, and set him down upon the ground; which he had no sooner done than
Grip drew fifty corks at least, and then began to dance; at the same time
eyeing the gentleman with surprising insolence of manner, and screwing his head
so much on one side that he appeared desirous of screwing it off upon the spot.
The cork-drawing seemed
to make a greater impression on the gentleman’s mind, than the raven’s power of
speech, and was indeed particularly adapted to his habits and capacity. He
desired to have that done again, but despite his being very peremptory, and
notwithstanding that Barnaby coaxed to the utmost, Grip turned a deaf ear to
the request, and preserved a dead silence.
"Bring him
along," said the gentleman, pointing to the house. But Grip, who had
watched the action, anticipated his master, by hopping on before
them;--constantly flapping his wings, and screaming "cook!"
meanwhile, as a hint perhaps that there was company coming, and a small
collation would be acceptable.
Barnaby and his mother
walked on, on either side of the gentleman on horseback, who surveyed each of
them from time to time in a proud and coarse manner, and occasionally thundered
out some question, the tone of which alarmed Barnaby so much that he could find
no answer, and, as a matter of course, could make him no reply. On one of these
occasions, when the gentleman appeared disposed to exercise his horsewhip, the
widow ventured to inform him in a low voice and with tears in her eyes, that
her son was of weak mind.
"An idiot,
eh?" said the gentleman, looking at Barnaby as he spoke. "And how
long hast thou been an idiot?"
"She knows,"
was Barnaby’s timid answer, pointing to his mother-- "I--always, I
believe."
"From his
birth," said the widow.
"I don’t believe
it," cried the gentleman, "not a bit of it. It’s an excuse not to
work. There’s nothing like flogging to cure that disorder. I’d make a
difference in him in ten minutes, I’ll be bound."
"Heaven has made
none in more than twice ten years, sir," said the widow mildly.
"Then why don’t
you shut him up? we pay enough for county institutions, damn ’em. But thou’d
rather drag him about to excite charity--of course. Ay, I know thee."
Now, this gentleman had
various endearing appellations among his intimate friends. By some he was
called "a country gentleman of the true school," by some "a fine
old country gentleman," by some "a sporting gentleman," by some
"a thorough-bred Englishman," by some "a genuine John
Bull;" but they all agreed in one respect, and that was, that it was a
pity there were not more like him, and that because there were not, the country
was going to rack and ruin every day. He was in the commission of the peace,
and could write his name almost legibly; but his greatest qualifications were,
that he was more severe with poachers, was a better shot, a harder rider, had
better horses, kept better dogs, could eat more solid food, drink more strong
wine, go to bed every night more drunk and get up every morning more sober,
than any man in the county. In knowledge of horseflesh he was almost equal to a
farrier, in stable learning he surpassed his own head groom, and in gluttony
not a pig on his estate was a match for him. He had no seat in Parliament
himself, but he was extremely patriotic, and usually drove his voters up to the
poll with his own hands. He was warmly attached to church and state, and never
appointed to the living in his gift any but a three-bottle man and a first-rate
fox-hunter. He mistrusted the honesty of all poor people who could read and
write, and had a secret jealousy of his own wife (a young lady whom he had
married for what his friends called "the good old English reason,"
that her father’s property adjoined his own) for possessing those
accomplishments in a greater degree than himself. In short, Barnaby being an
idiot, and Grip a creature of mere brute instinct, it would be very hard to say
what this gentleman was.
He rode up to the door
of a handsome house approached by a great flight of steps, where a man was
waiting to take his horse, and led the way into a large hall, which, spacious
as it was, was tainted with the fumes of last night’s stale debauch.
Greatcoats, riding- whips, bridles, top-boots, spurs, and such gear, were
strewn about on all sides, and formed, with some huge stags’ antlers, and a few
portraits of dogs and horses, its principal embellishments.
Throwing himself into a
great chair (in which, by the bye, he often snored away the night, when he had
been, according to his admirers, a finer country gentleman than usual) he bade
the man to tell his mistress to come down: and presently there appeared, a
little flurried, as it seemed, by the unwonted summons, a lady much younger
than himself, who had the appearance of being in delicate health, and not too
happy.
"Here! Thou’st no
delight in following the hounds as an Englishwoman should have," said the
gentleman. "See to this here. That’ll please thee perhaps."
The lady smiled, sat
down at a little distance from him, and glanced at Barnaby with a look of pity.
"He’s an idiot,
the woman says," observed the gentleman, shaking his head; "I don’t
believe it."
"Are you his
mother?" asked the lady.
She answered yes.
"What’s the use of
asking her?" said the gentleman,
thrusting his hands
into his breeches pockets. "She’ll tell thee so, of course. Most likely he’s
hired, at so much a day. There. Get on. Make him do something."
Grip having by this
time recovered his urbanity, condescended, at Barnaby’s solicitation, to repeat
his various phrases of speech, and to go through the whole of his performances
with the utmost success. The corks, and the never say die, afforded the
gentleman so much delight that he demanded the repetition of this part of the
entertainment, until Grip got into his basket, and positively refused to say
another word, good or bad. The lady too, was much amused with him; and the
closing point of his obstinacy so delighted her husband that he burst into a
roar of laughter, and demanded his price.
Barnaby looked as
though he didn’t understand his meaning. Probably he did not.
"His price,"
said the gentleman, rattling the money in his pockets, "what dost want for
him? How much?"
"He’s not to be
sold," replied Barnaby, shutting up the basket in a great hurry, and
throwing the strap over his shoulder. "Mother, come away."
"Thou seest how
much of an idiot he is, book-learner," said the gentleman, looking
scornfully at his wife. "He can make a bargain. What dost want for him,
old woman?"
"He is my son’s
constant companion," said the widow. "He is not to be sold, sir,
indeed."
"Not to be
sold!" cried the gentleman, growing ten times redder, hoarser, and louder
than before. "Not to be sold!"
"Indeed no,"
she answered. "We have never thought of parting with him, sir, I do assure
you."
He was evidently about
to make a very passionate retort, when a few murmured words from his wife
happening to catch his ear, he turned sharply round, and said, "Eh?
What?"
"We can hardly
expect them to sell the bird, against their own desire," she faltered.
"If they prefer to keep him--"
"Prefer to keep
him!" he echoed. "These people, who go tramping about the country
a-pilfering and vagabondising on all hands, prefer to keep a bird, when a
landed proprietor and a justice asks his price! That old woman’s been to
school. I know she has. Don’t tell me no," he roared to the widow, "I
say, yes."
Barnaby’s mother
pleaded guilty to the accusation, and hoped there was no harm in it.
"No harm!"
said the gentleman. "No. No harm. No harm, ye old rebel, not a bit of
harm. If my clerk was here, I’d set ye in the stocks, I would, or lay ye in
jail for prowling up and down, on the look-out for petty larcenies, ye limb of
a gipsy. Here, Simon, put these pilferers out, shove ’em into the road, out
with ’em! Ye don’t want to sell the bird, ye that come here to beg, don’t ye?
If they an’t out in double-quick, set the dogs upon ’em!"
They waited for no
further dismissal, but fled precipitately, leaving the gentleman to storm away
by himself (for the poor lady had already retreated), and making a great many
vain attempts to silence Grip, who, excited by the noise, drew corks enough for
a city feast as they hurried down the avenue, and appeared to congratulate
himself beyond measure on having been the cause of the disturbance. When they
had nearly reached the lodge, another servant, emerging from the shrubbery,
feigned to be very active in ordering them off, but this man put a crown into
the widow’s hand, and whispering that his lady sent it, thrust them gently from
the gate.
This incident only
suggested to the widow’s mind, when they halted at an alehouse some miles
further on, and heard the justice’s character as given by his friends, that
perhaps something more than capacity of stomach and tastes for the kennel and
the stable, were required to form either a perfect country gentleman, a
thoroughbred Englishman, or a genuine John Bull; and that possibly the terms
were sometimes misappropriated, not to say disgraced. She little thought then,
that a circumstance so slight would ever influence their future fortunes; but
time and experience enlightened her in this respect.
"Mother,"
said Barnaby, as they were sitting next day in a waggon which was to take them
within ten miles of the capital, "we’re going to London first, you said.
Shall we see that blind man there?"
She was about to answer
"Heaven forbid!" but checked herself, and told him No, she thought
not; why did he ask?
"He’s a wise
man," said Barnaby, with a thoughtful countenance. "I wish that we
may meet with him again. What was it that he said of crowds? That gold was to
be found where people crowded, and not among the trees and in such quiet
places? He spoke as if he loved it; London is a crowded place; I think we shall
meet him there."
"But why do you
desire to see him, love?" she asked.
"Because,"
said Barnaby, looking wistfully at her, "he talked to me about gold, which
is a rare thing, and say what you will, a thing you would like to have, I know.
And because he came and went away so strangely--just as white-headed old men
come sometimes to my bed’s foot in the night, and say what I can’t remember
when the bright day returns. He told me he’d come back. I wonder why he broke
his word!"
"But you never
thought of being rich or gay, before, dear Barnaby. You have always been
contented."
He laughed and bade her
say that again, then cried, "Ay ay--oh yes," and laughed once more.
Then something passed that caught his fancy, and the topic wandered from his
mind, and was succeeded by another just as fleeting.
But it was plain from
what he had said, and from his returning to the point more than once that day,
and on the next, that the blind man’s visit, and indeed his words, had taken
strong possession of his mind. Whether the idea of wealth had occurred to him
for the first time on looking at the golden clouds that evening--and images
were often presented to his thoughts by outward objects quite as remote and
distant; or whether their poor and humble way of life had suggested it, by
contrast, long ago; or whether the accident (as he would deem it) of the blind
man’s pursuing the current of his own remarks, had done so at the moment; or he
had been impressed by the mere circumstance of the man being blind, and,
therefore, unlike any one with whom he had talked before; it was impossible to
tell. She tried every means to discover, but in vain; and the probability is
that Barnaby himself was equally in the dark.
It filled her with
uneasiness to find him harping on this string, but all that she could do, was
to lead him quickly to some other subject, and to dismiss it from his brain. To
caution him against their visitor, to show any fear or suspicion in reference
to him, would only be, she feared, to increase that interest with which Barnaby
regarded him, and to strengthen his desire to meet him once again. She hoped,
by plunging into the crowd, to rid herself of her terrible pursuer, and then,
by journeying to a distance and observing increased caution, if that were
possible, to live again unknown, in secrecy and peace.
They reached, in course
of time, their halting-place within ten miles of London, and lay there for the
night, after bargaining to be carried on for a trifle next day, in a light van
which was returning empty, and was to start at five o’clock in the morning. The
driver was punctual, the road good--save for the dust, the weather being very hot
and dry--and at seven in the forenoon of Friday the second of June, one
thousand seven hundred and eighty, they alighted at the foot of Westminster
Bridge, bade their conductor farewell, and stood alone, together, on the
scorching pavement. For the freshness which night sheds upon such busy
thoroughfares had already departed, and the sun was shining with uncommon
lustre.
UNCERTAIN where to go
next, and bewildered by the crowd of people who were already astir, they sat
down in one of the recesses on the bridge, to rest. They soon became aware that
the stream of life was all pouring one way, and that a vast throng of persons
were crossing the river from the Middlesex to the Surrey shore, in unusual
haste and evident excitement. They were, for the most part, in knots of two or
three, or sometimes half-a-dozen; they spoke little together--many of them were
quite silent; and hurried on as if they had one absorbing object in view, which
was common to them all.
They were surprised to
see that nearly every man in this great concourse, which still came pouring
past, without slackening in the least, wore in his hat a blue cockade; and that
the chance passengers who were not so decorated, appeared timidly anxious to
escape observation or attack, and gave them the wall as if they would
conciliate them. This, however, was natural enough, considering their
inferiority in point of numbers; for the proportion of those who wore blue
cockades, to those who were dressed as usual, was at least forty or fifty to
one. There was no quarrelling, however: the blue cockades went swarming on,
passing each other when they could, and making all the speed that was possible
in such a multitude; and exchanged nothing more than looks, and very often not
even those, with such of the passers-by as were not of their number.
At first, the current
of people had been confined to the two pathways, and but a few more eager
stragglers kept the road. But after half an hour or so, the passage was
completely blocked up by the great press, which, being now closely wedged
together, and impeded by the carts and coaches it encountered, moved but
slowly, and was sometimes at a stand for five or ten minutes together.
After the lapse of
nearly two hours, the numbers began to diminish visibly, and gradually
dwindling away, by little and little, left the bridge quite clear, save that,
now and then, some hot and dusty man, with the cockade in his hat, and his coat
thrown over his shoulder, went panting by, fearful of being too late, or
stopped to ask which way his friends had taken, and being directed, hastened on
again like one refreshed. In this comparative solitude, which seemed quite
strange and novel after the late crowd, the widow had for the first time an
opportunity of inquiring of an old man who came and sat beside them, what was
the meaning of that great assemblage.
"Why, where have
you come from," he returned, "that you haven’t heard of Lord George
Gordon’s great association? This is the day that he presents the petition
against the Catholics, God bless him!"
"What have all
these men to do with that?" she said.
"What have they to
do with it!" the old man replied. "Why, how you talk! Don’t you know
his lordship has declared he won’t present it to the house at all, unless it is
attended to the door by forty thousand good and true men at least? There’s a
crowd for you!"
"A crowd
indeed!" said Barnaby. "Do you hear that, mother!"
"And they’re
mustering yonder, as I am told," resumed the old man, "nigh upon a
hundred thousand strong. Ah! Let Lord George alone. He knows his power. There’ll
be a good many faces inside them three windows over there," and he pointed
to where the House of Commons overlooked the river, "that’ll turn pale
when good Lord George gets up this afternoon, and with reason too! Ay, ay. Let
his lordship alone. Let him alone. He knows!" And so, with much mumbling
and chuckling and shaking of his forefinger, he rose, with the assistance of
his stick, and tottered off.
"Mother!"
said Barnaby, "that’s a brave crowd he talks of. Come!"
"Not to join
it!" cried his mother.
"Yes, yes,"
he answered, plucking at her sleeve. "Why not? Come!"
"You don’t
know," she urged, "what mischief they may do, where they may lead
you, what their meaning is. Dear Barnaby, for my sake--"
"For your
sake!" he cried, patting her hand. "Well! It is for your sake,
mother. You remember what the blind man said, about the gold. Here’s a brave
crowd! Come! Or wait till I come back--yes, yes, wait here."
She tried with all the
earnestness her fears engendered, to turn him from his purpose, but in vain. He
was stooping down to buckle on his shoe, when a hackney-coach passed them
rather quickly, and a voice inside called to the driver to stop.
"Young man,"
said a voice within.
"Who’s that?"
cried Barnaby, looking up.
"Do you wear this
ornament?" returned the stranger, holding out a blue cockade.
"In Heaven’s name,
no. Pray do not give it him!" exclaimed the widow.
"Speak for
yourself, woman," said the man within the coach, coldly. "Leave the
young man to his choice; he’s old enough to make it, and to snap your
apron-strings. He knows, without your telling, whether he wears the sign of a
loyal Englishman or not."
Barnaby, trembling with
impatience, cried, "Yes! yes, yes, I do," as he had cried a dozen times
already. The man threw him a cockade, and crying, "Make haste to St George’s
Fields," ordered the coachman to drive on fast; and left them.
With hands that
trembled with his eagerness to fix the bauble in his hat, Barnaby was adjusting
it as he best could, and hurriedly replying to the tears and entreaties of his
mother, when two gentlemen passed on the opposite side of the way. Observing
them, and seeing how Barnaby was occupied, they stopped, whispered together for
an instant, turned back, and came over to them.
"Why are you
sitting here?" said one of them, who was dressed in a plain suit of black,
wore long lank hair, and carried a great cane. "Why have you not gone with
the rest?"
"I am going,
sir," replied Barnaby, finishing his task, and putting his hat on with an
air of pride. "I shall be there directly."
"Say ’my lord,’
young man, when his lordship does you the honour of speaking to you," said
the second gentleman mildly. "If you don’t know Lord George Gordon when
you see him, it’s high time you should."
"Nay,
Gashford," said Lord George, as Barnaby pulled off his hat again and made
him a low bow, "it’s no great matter on a day like this, which every
Englishman will remember with delight and pride. Put on your hat, friend, and
follow us, for you lag behind and are late. It’s past ten now. Didn’t you know
that the hour for assembling was ten o’clock?"
Barnaby shook his head
and looked vacantly from one to the other.
"You might have
known it, friend," said Gashford, "it was perfectly understood. How
came you to be so ill informed?"
"He cannot tell
you, sir," the widow interposed. "It’s of no use to ask him. We are
but this morning come from a long distance in the country, and know nothing of
these matters."
"The cause has
taken a deep root, and has spread its branches far and wide," said Lord
George to his secretary. "This is a pleasant hearing. I thank Heaven for
it!"
"Amen!" cried
Gashford with a solemn face.
"You do not
understand me, my lord," said the widow. "Pardon me, but you cruelly mistake
my meaning. We know nothing of these matters. We have no desire or right to
join
in what you are about
to do. This is my son, my poor afflicted son, dearer to me than my own life. In
mercy’s name, my lord, go your way alone, and do not tempt him into
danger!"
"My good
woman," said Gashford, "how can you!--Dear me!--What do you mean by
tempting, and by danger? Do you think his lordship is a roaring lion, going
about and seeking whom he may devour? God bless me!"
"No, no, my lord,
forgive me," implored the widow, laying both her hands upon his breast,
and scarcely knowing what she did, or said, in the earnestness of her
supplication, "but there are reasons why you should hear my earnest,
mother’s prayer, and leave my son with me. Oh do! He is not in his right
senses, he is not, indeed!"
"It is a bad sign
of the wickedness of these times," said Lord George, evading her touch,
and colouring deeply, "that those who cling to the truth and support the
right cause, are set down as mad. Have you the heart to say this of your own
son, unnatural mother!"
"I am astonished
at you!" said Gashford, with a kind of meek severity. "This is a very
sad picture of female depravity."
"He has surely no
appearance," said Lord George, glancing at Barnaby, and whispering in his
secretary’s ear, "of being deranged? And even if he had, we must not
construe any trifling peculiarity into madness. Which of us"--and here he
turned red again--"would be safe, if that were made the law!"
"Not one,"
replied the secretary; "in that case, the greater the zeal, the truth, and
talent; the more direct the call from above; the clearer would be the madness.
With regard to this young man, my lord," he added, with a lip that
slightly curled as he looked at Barnaby, who stood twirling his hat, and
stealthily beckoning them to come away, "he is as sensible and
self-possessed as any one I ever saw."
"And you desire to
make one of this great body?" said Lord George, addressing him; "and
intended to make one, did you?"
"Yes--yes,"
said Barnaby, with sparkling eyes. "To be sure I did! I told her so
myself."
"I see,"
replied Lord George, with a reproachful glance at the unhappy mother. "I
thought so. Follow me and this gentleman, and you shall have your wish."
Barnaby kissed his
mother tenderly on the cheek, and bidding her be of good cheer, for their
fortunes were both made now, did as he was desired. She, poor woman, followed
too--with how much fear and grief it would be hard to tell.
They passed quickly
through the Bridge Road, where the shops were all shut up (for the passage of
the great crowd and the expectation of their return had alarmed the tradesmen
for their goods and windows), and where, in the upper stories, all the
inhabitants were congregated, looking down into the street below, with faces
variously expressive of alarm, of interest, expectancy, and indignation. Some
of these applauded, and some hissed; but regardless of these interruptions--for
the noise of a vast congregation of people at a little distance, sounded in his
ears like the roaring of the sea--Lord George Gordon quickened his pace, and
presently arrived before St George’s Fields.
They were really fields
at that time, and of considerable extent. Here an immense multitude was
collected, bearing flags of various kinds and sizes, but all of the same
colour--blue, like the cockades--some sections marching to and fro in military
array, and others drawn up in circles, squares, and lines. A large portion,
both of the bodies which paraded the ground, and of those which remained
stationary, were occupied in singing hymns or psalms. With whomsoever this
originated, it was well done; for the sound of so many thousand voices in the
air must have stirred the heart of any man within him, and could not fail to
have a wonderful effect upon enthusiasts, however mistaken.
Scouts had been posted
in advance of the great body, to give notice of their leader’s coming. These
falling back, the word was quickly passed through the whole host, and for a
short interval there ensued a profound and deathlike silence, during which the
mass was so still and quiet, that the fluttering of a banner caught the eye,
and became a circumstance of note. Then they burst into a tremendous shout,
into another, and another; and the air seemed rent and shaken, as if by the
discharge of cannon.
"Gashford!"
cried Lord George, pressing his secretary’s arm tight within his own, and
speaking with as much emotion in his voice, as in his altered face, "I arn
called indeed, now. I feel and know it. I am the leader of a host. If they
summoned me at this moment with one voice to lead them on to death, I’d do
it--Yes, and fall first myself!"
"It is a proud
sight," said the secretary. "It is a noble day for England, and for
the great cause throughout the world. Such homage, my lord, as I, an humble but
devoted man, can render--"
"What are you
doing?" cried his master, catching him by both hands; for he had made a
show of kneeling at his feet. "Do not unfit me, dear Gashford, for the
solemn duty of this glorious day--" the tears stood in the eyes of the
poor gentleman as he said the words.--"Let us go among them; we have to
find a place in some division for this new recruit--give me your hand."
Gashford slid his cold
insidious palm into his master’s grasp, and so, hand in hand, and followed
still by Barnaby and by his mother too, they mingled with the concourse.
They had by this time
taken to their singing again, and as their leader passed between their ranks,
they raised their voices to their utmost. Many of those who were banded
together to support the religion of their country, even unto death, had never
heard a hymn or psalm in all their lives. But these fellows having for the most
part strong lungs, and being naturally fond of singing, chanted any ribaldry or
nonsense that occurred to them, feeling pretty certain that it would not be
detected in the general chorus, and not caring much if it were. Many of these
voluntaries were sung under the very nose of Lord George Gordon, who, quite
unconscious of their burden, passed on with his usual stiff and solemn
deportment, very much edified and delighted by the pious conduct of his
followers.
So they went on and on,
up this line, down that, round the exterior of this circle, and on every side
of that hollow square; and still there were lines, and squares, and circles out
of number to review. The day being now intensely hot, and the sun striking down
his fiercest rays upon the field, those who carried heavy banners began to grow
faint and weary; most of the number assembled were fain to pull off their
neckcloths, and throw their coats and waistcoats open; and some, towards the
centre, quite overpowered by the excessive heat, which was of course rendered
more unendurable by the multitude around them, lay down upon the grass, and
offered all they had about them for a drink of water. Still, no man left the
ground, not even of those who were so distressed; still Lord George, streaming
from every pore, went on with Gashford; and still Barnaby and his mother
followed close behind them.
They had arrived at the
top of a long line of some eight hundred men in single file, and Lord George
had turned his head to look back, when a loud cry of recognition--in that
peculiar and half- stifled tone which a voice has, when it is raised in the
open air and in the midst of a great concourse of persons--was heard, and a man
stepped with a shout of laughter from the rank, and smote Barnaby on the
shoulders with his heavy hand.
"How now!" he
cried. "Barnaby Rudge! Why, where have you been hiding for these hundred
years?"
Barnaby had been
thinking within himself that the smell of the trodden grass brought back his
old days at cricket, when he was a young boy and played on Chigwell Green.
Confused by this sudden and boisterous address, he stared in a bewildered
manner at the man, and could scarcely say "What! Hugh!"
"Hugh!"
echoed the other; "ay, Hugh--Maypole Hugh! You remember my dog? He’s alive
now, and will know you, I warrant. What, you wear the colour, do you? Well
done! Ha ha ha!"
"You know this
young man, I see," said Lord George.
"Know him, my
lord! as well as I know my own right hand. My captain knows him. We all know
him."
"Will you take him
into your division?"
"It hasn’t in it a
better, nor a nimbler, nor a more active man, than Barnaby Rudge," said
Hugh. "Show me the man who says it has! Fall in, Barnaby. He shall march,
my lord, between me and Dennis; and he shall carry," he added, taking a
flag from the hand of a tired man who tendered it, "the gayest silken
streamer in this valiant army."
"In the name of
God, no!" shrieked the widow, darting forward. "Barnaby--my
lord--see--he’ll come back--Barnaby--Barnaby!"
"Women in the
field!" cried Hugh, stepping between them, and holding her off.
"Holloa! My captain there!"
"What’s the matter
here?" cried Simon Tappertit, bustling up in a great heat. "Do you
call this order?"
"Nothing like it,
captain," answered Hugh, still holding her back with his outstretched
hand. "It’s against all orders. Ladies are carrying off our gallant
soldiers from their duty. The word of command, captain! They’re filing off the
ground. Quick!"
"Close!"
cried Simon, with the whole power of his lungs. "Form! March!"
She was thrown to the
ground; the whole field was in motion; Barnaby was whirled away into the heart
of a dense mass of men, and she saw him no more.
THE mob had been
divided from its first assemblage into four divisions; the London, the
Westminster, the Southwark, and the Scotch. Each of these divisions being
subdivided into various bodies, and these bodies being drawn up in various
forms and figures, the general arrangement was, except to the few chiefs and
leaders, as unintelligible as the plan of a great battle to the meanest soldier
in the field. It was not without its method, however; for, in a very short
space of time after being put in motion, the crowd had resolved itself into
three great parties, and were prepared, as had been arranged, to cross the
river by different bridges, and make for the House of Commons in separate
detachments.
At the head of that
division which had Westminster Bridge for its approach to the scene of action,
Lord George Gordon took his post; with Gashford at his right hand, and sundry
ruffians, of most unpromising appearance, forming a kind of staff about him. The
conduct of a second party, whose route lay by Blackfriars, was entrusted to a
committee of management, including perhaps a dozen men: while the third, which
was to go by London Bridge, and through the main streets, in order that their
numbers and their serious intentions might be the better known and appreciated
by the citizens, were led by Simon Tappertit (assisted by a few subalterns,
selected from the Brotherhood of United Bulldogs), Dennis the hangman, Hugh,
and some others.
The word of command
being given, each of these great bodies took the road assigned to it, and
departed on its way, in perfect order and profound silence. That which went
through the City greatly exceeded the others in number, and was of such
prodigious extent that when the rear began to move, the front was nearly four
miles in advance, notwithstanding that the men marched three abreast and
followed very close upon each other.
At the head of this
party, in the place where Hugh, in the madness of his humour, had stationed
him, and walking between that dangerous companion and the hangman, went
Barnaby; as many a man among the thousands who looked on that day afterwards
remembered well. Forgetful of all other things in the ecstasy of the moment,
his face flushed and his eyes sparkling with delight, heedless of the weight of
the great banner he carried, and mindful only of its flashing in the sun and
rustling in the summer breeze, on he went, proud, happy, elated past all
telling:--the only light-hearted, undesigning creature, in the whole assembly.
"What do you think
of this?" asked Hugh, as they passed through the crowded streets, and
looked up at the windows which were thronged with spectators. "They have
all turned out to see our flags and streamers? Eh, Barnaby? Why, Barnaby’s the
greatest man of all the pack! His flag’s the largest of the lot, the brightest
too. There’s nothing in the show, like Barnaby. All eyes are turned on him. Ha
ha ha!"
"Don’t make that
din, brother," growled the hangman, glancing with no very approving eyes at
Barnaby as he spoke: "I hope he don’t think there’s nothing to be done,
but carrying that there piece of blue rag, like a boy at a breaking up. You’re
ready for action I hope, eh? You, I mean," he added, nudging Barnaby
roughly with his elbow. "What are you staring at? Why don’t you
speak?"
Barnaby had been gazing
at his flag, and looked vacantly from his questioner to Hugh.
"He don’t
understand your way," said the latter. "Here, I’ll explain it to him.
Barnaby old boy, attend to me."
"I’ll
attend," said Barnaby, looking anxiously round; "but I wish I could
see her somewhere."
"See who?"
demanded Dennis in a gruff tone. "You an’t in love I hope, brother? That
an’t the sort of thing for us, you know. We mustn’t have no love here."
"She would be
proud indeed to see me now, eh Hugh?" said Barnaby. "Wouldn’t it make
her glad to see me at the head of this large show? She’d cry for joy, I know
she would. Where can she be? She never sees me at my best, and what do I care
to be gay and fine if she’s not by?"
"Why, what palaver’s
this?" asked Mr. Dennis with supreme disdain. "We an’t got no
sentimental members among us, I hope."
"Don’t be uneasy,
brother," cried Hugh, "he’s only talking of his mother."
"Of his
what?" said Mr. Dennis with a strong oath.
"His mother."
"And have I
combined myself with this here section, and turned out on this here memorable
day, to hear men talk about their mothers!" growled Mr. Dennis with
extreme disgust. "The notion of a man’s sweetheart’s bad enough, but a man’s
mother!"--and here his disgust was so extreme that he spat upon the
ground, and could say no more.
"Barnaby’s
right," cried Hugh with a grin, "and I say it. Lookee, bold lad. If
she’s not here to see, it’s because I’ve provided for her, and sent
half-a-dozen gentlemen, every one of ’em with a blue flag (but not half as fine
as yours), to take her, in state, to a grand house all hung round with gold and
silver banners, and everything else you please, where she’ll wait till you
come, and want for nothing."
"Ay!" said
Barnaby, his face beaming with delight: "have you indeed? That’s a good
hearing. That’s fine! Kind Hugh!"
"But nothing to
what will come, bless you," retorted Hugh, with a wink at Dennis, who
regarded his new companion in arms with great astonishment.
"No, indeed?"
cried Barnaby.
"Nothing at
all," said Hugh. "Money, cocked hats and feathers, red coats and gold
lace; all the fine things there are, ever were, or will be; will belong to us
if we are true to that noble gentleman-- the best man in the world--carry our
flags for a few days, and keep ’em safe. That’s all we’ve got to do."
"Is that
all?" cried Barnaby with glistening eyes, as he clutched his pole the
tighter; "I warrant you I keep this one safe, then. You have put it in
good hands. You know me, Hugh. Nobody shall wrest this flag away."
"Well said!"
cried Hugh. "Ha ha! Nobly said! That’s the old stout Barnaby, that I have
climbed and leaped with, many and many a day--I knew I was not mistaken in
Barnaby.--Don’t you see, man," he added in a whisper, as he slipped to the
other side of Dennis, "that the lad’s a natural, and can be got to do
anything, if you take him the right way? Letting alone the fun he is, he’s
worth a dozen men, in earnest, as you’d find if you tried a fall with him.
Leave him to me. You shall soon see whether he’s of use or not."
Mr. Dennis received
these explanatory remarks with many nods and winks, and softened his behaviour
towards Barnaby from that moment. Hugh, laying his finger on his nose, stepped
back into his former place, and they proceeded in silence.
It was between two and
three o’clock in the afternoon when the three great parties met at Westminster,
and, uniting into one huge mass, raised a tremendous shout. This was not only
done in token of their presence, but as a signal to those on whom the task
devolved, that it was time to take possession of the lobbies of both Houses,
and of the various avenues of approach, and of the gallery stairs. To the
last-named place, Hugh and Dennis, still with their pupil between them, rushed
straightway; Barnaby having given his flag into the hands of one of their own
party, who kept them at the outer door. Their followers pressing on behind,
they were borne as on a great wave to the very doors of the gallery, whence it
was impossible to retreat, even if they had been so inclined, by reason of the
throng which choked up the passages. It is a familiar expression in describing
a great crowd, that a person might have walked upon the people’s heads. In this
case it was actually done; for a boy who had by some means got among the
concourse, and was in imminent danger of suffocation, climbed to the shoulders
of a man beside him and walked upon the people’s hats and heads into the open
street; traversing in his passage the whole length of two staircases and a long
gallery. Nor was the swarm without less dense; for a basket which had been
tossed into the crowd, was jerked from head to head, and shoulder to shoulder,
and went spinning and whirling on above them, until it was lost to view, without
ever once falling in among them or coming near the ground.
Through this vast
throng, sprinkled doubtless here and there with honest zealots, but composed
for the most part of the very scum and refuse of London, whose growth was
fostered by bad criminal laws, bad prison regulations, and the worst
conceivable police, such of the members of both Houses of Parliament as had not
taken the precaution to be already at their posts, were compelled to fight and
force their way. Their carriages were stopped and broken; the wheels wrenched
off; the glasses shivered to atoms; the panels beaten in; drivers, footmen, and
masters, pulled from their seats and rolled in the mud. Lords, commoners, and
reverend bishops, with little distinction of person or party, were kicked and
pinched and hustled; passed from hand to hand through various stages of
ill-usage; and sent to their fellow-senators at last with their clothes hanging
in ribands about them, their bagwigs torn off, themselves speechless and
breathless, and their persons covered with the powder which had been cuffed and
beaten out of their hair. One lord was so long in the hands of the populace,
that the Peers as a body resolved to sally forth and rescue him, and were in
the act of doing so, when he happily appeared among them covered with dirt and
bruises, and hardly to be recognised by those who knew him best. The noise and
uproar were on the increase every moment. The air was filled with execrations,
hoots, and howlings. The mob raged and roared, like a mad monster as it was,
unceasingly, and each new outrage served to swell its fury.
Within doors, matters
were even yet more threatening. Lord George-- preceded by a man who carried the
immense petition on a porter’s knot through the lobby to the door of the House
of Commons, where it was received by two officers of the house who rolled it up
to the table ready for presentation--had taken his seat at an early hour,
before the Speaker went to prayers. His followers pouring in at the same time,
the lobby and all the avenues were immediately filled, as we have seen. Thus
the members were not only attacked in their passage through the streets, but
were set upon within the very walls of Parliament; while the tumult, both
within and without, was so great, that those who attempted to speak could
scarcely hear their own voices: far less, consult upon the course it would be
wise to take in such extremity, or animate each other to dignified and firm
resistance. So sure as any member, just arrived, with dress disordered and
dishevelled hair, came struggling through the crowd in the lobby, it yelled and
screamed in triumph; and when the door of the House, partially and cautiously
opened by those within for his admission, gave them a momentary glimpse of the
interior, they grew more wild and savage, like beasts at the sight of prey, and
made a rush against the portal which strained its locks and bolts in their
staples, and shook the very beams.
The strangers’ gallery,
which was immediately above the door of the House, had been ordered to be
closed on the first rumour of disturbance, and was empty; save that now and
then Lord George took his seat there, for the convenience of coming to the head
of the stairs which led to it, and repeating to the people what had passed
within. It was on these stairs that Barnaby, Hugh, and Dennis were posted.
There were two flights, short, steep, and narrow, running parallel to each
other, and leading to two little doors communicating with a low passage which
opened on the gallery. Between them was a kind of well, or unglazed skylight,
for the admission of light and air into the lobby, which might be some eighteen
or twenty feet below.
Upon one of these
little staircases--not that at the head of which Lord George appeared from time
to time, but the other--Gashford stood with his elbow on the bannister, and his
cheek resting on his hand, with his usual crafty aspect. Whenever he varied
this attitude in the slightest degree--so much as by the gentlest motion of his
arm--the uproar was certain to increase, not merely there, but in the lobby
below; from which place no doubt, some man who acted as fugleman to the rest,
was constantly looking up and watching him.
"Order!"
cried Hugh, in a voice which made itself heard even above the roar and tumult,
as Lord George appeared at the top of the staircase. "News! News from my
lord!"
The noise continued,
notwithstanding his appearance, until Gashford looked round. There was silence
immediately--even among the people in the passages without, and on the other
staircases, who could neither see nor hear, but to whom, notwithstanding, the
signal was conveyed with marvellous rapidity.
"Gentlemen,"
said Lord George, who was very pale and agitated, we must be firm. They talk of
delays, but we must have no delays. They talk of taking your petition into
consideration next Tuesday, but we must have it considered now. Present
appearances look bad for our success, but we must succeed and will!"
"We must succeed
and will!" echoed the crowd. And so among their shouts and cheers and other
cries, he bowed to them and retired, and presently came back again. There was
another gesture from Gashford, and a dead silence directly.
"I am
afraid," he said, this time, "that we have little reason, gentlemen,
to hope for any redress from the proceedings of Parliament. But we must redress
our own grievances, we must meet again, we must put our trust in Providence,
and it will bless our endeavours."
This speech, being a
little more temperate than the last, was not so favourably received. When the
noise and exasperation were at their height, he came back once more, and told
them that the alarm had gone forth for many miles round; that when the King
heard of their assembling together in that great body, he had no doubt, His
Majesty would send down private orders to have their wishes complied with;
and--with the manner of his speech as childish, irresolute, and uncertain as
his matter-- was proceeding in this strain, when two gentlemen suddenly
appeared at the door where he stood, and pressing past him and coming a step or
two lower down upon the stairs, confronted the people.
The boldness of this
action quite took them by surprise. They were not the less disconcerted, when
one of the gentlemen, turning to Lord George, spoke thus--in a loud voice that
they might hear him well, but quite coolly and collectedly:
"You may tell
these people, if you please, my lord, that I am General Conway of whom they
have heard; and that I oppose this petition, and all their proceedings, and
yours. I am a soldier, you may tell them, and I will protect the freedom of
this place with my sword. You see, my lord, that the members of this House are
all in arms to-day; you know that the entrance to it is a narrow one; you
cannot be ignorant that there are men within these walls who are determined to
defend that pass to the last, and before whom many lives must fall if your
adherents persevere. Have a care what you do."
"And my Lord
George," said the other gentleman, addressing him in like manner, "I
desire them to hear this, from me--Colonel Gordon-- your near relation. If a
man among this crowd, whose uproar strikes us deaf, crosses the threshold of
the House of Commons, I swear to run my sword that moment--not into his, but
into your body!"
With that, they stepped
back again, keeping their faces towards the crowd; took each an arm of the
misguided nobleman; drew him into the passage, and shut the door; which they
directly locked and fastened on the inside.
This was so quickly
done, and the demeanour of both gentlemen--who were not young men either--was
so gallant and resolute, that the crowd faltered and stared at each other with
irresolute and timid looks. Many tried to turn towards the door; some of the
faintest- hearted cried they had best go back, and called to those behind to
give way; and the panic and confusion were increasing rapidly, when Gashford
whispered Hugh.
"What now!"
Hugh roared aloud, turning towards them. "Why go back? Where can you do
better than here, boys! One good rush against these doors and one below at the
same time, will do the business. Rush on, then! As to the door below, let those
stand back who are afraid. Let those who are not afraid, try who shall be the
first to pass it. Here goes! Look out down there!"
Without the delay of an
instant, he threw himself headlong over the bannisters into the lobby below. He
had hardly touched the ground when Barnaby was at his side. The chaplain’s
assistant, and some members who were imploring the people to retire,
immediately withdrew; and then, with a great shout, both crowds threw
themselves against the doors pell-mell, and besieged the House in earnest.
At that moment, when a
second onset must have brought them into collision with those who stood on the
defensive within, in which case great loss of life and bloodshed would
inevitably have ensued,--the hindmost portion of the crowd gave way, and the
rumour spread from mouth to mouth that a messenger had been despatched by water
for the military, who were forming in the street. Fearful of sustaining a
charge in the narrow passages in which they were so closely wedged together,
the throng poured out as impetuously as they had flocked in. As the whole
stream turned at once, Barnaby and Hugh went with it: and so, fighting and
struggling and trampling on fallen men and being trampled on in turn
themselves, they and the whole mass floated by degrees into the open street,
where a large detachment of the Guards, both horse and foot, came hurrying up;
clearing the ground before them so rapidly that the people seemed to melt away
as they advanced.
The word of command to
halt being given, the soldiers formed across the street; the rioters,
breathless and exhausted with their late exertions, formed likewise, though in
a very irregular and disorderly manner. The commanding officer rode hastily
into the open space between the two bodies, accompanied by a magistrate and an
officer of the House of Commons, for whose accommodation a couple of troopers
had hastily dismounted. The Riot Act was read, but not a man stirred.
In the first rank of
the insurgents, Barnaby and Hugh stood side by side. Somebody had thrust into
Barnaby’s hands when he came out into the street, his precious flag; which,
being now rolled up and tied round the pole, looked like a giant quarter-staff
as he grasped it firmly and stood upon his guard. If ever man believed with his
whole heart and soul that he was engaged in a just cause, and that he was bound
to stand by his leader to the last, poor Barnaby believed it of himself and
Lord George Gordon.
After an ineffectual
attempt to make himself heard, the magistrate gave the word and the Horse
Guards came riding in among the crowd. But, even then, he galloped here and
there, exhorting the people to disperse; and, although heavy stones were thrown
at the men, and some were desperately cut and bruised, they had no orders but
to make prisoners of such of the rioters as were the most active, and to drive
the people back with the flat of their sabres. As the horses came in among
them, the throng gave way at many points, and the Guards, following up their
advantage, were rapidly clearing the ground, when two or three of the foremost,
who were in a manner cut off from the rest by the people closing round them,
made straight towards Barnaby and Hugh, who had no doubt been pointed out as
the two men who dropped into the lobby: laying about them now with some effect,
and inflicting on the more turbulent of their opponents, a few slight flesh
wounds, under the influence of which a man dropped, here and there, into the
arms of his fellows, amid much groaning and confusion.
At the sight of gashed
and bloody faces, seen for a moment in the crowd, then hidden by the press
around them, Barnaby turned pale and sick. But he stood his ground, and
grasping his pole more firmly yet, kept his eye fixed upon the nearest
soldier--nodding his head meanwhile, as Hugh, with a scowling visage, whispered
in his ear.
The soldier came
spurring on, making his horse rear as the people pressed about him, cutting at
the hands of those who would have grasped his rein and forced his charger back,
and waving to his comrades to follow--and still Barnaby, without retreating an
inch, waited for his coming. Some called to him to fly, and some were in the
very act of closing round him, to prevent his being taken, when the pole swept
into the air above the people’s heads, and the man’s saddle was empty in an
instant.
Then, he and Hugh
turned and fled, the crowd opening to let them pass, and closing up again so
quickly that there was no clue to the course they had taken. Panting for
breath, hot, dusty, and exhausted with fatigue, they reached the riverside in
safety, and getting into a boat with all despatch were soon out of any
immediate danger.
As they glided down the
river, they plainly heard the people cheering; and supposing they might have
forced the soldiers to retreat, lay upon their oars for a few minutes,
uncertain whether to return or not. But the crowd passing along Westminster
Bridge, soon assured them that the populace were dispersing; and Hugh rightly
guessed from this, that they had cheered the magistrate for offering to dismiss
the military on condition of their immediate departure to their several homes,
and that he and Barnaby were better where they were. He advised, therefore,
that they should proceed to Blackfriars, and, going ashore at the bridge, make
the best of their way to The Boot; where there was not only good entertainment
and safe lodging, but where they would certainly be joined by many of their
late companions. Barnaby assenting, they decided on this course of action, and
pulled for Blackfriars accordingly.
They landed at a
critical time, and fortunately for themselves at the right moment. For, coming
into Fleet Street, they found it in an unusual stir; and inquiring the cause, were
told that a body of Horse Guards had just galloped past, and that they were
escorting some rioters whom they had made prisoners, to Newgate for safety. Not
at all ill-pleased to have so narrowly escaped the cavalcade, they lost no more
time in asking questions, but hurried to The Boot with as much speed as Hugh
considered it prudent to make, without appearing singular or attracting an
inconvenient share of public notice.
THEY were among the
first to reach the tavern, but they had not been there many minutes, when
several groups of men who had formed part of the crowd, came straggling in.
Among them were Simon Tappertit and Mr. Dennis; both of whom, but especially
the latter, greeted Barnaby with the utmost warmth, and paid him many compliments
on the prowess he had shown.
"Which," said
Dennis, with an oath, as he rested his bludgeon in a corner with his hat upon
it, and took his seat at the same table with them, "it does me good to
think of. There was a opportunity! But it led to nothing. For my part, I don’t
know what would. There’s no spirit among the people in these here times. Bring
something to eat and drink here. I’m disgusted with humanity."
"On what
account?" asked Mr. Tappertit, who had been quenching his fiery face in a
half-gallon can. "Don’t you consider this a good beginning, mister?"
"Give me security
that it an’t a ending," rejoined the hangman. "When that soldier went
down, we might have made London ours; but no;--we stand, and gape, and look
on--the justice (I wish he had had a bullet in each eye, as he would have had,
if we’d gone to work my way) says, ’My lads, if you’ll give me your word to
disperse, I’ll order off the military,’ our people sets up a hurrah, throws up
the game with the winning cards in their hands, and skulks away like a pack of
tame curs as they are. Ah," said the hangman, in a tone of deep disgust,
"it makes me blush for my feller creeturs. I wish I had been born a ox, I
do!"
"You’d have been
quite as agreeable a character if you had been, I think," returned Simon
Tappertit, going out in a lofty manner.
"Don’t be too sure
of that," rejoined the hangman, calling after him; "if I was a horned
animal at the present moment, with the smallest grain of sense, I’d toss every
man in this company, excepting them two," meaning Hugh and Barnaby,
"for his manner of conducting himself this day."
With which mournful
review of their proceedings, Mr. Dennis sought consolation in cold boiled beef
and beer; but without at all relaxing the grim and dissatisfied expression of
his face, the gloom of which was rather deepened than dissipated by their
grateful influence.
The company who were
thus libelled might have retaliated by strong words, if not by blows, but they
were dispirited and worn out. The greater part of them had fasted since
morning; all had suffered extremely from the excessive heat; and between the
day’s shouting, exertion, and excitement, many had quite lost their voices, and
so much of their strength that they could hardly stand. Then they were
uncertain what to do next, fearful of the consequences of what they had done
already, and sensible that after all they had carried no point, but had indeed
left matters worse than they had found them. Of those who had come to The Boot,
many dropped off within an hour; such of them as were really honest and
sincere, never, after the morning’s experience, to return, or to hold any
communication with their late companions. Others remained but to refresh
themselves, and then went home desponding; others who had theretofore been
regular in their attendance, avoided the place altogether. The half-dozen
prisoners whom the Guards had taken, were magnified by report into
half-a-hundred at least; and their friends, being faint and sober, so slackened
in their energy, and so drooped beneath these dispiriting influences, that by
eight o’clock in the evening, Dennis, Hugh, and Barnaby, were left alone. Even
they were fast asleep upon the benches, when Gashford’s entrance roused them.
"Oh! you are here
then?" said the Secretary. "Dear me!"
"Why, where should
we be, Muster Gashford!" Dennis rejoined as he rose into a sitting
posture.
"Oh nowhere,
nowhere," he returned with excessive mildness. "The streets are
filled with blue cockades. I rather thought you might have been among them. I
am glad you are not."
"You have orders
for us, master, then?" said Hugh.
"Oh dear, no. Not
I. No orders, my good fellow. What orders should I have? You are not in my
service."
"Muster
Gashford," remonstrated Dennis, "we belong to the cause, don’t
we?"
"The cause!"
repeated the secretary, looking at him in a sort of abstraction. "There is
no cause. The cause is lost."
"Lost!"
"Oh yes. You have
heard, I suppose? The petition is rejected by a hundred and ninety-two, to six.
It’s quite final. We might have spared ourselves some trouble. That, and my
lord’s vexation, are the only circumstances I regret. I am quite satisfied in
all other respects."
As he said this, he
took a penknife from his pocket, and putting his hat upon his knee, began to
busy himself in ripping off the blue cockade which he had worn all day; at the
same time humming a psalm tune which had been very popular in the morning, and
dwelling on it with a gentle regret.
His two adherents
looked at each other, and at him, as if they were at a loss how to pursue the
subject. At length Hugh, after some elbowing and winking between himself and
Mr. Dennis, ventured to stay his hand, and to ask him why he meddled with that
riband in his hat.
"Because,"
said the secretary, looking up with something between a snarl and a smile;
"because to sit still and wear it, or fall asleep and wear it, is a
mockery. That’s all, friend."
"What would you
have us do, master!" cried Hugh.
"Nothing,"
returned Gashford, shrugging his shoulders, "nothing. When my lord was
reproached and threatened for standing by you, I, as a prudent man, would have
had you do nothing. When the soldiers were trampling you under their horses’
feet, I would have had you do nothing. When one of them was struck down by a
daring hand, and I saw confusion and dismay in all their faces, I would have
had you do nothing--just what you did, in short. This is the young man who had
so little prudence and so much boldness. Ah! I am sorry for him."
"Sorry,
master!" cried Hugh.
"Sorry, Muster
Gashford!" echoed Dennis.
"In case there
should be a proclamation out to-morrow, offering five hundred pounds, or some
such trifle, for his apprehension; and in case it should include another man
who dropped into the lobby from the stairs above," said Gashford, coldly;
"still, do nothing."
"Fire and fury,
master!" cried Hugh, starting up. "What have we done, that you should
talk to us like this!"
"Nothing,"
returned Gashford with a sneer. "If you are cast into prison; if the young
man"--here he looked hard at Barnaby’s attentive face--"is dragged
from us and from his friends; perhaps from people whom he loves, and whom his
death would kill; is thrown into jail, brought out and hanged before their
eyes; still, do nothing. You’ll find it your best policy, I have no
doubt."
"Come on!"
cried Hugh, striding towards the door. "Dennis-- Barnaby--come on!"
"Where? To do
what?" said Gashford, slipping past him, and standing with his back
against it.
"Anywhere!
Anything!" cried Hugh. "Stand aside, master, or the window will serve
our turn as well. Let us out!"
"Ha ha ha! You are
of such--of such an impetuous nature," said Gashford, changing his manner
for one of the utmost good fellowship and the pleasantest raillery; "you
are such an excitable creature-- but you’ll drink with me before you go?"
"Oh,
yes--certainly," growled Dennis, drawing his sleeve across his thirsty
lips. "No malice, brother. Drink with Muster Gashford!"
Hugh wiped his heated
brow, and relaxed into a smile. The artful secretary laughed outright.
"Some liquor here!
Be quick, or he’ll not stop, even for that. He is a man of such desperate
ardour!" said the smooth secretary, whom Mr. Dennis corroborated with
sundry nods and muttered oaths--"Once roused, he is a fellow of such
fierce determination!"
Hugh poised his sturdy
arm aloft, and clapping Barnaby on the back, bade him fear nothing. They shook
hands together--poor Barnaby evidently possessed with the idea that he was
among the most virtuous and disinterested heroes in the world--and Gashford laughed
again.
"I hear," he
said smoothly, as he stood among them with a great measure of liquor in his
hand, and filled their glasses as quickly and as often as they chose, "I
hear--but I cannot say whether it be true or false--that the men who are loitering
in the streets to- night are half disposed to pull down a Romish chapel or two,
and that they only want leaders. I even heard mention of those in Duke Street,
Lincoln’s Inn Fields, and in Warwick Street, Golden Square; but common report,
you know--You are not going?"
"--To do nothing,
master, eh?" cried Hugh. "No jails and halter for Barnaby and me.
They must be frightened out of that. Leaders are wanted, are they? Now
boys!"
"A most impetuous
fellow!" cried the secretary. "Ha ha! A courageous, boisterous, most
vehement fellow! A man who--"
There was no need to
finish the sentence, for they had rushed out of the house, and were far beyond
hearing. He stopped in the middle of a laugh, listened, drew on his gloves,
and, clasping his hands behind him, paced the deserted room for a long time,
then bent his steps towards the busy town, and walked into the streets.
They were filled with
people, for the rumour of that day’s proceedings had made a great noise. Those
persons who did not care to leave home, were at their doors or windows, and one
topic of discourse prevailed on every side. Some reported that the riots were
effectually put down; others that they had broken out again: some said that
Lord George Gordon had been sent under a strong guard to the Tower; others that
an attempt had been made upon the King’s life, that the soldiers had been again
called out, and that the noise of musketry in a distant part of the town had
been plainly heard within an hour. As it grew darker, these stories became more
direful and mysterious; and often, when some frightened passenger ran past with
tidings that the rioters were not far off, and were coming up, the doors were
shut and barred, lower windows made secure, and as much consternation
engendered, as if the city were invaded by a foreign army.
Gashford walked
stealthily about, listening to all he heard, and diffusing or confirming,
whenever he had an opportunity, such false intelligence as suited his own
purpose; and, busily occupied in this way, turned into Holborn for the
twentieth time, when a great many women and children came flying along the
street--often panting and looking back--and the confused murmur of numerous
voices struck upon his ear. Assured by these tokens, and by the red light which
began to flash upon the houses on either side, that some of his friends were
indeed approaching, he begged a moment’s shelter at a door which opened as he
passed, and running with some other persons to an upper window, looked out upon
the crowd.
They had torches among
them, and the chief faces were distinctly visible. That they had been engaged
in the destruction of some building was sufficiently apparent, and that it was
a Catholic place of worship was evident from the spoils they bore as trophies,
which were easily recognisable for the vestments of priests, and rich fragments
of altar furniture. Covered with soot, and dirt, and dust, and lime; their
garments torn to rags; their hair hanging wildly about them; their hands and
faces jagged and bleeding with the wounds of rusty nails; Barnaby, Hugh, and
Dennis hurried on before them all, like hideous madmen. After them, the dense
throng came fighting on: some singing; some shouting in triumph; some
quarrelling among themselves; some menacing the spectators as they passed; some
with great wooden fragments, on which they spent their rage as if they had been
alive, rending them limb from limb, and hurling the scattered morsels high into
the air; some in a drunken state, unconscious of the hurts they had received
from falling bricks, and stones, and beams; one borne upon a shutter, in the
very midst, covered with a dingy cloth, a senseless, ghastly heap. Thus--a
vision of coarse faces, with here and there a blot of flaring, smoky light; a
dream of demon heads and savage eyes, and sticks and iron bars uplifted in the
air, and whirled about; a bewildering horror, in which so much was seen, and
yet so little, which seemed so long, and yet so short, in which there were so
many phantoms, not to be forgotten all through life, and yet so many things
that could not be observed in one distracting glimpse--it flitted onward, and
was gone.
As it passed away upon
its work of wrath and ruin, a piercing scream was heard. A knot of persons ran
towards the spot; Gashford, who just then emerged into the street, among them.
He was on the outskirts of the little concourse, and could not see or hear what
passed within; but one who had a better place, informed him that a widow woman
had descried her son among the rioters.
"Is that
all?" said the secretary, turning his face homewards. "Well! I think
this looks a little more like business!"
PROMISING as these
outrages were to Gashford’s view, and much like business as they looked, they
extended that night no farther. The soldiers were again called out, again they
took half-a-dozen prisoners, and again the crowd dispersed after a short and
bloodless scuffle. Hot and drunken though they were, they had not yet broken
all bounds and set all law and government at defiance. Something of their
habitual deference to the authority erected by society for its own preservation
yet remained among them, and had its majesty been vindicated in time, the
secretary would have had to digest a bitter disappointment.
By midnight, the
streets were clear and quiet, and, save that there stood in two parts of the
town a heap of nodding walls and pile of rubbish, where there had been at
sunset a rich and handsome building, everything wore its usual aspect. Even the
Catholic gentry and tradesmen, of whom there were many resident in different
parts of the City and its suburbs, had no fear for their lives or property, and
but little indignation for the wrong they had already sustained in the plunder
and destruction of their temples of worship. An honest confidence in the government
under whose protection they had lived for many years, and a well-founded
reliance on the good feeling and right thinking of the great mass of the
community, with whom, notwithstanding their religious differences, they were
every day in habits of confidential, affectionate, and friendly intercourse,
reassured them, even under the excesses that had been committed; and convinced
them that they who were Protestants in anything but the name, were no more to
be considered as abettors of these disgraceful occurrences, than they
themselves were chargeable with the uses of the block, the rack, the gibbet,
and the stake in cruel Mary’s reign.
The clock was on the
stroke of one, when Gabriel Varden, with his lady and Miss Miggs, sat waiting
in the little parlour. This fact; the toppling wicks of the dull, wasted
candles; the silence that prevailed; and, above all, the nightcaps of both maid
and matron, were sufficient evidence that they had been prepared for bed some
time ago, and had some reason for sitting up so far beyond their usual hour.
If any other
corroborative testimony had been required, it would have been abundantly
furnished in the actions of Miss Miggs, who, having arrived at that restless
state and sensitive condition of the nervous system which are the result of
long watching, did, by a constant rubbing and tweaking of her nose, a perpetual
change of position (arising from the sudden growth of imaginary knots and knobs
in her chair), a frequent friction of her eyebrows, the incessant recurrence of
a small cough, a small groan, a gasp, a sigh, a sniff, a spasmodic start, and
by other demonstrations of that nature, so file down and rasp, as it were, the
patience of the locksmith, that after looking at her in silence for some time,
he at last broke out into this apostrophe:--
"Miggs, my good
girl, go to bed--do go to bed. You’re really worse than the dripping of a
hundred water-butts outside the window, or the scratching of as many mice
behind the wainscot. I can’t bear it. Do go to bed, Miggs. To oblige
me--do."
"You haven’t got
nothing to untie, sir," returned Miss Miggs, "and therefore your
requests does not surprise me. But missis has--and while you sit up,
mim"--she added, turning to the locksmith’s wife, "I couldn’t, no,
not if twenty times the quantity of cold water was aperiently running down my
back at this moment, go to bed with a quiet spirit."
Having spoken these
words, Miss Miggs made divers efforts to rub her shoulders in an impossible
place, and shivered from head to foot; thereby giving the beholders to
understand that the imaginary cascade was still in full flow, but that a sense
of duty upheld her under that and all other sufferings, and nerved her to
endurance.
Mrs. Varden being too
sleepy to speak, and Miss Miggs having, as the phrase is, said her say, the
locksmith had nothing for it but to sigh and be as quiet as he could.
But to be quiet with
such a basilisk before him was impossible. If he looked another way, it was
worse to feel that she was rubbing her cheek, or twitching her ear, or winking
her eye, or making all kinds of extraordinary shapes with her nose, than to see
her do it. If she was for a moment free from any of these complaints, it was
only because of her foot being asleep, or of her arm having got the fidgets, or
of her leg being doubled up with the cramp, or of some other horrible disorder
which racked her whole frame. If she did enjoy a moment’s ease, then with her
eyes shut and her mouth wide open, she would be seen to sit very stiff and
upright in her chair; then to nod a little way forward, and stop with a jerk;
then to nod a little farther forward, and stop with another jerk; then to
recover herself; then to come forward again--lower--lower--lower-- by very slow
degrees, until, just as it seemed impossible that she could preserve her
balance for another instant, and the locksmith was about to call out in an
agony, to save her from dashing down upon her forehead and fracturing her
skull, then all of a sudden and without the smallest notice, she would come
upright and rigid again with her eyes open, and in her countenance an
expression of defiance, sleepy but yet most obstinate, which plainly said,
"I’ve never once closed ’em since I looked at you last, and I’ll take my
oath of it!"
At length, after the
clock had struck two, there was a sound at the street door, as if somebody had
fallen against the knocker by accident. Miss Miggs immediately jumping up and
clapping her hands, cried with a drowsy mingling of the sacred and profane,
"Ally Looyer, mim! there’s Simmuns’s knock!"
"Who’s
there?" said Gabriel.
"Me!" cried
the well-known voice of Mr. Tappertit. Gabriel opened the door, and gave him
admission.
He did not cut a very
insinuating figure, for a man of his stature suffers in a crowd; and having
been active in yesterday morning’s work, his dress was literally crushed from
head to foot: his hat being beaten out of all shape, and his shoes trodden down
at heel like slippers. His coat fluttered in strips about him, the buckles were
torn away both from his knees and feet, half his neckerchief was gone, and the
bosom of his shirt was rent to tatters. Yet notwithstanding all these personal
disadvantages; despite his being very weak from heat and fatigue; and so
begrimed with mud and dust that he might have been in a case, for anything of
the real texture (either of his skin or apparel) that the eye could discern; he
stalked haughtily into the parlour, and throwing himself into a chair, and
endeavouring to thrust his hands into the pockets of his small-clothes, which
were turned inside out and displayed upon his legs, like tassels, surveyed the
household with a gloomy dignity.
"Simon," said
the locksmith gravely, "how comes it that you return home at this time of
night, and in this condition? Give me an assurance that you have not been among
the rioters, and I am satisfied."
"Sir,"
replied Mr. Tappertit, with a contemptuous look, "I wonder at your
assurance in making such demands."
"You have been
drinking," said the locksmith.
"As a general
principle, and in the most offensive sense of the words, sir," returned
his journeyman with great self-possession, "I consider you a liar. In that
last observation you have unintentionally--unintentionally, sir,--struck upon
the truth."
"Martha,"
said the locksmith, turning to his wife, and shaking his head sorrowfully,
while a smile at the absurd figure beside him still played upon his open face,
"I trust it may turn out that this poor lad is not the victim of the
knaves and fools we have so often had words about, and who have done so much
harm to-day. If he has been at Warwick Street or Duke Street to-night--"
"He has been at
neither, sir," cried Mr. Tappertit in a loud voice, which he suddenly
dropped into a whisper as he repeated, with eyes fixed upon the locksmith,
"he has been at neither."
"I am glad of it,
with all my heart," said the locksmith in a serious tone; "for if he
had been, and it could be proved against him, Martha, your Great Association
would have been to him the cart that draws men to the gallows and leaves them
hanging in the air. It would, as sure as we’re alive!"
Mrs. Varden was too
much scared by Simon’s altered manner and appearance, and by the accounts of
the rioters which had reached her ears that night, to offer any retort, or to
have recourse to her usual matrimonial policy. Miss Miggs wrung her hands, and
wept.
"He was not at
Duke Street, or at Warwick Street, G. Varden," said Simon, sternly;
"but he was at Westminster. Perhaps, sir, he kicked a county member,
perhaps, sir, he tapped a lord--you may stare, sir, I repeat it--blood flowed
from noses, and perhaps he tapped a lord. Who knows? This," he added,
putting his hand into his waistcoat-pocket, and taking out a large tooth, at
the sight of which both Miggs and Mrs. Varden screamed, "this was a bishop’s.
Beware, G. Varden!"
"Now, I would
rather," said the locksmith hastily, "have paid five hundred pounds,
than had this come to pass. You idiot, do you know what peril you stand
in?"
"I know it,
sir," replied his journeyman, "and it is my glory. I was there,
everybody saw me there. I was conspicuous, and prominent. I will abide the
consequences."
The locksmith, really
disturbed and agitated, paced to and fro in silence--glancing at his former ’prentice
every now and then--and at length stopping before him, said:
"Get to bed, and
sleep for a couple of hours that you may wake penitent, and with some of your
senses about you. Be sorry for what you have done, and we will try to save you.
If I call him by five o’clock," said Varden, turning hurriedly to his wife,
and he washes himself clean and changes his dress, he may get to the Tower
Stairs, and away by the Gravesend tide-boat, before any search is made for him.
From there he can easily get on to Canterbury, where your cousin will give him
work till this storm has blown over. I am not sure that I do right in screening
him from the punishment he deserves, but he has lived in this house, man and
boy, for a dozen years, and I should be sorry if for this one day’s work he
made a miserable end. Lock the front-door, Miggs, and show no light towards the
street when you go upstairs. Quick, Simon! Get to bed!"
"And do you
suppose, sir," retorted Mr. Tappertit, with a thickness and slowness of
speech which contrasted forcibly with the rapidity and earnestness of his kind-hearted
master--"and do you suppose, sir, that I am base and mean enough to accept
your servile proposition?--Miscreant!"
"Whatever you
please, Sim, but get to bed. Every minute is of consequence. The light here,
Miggs!"
"Yes yes, oh do!
Go to bed directly," cried the two women together.
Mr. Tappertit stood
upon his feet, and pushing his chair away to show that he needed no assistance,
answered, swaying himself to and fro, and managing his head as if it had no
connection whatever with his body:
"You spoke of
Miggs, sir--Miggs may be smothered!"
"Oh Simmun!"
ejaculated that young lady in a faint voice. "Oh mim! Oh sir! Oh goodness
gracious, what a turn he has give me!"
"This family may
all be smothered, sir," returned Mr. Tappertit, after glancing at her with
a smile of ineffable disdain, "excepting Mrs. V. I have come here, sir,
for her sake, this night. Mrs. Varden, take this piece of paper. It’s a
protection, ma’am. You may need it."
With these words he
held out at arm’s length, a dirty, crumpled scrap of writing. The locksmith
took it from him, opened it, and read as follows:
"All good friends
to our cause, I hope will be particular, and do no injury to the property of
any true Protestant. I am well assured that the proprietor of this house is a staunch
and worthy friend to the cause.
"GEORGE
GORDON."
"What’s
this!" said the locksmith, with an altered face.
"Something that’ll
do you good service, young feller," replied his journeyman, "as you’ll
find. Keep that safe, and where you can lay your hand upon it in an instant.
And chalk ’No Popery’ on your door to-morrow night, and for a week to
come--that’s all."
"This is a genuine
document," said the locksmith, "I know, for I have seen the hand
before. What threat does it imply? What devil is abroad?"
"A fiery
devil," retorted Sim; "a flaming, furious devil. Don’t you put
yourself in its way, or you’re done for, my buck. Be warned in time, G. Varden.
Farewell!"
But here the two women
threw themselves in his way--especially Miss Miggs, who fell upon him with such
fervour that she pinned him against the wall--and conjured him in moving words
not to go forth till he was sober; to listen to reason; to think of it; to take
some rest, and then determine.
"I tell you,"
said Mr. Tappertit, "that my mind is made up. My bleeding country calls me
and I go! Miggs, if you don’t get out of the way, I’ll pinch you."
Miss Miggs, still
clinging to the rebel, screamed once vociferously--but whether in the
distraction of her mind, or because of his having executed his threat, is
uncertain.
"Release me,"
said Simon, struggling to free himself from her chaste, but spider-like
embrace. "Let me go! I have made arrangements for you in an altered state
of society, and mean to provide for you comfortably in life--there! Will that
satisfy you?"
"Oh Simmun!"
cried Miss Miggs. "Oh my blessed Simmun! Oh mim! what are my feelings at
this conflicting moment!"
Of a rather turbulent
description, it would seem; for her nightcap had been knocked off in the
scuffle, and she was on her knees upon the floor, making a strange revelation
of blue and yellow curl- papers, straggling locks of hair, tags of staylaces,
and strings of it’s impossible to say what; panting for breath, clasping her
hands, turning her eyes upwards, shedding abundance of tears, and exhibiting
various other symptoms of the acutest mental suffering.
"I leave,"
said Simon, turning to his master, with an utter disregard of Miggs’s maidenly
affliction, "a box of things upstairs. Do what you like with ’em. I don’t
want ’em. I’m never coming back here, any more. Provide yourself, sir, with a
journeyman; I’m my country’s journeyman; henceforward that’s my line of
business."
"Be what you like
in two hours’ time, but now go up to bed," returned the locksmith,
planting himself in the doorway. "Do you hear me? Go to bed!"
"I hear you, and
defy you, Varden," rejoined Simon Tappertit. "This night, sir, I have
been in the country, planning an expedition which shall fill your bell-hanging
soul with wonder and dismay. The plot demands my utmost energy. Let me
pass!"
"I’ll knock you
down if you come near the door," replied the locksmith. "You had
better go to bed!"
Simon made no answer,
but gathering himself up as straight as he could, plunged head foremost at his
old master, and the two went driving out into the workshop together, plying
their hands and feet so briskly that they looked like half-a-dozen, while Miggs
and Mrs. Varden screamed for twelve.
It would have been easy
for Varden to knock his old ’prentice down, and bind him hand and foot; but as
he was loth to hurt him in his then defenceless state, he contented himself
with parrying his blows when he could, taking them in perfect good part when he
could not, and keeping between him and the door, until a favourable opportunity
should present itself for forcing him to retreat up- stairs, and shutting him
up in his own room. But, in the goodness of his heart, he calculated too much
upon his adversary’s weakness, and forgot that drunken men who have lost the
power of walking steadily, can often run. Watching his time, Simon Tappertit
made a cunning show of falling back, staggered unexpectedly forward, brushed past
him, opened the door (he knew the trick of that lock well), and darted down the
street like a mad dog. The locksmith paused for a moment in the excess of his
astonishment, and then gave chase.
It was an excellent
season for a run, for at that silent hour the streets were deserted, the air
was cool, and the flying figure before him distinctly visible at a great
distance, as it sped away, with a long gaunt shadow following at its heels. But
the short- winded locksmith had no chance against a man of Sim’s youth and
spare figure, though the day had been when he could have run him down in no
time. The space between them rapidly increased, and as the rays of the rising
sun streamed upon Simon in the act of turning a distant corner, Gabriel Varden
was fain to give up, and sit down on a doorstep to fetch his breath. Simon
meanwhile, without once stopping, fled at the same degree of swiftness to The
Boot, where, as he well knew, some of his company were lying, and at which
respectable hostelry--for he had already acquired the distinction of being in
great peril of the law--a friendly watch had been expecting him all night, and
was even now on the look-out for his coming.
"Go thy ways, Sim,
go thy ways," said the locksmith, as soon as he could speak. "I have
done my best for thee, poor lad, and would have saved thee, but the rope is
round thy neck, I fear."
So saying, and shaking
his head in a very sorrowful and disconsolate manner, he turned back, and soon
re-entered his own house, where Mrs. Varden and the faithful Miggs had been
anxiously expecting his return.
Now Mrs. Varden (and by
consequence Miss Miggs likewise) was impressed with a secret misgiving that she
had done wrong; that she had, to the utmost of her small means, aided and
abetted the growth of disturbances, the end of which it was impossible to
foresee; that she had led remotely to the scene which had just passed; and that
the locksmith’s time for triumph and reproach had now arrived indeed. And so
strongly did Mrs. Varden feel this, and so crestfallen was she in consequence,
that while her husband was pursuing their lost journeyman, she secreted under
her chair the little red-brick dwelling-house with the yellow roof, lest it
should furnish new occasion for reference to the painful theme; and now hid the
same still more, with the skirts of her dress.
But it happened that
the locksmith had been thinking of this very article on his way home, and that,
coming into the room and not seeing it, he at once demanded where it was.
Mrs. Varden had no
resource but to produce it, which she did with many tears, and broken
protestations that if she could have known--
"Yes, yes,"
said Varden, "of course--I know that. I don’t mean to reproach you, my
dear. But recollect from this time that all good things perverted to evil
purposes, are worse than those which are naturally bad. A thoroughly wicked
woman, is wicked indeed. When religion goes wrong, she is very wrong, for the
same reason. Let us say no more about it, my dear."
So he dropped the
red-brick dwelling-house on the floor, and setting his heel upon it, crushed it
into pieces. The halfpence, and sixpences, and other voluntary contributions,
rolled about in all directions, but nobody offered to touch them, or to take
them up.
"That," said
the locksmith, "is easily disposed of, and I would to Heaven that
everything growing out of the same society could be settled as easily."
"It happens very
fortunately, Varden," said his wife, with her handkerchief to her eyes,
"that in case any more disturbances should happen--which I hope not; I
sincerely hope not--"
"I hope so too, my
dear."
"--That in case
any should occur, we have the piece of paper which that poor misguided young
man brought."
"Ay, to be
sure," said the locksmith, turning quickly round. "Where is that
piece of paper?"
Mrs. Varden stood
aghast as he took it from her outstretched band, tore it into fragments, and
threw them under the grate.
"Not use it?"
she said.
"Use it!"
cried the locksmith. "No! Let them come and pull the roof about our ears;
let them burn us out of house and home; I’d neither have the protection of
their leader, nor chalk their howl upon my door, though, for not doing it, they
shot me on my own threshold. Use it! Let them come and do their worst. The
first man who crosses my doorstep on such an errand as theirs, had better be a
hundred miles away. Let him look to it. The others may have their will. I
wouldn’t beg or buy them off, if, instead of every pound of iron in the place,
there was a hundred weight of gold. Get you to bed, Martha. I shall take down
the shutters and go to work."
"So early!"
said his wife.
"Ay," replied
the locksmith cheerily, "so early. Come when they may, they shall not find
us skulking and hiding, as if we feared to take our portion of the light of
day, and left it all to them. So pleasant dreams to you, my dear, and cheerful
sleep!"
With that he gave his
wife a hearty kiss, and bade her delay no longer, or it would be time to rise
before she lay down to rest. Mrs. Varden quite amiably and meekly walked upstairs,
followed by Miggs, who, although a good deal subdued, could not refrain from
sundry stimulative coughs and sniffs by the way, or from holding up her hands
in astonishment at the daring conduct of master.
A MOB is usually a
creature of very mysterious existence, particularly in a large city. Where it
comes from or whither it goes, few men can tell. Assembling and dispersing with
equal suddenness, it is as difficult to follow to its various sources as the sea
itself; nor does the parallel stop here, for the ocean is not more fickle and
uncertain, more terrible when roused, more unreasonable, or more cruel.
The people who were
boisterous at Westminster upon the Friday morning, and were eagerly bent upon
the work of devastation in Duke Street and Warwick Street at night, were, in
the mass, the same. Allowing for the chance accessions of which any crowd is
morally sure in a town where there must always be a large number of idle and
profligate persons, one and the same mob was at both places. Yet they spread
themselves in various directions when they dispersed in the afternoon, made no
appointment for reassembling, had no definite purpose or design, and indeed,
for anything they knew, were scattered beyond the hope of future union.
At The Boot, which, as
has been shown, was in a manner the head- quarters of the rioters, there were
not, upon this Friday night, a dozen people. Some slept in the stable and
outhouses, some in the common room, some two or three in beds. The rest were in
their usual homes or haunts. Perhaps not a score in all lay in the adjacent
fields and lanes, and under haystacks, or near the warmth of brick-kilns, who
had not their accustomed place of rest beneath the open sky. As to the public
ways within the town, they had their ordinary nightly occupants, and
no others; the usual
amount of vice and wretchedness, but no more.
The experience of one
evening, however, had taught the reckless leaders of disturbance, that they had
but to show themselves in the streets, to be immediately surrounded by
materials which they could only have kept together when their aid was not
required, at great risk, expense, and trouble. Once possessed of this secret,
they were as confident as if twenty thousand men, devoted to their will, had
been encamped about them, and assumed a confidence which could not have been
surpassed, though that had really been the case. All day, Saturday, they
remained quiet. On Sunday, they rather studied how to keep their men within call,
and in full hope, than to follow out, by any fierce measure, their first day’s
proceedings.
"I hope,"
said Dennis, as, with a loud yawn, he raised his body from a heap of straw on
which he had been sleeping, and supporting his head upon his hand, appealed to
Hugh on Sunday morning, "that Muster Gashford allows some rest? Perhaps he’d
have us at work again already, eh?"
"It’s not his way
to let matters drop, you may be sure of that," growled Hugh in answer.
"I’m in no humour to stir yet, though. I’m as stiff as a dead body, and as
full of ugly scratches as if I had been fighting all day yesterday with wild
cats."
"You’ve so much
enthusiasm, that’s it," said Dennis, looking with great admiration at the
uncombed head, matted beard, and torn hands and face of the wild figure before
him; "you’re such a devil of a fellow. You hurt yourself a hundred times
more than you need, because you will be foremost in everything, and will do
more than the rest."
"For the matter of
that," returned Hugh, shaking back his ragged hair and glancing towards
the door of the stable in which they lay; "there’s one yonder as good as
me. What did I tell you about him? Did I say he was worth a dozen, when you
doubted him?"
Mr. Dennis rolled
lazily over upon his breast, and resting his chin upon his hand in imitation of
the attitude in which Hugh lay, said, as he too looked towards the door:
"Ay, ay, you knew
him, brother, you knew him. But who’d suppose to look at that chap now, that he
could be the man he is! Isn’t it a thousand cruel pities, brother, that instead
of taking his nat’ral rest and qualifying himself for further exertions in this
here honourable cause, he should be playing at soldiers like a boy? And his
cleanliness too!" said Mr. Dennis, who certainly had no reason to entertain
a fellow feeling with anybody who was particular on that score; "what
weaknesses he’s guilty of; with respect to his cleanliness! At five o’clock
this morning, there he was at the pump, though any one would think he had gone
through enough, the day before yesterday, to be pretty fast asleep at that
time. But no--when I woke for a minute or two, there he was at the pump, and if
you’d have seen him sticking them peacock’s feathers into his hat when he’d
done washing--ah! I’m sorry he’s such a imperfect character, but the best on us
is incomplete in some pint of view or another."
The subject of this
dialogue and of these concluding remarks, which were uttered in a tone of
philosophical meditation, was, as the reader will have divined, no other than Barnaby,
who, with his flag in hand, stood sentry in the little patch of sunlight at the
distant door, or walked to and fro outside, singing softly to himself; and
keeping time to the music of some clear church bells. Whether he stood still,
leaning with both hands on the flagstaff, or, bearing it upon his shoulder,
paced slowly up and down, the careful arrangement of his poor dress, and his
erect and lofty bearing, showed how high a sense he had of the great importance
of his trust, and how happy and how proud it made him. To Hugh and his
companion, who lay in a dark corner of the gloomy shed, he, and the sunlight,
and the peaceful Sabbath sound to which he made response, seemed like a bright
picture framed by the door, and set off by the stable’s blackness. The whole
formed such a contrast to themselves, as they lay wallowing, like some obscene
animals, in their squalor and wickedness on the two heaps of straw, that for a
few moments they looked on without speaking, and felt almost ashamed.
"Ah!"said
Hugh at length, carrying it off with a laugh: "He’s a rare fellow is
Barnaby, and can do more, with less rest, or meat, or drink, than any of us. As
to his soldiering, I put him on duty there."
"Then there was a
object in it, and a proper good one too, I’ll be sworn," retorted Dennis
with a broad grin, and an oath of the same quality. "What was it,
brother?"
"Why, you
see," said Hugh, crawling a little nearer to him, "that our noble
captain yonder, came in yesterday morning rather the worse for liquor, and was--like
you and me--ditto last night."
Dennis looked to where
Simon Tappertit lay coiled upon a truss of hay, snoring profoundly, and nodded.
"And our noble
captain," continued Hugh with another laugh, "our noble captain and
I, have planned for to-morrow a roaring expedition, with good profit in
it."
"Again the
Papists?" asked Dennis, rubbing his hands.
"Ay, against the
Papists--against one of ’em at least, that some of us, and I for one, owe a
good heavy grudge to."
"Not Muster
Gashford’s friend that he spoke to us about in my house, eh?" said Dennis,
brimfull of pleasant expectation.
"The same
man," said Hugh.
"That’s your
sort," cried Mr. Dennis, gaily shaking hands with him, "that’s the
kind of game. Let’s have revenges and injuries, and all that, and we shall get
on twice as fast. Now you talk, indeed!"
"Ha ha ha! The
captain," added Hugh, "has thoughts of carrying off a woman in the
bustle, and--ha ha ha!--and so have I!"
Mr. Dennis received
this part of the scheme with a wry face, observing that as a general principle
he objected to women altogether, as being unsafe and slippery persons on whom
there was no calculating with any certainty, and who were never in the same
mind for four-and-twenty hours at a stretch. He might have expatiated on this suggestive
theme at much greater length, but that it occurred to him to ask what
connection existed between the proposed expedition and Barnaby’s being posted
at the stable-door as sentry; to which Hugh cautiously replied in these words:
"Why, the people we
mean to visit, were friends of his, once upon a time, and I know that much of
him to feel pretty sure that if he thought we were going to do them any harm,
he’d be no friend to our side, but would lend a ready hand to the other. So I’ve
persuaded him (for I know him of old) that Lord George has picked him out to
guard this place to-morrow while we’re away, and that it’s a great honour--and
so he’s on duty now, and as proud of it as if he was a general. Ha ha! What do
you say to me for a careful man as well as a devil of a one?"
Mr. Dennis exhausted
himself in compliments, and then added,
"But about the
expedition itself--"
"About that,"
said Hugh, "you shall hear all particulars from me and the great captain
conjointly and both together--for see, he’s waking up. Rouse yourself,
lion-heart. Ha ha! Put a good face upon it, and drink again. Another hair of
the dog that bit you, captain! Call for drink! There’s enough of gold and
silver cups and candlesticks buried underneath my bed," he added, rolling
back the straw, and pointing to where the ground was newly turned, "to pay
for it, if it was a score of casks full. Drink, captain!"
Mr. Tappertit received
these jovial promptings with a very bad grace, being much the worse, both in
mind and body, for his two nights of debauch, and but indifferently able to
stand upon his legs. With Hugh’s assistance, however, he contrived to stagger
to the pump; and having refreshed himself with an abundant draught of cold
water, and a copious shower of the same refreshing liquid on his head and face,
he ordered some rum and milk to be served; and upon that innocent beverage and
some biscuits and cheese made a pretty hearty meal. That done, he disposed
himself in an easy attitude on the ground beside his two companions (who were
carousing after their own tastes), and proceeded to enlighten Mr. Dennis in
reference to to-morrow’s project.
That their conversation
was an interesting one, was rendered manifest by its length, and by the close
attention of all three. That it was not of an oppressively grave character, but
was enlivened by various pleasantries arising out of the subject, was clear
from their loud and frequent roars of laughter, which startled Barnaby on his
post, and made him wonder at their levity. But he was not summoned to join
them, until they had eaten, and drunk, and slept, and talked together for some
hours; not, indeed, until the twilight; when they informed him that they were
about to make a slight demonstration in the streets--just to keep the people’s
hands in, as it was Sunday night, and the public might otherwise be
disappointed--and that he was free to accompany them if he would.
Without the slightest
preparation, saving that they carried clubs and wore the blue cockade, they
sallied out into the streets; and, with no more settled design than that of
doing as much mischief as they could, paraded them at random. Their numbers
rapidly increasing, they soon divided into parties; and agreeing to meet
by-and-by, in the fields near Welbeck Street, scoured the town in various
directions. The largest body, and that which augmented with the greatest
rapidity, was the one to which Hugh and Barnaby belonged. This took its way
towards Moorfields, where there was a rich chapel, and in which neighbourhood
several Catholic families were known to reside.
Beginning with the
private houses so occupied, they broke open the doors and windows; and while
they destroyed the furniture and left but the bare walls, made a sharp search
for tools and engines of destruction, such as hammers, pokers, axes, saws, and
such like instruments. Many of the rioters made belts of cord, of
handkerchiefs, or any material they found at hand, and wore these weapons as
openly as pioneers upon a field-day. There was not the least disguise or concealment--indeed,
on this night, very little excitement or hurry. From the chapels, they tore
down and took away the very altars, benches, pulpits, pews, and flooring; from
the dwelling-houses, the very wainscoting and stairs. This Sunday evening’s
recreation they pursued like mere workmen who had a certain task to do, and did
it. Fifty resolute men might have turned them at any moment; a single company
of soldiers could have scattered them like dust; but no man interposed, no
authority restrained them, and, except by the terrified persons who fled from
their approach, they were as little heeded as if they were pursuing their
lawful occupations with the utmost sobriety and good conduct.
In the same manner,
they marched to the place of rendezvous agreed upon, made great fires in the
fields, and reserving the most valuable of their spoils, burnt the rest.
Priestly garments, images of saints, rich stuffs and ornaments, altar-furniture
and household goods, were cast into the flames, and shed a glare on the whole country
round; but they danced and howled, and roared about these fires till they were
tired, and were never for an instant checked.
As the main body filed
off from this scene of action, and passed down Welbeck Street, they came upon
Gashford, who had been a witness of their proceedings, and was walking
stealthily along the pavement. Keeping up with him, and yet not seeming to
speak, Hugh muttered in his ear:
"Is this better,
master?"
"No," said
Gashford. "It is not."
"What would you
have?" said Hugh. "Fevers are never at their height at once. They
must get on by degrees."
"I would have
you," said Gashford, pinching his arm with such malevolence that his nails
seemed to meet in the skin; "I would have you put some meaning into your
work. Fools! Can you make no better bonfires than of rags and scraps? Can you
burn nothing whole?"
"A little
patience, master," said Hugh. "Wait but a few hours, and you shall
see. Look for a redness in the sky, to-morrow night."
With that, he fell back
into his place beside Barnaby; and when the secretary looked after him, both
were lost in the crowd.
THE next day was
ushered in by merry peals of bells, and by the firing of the Tower guns; flags
were hoisted on many of the church- steeples; the usual demonstrations were
made in honour of the anniversary of the King’s birthday; and every man went
about his pleasure or business as if the city were in perfect order, and there
were no half-smouldering embers in its secret places, which, on the approach of
night, would kindle up again and scatter ruin and dismay abroad. The leaders of
the riot, rendered still more daring by the success of last night and by the
booty they had acquired, kept steadily together, and only thought of
implicating the mass of their followers so deeply that no hope of pardon or
reward might tempt them to betray their more notorious confederates into the
hands of justice.
Indeed, the sense of
having gone too far to be forgiven, held the timid together no less than the
bold. Many who would readily have pointed out the foremost rioters and given
evidence against them, felt that escape by that means was hopeless, when their
every act had been observed by scores of people who had taken no part in the
disturbances; who had suffered in their persons, peace, or property, by the
outrages of the mob; who would be most willing witnesses; and whom the
government would, no doubt, prefer to any King’s evidence that might be
offered. Many of this class had deserted their usual occupations on the
Saturday morning; some had been seen by their employers active in the tumult;
others knew they must be suspected, and that they would be discharged if they
returned; others had been desperate from the beginning, and comforted
themselves with the homely proverb, that, being hanged at all, they might as
well be hanged for a sheep as a lamb. They all hoped and believed, in a greater
or less degree, that the government they seemed to have paralysed, would, in
its terror, come to terms with them in the end, and suffer them to make their
own conditions. The least sanguine among them reasoned with himself that, at
the worst, they were too many to be all punished, and that he had as good a
chance of escape as any other man. The great mass never reasoned or thought at
all, but were stimulated by their own headlong passions, by poverty, by
ignorance, by the love of mischief, and the hope of plunder.
One other circumstance
is worthy of remark; and that is, that from the moment of their first outbreak
at Westminster, every symptom of order or preconcerted arrangement among them
vanished. When they divided into parties and ran to different quarters of the
town, it was on the spontaneous suggestion of the moment. Each party swelled as
it went along, like rivers as they roll towards the sea; new leaders sprang up
as they were wanted, disappeared when the necessity was over, and reappeared at
the next crisis. Each tumult took shape and form from the circumstances of the
moment; sober workmen, going home from their day’s labour, were seen to cast
down their baskets of tools and become rioters in an instant; mere boys on
errands did the like. In a word, a moral plague ran through the city. The
noise, and hurry, and excitement, had for hundreds and hundreds an attraction
they had no firmness to resist. The contagion spread like a dread fever: an
infectious madness, as yet not near its height, seized on new victims every
hour, and society began to tremble at their ravings.
It was between two and
three o’clock in the afternoon when Gashford looked into the lair described in
the last chapter, and seeing only Barnaby and Dennis there, inquired for Hugh.
He was out, Barnaby
told him; had gone out more than an hour ago; and had not yet returned.
"Dennis!"
said the smiling secretary, in his smoothest voice, as he sat down cross-legged
on a barrel, "Dennis!"
The hangman struggled
into a sitting posture directly, and with his eyes wide open, looked towards
him.
"How do you do,
Dennis?" said Gashford, nodding. "I hope you have suffered no
inconvenience from your late exertions, Dennis?"
"I always will say
of you, Muster Gashford," returned the hangman, staring at him, "that
that ’ere quiet way of yours might almost wake a dead man. It is," he
added, with a muttered oath--still staring at him in a thoughtful
manner--"so awful sly!"
"So distinct, eh
Dennis?"
"Distinct!"
he answered, scratching his head, and keeping his eyes upon the secretary’s
face; "I seem to hear it, Muster Gashford, in my wery bones."
"I am very glad
your sense of hearing is so sharp, and that I succeed in making myself so
intelligible," said Gashford, in his unvarying, even tone. "Where is
your friend?"
Mr. Dennis looked round
as in expectation of beholding him asleep upon his bed of straw; then
remembering he had seen him go out, replied:
"I can’t say where
he is, Muster Gashford, I expected him back afore now. I hope it isn’t time
that we was busy, Muster Gashford?"
"Nay," said
the secretary, "who should know that as well as you? How can I tell you,
Dennis? You are perfect master of your own actions, you know, and accountable
to nobody--except sometimes to the law, eh?"
Dennis, who was very
much baffled by the cool matter-of-course manner of this reply, recovered his
self-possession on his professional pursuits being referred to, and pointing
towards Barnaby, shook his head and frowned.
"Hush!" cried
Barnaby.
"Ah! Do hush about
that, Muster Gashford," said the hangman in a low voice, "pop’lar
prejudices--you always forget--well, Barnaby, my lad, what’s the matter?"
"I hear him
coming," he answered: "Hark! Do you mark that? That’s his foot! Bless
you, I know his step, and his dog’s too. Tramp, tramp, pit-pat, on they come
together, and, ha ha ha!--and here they are!" he cried, joyfully welcoming
Hugh with both hands, and then patting him fondly on the back, as if instead of
being the rough companion he was, he had been one of the most prepossessing of
men. "Here he is, and safe too! I am glad to see him back again, old Hugh!"
"I’m a Turk if he
don’t give me a warmer welcome always than any man of sense," said Hugh,
shaking hands with him with a kind of ferocious friendship, strange enough to
see. "How are you, boy?"
"Hearty!"
cried Barnaby, waving his hat. "Ha ha ha! And merrry too, Hugh! And ready
to do anything for the good cause, and the right, and to help the kind, mild,
pale-faced gentleman--the lord they used so ill--eh, Hugh?"
"Ay!"
returned his friend, dropping his hand, and looking at Gashford for an instant
with a changed expression before he spoke to him. "Good day, master!"
"And good day to
you," replied the secretary, nursing his leg.
"And many good
days--whole years of them, I hope. You are heated."
"So would you have
been, master," said Hugh, wiping his face, "if you’d been running
here as fast as I have."
"You know the
news, then? Yes, I supposed you would have heard it."
"News! what
news?"
"You don’t?"
cried Gashford, raising his eyebrows with an exclamation of surprise.
"Dear me! Come; then I am the first to make you acquainted with your
distinguished position, after all. Do you see the King’s Arms a-top?" he
smilingly asked, as he took a large paper from his pocket, unfolded it, and
held it out for Hugh’s inspection.
"Well!" said
Hugh. "What’s that to me?"
"Much. A great
deal," replied the secretary. "Read it."
"I told you, the
first time I saw you, that I couldn’t read," said Hugh, impatiently.
"What in the Devil’s name’s inside of it?"
"It is a
proclamation from the King in Council," said Gashford, "dated to-day,
and offering a reward of five hundred pounds--five hundred pounds is a great
deal of money, and a large temptation to some people--to any one who will
discover the person or persons most active in demolishing those chapels on
Saturday night."
"Is that
all?" cried Hugh, with an indifferent air. "I knew of that."
"Truly I might
have known you did," said Gashford, smiling, and folding up the document
again. "Your friend, I might have guessed-- indeed I did guess--was sure
to tell you."
"My friend!"
stammered Hugh, with an unsuccessful effort to appear surprised. "What
friend?"
"Tut tut--do you
suppose I don’t know where you have been?" retorted Gashford, rubbing his
hands, and beating the back of one on the palm of the other, and looking at him
with a cunning eye. "How dull you think me! Shall I say his name?"
"No," said
Hugh, with a hasty glance towards Dennis.
"You have also
heard from him, no doubt," resumed the secretary, after a moment’s pause,
"that the rioters who have been taken (poor fellows) are committed for
trial, and that some very active witnesses have had the temerity to appear
against them. Among others--" and here he clenched his teeth, as if he
would suppress by force some violent words that rose upon his tongue; and spoke
very slowly. "Among others, a gentleman who saw the work going on in
Warwick Street; a Catholic gentleman; one Haredale."
Hugh would have
prevented his uttering the word, but it was out already. Hearing the name,
Barnaby turned swiftly round.
"Duty, duty, bold
Barnaby!" cried Hugh, assuming his wildest and most rapid manner, and
thrusting into his hand his staff and flag which leant against the wall.
"Mount guard without loss of time, for we are off upon our expedition. Up,
Dennis, and get ready! Take care that no one turns the straw upon my bed, brave
Barnaby; we know what’s underneath it--eh? Now, master, quick! What you have to
say, say speedily, for the little captain and a cluster of ’em are in the
fields, and only waiting for us. Sharp’s the word, and strike’s the action.
Quick!"
Barnaby was not proof
against this bustle and despatch. The look of mingled astonishtnent and anger
which had appeared in his face when he turned towards them, faded from it as
the words passed from his memory, like breath from a polished mirror; and
grasping the weapon which Hugh forced upon him, he proudly took his station at
the door, beyond their hearing.
"You might have
spoiled our plans, master," said Hugh. "You, too, of all men!"
"Who would have
supposed that he would be so quick?" urged Gashford.
"He’s as quick
sometimes--I don’t mean with his hands, for that you know, but with his
head--as you or any man," said Hugh. "Dennis, it’s time we were
going; they’re waiting for us; I came to tell you. Reach me my stick and belt.
Here! Lend a hand, master. Fling this over my shoulder, and buckle it behind,
will you?"
"Brisk as
ever!" said the secretary, adjusting it for him as he desired.
"A man need be
brisk to-day; there’s brisk work a-foot."
"There is, is
there?" said Gashford. He said it with such a provoking assumption of
ignorance, that Hugh, looking over his shoulder and angrily down upon him,
replied:
"Is there! You
know there is! Who knows better than you, master, that the first great step to
be taken is to make examples of these witnesses, and frighten all men from
appearing against us or any of our body, any more?"
"There’s one we
know of," returned Gashford, with an expressive smile, "who is at
least as well informed upon that subject as you or I."
"If we mean the
same gentleman, as I suppose we do," Hugh rejoined softly, "I tell
you this--he’s as good and quick information about everything as--" here
he paused and looked round, as if to make sure that the person in question was
not within hearing, "as Old Nick himself. Have you done that, master? How
slow you are!"
"It’s quite fast
now," said Gashford, rising. "I say--you didn’t find that your friend
disapproved of to-day’s little expedition? Ha ha ha! It is fortunate it jumps
so well with the witness policy; for, once planned, it must have been carried
out. And now you are going, eh?"
"Now we are going,
master!" Hugh replied. "Any parting words?"
"Oh dear,
no," said Gashford sweetly. "None!"
"You’re
sure?" cried Hugh, nudging the grinning Dennis.
"Quite sure, eh,
Muster Gashford?" chuckled the hangman.
Gashford paused a
moment, struggling with his caution and his malice; then putting himself
between the two men, and laying a hand upon the arm of each, said, in a cramped
whisper:
"Do not, my good
friends--I am sure you will not--forget our talk one night--in your house,
Dennis--about this person. No mercy, no quarter, no two beams of his house to
be left standing where the builder placed them! Fire, the saying goes, is a
good servant, but a bad master. Makes it his master; he deserves no better. But
I am sure you will be firm, I am sure you will be very resolute, I am sure you
will remember that he thirsts for your lives, and those of all your brave
companions. If you ever acted like staunch fellows, you will do so to-day. Won’t
you, Dennis--won’t you, Hugh?"
The two looked at him,
and at each other; then bursting into a roar of laughter, brandished their
staves above their heads, shook hands, and hurried out.
When they had been gone
a little time, Gashford followed. They were yet in sight, and hastening to that
part of the adjacent fields in which their fellows had already mustered; Hugh
was looking back, and flourishing his hat to Barnaby, who, delighted with his
trust, replied in the same way, and then resumed his pacing up and down before
the stable-door, where his feet had worn a path already. And when Gashford
himself was far distant, and looked back for the last time, he was still
walking to and fro, with the same measured tread; the most devoted and the
blithest champion that ever maintained a post, and felt his heart lifted up
with a brave sense of duty, and determination to defend it to the last.
Smiling at the
simplicity of the poor idiot, Gashford betook himself to Welbeck Street by a
different path from that which he knew the rioters would take, and sitting down
behind a curtain in one of the upper windows of Lord George Gordon’s house,
waited impatiently for their coming. They were so long, that although he knew
it had been settled they should come that way, he had a misgiving they must
have changed their plans and taken some other route. But at length the roar of
voices was heard in the neighbouring fields, and soon afterwards they came
thronging past, in a great body.
However, they were not
all, nor nearly all, in one body, but were, as he soon found, divided into four
parties, each of which stopped before the house to give three cheers, and then
went on; the leaders crying out in what direction they were going, and calling
on the spectators to join them. The first detachment, carrying, by way of
banners, some relics of the havoc they had made in Moorfields, proclaimed that
they were on their way to Chelsea, whence they would return in the same order,
to make of the spoil they bore, a great bonfire, near at hand. The second gave
out that they were bound for Wapping, to destroy a chapel; the third, that
their place of destination was East Smithfield, and their object the same. All
this was done in broad, bright, summer day. Gay carriages and chairs stopped to
let them pass, or turned back to avoid them; people on foot stood aside in
doorways, or perhaps knocked and begged permission to stand at a window, or in
the hall, until the rioters had passed: but nobody interfered with them; and
when they had gone by, everything went on as usual.
There still remained
the fourth body, and for that the secretary looked with a most intense
eagerness. At last it came up. It was numerous, and composed of picked men; for
as he gazed down among them, he recognised many upturned faces which he knew
well--those of Simon Tappertit, Hugh, and Dennis in the front, of course. They
halted and cheered, as the others had done; but when they moved again, they did
not, like them, proclaim what design they had. Hugh merely raised his hat upon
the bludgeon he carried, and glancing at a spectator on the opposite side of
the way, was gone.
Gashford followed the
direction of his glance instinctively, and saw, standing on the pavement, and
wearing the blue cockade, Sir John Chester. He held his hat an inch or two
above his head, to propitiate the mob; and, resting gracefully on his cane,
smiling pleasantly, and displaying his dress and person to the very best
advantage, looked on in the most tranquil state imaginable. For all that, and
quick and dexterous as he was, Gashford had seen him recognise Hugh with the
air of a patron. He had no longer any eyes for the crowd, but fixed his keen
regards upon Sir John.
He stood in the same
place and posture until the last man in the concourse had turned the corner of
the street; then very deliberately took the blue cockade out of his hat; put it
carefully in his pocket, ready for the next emergency; refreshed himself with a
pinch of snuff; put up his box; and was walking slowly off, when a passing
carriage stopped, and a lady’s hand let down the glass. Sir John’s hat was off
again immediately.
After a minute’s
conversation at the carriage-window, in which it was apparent that he was
vastly entertaining on the subject of the mob, he stepped lightly in, and was
driven away.
The secretary smiled,
but he had other thoughts to dwell upon, and soon dismissed the topic. Dinner
was brought him, but he sent it down untasted; and, in restless pacings up and
down the room, and constant glances at the clock, and many futile efforts to
sit down and read, or go to sleep, or look out of the window, consumed four
weary hours. When the dial told him thus much time had crept away, he stole
upstairs to the top of the house, and coming out upon the roof sat down, with
his face towards the east.
Heedless of the fresh
air that blew upon his heated brow, of the pleasant meadows from which he
turned, of the piles of roofs and chimneys upon which he looked, of the smoke
and rising mist he vainly sought to pierce, of the shrill cries of children at
their evening sports, the distant hum and turmoil of the town, the cheerful
country breath that rustled past to meet it, and to droop, and die; he watched,
and watched, till it was dark save for the specks of light that twinkled in the
streets below and far away-- and, as the darkness deepened, strained his gaze
and grew more eager yet.
"Nothing but gloom
in that direction, still!" he muttered restlessly. "Dog! where is the
redness in the sky, you promised me?"
RUMOURS of the
prevailing disturbances had, by this time, begun to be pretty generally
circulated through the towns and villages round London, and the tidings were
everywhere received with that appetite for the marvellous and love of the
terrible which have probably been among the natural characteristics of mankind
since the creation of the world. These accounts, however, appeared, to many
persons at that day--as they would to us at the present, but that we know them
to be matter of history--so monstrous and improbable, that a great number of
those who were resident at a distance, and who were credulous enough on other
points, were really unable to bring their minds to believe that such things
could be; and rejected the intelligence they received on all hands, as wholly
fabulous and absurd.
Mr. Willet--not so
much, perhaps, on account of his having argued and settled the matter with
himself, as by reason of his constitutional obstinacy--was one of those who
positively refused to entertain the current topic for a moment. On this very
evening, and perhaps at the very time when Gashford kept his solitary watch,
old John was so red in the face with perpetually shaking his head in
contradiction of his three ancient cronies and pot companions, that he was
quite a phenomenon to behold, and lighted up the Maypole Porch wherein they sat
together, like a monstrous carbuncle in a fairy tale.
"Do you think,
sir," said Mr. Willet, looking hard at Solomon Daisy--for it was his
custom in cases of personal altercation to fasten upon the smallest man in the
party--"do you think, sir, that I’m a born fool?"
"No, no,
Johnny," returned Solomon, looking round upon the little circle of which
he formed a part: "We all know better than that. You’re no fool, Johnny.
No, no!"
Mr. Cobb and Mr. Parkes
shook their heads in unison, muttering, "No, no, Johnny, not you!"
But as such compliments had usually the effect of making Mr. Willet rather more
dogged than before, he surveyed them with a look of deep disdain, and returned
for answer:
"Then what do you
mean by coming here, and telling me that this evening you’re a-going to walk up
to London together--you three-- you--and have the evidence of your own senses?
An’t," said Mr. Willet, putting his pipe in his mouth with an air of
solemn disgust, "an’t the evidence of my senses enough for you?"
"But we haven’t got
it, Johnny," pleaded Parkes, humbly.
"You haven’t got
it, sir?" repeated Mr. Willet, eyeing him from top to toe. "You haven’t
got it, sir? You have got it, sir. Don’t I tell you that His blessed Majesty
King George the Third would no more stand a rioting and rollicking in his
streets, than he’d stand being crowed over by his own Parliament?"
"Yes, Johnny, but
that’s your sense--not your senses," said the adventurous Mr. Parkes.
"How do you
know?" retorted John with great dignity. "You’re a contradicting
pretty free, you are, sir. How do you know which it is? I’m not aware I ever
told you, sir."
Mr. Parkes, finding
himself in the position of having got into metaphysics without exactly seeing
his way out of them, stammered forth an apology and retreated from the
argument. There then ensued a silence of some ten minutes or a quarter of an
hour, at the expiration of which period Mr. Willet was observed to rumble and
shake with laughter, and presently remarked, in reference to his late
adversary, "that he hoped he had tackled him enough." Thereupon
Messrs Cobb and Daisy laughed, and nodded, and Parkes was looked upon as
thoroughly and effectually put down.
"Do you suppose if
all this was true, that Mr. Haredale would be constantly away from home, as he
is?" said John, after another silence. "Do you think he wouldn’t be
afraid to leave his house with them two young women in it, and only a couple of
men, or so?"
"Ay, but then you
know," returned Solomon Daisy, "his house is a goodish way out of
London, and they do say that the rioters won’t go more than two miles, or three
at the farthest, off the stones. Besides, you know, some of the Catholic
gentlefolks have actually sent trinkets and suchlike down here for safety--at
least, so the story goes."
"The story goes!"
said Mr. Willet testily. "Yes, sir. The story goes that you saw a ghost
last March. But nobody believes it."
"Well!" said
Solomon, rising, to divert the attention of his two friends, who tittered at
this retort: "believed or disbelieved, it’s true; and true or not, if we
mean to go to London, we must be going at once. So shake hands, Johnny, and
good night."
"I shall shake
hands," returned the landlord, putting his into his pockets, "with no
man as goes to London on such nonsensical errands."
The three cronies were
therefore reduced to the necessity of shaking his elbows; having performed that
ceremony, and brought from the house their hats, and sticks, and greatcoats,
they bade him good night and departed; promising to bring him on the morrow full
and true accounts of the real state of the city, and if it were quiet, to give
him the full merit of his victory.
John Willet looked
after them, as they plodded along the road in the rich glow of a summer
evening; and knocking the ashes out of his pipe, laughed inwardly at their
folly, until his sides were sore. When he had quite exhausted himself--which
took some time, for he laughed as slowly as he thought and spoke--he sat
himself comfortably with his back to the house, put his legs upon the bench, then
his apron over his face, and fell sound asleep.
How long he slept,
matters not; but it was for no brief space, for when he awoke, the rich light
had faded, the sombre hues of night were falling fast upon the landscape, and a
few bright stars were already twinkling overhead. The birds were all at roost,
the daisies on the green had closed their fairy hoods, the honeysuckle twining
round the porch exhaled its perfume in a twofold degree, as though it lost its
coyness at that silent time and loved to shed its fragrance on the night; the
ivy scarcely stirred its deep green leaves. How tranquil, and how beautiful it
was!
Was there no sound in
the air, besides the gentle rustling of the trees and the grasshopper’s merry
chirp? Hark! Something very faint and distant, not unlike the murmuring in a
sea-shell. Now it grew louder, fainter now, and now it altogether died away.
Presently, it came again, subsided, came once more, grew louder,
fainter--swelled into a roar. It was on the road, and varied with its windings.
All at once it burst into a distinct sound--the voices, and the tramping feet
of many men.
It is questionable
whether old John Willet, even then, would have thought of the rioters but for
the cries of his cook and housemaid, who ran screaming upstairs and locked
themselves into one of the old garrets,--shrieking dismally when they had done
so, by way of rendering their place of refuge perfectly secret and secure.
These two females did afterwards depone that Mr. Willet in his consternation
uttered but one word, and called that up the stairs in a stentorian voice, six
distinct times. But as this word was a monosyllable, which, however inoffensive
when applied to the quadruped it denotes, is highly reprehensible when used in
connection with females of unimpeachable character, many persons were inclined
to believe that the young women laboured under some hallucination caused by
excessive fear; and that their ears deceived them.
Be this as it may, John
Willet, in whom the very uttermost extent of dull-headed perplexity supplied
the place of courage, stationed himself in the porch, and waited for their
coming up. Once, it dimly occurred to him that there was a kind of door to the
house, which had a lock and bolts; and at the same time some shadowy ideas of
shutters to the lower windows, flitted through his brain. But he stood stock
still, looking down the road in the direction in which the noise was rapidly
advancing, and did not so much as take his hands out of his pockets.
He had not to wait
long. A dark mass, looming through a cloud of dust, soon became visible; the
mob quickened their pace; shouting and whooping like savages, they came rushing
on pell mell; and in a few seconds he was bandied from hand to hand, in the
heart of a crowd of men.
"Halloa!"
cried a voice he knew, as the man who spoke came cleaving through the throng.
"Where is he? Give him to me. Don’t hurt him. How now, old Jack! Ha ha
ha!"
Mr. Willet looked at
him, and saw it was Hugh; but he said nothing, and thought nothing.
"These lads are thirsty
and must drink!" cried Hugh, thrusting him back towards the house.
"Bustle, Jack, bustle. Show us the best-- the very best--the over-proof
that you keep for your own drinking, Jack!"
John faintly
articulated the words, "Who’s to pay?"
"He says ’Who’s to
pay?’" cried Hugh, with a roar of laughter which was loudly echoed by the
crowd. Then turning to John, he added, "Pay! Why, nobody."
John stared round at
the mass of faces--some grinning, some fierce, some lighted up by torches, some
indistinct, some dusky and shadowy: some looking at him, some at his house,
some at each other--and while he was, as he thought, in the very act of doing
so, found himself, without any consciousness of having moved, in the bar;
sitting down in an arm-chair, and watching the destruction of his property, as
if it were some
queer play or
entertainment, of an astonishing and stupefying nature, but having no reference
to himself--that he could make out--at all.
Yes. Here was the
bar--the bar that the boldest never entered without special invitation--the
sanctuary, the mystery, the hallowed ground: here it was, crammed with men,
clubs, sticks, torches, pistols; filled with a deafening noise, oaths, shouts,
screams, hootings; changed all at once into a bear-garden, a madhouse, an
infernal temple: men darting in and out, by door and window, smashing the
glass, turning the taps, drinking liquor out of China punchbowls, sitting
astride of casks, smoking private and personal pipes, cutting down the sacred
grove of lemons, hacking and hewing at the celebrated cheese, breaking open
inviolable drawers, putting things in their pockets which didn’t belong to
them, dividing his own money before his own eyes, wantonly wasting, breaking,
pulling down and tearing up: nothing quiet, nothing private: men
everywhere--above, below, overhead, in the bedrooms, in the kitchen, in the
yard, in the stables--clambering in at windows when there were doors wide open;
dropping out of windows when the stairs were handy; leaping over the bannisters
into chasms of passages: new faces and figures presenting themselves every
instant--some yelling, some singing, some fighting, some breaking glass and
crockery, some laying the dust with the liquor they couldn’t drink, some
ringing the bells till they pulled them down, others beating them with pokers
till they beat them into fragments: more men still--more, more, more--swarming
on like insects: noise, smoke, light, darkness, frolic, anger, laughter,
groans, plunder, fear, and ruin!
Nearly all the time
while John looked on at this bewildering scene, Hugh kept near him; and though
he was the loudest, wildest, most destructive villain there, he saved his old
master’s bones a score of times. Nay, even when Mr. Tappertit, excited by
liquor, came up, and in assertion of his prerogative politely kicked John
Willet on the shins, Hugh bade him return the compliment; and if old John had
had sufficient presence of mind to understand this whispered direction, and to
profit by it, he might no doubt, under Hugh’s protection, have done so with
impunity.
At length the band
began to reassemble outside the house, and to call to those within, to join
them, for they were losing time. These murmurs increasing, and attaining a high
pitch, Hugh, and some of those who yet lingered in the bar, and who plainly
were the leaders of the troop, took counsel together, apart, as to what was to
be done with John, to keep him quiet until their Chigwell work was over. Some
proposed to set the house on fire and leave him in it; others, that he should
be reduced to a state of temporary insensibility, by knocking on the head;
others, that he should be sworn to sit where he was until to-morrow at the same
hour; others again, that he should be gagged and taken off with them, under a
sufficient guard. All these propositions being overruled, it was concluded, at
last, to bind him in his chair, and the word was passed for Dennis.
"Look’ee here,
Jack!" said Hugh, striding up to him: "We are going to tie you, hand
and foot, but otherwise you won’t be hurt. D’ye hear?"
John Willet looked at
another man, as if he didn’t know which was the speaker, and muttered something
about an ordinary every Sunday at two o’clock.
"You won’t be hurt
I tell you, Jack--do you hear me?" roared Hugh, impressing the assurance upon
him by means of a heavy blow on the back. "He’s so dead scared, he’s
woolgathering, I think. Give him a drop of something to drink here. Hand over,
one of you."
A glass of liquor being
passed forward, Hugh poured the contents down old John’s throat. Mr. Willet
feebly smacked his lips, thrust his hand into his pocket, and inquired what was
to pay; adding, as he looked vacantly round, that he believed there was a
trifle of broken glass--
"He’s out of his
senses for the time, it’s my belief," said Hugh, after shaking him,
without any visible effect upon his system, until his keys rattled in his
pocket. "Where’s that Dennis?"
The word was again
passed, and presently Mr. Dennis, with a long cord bound about his middle,
something after the manner of a friar, came hurrying in, attended by a
body-guard of half-a-dozen of his men.
"Come! Be alive
here!" cried Hugh, stamping his foot upon the ground. "Make
haste!"
Dennis, with a wink and
a nod, unwound the cord from about his person, and raising his eyes to the
ceiling, looked all over it, and round the walls and cornice, with a curious
eye; then shook his head.
"Move, man, can’t
you!" cried Hugh, with another impatient stamp of his foot. "Are we
to wait here, till the cry has gone for ten miles round, and our work’s
interrupted?"
"It’s all very
fine talking, brother," answered Dennis, stepping towards him; "but
unless--" and here he whispered in his ear-- "unless we do it over
the door, it can’t be done at all in this here room."
"What can’t?"
Hugh demanded.
"What can’t!"
retorted Dennis. "Why, the old man can’t."
"Why, you weren’t
going to hang him!" cried Hugh.
"No,
brother?" returned the hangman with a stare. "What else?"
Hugh made no answer,
but snatching the rope from his companion’s hand, proceeded to bind old John
himself; but his very first move was so bungling and unskilful, that Mr. Dennis
entreated, almost with tears in his eyes, that he might be permitted to perform
the duty. Hugh consenting, be achieved it in a twinkling.
"There," he
said, looking mournfully at John Willet, who displayed no more emotion in his
bonds than he had shown out of them. "That’s what I call pretty and
workmanlike. He’s quite a picter now. But, brother, just a word with you--now
that he’s ready trussed, as one may say, wouldn’t it be better for all parties
if we was to work him off? It would read uncommon well in the newspapers, it
would indeed. The public would think a great deal more on us!"
Hugh, inferring what
his companion meant, rather from his gestures than his technical mode of
expressing himself (to which, as he was ignorant of his calling, he wanted the
clue), rejected this proposition for the second time, and gave the word
"Forward!" which was echoed by a hundred voices from without.
"To the
Warren!" shouted Dennis as he ran out, followed by the rest. "A
witness’s house, my lads!"
A loud yell followed,
and the whole throng hurried off, mad for pillage and destruction. Hugh
lingered behind for a few moments to stimulate himself with more drink, and to
set all the taps running, a few of which had accidentally been spared; then,
glancing round the despoiled and plundered room, through whose shattered window
the rioters had thrust the Maypole itself,--for even that had been sawn
down,--lighted a torch, clapped the mute and motionless John Willet on the
back, and waving his light above his head, and uttering a fierce shout,
hastened after his companions.
JOHN WILLET, left alone
in his dismantled bar, continued to sit staring about him; awake as to his
eyes, certainly, but with all his powers of reason and reflection in a sound
and dreamless sleep. He looked round upon the room which had been for years, and
was within an hour ago, the pride of his heart; and not a muscle of his face
was moved. The night, without, looked black and cold through the dreary gaps in
the casement; the precious liquids, now nearly leaked away, dripped with a
hollow sound upon the floor; the Maypole peered ruefully in through the broken
window, like the bowsprit of a wrecked ship; the ground might have been the
bottom of the sea, it was so strewn with precious fragments. Currents of air
rushed in, as the old doors jarred and creaked upon their hinges; the candles
flickered and guttered down, and made long winding-sheets; the cheery deep-red
curtains flapped and fluttered idly in the wind; even the stout Dutch kegs,
overthrown and lying empty in dark corners, seemed the mere husks of good
fellows whose jollity had departed, and who could kindle with a friendly glow
no more. John saw this desolation, and yet saw it not. He was perfectly
contented to sit there, staring at it, and felt no more indignation or
discomfort in his bonds than if they had been robes of honour. So far as he was
personally concerned, old Time lay snoring, and the world stood still.
Save for the dripping
from the barrels, the rustling of such light fragments of destruction as the
wind affected, and the dull creaking of the open doors, all was profoundly
quiet: indeed, these sounds, like the ticking of the death-watch in the night,
only made the silence they invaded deeper and more apparent. But quiet or
noisy, it was all one to John. If a train of heavy artillery could have come up
and commenced ball practice outside the window, it would have been all the same
to him. He was a long way beyond surprise. A ghost couldn’t have overtaken him.
By and by he heard a
footstep--a hurried, and yet cautious footstep--coming on towards the house. It
stopped, advanced again, then seemed to go quite round it. Having done that, it
came beneath the window, and a head looked in.
It was strongly
relieved against the darkness outside by the glare of the guttering candles. A
pale, worn, withered face; the eyes-- but that was owing to its gaunt
condition--unnaturally large and bright; the hair, a grizzled black. It gave a
searching glance all round the room, and a deep voice said:
"Are you alone in
this house?"
John made no sign,
though the question was repeated twice, and he heard it distinctly. After a
moment’s pause, the man got in at the window. John was not at all surprised at
this, either. There had been so much getting in and out of window in the course
of the last hour or so, that he had quite forgotten the door, and seemed to
have lived among such exercises from infancy.
The man wore a large,
dark, faded cloak, and a slouched hat; he walked up close to John, and looked
at him. John returned the compliment with interest.
"How long have you
been sitting thus?" said the man.
John considered, but
nothing came of it.
"Which way have
the party gone?"
Some wandering
speculations relative to the fashion of the stranger’s boots, got into Mr.
Willet’s mind by some accident or other, but they got out again in a hurry, and
left him in his former state.
"You would do well
to speak," said the man; "you may keep a whole skin, though you have
nothing else left that can be hurt. Which way have the party gone?"
"That!" said
John, finding his voice all at once, and nodding with perfect good faith--he
couldn’t point; he was so tightly bound--in exactly the opposite direction to
the right one.
"You lie!"
said the man angrily, and with a threatening gesture. "I came that way.
You would betray me."
It was so evident that
John’s imperturbability was not assumed, but was the result of the late
proceedings under his roof, that the man stayed his hand in the very act of
striking him, and turned away.
John looked after him
without so much as a twitch in a single nerve of his face. He seized a glass,
and holding it under one of the little casks until a few drops were collected,
drank them greedily off; then throwing it down upon the floor impatiently, he
took the vessel in his hands and drained it into his throat. Some scraps of
bread and meat were scattered about, and on these he fell next; eating them
with voracity, and pausing every now and then to listen for some fancied noise
outside. When he had refreshed himself in this manner with violent haste, and
raised another barrel to his lips, he pulled his hat upon his brow as though he
were about to leave the house, and turned to John.
"Where are your
servants?"
Mr. Willet indistinctly
remembered to have heard the rioters calling to them to throw the key of the
room in which they were, out of window, for their keeping. He therefore
replied, "Locked up."
"Well for them if
they remain quiet, and well for you if you do the like," said the man.
"Now show me the way the party went."
This time Mr. Willet indicated
it correctly. The man was hurrying to the door, when suddenly there came
towards them on the wind, the loud and rapid tolling of an alarm-bell, and then
a bright and vivid glare streamed up, which illumined, not only the whole
chamber, but all the country.
It was not the sudden
change from darkness to this dreadful light, it was not the sound of distant
shrieks and shouts of triumph, it was not this dread invasion of the serenity
and peace of night, that drove the man back as though a thunderbolt had struck
him. It was the Bell. If the ghastliest shape the human mind has ever pictured
in its wildest dreams had risen up before him, he could not have staggered
backward from its touch, as he did from the first sound of that loud iron
voice. With eyes that started from his head, his limbs convulsed, his face most
horrible to see, he raised one arm high up into the air, and holding something
visionary back and down, with his other hand, drove at it as though he held a
knife and stabbed it to the heart. He clutched his hair, and stopped his ears,
and travelled madly round and round; then gave a frightful cry, and with it
rushed away: still, still, the Bell tolled on and seemed to follow him--louder
and louder, hotter and hotter yet. The glare grew brighter, the roar of voices
deeper; the crash of heavy bodies falling, shook the air; bright streams of
sparks rose up into the sky; but louder than them all-- rising faster far, to
Heaven--a million times more fierce and furious--pouring forth dreadful secrets
after its long silence-- speaking the language of the dead--the Bell--the Bell!
What hunt of spectres
could surpass that dread pursuit and flight! Had there been a legion of them on
his track, he could have better borne it. They would have had a beginning and
an end, but here all space was full. The one pursuing voice was everywhere: it
sounded in the earth, the air; shook the long grass, and howled among the
trembling trees. The echoes caught it up, the owls hooted as it flew upon the
breeze, the nightingale was silent and hid herself among the thickest boughs:
it seemed to goad and urge the angry fire, and lash it into madness; everything
was steeped in one prevailing red; the glow was everywhere; nature was drenched
in blood: still the remorseless crying of that awful voice--the Bell, the Bell!
It ceased; but not in
his ears. The knell was at his heart. No work of man had ever voice like that
which sounded there, and warned him that it cried unceasingly to Heaven. Who
could hear that hell, and not know what it said! There was murder in its every
note--cruel, relentless, savage murder--the murder of a confiding man, by one
who held his every trust. Its ringing summoned phantoms from their graves. What
face was that, in which a friendly smile changed to a look of half incredulous
horror, which stiffened for a moment into one of pain, then changed again into
an imploring glance at Heaven, and so fell idly down with upturned eyes, like
the dead stags’ he had often peeped at when a little child: shrinking and shuddering--there
was a dreadful thing to think of now!--and clinging to an apron as he looked!
He sank upon the ground, and grovelling down as if he would dig himself a place
to hide in, covered his face and ears: but no, no, no,--a hundred walls and
roofs of brass would not shut out that bell, for in it spoke the wrathful voice
of God, and from that voice, the whole wide universe could not afford a refuge!
While he rushed up and
down, not knowing where to turn, and while he lay crouching there, the work went
briskly on indeed. When they left the Maypole, the rioters formed into a solid
body, and advanced at a quick pace towards the Warren. Rumour of their approach
having gone before, they found the garden-doors fast closed, the windows made
secure, and the house profoundly dark: not a light being visible in any portion
of the building. After some fruitless ringing at the bells, and beating at the
iron gates, they drew off a few paces to reconnoitre, and confer upon the
course it would be best to take.
Very little conference
was needed, when all were bent upon one desperate purpose, infuriated with
liquor, and flushed with successful riot. The word being given to surround the
house, some climbed the gates, or dropped into the shallow trench and scaled
the garden wall, while others pulled down the solid iron fence, and while they
made a breach to enter by, made deadly weapons of the bars. The house being
completely encircled, a small number of men were despatched to break open a
tool-shed in the garden; and during their absence on this errand, the remainder
contented themselves with knocking violently at the doors, and calling to those
within, to come down and open them on peril of their lives.
No answer being
returned to this repeated summons, and the detachment who had been sent away,
coming back with an accession of pickaxes, spades, and hoes, they,--together
with those who had such arms already, or carried (as many did) axes, poles, and
crowbars,-- struggled into the foremost rank, ready to beset the doors and
windows. They had not at this time more than a dozen lighted torches among
them; but when these preparations were completed, flaming links were
distributed and passed from hand to hand with such rapidity, that, in a minute’s
time, at least two-thirds of the whole roaring mass bore, each man in his hand,
a blazing brand. Whirling these about their heads they raised a loud shout, and
fell to work upon the doors and windows.
Amidst the clattering
of heavy blows, the rattling of broken glass, the cries and execrations of the
mob, and all the din and turmoil of the scene, Hugh and his friends kept
together at the turret-door where Mr. Haredale had last admitted him and old
John Willet; and spent their united force on that. It was a strong old oaken
door, guarded by good bolts and a heavy bar, but it soon went crashing in upon
the narrow stairs behind, and made, as it were, a platform to facilitate their
tearing up into the rooms above. Almost at the same moment, a dozen other
points were forced, and at every one the crowd poured in like water.
A few armed servant-men
were posted in the hall, and when the rioters forced an entrance there, they
fired some half-a-dozen shots. But these taking no effect, and the concourse
coming on like an army of devils, they only thought of consulting their own
safety, and retreated, echoing their assailants’ cries, and hoping in the
confusion to be taken for rioters themselves; in which stratagem they
succeeded, with the exception of one old man who was never heard of again, and
was said to have had his brains beaten out with an iron bar (one of his fellows
reported that he had seen the old man fall), and to have been afterwards burnt
in the flames.
The besiegers being now
in complete possession of the house, spread themselves over it from garret to
cellar, and plied their demon labours fiercely. While some small parties
kindled bonfires underneath the windows, others broke up the furniture and cast
the fragments down to feed the flames below; where the apertures in the wall
(windows no longer) were large enough, they threw out tables, chests of
drawers, beds, mirrors, pictures, and flung them whole into the fire; while
every fresh addition to the blazing masses was received with shouts, and howls,
and yells, which added new and dismal terrors to the conflagration. Those who
had axes and had spent their fury on the movables, chopped and tore down the
doors and window frames, broke up the flooring, hewed away the rafters, and
buried men who lingered in the upper rooms, in heaps of ruins. Some searched
the drawers, the chests, the boxes, writing-desks, and closets, for jewels,
plate, and money; while others, less mindful of gain and more mad for
destruction, cast their whole contents into the courtyard without examination,
and called to those below, to heap them on the blaze. Men who had been into the
cellars, and had staved the casks, rushed to and fro stark mad, setting fire to
all they saw--often to the dresses of their own friends--and kindling the
building in so many parts that some had no time for escape, and were seen, with
drooping hands and blackened faces, hanging senseless on the window-sills to
which they had crawled, until they were sucked and drawn into the burning gulf.
The more the fire crackled and raged, the wilder and more cruel the men grew;
as though moving in that element they became fiends, and changed their earthly
nature for the qualities that give delight in hell.
The burning pile,
revealing rooms and passages red hot, through gaps made in the crumbling walls;
the tributary fires that licked the outer bricks and stones, with their long
forked tongues, and ran up to meet the glowing mass within; the shining of the
flames upon the villains who looked on and fed them; the roaring of the angry
blaze, so bright and high that it seemed in its rapacity to have swallowed up
the very smoke; the living flakes the wind bore rapidly away and hurried on
with, like a storm of fiery snow; the noiseless breaking of great beams of wood,
which fell like feathers on the heap of ashes, and crumbled in the very act to
sparks and powder; the lurid tinge that overspread the sky, and the darkness,
very deep by contrast, which prevailed around; the exposure to the coarse,
common gaze, of every little nook which usages of home had made a sacred place,
and the destruction by rude hands of every little household favourite which old
associations made a dear and precious thing: all this taking place--not among
pitying looks and friendly murmurs of compassion, but brutal shouts and
exultations, which seemed to make the very rats who stood by the old house too
long, creatures with some claim upon the pity and regard of those its roof had
sheltered:--combined to form a scene never to be forgotten by those who saw it
and were not actors in the work, so long as life endured.
And who were they? The
alarm-bell rang--and it was pulled by no faint or hesitating hands--for a long
time; but not a soul was seen. Some of the insurgents said that when it ceased,
they heard the shrieks of women, and saw some garments fluttering in the air,
as a party of men bore away no unresisting burdens. No one could say that this
was true or false, in such an uproar; but where was Hugh? Who among them had
seen him, since the forcing of the doors? The cry spread through the body.
Where was Hugh!
"Here!" he
hoarsely cried, appearing from the darkness; out of breath, and blackened with
the smoke. "We have done all we can; the fire is burning itself out; and
even the corners where it hasn’t spread, are nothing but heaps of ruins.
Disperse, my lads, while the coast’s clear; get back by different ways; and
meet as usual!" With that, he disappeared again,--contrary to his wont,
for he was always first to advance, and last to go away,--leaving them to
follow homewards as they would.
It was not an easy task
to draw off such a throng. If Bedlam gates had been flung wide open, there
would not have issued forth such maniacs as the frenzy of that night had made.
There were men there, who danced and trampled on the beds of flowers as though
they trod down human enemies, and wrenched them from the stalks, like savages
who twisted human necks. There were men who cast their lighted torches in the
air, and suffered them to fall upon their heads and faces, blistering the skin
with deep unseemly burns. There were men who rushed up to the fire, and paddled
in it with their hands as if in water; and others who were restrained by force
from plunging in, to gratify their deadly longing. On the skull of one drunken
lad--not twenty, by his looks--who lay upon the ground with a bottle to his
mouth, the lead from the roof came streaming down in a shower of liquid fire,
white hot; melting his head like wax. When the scattered parties were
collected, men-- living yet, but singed as with hot irons--were plucked out of
the cellars, and carried off upon the shoulders of others, who strove to wake
them as they went along, with ribald jokes, and left them, dead, in the
passages of hospitals. But of all the howling throng not one learnt mercy from,
or sickened at, these sights; nor was the fierce, besotted, senseless rage of
one man glutted.
Slowly, and in small
clusters, with hoarse hurrahs and repetitions of their usual cry, the assembly
dropped away. The last few red- eyed stragglers reeled after those who had gone
before; the distant noise of men calling to each other, and whistling for
others whom they missed, grew fainter and fainter; at length even these sounds
died away, and silence reigned alone.
Silence indeed! The
glare of the flames had sunk into a fitful, flashing light; and the gentle
stars, invisible till now, looked down upon the blackening heap. A dull smoke
hung upon the ruin, as though to hide it from those eyes of Heaven; and the
wind forbore to move it. Bare walls, roof open to the sky--chambers, where the
beloved dead had, many and many a fair day, risen to new life and energy; where
so many dear ones had been sad and merry; which were connected with so many
thoughts and hopes, regrets and changes--all gone. Nothing left but a dull and
dreary blank--a smouldering heap of dust and ashes--the silence and solitude of
utter desolation.
THE Maypole cronies,
little dreaming of the change so soon to come upon their favourite haunt,
struck through the Forest path upon their way to London; and avoiding the main
road, which was hot and dusty, kept to the by-paths and the fields. As they
drew nearer to their destination, they began to make inquiries of the people
whom they passed, concerning the riots, and the truth or falsehood of the
stories they had heard. The answers went far beyond any intelligence that had
spread to quiet Chigwell. One man told them that that afternoon the Guards,
conveying to Newgate some rioters who had been re-examined, had been set upon
by the mob and compelled to retreat; another, that the houses of two witnesses
near Clare Market were about to be pulled down when he came away; another, that
Sir George Saville’s house in Leicester Fields was to be burned that night, and
that it would go hard with Sir George if he fell into the people’s hands, as it
was he who had brought in the Catholic bill. All accounts agreed that the mob
were out, in stronger numbers and more numerous parties than had yet appeared;
that the streets were unsafe; that no man’s house or life was worth an hour’s
purchase; that the public consternation was increasing every moment; and that
many families had already fled the city. One fellow who wore the popular
colour, damned them for not having cockades in their hats, and bade them set a
good watch to-morrow night upon their prison doors, for the locks would have a
straining; another asked if they were fire-proof, that they walked abroad
without the distinguishing mark of all good and true men;--and a third who rode
on horseback, and was quite alone, ordered them to throw each man a shilling,
in his hat, towards the support of the rioters. Although they were afraid to
refuse compliance with this demand, and were much alarmed by these reports,
they agreed, having come so far, to go forward, and see the real state of
things with their own eyes. So they pushed on quicker, as men do who are
excited by portentous news; and ruminating on what they had heard, spoke little
to each other.
It was now night, and
as they came nearer to the city they had dismal confirmation of this
intelligence in three great fires, all close together, which burnt fiercely and
were gloomily reflected in the sky. Arriving in the immediate suburbs, they
found that almost every house had chalked upon its door in large characters
"No Popery," that the shops were shut, and that alarm and anxiety
were depicted in every face they passed.
Noting these things
with a degree of apprehension which neither of the three cared to impart, in
its full extent, to his companions, they came to a turnpike-gate, which was
shut. They were passing through the turnstile on the path, when a horseman rode
up from London at a hard gallop, and called to the toll-keeper in a voice of
great agitation, to open quickly in the name of God.
The adjuration was so
earnest and vehement, that the man, with a lantern in his hand, came running
out--toll-keeper though he was-- and was about to throw the gate open, when
happening to look behind him, he exclaimed, "Good Heaven, what’s that!
Another fire!"
At this, the three
turned their heads, and saw in the distance-- straight in the direction whence
they had come--a broad sheet of flame, casting a threatening light upon the
clouds, which glimmered as though the conflagration were behind them, and
showed like a wrathful sunset.
"My mind misgives
me," said the horseman, "or I know from what far building those
flames come. Don’t stand aghast, my good fellow. Open the gate!"
"Sir," cried
the man, laying his hand upon his horse’s bridle as he let him through: "I
know you now, sir; be advised by me; do not go on. I saw them pass, and know
what kind of men they are. You will be murdered."
"So be it!"
said the horseman, looking intently towards the fire, and not at him who spoke.
"But sir--sir,"
cried the man, grasping at his rein more tightly yet, "if you do go on,
wear the blue riband. Here, sir," he added, taking one from his own hat,
"it’s necessity, not choice, that makes me wear it; it’s love of life and
home, sir. Wear it for this one night, sir; only for this one night."
"Do!" cried
the three friends, pressing round his horse. "Mr. Haredale--worthy
sir--good gentleman--pray be persuaded."
"Who’s that?"
cried Mr. Haredale, stooping down to look. "Did I hear Daisy’s
voice?"
"You did,
sir," cried the little man. "Do be persuaded, sir. This gentleman
says very true. Your life may hang upon it."
"Are you,"
said Mr. Haredale abruptly, "afraid to come with me?"
"I,
sir?--N-n-no."
"Put that riband
in your hat. If we meet the rioters, swear that I took you prisoner for wearing
it. I will tell them so with my own lips; for as I hope for mercy when I die, I
will take no quarter from them, nor shall they have quarter from me, if we come
hand to hand to-night. Up here--behind me--quick! Clasp me tight round the
body, and fear nothing."
In an instant they were
riding away, at full gallop, in a dense cloud of dust, and speeding on, like
hunters in a dream.
It was well the good
horse knew the road he traversed, for never once--no, never once in all the
journey--did Mr. Haredale cast his eyes upon the ground, or turn them, for an
instant, from the light towards which they sped so madly. Once he said in a low
voice, "It is my house," but that was the only time he spoke. When
they came to dark and doubtful places, he never forgot to put his hand upon the
little man to hold him more securely in his seat, but he kept his head erect
and his eyes fixed on the fire, then, and always.
The road was dangerous
enough, for they went the nearest way-- headlong--far from the highway--by
lonely lanes and paths, where waggon-wheels had worn deep ruts; where hedge and
ditch hemmed in the narrow strip of ground; and tall trees, arching overhead,
made it profoundly dark. But on, on, on, with neither stop nor stumble, till
they reached the Maypole door, and could plainly see that the fire began to
fade, as if for want of fuel.
"Down--for one
moment--for but one moment," said Mr. Haredale, helping Daisy to the
ground, and following himself. "Willet-- Willet--where are my niece and
servants--Willet!"
Crying to him
distractedly, he rushed into the bar.--The landlord bound and fastened to his
chair; the place dismantled, stripped, and pulled about his ears;--nobody could
have taken shelter here.
He was a strong man,
accustomed to restrain himself, and suppress his strong emotions; but this
preparation for what was to follow-- though he had seen that fire burning, and
knew that his house must be razed to the ground--was more than he could bear.
He covered his face with his hands for a moment, and turned away his head.
"Johnny,
Johnny," said Solomon--and the simple-hearted fellow cried outright, and
wrung his hands--"Oh dear old Johnny, here’s a change! That the Maypole
bar should come to this, and we should live to see it! The old Warren too,
Johnny--Mr. Haredale--oh, Johnny, what a piteous sight this is!"
Pointing to Mr.
Haredale as he said these words, littele Solomon Daisy put his elbows on the
back of Mr. Willet’s chair, and fairly blubbered on his shoulder.
While Solomon was
speaking, old John sat, mute as a stock-fish, staring at him with an unearthly
glare, and displaying, by every possible symptom, entire and complete
unconsciousness. But when Solomon was silent again, John followed, with his
great round eyes, the direction of his looks, and did appear to have some
dawning distant notion that somebody had come to see him.
"You know us, don’t
you, Johnny?" said the little clerk, rapping himself on the breast.
"Daisy, you know--Chigwell Church--bell- ringer--little desk on
Sundays--eh, Johnny?"
Mr. Willet reflected
for a few moments, and then muttered, as it were mechanically: "Let us
sing to the praise and glory of--"
"Yes, to be
sure," cried the little man, hastily; "that’s it-- that’s me, Johnny.
You’re all right now, an’t you? Say you’re all right, Johnny."
"All right?"
pondered Mr. Willet, as if that were a matter entirely between himself and his
conscience. "All right? Ah!"
"They haven’t been
misusing you with sticks, or pokers, or any other blunt instruments--have they,
Johnny?" asked Solomon, with a very anxious glance at Mr. Willet’s head.
"They didn’t beat you, did they?"
John knitted his brow;
looked downwards, as if he were mentally engaged in some arithmetical
calculation; then upwards, as if the total would not come at his call; then at
Solomon Daisy, from his eyebrow to his shoe-buckle; then very slowly round the
bar. And then a great, round, leaden-looking, and not at all transparent tear,
came rolling out of each eye, and he said, as he shook his head:
"If they’d only
had the goodness to murder me, I’d have thanked ’em kindly."
"No, no, no, don’t
say that, Johnny," whimpered his little friend. "It’s very, very bad,
but not quite so bad as that. No, no!"
"Look’ee here,
sir!" cried John, turning his rueful eyes on Mr. Haredale, who had dropped
on one knee, and was hastily beginning to untie his bonds. "Look’ee here,
sir! The very Maypole--the old dumb Maypole--stares in at the winder, as if it
said, ’John Willet, John Willet, let’s go and pitch ourselves in the nighest
pool of water as is deep enough to hold us; for our day is over!’"
"Don’t, Johnny,
don’t," cried his friend: no less affected with this mournful effort of
Mr. Willet’s imagination, than by the sepulchral tone in which he had spoken of
the Maypole. "Please don’t, Johnny!"
"Your loss is
great, and your misfortune a heavy one," said Mr. Haredale, looking
restlessly towards the door: "and this is not a time to comfort you. If it
were, I am in no condition to do so. Before I leave you, tell me one thing, and
try to tell me plainly, I implore you. Have you seen, or heard of Emma?"
"No!" said
Mr. Willet.
"Nor any one but
these bloodhounds?"
"No!"
"They rode away, I
trust in Heaven, before these dreadful scenes began," said Mr. Haredale,
who, between his agitation, his eagerness to mount his horse again, and the
dexterity with which the cords were tied, had scarcely yet undone one knot.
"A knife, Daisy!"
"You didn’t,"
said John, looking about, as though he had lost his pocket-handkerchief, or
some such slight article--"either of you gentlemen--see a--a coffin
anywheres, did you?"
"Willet!"
cried Mr. Haredale. Solomon dropped the knife, and instantly becoming limp from
head to foot, exclaimed "Good gracious!"
"--Because,"
said John, not at all regarding them, "a dead man called a little time
ago, on his way yonder. I could have told you what name was on the plate, if he
had brought his coffin with him, and left it behind. If he didn’t, it don’t
signify."
His landlord, who had
listened to these words with breathless attention, started that moment to his
feet; and, without a word, drew Solomon Daisy to the door, mounted his horse,
took him up behind again, and flew rather than galloped towards the pile of
ruins, which that day’s sun had shone upon, a stately house. Mr. Willet stared
after them, listened, looked down upon himself to make quite sure that he was
still unbound, and, without any manifestation of impatience, disappointment, or
surprise, gently relapsed into the condition from which he had so imperfectly
recovered.
Mr. Haredale tied his
horse to the trunk of a tree, and grasping his companion’s arm, stole softly
along the footpath, and into what had been the garden of his house. He stopped
for an instant to look upon its smoking walls, and at the stars that shone
through roof and floor upon the heap of crumbling ashes. Solomon glanced
timidly in his face, but his lips were tightly pressed together, a resolute and
stern expression sat upon his brow, and not a tear, a look, or gesture
indicating grief, escaped him.
He drew his sword; felt
for a moment in his breast, as though he carried other arms about him; then
grasping Solomon by the wrist again, went with a cautious step all round the
house. He looked into every doorway and gap in the wall; retraced his steps at
every rustling of the air among the leaves; and searched in every shadowed nook
with outstretched hands. Thus they made the circuit of the building: but they
returned to the spot from which they had set out, without encountering any
human being, or finding the least trace of any concealed straggler.
After a short pause,
Mr. Haredale shouted twice or thrice. Then cried aloud, "Is there any one
in hiding here, who knows my voice? There is nothing to fear now. If any of my
people are near, I entreat them to answer!" He called them all by name;
his voice was echoed in many mournful tones; then all was silent as before.
They were standing near
the foot of the turret, where the alarm- bell hung. The fire had raged there,
and the floors had been sawn, and hewn, and beaten down, besides. It was open
to the night; but a part of the staircase still remained, winding upward from a
great mound of dust and cinders. Fragments of the jagged and broken steps
offered an insecure and giddy footing here and there, and then were lost again,
behind protruding angles of the wall, or in the deep shadows cast upon it by
other portions of the ruin; for by this time the moon had risen, and shone
brightly.
As they stood here,
listening to the echoes as they died away, and hoping in vain to hear a voice
they knew, some of the ashes in this turret slipped and rolled down. Startled
by the least noise in that melancholy place, Solomon looked up in his companion’s
face, and saw that he had turned towards the spot, and that he watched and
listened keenly.
He covered the little
man’s mouth with his hand, and looked again. Instantly, with kindling eyes, he
bade him on his life keep still, and neither speak nor move. Then holding his
breath, and stooping down, he stole into the turret, with his drawn sword in
his hand, and disappeared.
Terrified to be left
there by himself, under such desolate circumstances, and after all he had seen
and heard that night, Solomon would have followed, but there had been something
in Mr. Haredale’s manner and his look, the recollection of which held him
spellbound. He stood rooted to the spot; and scarcely venturing to breathe,
looked up with mingled fear and wonder.
Again the ashes slipped
and rolled--very, very softly--again--and then again, as though they crumbled
underneath the tread of a stealthy foot. And now a figure was dimly visible;
climbing very softly; and often stopping to look down; now it pursued its
difficult way; and now it was hidden from the view again.
It emerged once more,
into the shadowy and uncertain light--higher now, but not much, for the way was
steep and toilsome, and its progress very slow. What phantom of the brain did
he pursue; and why did he look down so constantly? He knew he was alone. Surely
his mind was not affected by that night’s loss and agony. He was not about to
throw himself headlong from the summit of the tottering wall. Solomon turned
sick, and clasped his hands. His limbs trembled beneath him, and a cold sweat
broke out upon his pallid face.
If he complied with Mr.
Haredale’s last injunction now, it was because he had not the power to speak or
move. He strained his gaze, and fixed it on a patch of moonlight, into which,
if he continued to ascend, he must soon emerge. When he appeared there, he
would try to call to him.
Again the ashes slipped
and crumbled; some stones rolled down, and fell with a dull, heavy sound upon
the ground below. He kept his eyes upon the piece of moonlight. The figure was
coming on, for its shadow was already thrown upon the wall. Now it
appeared--and now looked round at him--and now--
The horror-stricken
clerk uttered a scream that pierced the air, and cried, "The ghost! The
ghost!"
Long before the echo of
his cry had died away, another form rushed out into the light, flung itself
upon the foremost one, knelt down upon its breast, and clutched its throat with
both hands.
"Villain!"
cried Mr. Haredale, in a terrible voice--for it was he. "Dead and buried,
as all men supposed through your infernal arts, but reserved by Heaven for
this--at last--at last I have you. You, whose hands are red with my brother’s
blood, and that of his faithful servant, shed to conceal your own atrocious
guilt--You, Rudge, double murderer and
monster, I arrest you
in the name of God, who has delivered you into my hands. No. Though you had the
strength of twenty men," he added, as the murderer writhed and struggled,
"you could not escape me or loosen my grasp to-night!"
BARNABY, armed as we
have seen, continued to pace up and down before the stable-door; glad to be
alone again, and heartily rejoicing in the unaccustomed silence and
tranquillity. After the whirl of noise and riot in which the last two days had
been passed, the pleasures of solitude and peace were enhanced a thousandfold.
He felt quite happy; and as he leaned upon his staff and mused, a bright smile
overspread his face, and none but cheerful visions floated into his brain.
Had he no thoughts of
her, whose sole delight he was, and whom he had unconsciously plunged in such
bitter sorrow and such deep affliction? Oh, yes. She was at the heart of all
his cheerful hopes and proud reflections. It was she whom all this honour and
distinction were to gladden; the joy and profit were for her. What delight it
gave her to hear of the bravery of her poor boy! Ah! He would have known that,
without Hugh’s telling him. And what a precious thing it was to know she lived
so happily, and heard with so much pride (he pictured to himself her look when
they told her) that he was in such high esteem: bold among the boldest, and
trusted before them all! And when these frays were over, and the good lord had
conquered his enemies, and they were all at peace again, and he and she were rich,
what happiness they would have in talking of these troubled times when he was a
great soldier: and when they sat alone together in the tranquil twilight, and
she had no longer reason to be anxious for the morrow, what pleasure would he
have in the reflection that this was his doing--his--poor foolish Barnaby’s;
and in patting her on the cheek, and saying with a merry laugh, "Am I
silly now, mother--am I silly now?"
With a lighter heart
and step, and eyes the brighter for the happy tear that dimmed them for a
moment, Barnaby resumed his walk; and singing gaily to himself, kept guard upon
his quiet post.
His comrade Grip, the
partner of his watch, though fond of basking in the sunshine, preferred to-day
to walk about the stable; having a great deal to do in the way of scattering
the straw, hiding under it such small articles as had been casually left about,
and haunting Hugh’s bed, to which he seemed to have taken a particular
attachment. Sometimes Barnaby looked in and called him, and then he came hopping
out; but he merely did this as a concession to his master’s weakness, and soon
returned again to his own grave pursuits: peering into the straw with his bill,
and rapidly covering up the place, as if, Midas-like, he were whispering
secrets to the earth and burying them; constantly busying himself upon the sly;
and affecting, whenever Barnaby came past, to look up in the clouds and have
nothing whatever on his mind: in short, conducting himself, in many respects,
in a more than usually thoughtful, deep, and mysterious manner.
As the day crept on,
Barnaby, who had no directions forbidding him to eat and drink upon his post,
but had been, on the contrary, supplied with a bottle of beer and a basket of
provisions, determined to break his fast, which he had not done since morning.
To this end, he sat down on the ground before the door, and putting his staff
across his knees in case of alarm or surprise, summoned Grip to dinner.
This call, the bird
obeyed with great alacrity; crying, as he sidled up to his master, "I’m a
devil, I’m a Polly, I’m a kettle, I’m a Protestant, No Popery!" Having
learnt this latter sentiment from the gentry among whom he had lived of late,
he delivered it with uncommon emphasis.
"Well said,
Grip!" cried his master, as he fed him with the daintiest bits. "Well
said, old boy!"
"Never say die,
bow wow wow, keep up your spirits, Grip Grip Grip, Holloa! We’ll all have tea,
I’m a Protestant kettle, No Popery!" cried the raven.
"Gordon for ever,
Grip!" cried Barnaby.
The raven, placing his
head upon the ground, looked at his master sideways, as though he would have
said, "Say that again!" Perfectly understanding his desire, Barnaby
repeated the phrase a great many times. The bird listened with profound
attention; sometimes repeating the popular cry in a low voice, as if to compare
the two, and try if it would at all help him to this new accomplishment;
sometimes flapping his wings, or barking; and sometimes in a kind of
desperation drawing a multitude of corks, with extraordinary viciousness.
Barnaby was so intent
upon his favourite, that he was not at first aware of the approach of two
persons on horseback, who were riding at a foot-pace, and coming straight
towards his post. When he perceived them, however, which he did when they were
within some fifty yards of him, he jumped hastily up, and ordering Grip within
doors, stood with both hands on his staff, waiting until he should know whether
they were friends or foes.
He had hardly done so,
when he observed that those who advanced were a gentleman and his servant;
almost at the same moment he recognised Lord George Gordon, before whom he
stood uncovered, with his eyes turned towards the ground.
"Good day!"
said Lord George, not reining in his horse until he was close beside him.
"Well!"
"All quiet, sir,
all safe!" cried Barnaby. "The rest are away-- they went by that
path--that one. A grand party!"
"Ay?" said
Lord George, looking thoughtfully at him. "And you?"
"Oh! They left me
here to watch--to mount guard--to keep everything secure till they come back. I’ll
do it, sir, for your sake. You’re a good gentleman; a kind gentleman--ay, you
are. There are many against you, but we’ll be a match for them, never
fear!"
"What’s
that?" said Lord George--pointing to the raven who was peeping out of the
stable-door--but still looking thoughtfully, and in some perplexity, it seemed,
at Barnaby.
"Why, don’t you
know!" retorted Barnaby, with a wondering laugh. "Not know what he
is! A bird, to be sure. My bird--my friend--Grip."
"A devil, a
kettle, a Grip, a Polly, a Protestant, no Popery!" cried the raven.
"Though,
indeed," added Barnaby, laying his hand upon the neck of Lord George’s
horse, and speaking softly: "you had good reason to ask me what he is, for
sometimes it puzzles me--and I am used to him--to think he’s only a bird. He’s
my brother, Grip is--always with me--always talking--always merry--eh,
Grip?"
The raven answered by
an affectionate croak, and hopping on his master’s arm, which he held downward
for that purpose, submitted with an air of perfect indifference to be fondled,
and turned his restless, curious eye, now upon Lord George, and now upon his
man.
Lord George, biting his
nails in a discomfited manner, regarded Barnaby for some time in silence; then
beckoning to his servant, said:
"Come hither,
John."
John Grueby touched his
hat, and came.
"Have you ever
seen this young man before?" his master asked in a low voice.
"Twice, my
lord," said John. "I saw him in the crowd last night and
Saturday."
"Did--did it seem
to you that his manner was at all wild or strange?" Lord George demanded,
faltering.
"Mad," said
John, with emphatic brevity.
"And why do you
think him mad, sir?" said his master, speaking in a peevish tone.
"Don’t use that word too freely. Why do you think him mad?"
"My lord,"
John Grueby answered, "look at his dress, look at his eyes, look at his
restless way, hear him cry ’No Popery!’ Mad, my lord."
"So because one
man dresses unlike another," returned his angry master, glancing at
himself; "and happens to differ from other men in his carriage and manner,
and to advocate a great cause which the corrupt and irreligious desert, he is
to be accounted mad, is he?"
"Stark, staring,
raving, roaring mad, my lord," returned the unmoved John.
"Do you say this
to my face?" cried his master, turning sharply upon him.
"To any man, my
lord, who asks me," answered John.
"Mr. Gashford, I
find, was right," said Lord George; "I thought him prejudiced, though
I ought to have known a man like him better than to have supposed it possible!"
"I shall never
have Mr. Gashford’s good word, my lord," replied John, touching his hat
respectfully, "and I don’t covet it."
"You are an
ill-conditioned, most ungrateful fellow," said Lord George: "a spy,
for anything I know. Mr. Gashford is perfectly correct, as I might have felt
convinced he was. I have done wrong to retain you in my service. It is a tacit
insult to him as my choice and confidential friend to do so, remembering the
cause you sided with, on the day he was maligned at Westminster. You will leave
me to-night--nay, as soon as we reach home. The sooner the better."
"If it comes to
that, I say so too, my lord. Let Mr. Gashford have his will. As to my being a
spy, my lord, you know me better than to believe it, I am sure. I don’t know
much about causes. My cause is the cause of one man against two hundred; and I
hope it always will be."
"You have said
quite enough," returned Lord George, motioning him to go back. "I
desire to hear no more."
"If you’ll let me
have another word, my lord," returned John Grueby, "I’d give this
silly fellow a caution not to stay here by himself. The proclamation is in a
good many hands already, and it’s well known that he was concerned in the
business it relates to. He had better get to a place of safety if he can, poor
creature."
"You hear what
this man says?" cried Lord George, addressing Barnaby, who had looked on
and wondered while this dialogue passed. "He thinks you may be afraid to
remain upon your post, and are kept here perhaps against your will. What do you
say?"
"I think, young
man," said John, in explanation, "that the soldiers may turn out and
take you; and that if they do, you will certainly be hung by the neck till you’re
dead--dead--dead. And I think you had better go from here, as fast as you can.
That’s what I think."
"He’s a coward,
Grip, a coward!" cried Barnaby, putting the raven on the ground, and
shouldering his staff. "Let them come! Gordon for ever! Let them
come!"
"Ay!" said
Lord George, "let them! Let us see who will venture to attack a power like
ours; the solemn league of a whole people. This a madman! You have said well,
very well. I am proud to be the leader of such men as you."
Bamaby’s heart swelled
within his bosom as he heard these words. He took Lord George’s hand and
carried it to his lips; patted his horse’s crest, as if the affection and
admiration he had conceived for the man extended to the animal he rode; then
unfurling his flag, and proudly waving it, resumed his pacing up and down.
Lord George, with a
kindling eye and glowing cheek, took off his hat, and flourishing it above his
head, bade him exultingly Farewell!--then cantered off at a brisk pace; after
glancing angrily round to see that his servant followed. Honest John set spurs
to his horse and rode after his master, but not before he had again warned
Barnaby to retreat, with many significant gestures, which indeed he continued
to make, and Barnaby to resist, until the windings of the road concealed them
from each other’s view.
Left to himself again
with a still higher sense of the importance of his post, and stimulated to
enthusiasm by the special notice and encouragement of his leader, Barnaby
walked to and fro in a delicious trance rather than as a waking man. The
sunshine which prevailed around was in his mind. He had but one desire
ungratified. If she could only see him now!
The day wore on; its
heat was gently giving place to the cool of evening; a light wind sprung up,
fanning his long hair, and making the banner rustle pleasantly above his head.
There was a freedom and freshness in the sound and in the time, which chimed
exactly with his mood. He was happier than ever.
He was leaning on his
staff looking towards the declining sun, and reflecting with a smile that he
stood sentinel at that moment over buried gold, when two or three figures
appeared in the distance, making towards the house at a rapid pace, and
motioning with their hands as though they urged its inmates to retreat from some
approaching danger. As they drew nearer, they became more earnest in their
gestures; and they were no sooner within hearing, than the foremost among them
cried that the soldiers were coming up.
At these words, Barnaby
furled his flag, and tied it round the pole. His heart beat high while he did
so, but he had no more fear or thought of retreating than the pole itself. The
friendly stragglers hurried past him, after giving him notice of his danger,
and quickly passed into the house, where the utmost confusion immediately
prevailed. As those within hastily closed the windows and the doors, they urged
him by looks and signs to fly without loss of time, and called to him many
times to do so; but he only shook his head indignantly in answer, and stood the
firmer on his post. Finding that he was not to be persuaded, they took care of
themselves; and leaving the place with only one old woman in it, speedily
withdrew.
As yet there had been
no symptom of the news having any better foundation than in the fears of those
who brought it, but The Boot had not been deserted five minutes, when there
appeared, coming across the fields, a body of men who, it was easy to see, by
the glitter of their arms and ornaments in the sun, and by their orderly and
regular mode of advancing--for they came on as one man--were soldiers. In a
very little time, Barnaby knew that they were a strong detachment of the Foot
Guards, having along with them two gentlemen in private clothes, and a small
party of Horse; the latter brought up the rear, and were not in number more
than six or eight.
They advanced steadily;
neither quickening their pace as they came nearer, nor raising any cry, nor
showing the least emotion or anxiety. Though this was a matter of course in the
case of regular troops, even to Barnaby, there was something particularly
impressive and disconcerting in it to one accustomed to the noise and tumult of
an undisciplined mob. For all that, he stood his ground not a whit the less
resolutely, and looked on undismayed.
Presently, they marched
into the yard, and halted. The commanding-officer despatched a messenger to the
horsemen, one of whom came riding back. Some words passed between them, and
they glanced at Barnaby; who well remembered the man he had unhorsed at
Westminster, and saw him now before his eyes. The man being speedily dismissed,
saluted, and rode back to his comrades, who were drawn up apart at a short
distance.
The officer then gave
the word to prime and load. The heavy ringing of the musket-stocks upon the
ground, and the sharp and rapid rattling of the ramrods in their barrels, were
a kind of relief to Batnahy, deadly though he knew the purport of such sounds
to be. When this was done, other commands were given, and the soldiers
instantaneously formed in single file all round the house and stables;
completely encircling them in every part, at a distance, perhaps, of some
half-dozen yards; at least that seemed in Barnaby’s eyes to be about the space
left between himself and those who confronted him. The horsemen remained drawn
up by themselves as before.
The two gentlemen in
private clothes who had kept aloof, now rode forward, one on either side the
officer. The proclamation having been produced and read by one of them, the
officer called on Barnaby to surrender.
He made no answer, but
stepping within the door, before which he had kept guard, held his pole
crosswise to protect it. In the midst of a profound silence, he was again
called upon to yield.
Still he offered no
reply. Indeed he had enough to do, to run his eye backward and forward along
the half-dozen men who immediately fronted him, and settle hurriedly within
himself at which of them he would strike first, when they pressed on him. He
caught the eye of one in the centre, and resolved to hew that fellow down,
though he died for it.
Again there was a dead
silence, and again the same voice called upon him to deliver himself up.
Next moment he was back
in the stable, dealing blows about him like a madman. Two of the men lay
stretched at his feet: the one he had marked, dropped first--he had a thought
for that, even in the hot blood and hurry of the struggle. Another
blow--another! Down, mastered, wounded in the breast by a heavy blow from the
butt-end of a gun (he saw the weapon in the act of falling)--breathless--and a
prisoner.
An exclamation of
surprise from the officer recalled him, in some degree, to himself. He looked
round. Grip, after working in secret all the afternoon, and with redoubled
vigour while everybody’s attention was distracted, had plucked away the straw
from Hugh’s bed, and turned up the loose ground with his iron bill. The hole
had been recklessly filled to the brim, and was merely sprinkled with earth.
Golden cups, spoons, candlesticks, coined guineas--all the riches were
revealed.
They brought spades and
a sack; dug up everything that was hidden there; and carried away more than two
men could lift.
They handcuffed him and
bound his arms, searched him, and took away all he had. Nobody questioned or
reproached him, or seemed to have much curiosity about him. The two men he had
stunned, were carried off by their companions in the same business-like way in
which everything else was done. Finally, he was left under a guard of four
soldiers with fixed bayonets, while the officer directed in person the search
of the house and the other buildings connected with it.
This was soon
completed. The soldiers formed again in the yard; he was marched out, with his
guard about him; and ordered to fall in, where a space was left. The others
closed up all round, and so they moved away, with the prisoner in the centre.
When they came into the
streets, he felt he was a sight; and looking up as they passed quickly along,
could see people running to the windows a little too late, and throwing up the
sashes to look after him. Sometimes he met a staring face beyond the heads
about him, or under the arms of his conductors, or peering down upon him from a
waggon-top or coach-box; but this was all he saw, being surrounded by so many
men. The very noises of the streets seemed muffled and subdued; and the air
came stale and hot upon him, like the sickly breath of an oven.
Tramp, tramp. Tramp,
tramp. Heads erect, shoulders square, every man stepping in exact time--all so
orderly and regular--nobody looking at him--nobody seeming conscious of his
presence,--he could hardly believe he was a Prisoner. But at the word, though
only thought, not spoken, he felt the handcuffs galling his wrists, the cord
pressing his arms to his sides: the loaded guns levelled at his head; and those
cold, bright, sharp, shining points turned towards him: the mere looking down
at which, now that he was bound and helpless, made the warm current of his life
run cold.
THEY were not long in
reaching the barracks, for the officer who commanded the party was desirous to
avoid rousing the people by the display of military force in the streets, and
was humanely anxious to give as little opportunity as possible for any attempt
at rescue; knowing that it must lead to bloodshed and loss of life, and that if
the civil authorities by whom he was accompanied, empowered him to order his
men to fire, many innocent persons would probably fall, whom curiosity or
idleness had attracted to the spot. He therefore led the party briskly on,
avoiding with a merciful prudence the more public and crowded thoroughfares,
and pursuing those which he deemed least likely to be infested by disorderly
persons. This wise proceeding not only enabled them to gain their quarters
without any interruption, but completely baffled a body of rioters who had
assembled in one of the main streets, through which it was considered certain
they would pass, and who remained gathered together for the purpose of
releasing the prisoner from their hands, long after they had deposited him in a
place of security, closed the barrack-gates, and set a double guard at every
entrance for its better protection.
Arrived at this place,
poor Barnaby was marched into a stone- floored room, where there was a very
powerful smell of tobacco, a strong thorough draught of air, and a great wooden
bedstead, large enough for a score of men. Several soldiers in undress were
lounging about, or eating from tin cans; military accoutrements dangled on rows
of pegs along the whitewashed wall; and some half- dozen men lay fast asleep
upon their backs, snoring in concert. After remaining here just long enough to
note these things, he was marched out again, and conveyed across the
parade-ground to another portion of the building.
Perhaps a man never
sees so much at a glance as when he is in a situation of extremity. The chances
are a hundred to one, that if Barnaby had lounged in at the gate to look about
him, he would have lounged out again with a very imperfect idea of the place,
and would have remembered very little about it. But as he was taken handcuffed
across the gravelled area, nothing escaped his notice. The dry, arid look of
the dusty square, and of the bare brick building; the clothes hanging at some
of the windows; and the men in their shirt-sleeves and braces, lolling with
half their bodies out of the others; the green sun-blinds at the officers’
quarters, and the little scanty trees in front; the drummer-boys practising in
a distant courtyard; the men at drill on the parade; the two soldiers carrying
a basket between them, who winked to each other as he went by, and slily
pointed to their throats; the spruce sergeant who hurried past with a cane in
his hand, and under his arm a clasped book with a vellum cover; the fellows in
the ground- floor rooms, furbishing and brushing up their different articles of
dress, who stopped to look at him, and whose voices as they spoke together
echoed loudly through the empty galleries and passages;-- everything, down to
the stand of muskets before the guard-house, and the drum with a pipe-clayed
belt attached, in one corner, impressed itself upon his observation, as though
he had noticed them in the same place a hundred times, or had been a whole day
among them, in place of one brief hurried minute.
He was taken into a
small paved back yard, and there they opened a great door, plated with iron,
and pierced some five feet above the ground with a few holes to let in air and
light. Into this dungeon he was walked straightway; and having locked him up
there, and placed a sentry over him, they left him to his meditations.
The cell, or black
hole, for it had those words painted on the door, was very dark, and having
recently accommodated a drunken deserter, by no means clean. Barnaby felt his way
to some straw at the farther end, and looking towards the door, tried to
accustom himself to the gloom, which, coming from the bright sunshine out of
doors, was not an easy task.
There was a kind of
portico or colonnade outside, and this obstructed even the little light that at
the best could have found its way through the small apertures in the door. The
footsteps of the sentinel echoed monotonously as he paced its stone pavement to
and fro (reminding Barnaby of the watch he had so lately kept himself); and as
he passed and repassed the door, he made the cell for an instant so black by
the interposition of his body, that his going away again seemed like the
appearance of a new ray of light, and was quite a circumstance to look for.
When the prisoner had
sat sometime upon the ground, gazing at the chinks, and listening to the
advancing and receding footsteps of his guard, the man stood still upon his
post. Barnaby, quite unable to think, or to speculate on what would be done
with him, had been lulled into a kind of doze by his regular pace; but his
stopping roused him; and then he became aware that two men were in conversation
under the colonnade, and very near the door of his cell.
How long they had been
talking there, he could not tell, for he had fallen into an unconsciousness of
his real position, and when the footsteps ceased, was answering aloud some
question which seemed to have been put to him by Hugh in the stable, though of
the fancied purport, either of question or reply, notwithstanding that he awoke
with the latter on his lips, he had no recollection whatever. The first words
that reached his ears, were these:
"Why is he brought
here then, if he has to be taken away again so soon?"
"Why where would
you have him go! Damme, he’s not as safe anywhere as among the king’s troops,
is he? What would you do with him? Would you hand him over to a pack of
cowardly civilians, that shake in their shoes till they wear the soles out,
with trembling at the threats of the ragamuffins he belongs to?"
"That’s true
enough."
"True enough!--I’ll
tell you what. I wish, Tom Green, that I was a commissioned instead of a
non-commissioned officer, and that I had the command of two companies--only two
companies--of my own regiment. Call me out to stop these riots--give me the
needful authority, and half-a-dozen rounds of ball cartridge--"
"Ay!" said
the other voice. "That’s all very well, but they won’t give the needful
authority. If the magistrate won’t give the word, what’s the officer to
do?"
Not very well knowing,
as it seemed, how to overcome this difficulty, the other man contented himself
with damning the magistrates.
"With all my
heart," said his friend.
"Where’s the use
of a magistrate?" returned the other voice. "What’s a magistrate in
this case, but an impertinent, unnecessary, unconstitutional sort of
interference? Here’s a proclamation. Here’s a man referred to in that
proclamation. Here’s proof against him, and a witness on the spot. Damme! Take
him out and shoot him, sir. Who wants a magistrate?"
"When does he go
before Sir John Fielding?" asked the man who had spoken first.
"To-night at eight
o’clock," returned the other. "Mark what follows. The magistrate
commits him to Newgate. Our people take him to Newgate. The rioters pelt our
people. Our people retire before the rioters. Stones are thrown, insults are
offered, not a shot’s fired. Why? Because of the magistrates. Damn the
magistrates!"
When he had in some
degree relieved his mind by cursing the magistrates in various other forms of
speech, the man was silent, save for a low growling, still having reference to
those authorities, which from time to time escaped him.
Barnaby, who had wit
enough to know that this conversation concerned, and very nearly concerned,
himself, remained perfectly quiet until they ceased to speak, when he groped
his way to the door, and peeping through the air-holes, tried to make out what
kind of men they were, to whom he had been listening.
The one who condemned
the civil power in such strong terms, was a sergeant--engaged just then, as the
streaming ribands in his cap announced, on the recruiting service. He stood
leaning sideways against a pillar nearly opposite the door, and as he growled
to himself, drew figures on the pavement with his cane. The other man had his back
towards the dungeon, and Barnaby could only see his form. To judge from that,
he was a gallant, manly, handsome fellow, but he had lost his left arm. It had
been taken off between the elbow and the shoulder, and his empty coat-sleeve
hung across his breast.
It was probably this
circumstance which gave him an interest beyond any that his companion could
boast of, and attracted Barnaby’s attention. There was something soldierly in
his bearing, and he wore a jaunty cap and jacket. Perhaps he had been in the
service at one time or other. If he had, it could not have been very long ago,
for he was but a young fellow now.
"Well, well,"
he said thoughtfully; "let the fault be where it may, it makes a man
sorrowful to come back to old England, and see her in this condition."
"I suppose the
pigs will join ’em next," said the sergeant, with an imprecation on the
rioters, "now that the birds have set ’em the example."
"The birds!"
repeated Tom Green.
"Ah--birds,"
said the sergeant testily; "that’s English, an’t it?"
"I don’t know what
you mean."
"Go to the
guard-house, and see. You’ll find a bird there, that’s got their cry as pat as
any of ’em, and bawls ’No Popery,’ like a man--or like a devil, as he says he
is. I shouldn’t wonder. The devil’s loose in London somewhere. Damme if I
wouldn’t twist his neck round, on the chance, if I had my way."
The young man had taken
two or three steps away, as if to go and see this creature, when he was
arrested by the voice of Barnaby.
"It’s mine,"
he called out, half laughing and half weeping--"my pet, my friend Grip. Ha
ha ha! Don’t hurt him, he has done no harm. I taught him; it’s my fault. Let me
have him, if you please. He’s the only friend I have left now. He’ll not dance,
or talk, or whistle for you, I know; but he will for me, because he knows me
and loves me--though you wouldn’t think it--very well. You wouldn’t hurt a
bird, I’m sure. You’re a brave soldier, sir, and wouldn’t harm a woman or a
child--no, no, nor a poor bird, I’m certain."
This latter adjuration
was addressed to the sergeant, whom Barnaby judged from his red coat to be high
in office, and able to seal Grip’s destiny by a word. But that gentleman, in
reply, surlily damned him for a thief and rebel as he was, and with many
disinterested imprecations on his own eyes, liver, blood, and body, assured him
that if it rested with him to decide, he would put a final stopper on the bird,
and his master too.
"You talk boldly
to a caged man," said Barnaby, in anger. "If I was on the other side
of the door and there were none to part us, you’d change your note--ay, you may
toss your head--you would! Kill the bird--do. Kill anything you can, and so
revenge yourself on those who with their bare hands untied could do as much to
you!"
Having vented his
defiance, he flung himself into the furthest corner of his prison, and
muttering, "Good bye, Grip--good bye, dear old Grip!" shed tears for
the first time since he had been taken captive; and hid his face in the straw.
He had had some fancy
at first, that the one-armed man would help him, or would give him a kind word
in answer. He hardly knew why, but he hoped and thought so. The young fellow
had stopped when he called out, and checking himself in the very act of turning
round, stood listening to every word he said. Perhaps he built his feeble trust
on this; perhaps on his being young, and having a frank and honest manner.
However that might be, he built on sand. The other went away directly he had
finished speaking, and neither answered him, nor returned. No matter. They were
all against him here: he might have known as much. Good bye, old Grip, good
bye!
After some time, they
came and unlocked the door, and called to him to come out. He rose directly,
and complied, for he would not have them think he was subdued or frightened. He
walked out like a man, and looked from face to face.
None of them returned
his gaze or seemed to notice it. They marched him back to the parade by the way
they had brought him, and there they halted, among a body of soldiers, at least
twice as numerous as that which had taken him prisoner in the afternoon. The
officer he had seen before, bade him in a few brief words take notice that if
he attempted to escape, no matter how favourable a chance he might suppose he
had, certain of the men had orders to fire upon him, that moment. They then
closed round him as before, and marched him off again.
In the same unbroken
order they arrived at Bow Street, followed and beset on all sides by a crowd
which was continually increasing. Here he was placed before a blind gentleman,
and asked if he wished to say anything. Not he. What had he got to tell them?
After a very little talking, which he was careless of and quite indifferent to,
they told him he was to go to Newgate, and took him away.
He went out into the
street, so surrounded and hemmed in on every side by soldiers, that he could
see nothing; but he knew there was a great crowd of people, by the murmur; and
that they were not friendly to the soldiers, was soon rendered
evident by their yells
and hisses. How often and how eagerly he listened for the voice of Hugh! There
was not a voice he knew among them all. Was Hugh a prisoner too? Was there no
hope!
As they came nearer and
nearer to the prison, the hootings of the people grew more violent; stones were
thrown; and every now and then, a rush was made against the soldiers, which
they staggered under. One of them, close before him, smarting under a blow upon
the temple, levelled his musket, but the officer struck it upwards with his
sword, and ordered him on peril of his life to desist. This was the last thing
he saw with any distinctness, for directly afterwards he was tossed about, and
beaten to and fro, as though in a tempestuous sea. But go where he would, there
were the same guards about him. Twice or thrice he was thrown down, and so were
they; but even then, he could not elude their vigilance for a moment. They were
up again, and had closed about him, before he, with his wrists so tightly
bound, could scramble to his feet. Fenced in, thus, he felt himself hoisted to
the top of a low flight of steps, and then for a moment he caught a glimpse of
the fighting in the crowd, and of a few red coats sprinkled together, here and
there, struggling to rejoin their fellows. Next moment, everything was dark and
gloomy, and he was standing in the prison lobby; the centre of a group of men.
A smith was speedily in
attendance, who riveted upon him a set of heavy irons. Stumbling on as well as
he could, beneath the unusual burden of these fetters, he was conducted to a
strong stone cell, where, fastening the door with locks, and bolts, and chains,
they left him, well secured; having first, unseen by him, thrust in Grip, who,
with his head drooping and his deep black plumes rough and rumpled, appeared to
comprehend and to partake, his master’s fallen fortunes.
END OF VOL. I.
VIRTUE AND CO.,
PRINTERS, CITY ROAD, LONDON.
IT is necessary at this
juncture to return to Hugh, who, having, as we have seen, called to the rioters
to disperse from about the Warren, and meet again as usual, glided back into
the darkness from which he had emerged, and reappeared no more that night.
He paused in the copse
which sheltered him from the observation of his mad companions, and waited to
ascertain whether they drew off at his bidding, or still lingered and called to
him to join them. Some few, he saw, were indisposed to go away without him, and
made towards the spot where he stood concealed as though they were about to
follow in his footsteps, and urge him to come back; but these men, being in
their turn called to by their friends, and in truth not greatly caring to
venture into the dark parts of the grounds, where they might be easily surprised
and taken, if any of the neighbours or retainers of the family were watching
them from among the trees, soon abandoned the idea, and hastily assembling such
men as they found of their mind at the moment, straggled off.
When he was satisfied
that the great mass of the insurgents were imitating this example, and that the
ground was rapidly clearing, he plunged into the thickest portion of the little
wood; and, crashing the branches as he went, made straight towards a distant
light: guided by that, and by the sullen glow of the fire behind him.
As he drew nearer and
nearer to the twinkling beacon towards which he bent his course, the red glare
of a few torches began to reveal itself, and the voices of men speaking
together in a subdued tone broke the silence which, save for a distant shouting
now and then, already prevailed. At length he cleared the wood, and, springing
across a ditch, stood in a dark lane, where a small body of ill- looking
vagabonds, whom he had left there some twenty minutes before, waited his coming
with impatience.
They were gathered
round an old post-chaise or chariot, driven by one of themselves, who sat
postilion-wise upon the near horse. The blinds were drawn up, and Mr. Tappertit
and Dennis kept guard at the two windows. The former assumed the command of the
party, for he challenged Hugh as he advanced towards them; and when he did so,
those who were resting on the ground about the carriage rose to their feet and
clustered round him.
"Well!" said
Simon, in a low voice; "is all right?"
"Right
enough," replied Hugh, in the same tone. "They’re dispersing now--had
begun before I came away."
"And is the coast
clear?"
"Clear enough
before our men, I take it," said Hugh. "There are not many who,
knowing of their work over yonder, will want to meddle with ’em to-night.--Who’s
got some drink here?"
Everybody had some
plunder from the cellar; half-a-dozen flasks and bottles were offered directly.
He selected the largest, and putting it to his mouth, sent the wine gurgling
down his throat. Having emptied it, he threw it down, and stretched out his
hand for another, which he emptied likewise, at a draught. Another was given
him, and this he half emptied too. Reserving what remained to finish with, he
asked:
"Have you got
anything to eat, any of you? I’m as ravenous as a hungry wolf. Which of you was
in the larder--come?"
"I was,
brother," said Dennis, pulling off his hat, and fumbling in the crown.
"There’s a matter of cold venison pasty somewhere or another here, if that’ll
do."
"Do!" cried
Hugh, seating himself on the pathway. "Bring it out! Quick! Show a light
here, and gather round! Let me sup in state, my lads! Ha ha ha!"
Entering into his
boisterous humour, for they all had drunk deeply, and were as wild as he, they
crowded about him, while two of their number who had torches, held them up, one
on either side of him, that his banquet might not be despatched in the dark. Mr.
Dennis, having by this time succeeded in extricating from his hat a great mass
of pasty, which had been wedged in so tightly that it was not easily got out,
put it before him; and Hugh, having borrowed a notched and jagged knife from
one of the company, fell to work upon it vigorously.
"I should
recommend you to swallow a little fire every day, about an hour afore dinner,
brother," said Dennis, after a pause. "It seems to agree with you,
and to stimulate your appetite."
Hugh looked at him, and
at the blackened faces by which he was surrounded, and, stopping for a moment
to flourish his knife above his head, answered with a roar of laughter.
"Keep order,
there, will you?" said Simon Tappertit.
"Why, isn’t a man
allowed to regale himself, noble captain," retorted his lieutenant,
parting the men who stood between them, with his knife, that he might see
him,--"to regale himself a little bit after such work as mine? What a hard
captain! What a strict captain! What a tyrannical captain! Ha ha ha!"
"I wish one of you
fellers would hold a bottle to his mouth to keep him quiet," said Simon,
"unless you want the military to be down upon us."
"And what if they
are down upon us!" retorted Hugh. "Who cares? Who’s afraid? Let ’em
come, I say, let ’em come. The more, the merrier. Give me bold Barnaby at my
side, and we two will settle the military, without troubling any of you.
Barnaby’s the man for the military. Barnaby’s health!"
But as the majority of
those present were by no means anxious for a second engagement that night,
being already weary and exhausted, they sided with Mr. Tappertit, and pressed
him to make haste with his supper, for they had already delayed too long.
Knowing, even in the height of his frenzy, that they incurred great danger by
lingering so near the scene of the late outrages, Hugh made an end of his meal
without more remonstrance, and rising, stepped up to Mr. Tappertit, and smote
him on the back.
"Now then,"
he cried, "I’m ready. There are brave birds inside this cage, eh? Delicate
birds,--tender, loving, little doves. I caged ’em--I caged ’em--one more
peep!"
He thrust the little
man aside as he spoke, and mounting on the steps, which were half let down,
pulled down the blind by force, and stared into the chaise like an ogre into
his larder.
"Ha ha ha! and did
you scratch, and pinch, and struggle, pretty mistress?" he cried, as he
grasped a little hand that sought in vain to free itself from his grip:
"you, so bright-eyed, and cherry-lipped, and daintily made? But I love you
better for it, mistress. Ay, I do. You should stab me and welcome, so that it
pleased you, and you had to cure me afterwards. I love to see you proud and
scornful. It makes you handsomer than ever; and who so handsome as you at any
time, my pretty one!"
"Come!" said
Mr. Tappertit, who had waited during this speech with considerable impatience.
"There’s enough of that. Come down."
The little hand
seconded this admonition by thrusting Hugh’s great head away with all its
force, and drawing up the blind, amidst his noisy laughter, and vows that he
must have another look, for the last glimpse of that sweet face had provoked
him past all bearing. However, as the suppressed impatience of the
party now broke out
into open murmurs, he abandoned this design, and taking his seat upon the bar,
contented himself with tapping at the front windows of the carriage, and trying
to steal a glance inside; Mr. Tappertit, mounting the steps and hanging on by
the door, issued his directions to the driver with a commanding voice and attitude;
the rest got up behind, or ran by the side of the carriage, as they could;
some, in imitation of Hugh, endeavoured to see the face he had praised so
highly, and were reminded of their impertinence by hints from the cudgel of Mr.
Tappertit. Thus they pursued their journey by circuitous and winding roads;
preserving, except when they halted to take breath, or to quarrel about the
best way of reaching London, pretty good order and tolerable silence.
In the mean time,
Dolly--beautiful, bewitching, captivating little Dolly--her hair dishevelled,
her dress torn, her dark eyelashes wet with tears, her bosom heaving--her face,
now pale with fear, now crimsoned with indignation--her whole self a hundred
times more beautiful in this heightened aspect than ever she had been before--
vainly strove to comfort Emma Haredale, and to impart to her the consolation of
which she stood in so much need herself. The soldiers were sure to come; they
must be rescued; it would be impossible to convey them through the streets of London
when they set the threats of their guards at defiance, and shrieked to the
passengers for help. If they did this when they came into the more frequented
ways, she was certain--she was quite certain--they must be released. So poor
Dolly said, and so poor Dolly tried to think; but the invariable conclusion of
all such arguments was, that Dolly burst into tears; cried, as she wrung her
hands, what would they do or think, or who would comfort them, at home, at the
Golden Key; and sobbed most piteously.
Miss Haredale, whose
feelings were usually of a quieter kind than Dolly’s, and not so much upon the
surface, was dreadfully alarmed, and indeed had only just recovered from a
swoon. She was very pale, and the hand which Dolly held was quite cold; but she
bade her, nevertheless, remember that, under Providence, much must depend upon
their own discretion; that if they remained quiet and lulled the vigilance of
the ruffians into whose hands they had fallen, the chances of their being able
to procure assistance when they reached the town, were very much increased;
that unless society were quite unhinged, a hot pursuit must be immediately
commenced; and that her uncle, she might be sure, would never rest until he had
found them out and rescued them. But as she said these latter words, the idea
that he had fallen in a general massacre of the Catholics that night--no very
wild or improbable supposition after what they had seen and undergone--struck
her dumb; and, lost in the horrors they had witnessed, and those they might be
yet reserved for, she sat incapable of thought, or speech, or outward show of
grief: as rigid, and almost as white and cold, as marble.
Oh, how many, many
times, in that long ride, did Dolly think of her old lover,--poor, fond,
slighted Joe! How many, many times, did she recall that night when she ran into
his arms from the very man now projecting his hateful gaze into the darkness
where she sat, and leering through the glass in monstrous admiration! And when
she thought of Joe, and what a brave fellow he was, and how he would have rode
boldly up, and dashed in among these villains now, yes, though they were double
the number--and here she clenched her little hand, and pressed her foot upon
the ground--the pride she felt for a moment in having won his heart, faded in a
burst of tears, and she sobbed more bitterly than ever.
As the night wore on,
and they proceeded by ways which were quite unknown to them--for they could
recognise none of the objects of which they sometimes caught a hurried glimpse--their
fears increased; nor were they without good foundation; it was not difficult
for two beautiful young women to find, in their being borne they knew not
whither by a band of daring villains who eyed them as some among these fellows
did, reasons for the worst alarm. When they at last entered London, by a suburb
with which they were wholly unacquainted, it was past midnight, and the streets
were dark and empty. Nor was this the worst, for the carriage stopping in a
lonely spot, Hugh suddenly opened the door, jumped in, and took his seat
between them.
It was in vain they
cried for help. He put his arm about the neck of each, and swore to stifle them
with kisses if they were not as silent as the grave.
"I come here to
keep you quiet," he said, "and that’s the means I shall take. So don’t
be quiet, pretty mistresses--make a noise-- do--and I shall like it all the
better."
They were proceeding at
a rapid pace, and apparently with fewer attendants than before, though it was
so dark (the torches being extinguished) that this was mere conjecture. They
shrunk from his touch, each into the farthest corner of the carriage; but
shrink as Dolly would, his arm encircled her waist, and held her fast. She
neither cried nor spoke, for terror and disgust deprived her of the power; but
she plucked at his hand as though she would die in the effort to disengage
herself; and crouching on the ground, with her head averted and held down,
repelled him with a strength she wondered at as much as he. The carriage
stopped again.
"Lift this one
out," said Hugh to the man who opened the door, as he took Miss Haredale’s
hand, and felt how heavily it fell. "She’s fainted."
"So much the
better," growled Dennis--it was that amiable gentleman. "She’s quiet.
I always like ’em to faint, unless they’re very tender and composed."
"Can you take her
by yourself?" asked Hugh.
"I don’t know till
I try. I ought to be able to; I’ve lifted up a good many in my time," said
the hangman. "Up then! She’s no small weight, brother; none of these here
fine gals are. Up again! Now we have her."
Having by this time
hoisted the young lady into his arms, he staggered off with his burden.
"Look ye, pretty
bird," said Hugh, drawing Dolly towards him. "Remember what I told
you--a kiss for every cry. Scream, if you love me, darling. Scream once,
mistress. Pretty mistress, only once, if you love me."
Thrusting his face away
with all her force, and holding down her head, Dolly submitted to be carried
out of the chaise, and borne after Miss Haredale into a miserable cottage,
where Hugh, after hugging her to his breast, set her gently down upon the
floor.
Poor Dolly! Do what she
would, she only looked the better for it, and tempted them the more. When her
eyes flashed angrily, and her ripe lips slightly parted, to give her rapid
breathing vent, who could resist it? When she wept and sobbed as though her heart
would break, and bemoaned her miseries in the sweetest voice that ever fell
upon a listener’s ear, who could be insensible to the little winning
pettishness which now and then displayed itself, even in the sincerity and
earnestness of her grief? When, forgetful for a moment of herself, as she was
now, she fell on her knees beside her friend, and bent over her, and laid her
cheek to hers, and put her arms about her, what mortal eyes could have avoided
wandering to the delicate bodice, the streaming hair, the neglected dress, the
perfect abandonment and unconsciousness of the blooming little beauty? Who
could look on and see her lavish caresses and endearments, and not desire to be
in Emma Haredale’s place; to be either her or Dolly; either the hugging or the
hugged? Not Hugh. Not Dennis.
"I tell you what
it is, young women," said Mr. Dennis, "I an’t much of a lady’s man
myself, nor am I a party in the present business further than lending a willing
hand to my friends: but if I see much more of this here sort of thing, I shall
become a principal instead of a accessory. I tell you candid."
"Why have you
brought us here?" said Emma. "Are we to be murdered?"
"Murdered!"
cried Dennis, sitting down upon a stool, and regarding her with great favour.
"Why, my dear, who’d murder sich chickabiddies as you? If you was to ask
me, now, whether you was brought here to be married, there might be something
in it."
And here he exchanged a
grin with Hugh, who removed his eyes from Dolly for the purpose.
"No, no,"
said Dennis, "there’ll be no murdering, my pets. Nothing of that sort.
Quite the contrairy."
"You are an older
man than your companion, sir," said Emma, trembling. "Have you no
pity for us? Do you not consider that we are women?"
"I do indeed, my
dear," retorted Dennis. "It would be very hard not to, with two such
specimens afore my eyes. Ha ha! Oh yes, I consider that. We all consider that,
miss."
He shook his head
waggishly, leered at Hugh again, and laughed very much, as if he had said a
noble thing, and rather thought he was coming out.
"There’ll be no
murdering, my dear. Not a bit on it. I tell you what though, brother,"
said Dennis, cocking his hat for the convenience of scratching his head, and
looking gravely at Hugh, "it’s worthy of notice, as a proof of the amazing
equalness and dignity of our law, that it don’t make no distinction between men
and women. I’ve heerd the judge say, sometimes, to a highwayman or housebreaker
as had tied the ladies neck and heels--you’ll excuse me making mention of it,
my darlings--and put ’em in a cellar, that he showed no consideration to women.
Now, I say that there judge didn’t know his business, brother; and that if I
had been that there highwayman or housebreaker, I should have made answer: ’What
are you a talking of, my lord? I showed the women as much consideration as the
law does, and what more would you have me do?’ If you was to count up in the
newspapers the number of females as have been worked off in this here city
alone, in the last ten year," said Mr. Dennis thoughtfully, "you’d be
surprised at the total--quite amazed, you would. There’s a dignified and equal
thing; a beautiful thing! But we’ve no security for its lasting. Now that they’ve
begun to favour these here Papists, I shouldn’t wonder if they went and altered
even that, one of these days. Upon my soul, I shouldn’t."
The subject, perhaps
from being of too exclusive and professional a nature, failed to interest Hugh
as much as his friend had anticipated. But he had no time to pursue it, for at
this crisis Mr. Tappertit entered precipitately; at sight of whom Dolly uttered
a scream of joy, and fairly threw herself into his arms.
"I knew it, I was
sure of it!" cried Dolly. "My dear father’s at the door. Thank God,
thank God! Bless you, Sim. Heaven bless you for this!"
Simon Tappertit, who
had at first implicitly believed that the locksmith’s daughter, unable any
longer to suppress her secret passion for himself, was about to give it full
vent in its intensity, and to declare that she was his for ever, looked
extremely foolish when she said these words;--the more so, as they were
received by Hugh and Dennis with a loud laugh, which made her draw back, and
regard him with a fixed and earnest look.
"Miss
Haredale," said Sim, after a very awkward silence, "I hope you’re as
comfortable as circumstances will permit of. Dolly Varden, my darling--my own,
my lovely one--I hope you’re pretty comfortable likewise."
Poor little Dolly! She
saw how it was; hid her face in her hands; and sobbed more bitterly than ever.
"You meet in me,
Miss V.," said Simon, laying his hand upon his breast, "not a ’prentice,
not a workman, not a slave, not the wictim of your father’s tyrannical
behaviour, but the leader of a great people, the captain of a noble band, in
which these gentlemen are, as I may say, corporals and sergeants. You behold in
me, not a private individual, but a public character; not a mender of locks,
but a healer of the wounds of his unhappy country. Dolly V., sweet Dolly V.,
for how many years have I looked forward to this present meeting! For how many
years has it been my intention to exalt and ennoble you! I redeem it. Behold in
me, your husband. Yes, beautiful Dolly--charmer--enslaver--S. Tappertit is all
your own!"
As he said these words
he advanced towards her. Dolly retreated till she could go no farther, and then
sank down upon the floor. Thinking it very possible that this might be maiden
modesty, Simon essayed to raise her; on which Dolly, goaded to desperation,
wound her hands in his hair, and crying out amidst her tears that he was a
dreadful little wretch, and always
had been, shook, and
pulled, and beat him, until he was fain to call for help, most lustily. Hugh
had never admired her half so much as at that moment.
"She’s in an
excited state to-night," said Simon, as he smoothed his rumpled feathers,
"and don’t know when she’s well off. Let her be by herself till to-morrow,
and that’ll bring her down a little. Carry her into the next house!"
Hugh had her in his
arms directly. It might be that Mr. Tappertit’s heart was really softened by
her distress, or it might be that he felt it in some degree indecorous that his
intended bride should be struggling in the grasp of another man. He commanded
him, on second thoughts, to put her down again, and looked moodily on as she
flew to Miss Haredale’s side, and clinging to her dress, hid her flushed face
in its folds.
"They shall remain
here together till to-morrow," said Simon, who had now quite recovered his
dignity--"till to-morrow. Come away!"
"Ay!" cried Hugh.
"Come away, captain. Ha ha ha!"
"What are you
laughing at?" demanded Simon sternly.
"Nothing, captain,
nothing," Hugh rejoined; and as he spoke, and clapped his hand upon the
shoulder of the little man, he laughed again, for some unknown reason, with
tenfold violence.
Mr. Tappertit surveyed
him from head to foot with lofty scorn (this only made him laugh the more), and
turning to the prisoners, said:
"You’ll take
notice, ladies, that this place is well watched on every side, and that the
least noise is certain to be attended with unpleasant consequences. You’ll
hear--both of you--more of our intentions to-morrow. In the mean time, don’t
show yourselves at the window, or appeal to any of the people you may see pass
it; for if you do, it’ll be known directly that you come from a Catholic house,
and all the exertions our men can make, may not be able to save your
lives."
With this last caution,
which was true enough, he turned to the door, followed by Hugh and Dennis. They
paused for a moment, going out, to look at them clasped in each other’s arms,
and then left the cottage; fastening the door, and setting a good watch upon
it, and indeed all round the house.
"I say,"
growled Dennis, as they walked away in company, "that’s a dainty pair.
Muster Gashford’s one is as handsome as the other, eh?"
"Hush!" said
Hugh, hastily. "Don’t you mention names. It’s a bad habit."
"I wouldn’t like
to be him, then (as you don’t like names), when he breaks it out to her; that’s
all," said Dennis. "She’s one of them fine, black-eyed, proud gals,
as I wouldn’t trust at such times with a knife too near ’em. I’ve seen some of
that sort, afore now. I recollect one that was worked off, many year ago--and
there was a gentleman in that case too--that says to me, with her lip a
trembling, but her hand as steady as ever I see one: ’Dennis, I’m near my end,
but if I had a dagger in these fingers, and he was within my reach, I’d strike
him dead afore me;’--ah, she did--and she’d have done it too!"
"Strike who dead?"
demanded Hugh.
"How should I
know, brother?" answered Dennis. "She never said; not she."
Hugh looked, for a
moment, as though he would have made some further inquiry into this incoherent
recollection; but Simon Tappertit, who had been meditating deeply, gave his
thoughts a new direction.
"Hugh!" said
Sim. "You have done well to-day. You shall be rewarded. So have you,
Dennis.--There’s no young woman you want to carry off, is there?"
"N--no,"
returned that gentleman, stroking his grizzly beard, which was some two inches
long. "None in partickler, I think."
"Very good,"
said Sim; "then we’ll find some other way of making it up to you. As to
you, old boy"--he turned to Hugh--"you shall have Miggs (her that I
promised you, you know) within three days. Mind. I pass my word for it."
Hugh thanked him
heartily; and as he did so, his laughing fit returned with such violence that
he was obliged to hold his side with one hand, and to lean with the other on
the shoulder of his small captain, without whose support he would certainly
have rolled upon the ground.
THE three worthies
turned their faces towards The Boot, with the intention of passing the night in
that place of rendezvous, and of seeking the repose they so much needed in the
shelter of their old den; for now that the mischief and destruction they had
purposed were achieved, and their prisoners were safely bestowed for the night,
they began to be conscious of exhaustion, and to feel the wasting effects of
the madness which had led to such deplorable results.
Notwithstanding the
lassitude and fatigue which oppressed him now, in common with his two
companions, and indeed with all who had taken an active share in that night’s
work, Hugh’s boisterous merriment broke out afresh whenever he looked at Simon
Tappertit, and vented itself--much to that gentleman’s indignation--in such
shouts of laughter as bade fair to bring the watch upon them, and involve them
in a skirmish, to which in their present worn-out condition they might prove by
no means equal. Even Mr. Dennis, who was not at all particular on the score of
gravity or dignity, and who had a great relish for his young friend’s eccentric
humours, took occasion to remonstrate with him on this imprudent behaviour,
which he held to be a species of suicide, tantamount to a man’s working himself
off without being overtaken by the law, than which he could imagine nothing
more ridiculous or impertinent.
Not abating one jot of
his noisy mirth for these remonstrances, Hugh reeled along between them, having
an arm of each, until they hove in sight of The Boot, and were within a field
or two of that convenient tavern. He happened by great good luck to have roared
and shouted himself into silence by this time. They were proceeding onward
without noise, when a scout who had been creeping about the ditches all night,
to warn any stragglers from encroaching further on what was now such dangerous ground,
peeped cautiously from his hiding-place, and called to them to stop.
"Stop! and
why?" said Hugh.
Because (the scout
replied) the house was filled with constables and soldiers; having been
surprised that afternoon. The inmates had fled or been taken into custody, he
could not say which. He had prevented a great many people from approaching
nearer, and he believed they had gone to the markets and such places to pass
the night. He had seen the distant fires, but they were all out now. He had
heard the people who passed and repassed, speaking of them too, and could
report that the prevailing opinion was one of apprehension and dismay. He had
not heard a word of Barnaby-- didn’t even know his name--but it had been said
in his hearing that some man had been taken and carried off to Newgate. Whether
this was true or false, he could not affirm.
The three took counsel
together, on hearing this, and debated what it might be best to do. Hugh,
deeming it possible that Barnaby was in the hands of the soldiers, and at that
moment under detention at The Boot, was for advancing stealthily, and firing
the house; but his companions, who objected to such rash measures unless they
had a crowd at their backs, represented that if Barnaby were taken he had
assuredly been removed to a stronger prison; they would never have dreamed of
keeping him all night in a place so weak and open to attack. Yielding to this
reasoning, and to their persuasions, Hugh consented to turn back and to repair
to Fleet Market; for which place, it seemed, a few of their boldest associates
had shaped their course, on receiving the same intelligence.
Feeling their strength
recruited and their spirits roused, now that there was a new necessity for
action, they hurried away, quite forgetful of the fatigue under which they had
been sinking but a few minutes before; and soon arrived at their new place of
destination.
Fleet Market, at that
time, was a long irregular row of wooden sheds and penthouses, occupying the
centre of what is now called Farringdon Street. They were jumbled together in a
most unsightly fashion, in the middle of the road; to the great obstruction of
the thoroughfare and the annoyance of passengers, who were fain to make their
way, as they best could, among carts, baskets, barrows, trucks, casks, bulks,
and benches, and to jostle with porters, hucksters, waggoners, and a motley
crowd of buyers, sellers, pick- pockets, vagrants, and idlers. The air was
perfumed with the stench of rotten leaves and faded fruit; the refuse of the
butchers’ stalls, and offal and garbage of a hundred kinds. It was
indispensable to most public conveniences in those days, that they should be
public nuisances likewise; and Fleet Market maintained the principle to
admiration.
To this place, perhaps
because its sheds and baskets were a tolerable substitute for beds, or perhaps
because it afforded the means of a hasty barricade in case of need, many of the
rioters had straggled, not only that night, but for two or three nights before.
It was now broad day, but the morning being cold, a group of them were gathered
round a fire in a public-house, drinking hot purl, and smoking pipes, and
planning new schemes for to-morrow.
Hugh and his two
friends being known to most of these men, were received with signal marks of approbation,
and inducted into the most honourable seats. The room-door was closed and
fastened to keep intruders at a distance, and then they proceeded to exchange
news.
"The soldiers have
taken possession of The Boot, I hear," said Hugh. "Who knows anything
about it?"
Several cried that they
did; but the majority of the company having been engaged in the assault upon
the Warren, and all present having been concerned in one or other of the night’s
expeditions, it proved that they knew no more than Hugh himself; having been
merely warned by each other, or by the scout, and knowing nothing of their own
knowledge.
"We left a man on
guard there to-day," said Hugh, looking round him, "who is not here.
You know who it is--Barnaby, who brought the soldier down, at Westminster. Has
any man seen or heard of him?"
They shook their heads,
and murmured an answer in the negative, as each man looked round and appealed
to his fellow; when a noise was heard without, and a man was heard to say that
he wanted Hugh--that he must see Hugh.
"He is but one
man," cried Hugh to those who kept the door; "let him come in."
"Ay, ay!"
muttered the others. "Let him come in. Let him come in."
The door was
accordingly unlocked and opened. A one-armed man, with his head and face tied up
with a bloody cloth, as though he had been severely beaten, his clothes torn,
and his remaining hand grasping a thick stick, rushed in among them, and
panting for breath, demanded which was Hugh.
"Here he is,"
replied the person he inquired for. "I am Hugh. What do you want with
me?"
"I have a message
for you," said the man. "You know one Barnaby."
"What of him? Did
he send the message?"
"Yes. He’s taken.
He’s in one of the strong cells in Newgate. He defended himself as well as he
could, but was overpowered by numbers. That’s his message."
"When did you see
him?" asked Hugh, hastily.
"On his way to
prison, where he was taken by a party of soldiers. They took a by-road, and not
the one we expected. I was one of the few who tried to rescue him, and he
called to me, and told me to tell Hugh where he was. We made a good struggle,
though it failed. Look here!"
He pointed to his dress
and to his bandaged head, and still panting for breath, glanced round the room;
then faced towards Hugh again.
"I know you by
sight," he said, "for I was in the crowd on Friday, and on Saturday,
and yesterday, but I didn’t know your name. You’re a bold fellow, I know. So is
he. He fought like a lion tonight, but it was of no use. I did my best,
considering that I want this limb."
Again he glanced
inquisitively round the room or seemed to do so, for his face was nearly hidden
by the bandage--and again facing sharply towards Hugh, grasped his stick as if
he half expected to be set upon, and stood on the defensive.
If he had any such
apprehension, however, he was speedily reassured by the demeanour of all
present. None thought of the bearer of the tidings. He was lost in the news he
brought. Oaths, threats, and execrations, were vented on all sides. Some cried
that if they bore this tamely, another day would see them all in jail; some,
that they should have rescued the other prisoners, and this would not have
happened. One man cried in a loud voice, "Who’ll follow me to Newgate!"
and there was a loud shout and general rush towards the door.
But Hugh and Dennis
stood with their backs against it, and kept them back, until the clamour had so
far subsided that their voices could be heard, when they called to them
together that to go now, in broad day, would be madness; and that if they
waited until night and arranged a plan of attack, they might release, not only
their own companions, but all the prisoners, and burn down the jail.
"Not that jail
alone," cried Hugh, "but every jail in London. They shall have no
place to put their prisoners in. We’ll burn them all down; make bonfires of
them every one! Here!" he cried, catching at the hangman’s hand. "Let
all who’re men here, join with us. Shake hands upon it. Barnaby out of jail,
and not a jail left standing! Who joins?"
Every man there. And
they swore a great oath to release their friends from Newgate next night; to
force the doors and burn the jail; or perish in the fire themselves.
ON that same
night--events so crowd upon each other in convulsed and distracted times, that
more than the stirring incidents of a whole life often become compressed into
the compass of four-and- twenty hours--on that same night, Mr. Haredale, having
strongly bound his prisoner, with the assistance of the sexton, and forced him
to mount his horse, conducted him to Chigwell; bent upon procuring a conveyance
to London from that place, and carrying him at once before a justice. The
disturbed state of the town would be, he knew, a sufficient reason for
demanding the murderer’s committal to prison before daybreak, as no man could
answer for the security of any of the watch-houses or ordinary places of
detention; and to convey a prisoner through the streets when the mob were again
abroad, would not only be a task of great danger and hazard, but would be to
challenge an attempt at rescue. Directing the sexton to lead the horse, he
walked close by the murderer’s side, and in this order they reached the village
about the middle of the night.
The people were all
awake and up, for they were fearful of being burnt in their beds, and sought to
comfort and assure each other by watching in company. A few of the
stoutest-hearted were armed and gathered in a body on the green. To these, who
knew him well, Mr. Haredale addressed himself, briefly narrating what had
happened, and beseeching them to aid in conveying the criminal to London before
the dawn of day.
But not a man among
them dared to help him by so much as the motion of a finger. The rioters, in their
passage through the village, had menaced with their fiercest vengeance, any
person who should aid in extinguishing the fire, or render the least assistance
to him, or any Catholic whomsoever. Their threats extended to their lives and
all they possessed. They were assembled for their own protection, and could not
endanger themselves by lending any aid to him. This they told him, not without
hesitation and regret, as they kept aloof in the moonlight and glanced
fearfully at the ghostly rider, who, with his head drooping on his breast and
his hat slouched down upon his brow, neither moved nor spoke.
Finding it impossible
to persuade them, and indeed hardly knowing how to do so after what they had
seen of the fury of the crowd, Mr. Haredale besought them that at least they
would leave him free to act for himself, and would suffer him to take the only
chaise and pair of horses that the place afforded. This was not acceded to
without some difficulty, but in the end they told him to do what he would, and
go away from them in heaven’s name.
Leaving the sexton at
the horse’s bridle, he drew out the chaise with his own hands, and would have
harnessed the horses, but that the post-boy of the village--a soft-hearted,
good-for-nothing, vagabond kind of fellow--was moved by his earnestness and
passion, and, throwing down a pitchfork with which he was armed, swore that the
rioters might cut him into mincemeat if they liked, but he would not stand by
and see an honest gentleman who had done no wrong, reduced to such extremity,
without doing what he could to help him. Mr. Haredale shook him warmly by the
hand, and thanked him from his heart. In five minutes’ time the chaise was
ready, and this good scapegrace in his saddle. The murderer was put inside, the
blinds were drawn up, the sexton took his seat upon the bar, Mr. Haredale
mounted his horse and rode close beside the door; and so they started in the
dead of night, and in profound silence, for London.
The consternation was
so extreme that even the horses which had escaped the flames at the Warren,
could find no friends to shelter them. They passed them on the road, browsing
on the stunted grass; and the driver told them, that the poor beasts had
wandered to the village first, but had been driven away, lest they should bring
the vengeance of the crowd on any of the inhabitants.
Nor was this feeling
confined to such small places, where the people were timid, ignorant, and
unprotected. When they came near London they met, in the grey light of morning,
more than one poor Catholic family who, terrified by the threats and warnings
of their neighbours, were quitting the city on foot, and who told them they
could hire no cart or horse for the removal of their goods, and had been
compelled to leave them behind, at the mercy of the crowd. Near Mile End they
passed a house, the master of which, a Catholic gentleman of small means,
having hired a waggon to remove his furniture by midnight, had had it all
brought down into the street, to wait the vehicle’s arrival, and save time in the
packing. But the man with whom he made the bargain, alarmed by the fires that
night, and by the sight of the rioters passing his door, had refused to keep
it: and the poor gentleman, with his wife and servant and their little
children, were sitting trembling among their goods in the open street, dreading
the arrival of day and not knowing where to turn or what to do.
It was the same, they
heard, with the public conveyances. The panic was so great that the mails and
stage-coaches were afraid to carry passengers who professed the obnoxious
religion. If the drivers knew them, or they admitted that they held that creed,
they would not take them, no, though they offered large sums; and yesterday,
people had been afraid to recognise Catholic acquaintance in the streets, lest
they should be marked by spies, and burnt out, as it was called, in
consequence. One mild old man-- a priest, whose chapel was destroyed; a very
feeble, patient, inoffensive creature--who was trudging away, alone, designing
to walk some distance from town, and then try his fortune with the coaches,
told Mr. Haredale that he feared he might not find a magistrate who would have
the hardihood to commit a prisoner to jail, on his complaint. But
notwithstanding these discouraging accounts they went on, and reached the
Mansion House soon after sunrise.
Mr. Haredale threw
himself from his horse, but he had no need to knock at the door, for it was
already open, and there stood upon the step a portly old man, with a very red,
or rather purple face, who with an anxious expression of countenance, was
remonstrating with some unseen personage upstairs, while the porter essayed to
close the door by degrees and get rid of him. With the intense impatience and
excitement natural to one in his condition, Mr. Haredale thrust himself forward
and was about to speak, when the fat old gentleman interposed:
"My good
sir," said he, "pray let me get an answer. This is the sixth time I
have been here. I was here five times yesterday. My house is threatened with
destruction. It is to be burned down to- night, and was to have been last
night, but they had other business on their hands. Pray let me get an
answer."
"My good
sir," returned Mr. Haredale, shaking his head, "my house is burned to
the ground. But heaven forbid that yours should be. Get your answer. Be brief,
in mercy to me."
"Now, you hear
this, my lord?"--said the old gentleman, calling up the stairs, to where
the skirt of a dressing-gown fluttered on the landing-place. "Here is a
gentleman here, whose house was actually burnt down last night."
"Dear me, dear
me," replied a testy voice, "I am very sorry for it, but what am I to
do? I can’t build it up again. The chief magistrate of the city can’t go and be
a rebuilding of people’s houses, my good sir. Stuff and nonsense!"
"But the chief
magistrate of the city can prevent people’s houses from having any need to be
rebuilt, if the chief magistrate’s a man, and not a dummy--can’t he, my
lord?" cried the old gentleman in a choleric manner.
"You are
disrespectable, sir," said the Lord Mayor--"leastways, disrespectful
I mean."
"Disrespectful, my
lord!" returned the old gentleman. "I was respectful five times
yesterday. I can’t be respectful for ever. Men can’t stand on being respectful
when their houses are going to be burnt over their heads, with them in ’em.
What am I to do, my lord? Am I to have any protection!"
"I told you
yesterday, sir," said the Lord Mayor, "that you might have an
alderman in your house, if you could get one to come."
"What the devil’s
the good of an alderman?" returned the choleric old gentleman.
"--To awe the
crowd, sir," said the Lord Mayor.
"Oh Lord ha’
mercy!" whimpered the old gentleman, as he wiped his forehead in a state
of ludicrous distress, "to think of sending an alderman to awe a crowd!
Why, my lord, if they were even so many babies, fed on mother’s milk, what do
you think they’d care for an alderman! Will you come?"
"I!" said the
Lord Mayor, most emphatically: "Certainly not."
"Then what,"
returned the old gentleman, "what am I to do? Am I a citizen of England?
Am I to have the benefit of the laws? Am I to have any return for the King’s
taxes?"
"I don’t know, I
am sure," said the Lord Mayor; "what a pity it is you’re a Catholic!
Why couldn’t you be a Protestant, and then you wouldn’t have got yourself into
such a mess? I’m sure I don’t know what’s to be done.--There are great people
at the bottom of these riots.--Oh dear me, what a thing it is to be a public
character!-- You must look in again in the course of the day.--Would a javelin-
man do?--Or there’s Philips the constable,--he’s disengaged,--he’s not very old
for a man at his time of life, except in his legs, and if you put him up at a
window he’d look quite young by candle- light, and might frighten ’em very
much.--Oh dear!--well!--we’ll see about it."
"Stop!" cried
Mr. Haredale, pressing the door open as the porter strove to shut it, and
speaking rapidly, "My Lord Mayor, I beg you not to go away. I have a man
here, who committed a murder eight- and-twenty years ago. Half-a-dozen words
from me, on oath, will justify you in committing him to prison for
re-examination. I only seek, just now, to have him consigned to a place of
safety. The least delay may involve his being rescued by the rioters."
"Oh dear me!"
cried the Lord Mayor. "God bless my soul--and body-- oh Lor!--well
I!--there are great people at the bottom of these riots, you know.--You really
mustn’t."
"My lord,"
said Mr. Haredale, "the murdered gentleman was my brother; I succeeded to
his inheritance; there were not wanting slanderous tongues at that time, to
whisper that the guilt of this most foul and cruel deed was mine--mine, who
loved him, as he knows, in Heaven, dearly. The time has come, after all these
years of gloom and misery, for avenging him, and bringing to light a crime so
artful and so devilish that it has no parallel. Every second’s delay on your
part loosens this man’s bloody hands again, and leads to his escape. My lord, I
charge you hear me, and despatch this matter on the instant."
"Oh dear me!"
cried the chief magistrate; "these an’t business hours, you know--I wonder
at you--how ungentlemanly it is of you-- you mustn’t--you really mustn’t.--And
I suppose you are a Catholic too?"
"I am," said
Mr. Haredale.
"God bless my
soul, I believe people turn Catholics a’purpose to vex and worrit me,"
cried the Lord Mayor. "I wish you wouldn’t come here; they’ll be setting
the Mansion House afire next, and we shall have you to thank for it. You must
lock your prisoner up, sir--give him to a watchman--and--call again at a proper
time. Then we’ll see about it!"
Before Mr. Haredale
could answer, the sharp closing of a door and drawing of its bolts, gave notice
that the Lord Mayor had retreated to his bedroom, and that further remonstrance
would be unavailing. The two clients retreated likewise, and the porter shut
them out into the street.
"That’s the way he
puts me off," said the old gentleman, "I can get no redress and no
help. What are you going to do, sir?"
"To try
elsewhere," answered Mr. Haredale, who was by this time on horseback.
"I feel for you, I
assure you--and well I may, for we are in a common cause," said the old
gentleman. "I may not have a house to offer you to-night; let me tender it
while I can. On second thoughts though," he added, putting up a
pocket-book he had produced while speaking, "I’ll not give you a card, for
if it was found upon you, it might get you into trouble. Langdale--that’s my
name--vintner and distiller--Holborn Hill--you’re heartily welcome, if you’ll
come."
Mr. Haredale bowed, and
rode off, close beside the chaise as before; determining to repair to the house
of Sir John Fielding, who had the reputation of being a bold and active
magistrate, and fully resolved, in case the rioters should come upon them, to
do execution on the murderer with his own hands, rather than suffer him to be
released.
They arrived at the
magistrate’s dwelling, however, without molestation (for the mob, as we have
seen, were then intent on deeper schemes), and knocked at the door. As it had
been pretty generally rumoured that Sir John was proscribed by the rioters, a
body of thief-takers had been keeping watch in the house all night. To one of
them Mr. Haredale stated his business, which appearing to the man of sufficient
moment to warrant his arousing the justice, procured him an immediate audience.
No time was lost in
committing the murderer to Newgate; then a new building, recently completed at
a vast expense, and considered to be of enormous strength. The warrant being
made out, three of the thief-takers bound him afresh (he had been struggling,
it seemed, in the chaise, and had loosened his manacles); gagged him lest they
should meet with any of the mob, and he should call to them for help; and
seated themselves, along with him, in the carriage. These men being all well
armed, made a formidable escort; but they drew up the blinds again, as though
the carriage were empty, and directed Mr. Haredale to ride forward, that he
might not attract attention by seeming to belong to it.
The wisdom of this
proceeding was sufficiently obvious, for as they hurried through the city they
passed among several groups of men, who, if they had not supposed the chaise to
be quite empty, would certainly have stopped it. But those within keeping quite
close, and the driver tarrying to be asked no questions, they reached the
prison without interruption, and, once there, had him out, and safe within its
gloomy walls, in a twinkling.
With eager eyes and
strained attention, Mr. Haredale saw him chained, and locked and barred up in
his cell. Nay, when he had left the jail, and stood in the free street,
without, he felt the iron plates upon the doors, with his hands, and drew them
over the stone wall, to assure himself that it was real; and to exult in its
being so strong, and rough, and cold. It was not until he turned his back upon
the jail, and glanced along the empty streets, so lifeless and quiet in the
bright morning, that he felt the weight upon his heart; that he knew he was
tortured by anxiety for those he had left at home; and that home itself was but
another bead in the long rosary of his regrets.
THE prisoner, left to
himself, sat down upon his bedstead: and resting his elbows on his knees, and
his chin upon his hands, remained in that attitude for hours. It would be hard
to say, of what nature his reflections were. They had no distinctness, and,
saving for some flashes now and then, no reference to his condition or the
train of circumstances by which it had been brought about. The cracks in the
pavement of his cell, the chinks in the wall where stone was joined to stone,
the bars in the window, the iron ring upon the floor,--such things as these,
subsiding strangely into one another, and awakening an indescribable kind of interest
and amusement, engrossed his whole mind; and although at the bottom of his
every thought there was an uneasy sense of guilt, and dread of death, he felt
no more than that vague consciousness of it, which a sleeper has of pain. It
pursues him through his dreams, gnaws at the heart of all his fancied
pleasures, robs the banquet of its taste, music of its sweetness, makes
happiness itself unhappy, and yet is no bodily sensation, but a phantom without
shape, or form, or visible presence; pervading everything, but having no
existence; recognisable everywhere, but nowhere seen, or touched, or met with
face to face, until the sleep is past, and waking agony returns.
After a long time the
door of his cell opened. He looked up; saw the blind man enter; and relapsed
into his former position.
Guided by his
breathing, the visitor advanced to where he sat; and stopping beside him, and
stretching out his hand to assure himself that he was right, remained, for a
good space, silent.
"This is bad,
Rudge. This is bad," he said at length.
The prisoner shuffled
with his feet upon the ground in turning his body from him, but made no other
answer.
"How were you
taken?" he asked. "And where? You never told me more than half your
secret. No matter; I know it now. How was it, and where, eh?" he asked
again, coming still nearer to him.
"At
Chigwell," said the other.
"At Chigwell! How
came you there?"
"Because I went
there to avoid the man I stumbled on," he answered. "Because I was
chased and driven there, by him and Fate. Because I was urged to go there, by
something stronger than my own will. When I found him watching in the house she
used to live in, night after night, I knew I never could escape him--never! and
when I heard the Bell--"
He shivered; muttered
that it was very cold; paced quickly up and down the narrow cell; and sitting
down again, fell into his old posture.
"You were
saying," said the blind man, after another pause, "that when you
heard the Bell--"
"Let it be, will
you?" he retorted in a hurried voice. "It hangs there yet."
The blind man turned a
wistful and inquisitive face towards him, but he continued to speak, without
noticing him.
"I went to
Chigwell, in search of the mob. I have been so hunted and beset by this man,
that I knew my only hope of safety lay in joining them. They had gone on
before; I followed them when it left off."
"When what left
off?"
"The Bell. They
had quitted the place. I hoped that some of them might be still lingering among
the ruins, and was searching for them when I heard--" he drew a long
breath, and wiped his forehead with his sleeve--"his voice."
"Saying
what?"
"No matter what. I
don’t know. I was then at the foot of the turret, where I did the--"
"Ay," said
the blind man, nodding his head with perfect composure, "I
understand."
"I climbed the
stair, or so much of it as was left; meaning to hide till he had gone. But he
heard me; and followed almost as soon as I set foot upon the ashes."
"You might have
hidden in the wall, and thrown him down, or stabbed him," said the blind
man.
"Might I? Between
that man and me, was one who led him on--I saw it, though he did not--and
raised above his head a bloody hand. It was in the room above that he and I
stood glaring at each other on the night of the murder, and before he fell he
raised his hand like that, and fixed his eyes on me. I knew the chase would end
there."
"You have a strong
fancy," said the blind man, with a smile.
"Strengthen yours
with blood, and see what it will come to."
He groaned, and rocked
himself, and looking up for the first time, said, in a low, hollow voice:
"Eight-and-twenty
years! Eight-and-twenty years! He has never changed in all that time, never
grown older, nor altered in the least degree. He has been before me in the dark
night, and the broad sunny day; in the twilight, the moonlight, the sunlight,
the light of fire, and lamp, and candle; and in the deepest gloom. Always the
same! In company, in solitude, on land, on shipboard; sometimes leaving me
alone for months, and sometimes always with me. I have seen him, at sea, come
gliding in the dead of night along the bright reflection of the moon in the
calm water; and I have seen him, on quays and market-places, with his hand
uplifted, towering, the centre of a busy crowd, unconscious of the terrible
form that had its silent stand among them. Fancy! Are you real? Am I? Are these
iron fetters, riveted on me by the smith’s hammer, or are they fancies I can shatter
at a blow?"
The blind man listened
in silence.
"Fancy! Do I fancy
that I killed him? Do I fancy that as I left the chamber where he lay, I saw
the face of a man peeping from a dark door, who plainly showed me by his
fearful looks that he suspected what I had done? Do I remember that I spoke
fairly to him--that I drew nearer--nearer yet--with the hot knife in my sleeve?
Do I fancy how he died? Did he stagger back into the angle of the wall into
which I had hemmed him, and, bleeding inwardly, stand, not fail, a corpse
before me? Did I see him, for an instant, as I see you now, erect and on his
feet--but dead!"
The blind man, who knew
that he had risen, motioned him to sit down again upon his bedstead; but he
took no notice of the gesture.
"It was then I
thought, for the first time, of fastening the murder upon him. It was then I
dressed him in my clothes, and dragged him down the back-stairs to the piece of
water. Do I remember listening to the bubbles that came rising up when I had rolled
him in? Do I remember wiping the water from my face, and because the body
splashed it there, in its descent, feeling as if it must be blood?
"Did I go home
when I had done? And oh, my God! how long it took to do! Did I stand before my
wife, and tell her? Did I see her fall upon the ground; and, when I stooped to
raise her, did she thrust me back with a force that cast me off as if I had
been a child, staining the hand with which she clasped my wrist? Is that fancy?
"Did she go down
upon her knees, and call on Heaven to witness that she and her unborn child
renounced me from that hour; and did she, in words so solemn that they turned
me cold--me, fresh from the horrors my own hands had made--warn me to fly while
there was time; for though she would be silent, being my wretched wife, she
would not shelter me? Did I go forth that night, abjured of God and man, and
anchored deep in hell, to wander at my cable’s length about the earth, and
surely be drawn down at last?"
"Why did you
return?" said the blind man.
"Why is blood red?
I could no more help it, than I could live without breath. I struggled against
the impulse, but I was drawn back, through every difficult and adverse
circumstance, as by a mighty engine. Nothing could stop me. The day and hour
were none of my choice. Sleeping and waking, I had been among the old haunts
for years--had visited my own grave. Why did I come back? Because this jail was
gaping for me, and he stood beckoning at the door."
"You were not
known?" said the blind man.
"I was a man who
had been twenty-two years dead. No. I was not known."
"You should have
kept your secret better."
"My secret? Mine?
It was a secret any breath of air could whisper at its will. The stars had it
in their twinkling, the water in its flowing, the leaves in their rustling, the
seasons in their return. It lurked in strangers’ faces, and their voices.
Everything had lips on which it always trembled.--My secret!"
"It was revealed
by your own act at any rate," said the blind man.
"The act was not
mine. I did it, but it was not mine. I was forced at times to wander round, and
round, and round that spot. If you had chained me up when the fit was on me, I
should have broken away, and gone there. As truly as the loadstone draws iron
towards it, so he, lying at the bottom of his grave, could draw me near him
when he would. Was that fancy? Did I like to go there, or did I strive and
wrestle with the power that forced me?"
The blind man shrugged
his shoulders, and smiled incredulously. The prisoner again resumed his old
attitude, and for a long time both were mute.
"I suppose
then," said his visitor, at length breaking silence, "that you are
penitent and resigned; that you desire to make peace with everybody (in
particular, with your wife who has brought you to this); and that you ask no
greater favour than to be carried to Tyburn as soon as possible? That being the
case, I had better take my leave. I am not good enough to be company for
you."
"Have I not told
you," said the other fiercely, "that I have striven and wrestled with
the power that brought me here? Has my whole life, for eight-and-twenty years,
been one perpetual struggle and resistance, and do you think I want to lie down
and die? Do all men shrink from death--I most of all!"
"That’s better
said. That’s better spoken, Rudge--but I’ll not call you that again--than
anything you have said yet," returned the blind man, speaking more
familiarly, and laying his hands upon his arm. "Lookye,--I never killed a
man myself, for I have never been placed in a position that made it worth my
while. Farther, I am not an advocate for killing men, and I don’t think I
should recommend it or like it--for it’s very hazardous--under any
circumstances. But as you had the misfortune to get into this trouble before I
made your acquaintance, and as you have been my companion, and have been of use
to me for a long time now, I overlook that part of the matter, and am only
anxious that you shouldn’t die unnecessarily. Now, I do not consider that, at
present, it is at all necessary."
"What else is left
me?" returned the prisoner. "To eat my way through these walls with
my teeth?"
"Something easier
than that," returned his friend. "Promise me that you will talk no
more of these fancies of yours--idle, foolish things, quite beneath a man--and
I’ll tell you what I mean."
"Tell me,"
said the other.
"Your worthy lady
with the tender conscience; your scrupulous, virtuous, punctilious, but not
blindly affectionate wife--"
"What of
her?"
"Is now in
London."
"A curse upon her,
be she where she may!"
"That’s natural
enough. If she had taken her annuity as usual, you would not have been here,
and we should have been better off. But that’s apart from the business. She’s
in London. Scared, as I suppose, and have no doubt, by my representation when I
waited upon her, that you were close at hand (which I, of course, urged only as
an inducement to compliance, knowing that she was not pining to see you), she
left that place, and travelled up to London."
"How do you
know?"
"From my friend
the noble captain--the illustrious general--the bladder, Mr. Tappertit. I
learnt from him the last time I saw him, which was yesterday, that your son who
is called Barnaby--not after his father, I suppose--"
"Death! does that
matter now!"
"--You are
impatient," said the blind man, calmly; "it’s a good sign, and looks
like life--that your son Barnaby had been lured away from her by one of his
companions who knew him of old, at Chigwell; and that he is now among the
rioters."
"And what is that
to me? If father and son be hanged together, what comfort shall I find in
that?"
"Stay--stay, my
friend," returned the blind man, with a cunning look, "you travel
fast to journeys’ ends. Suppose I track my lady out, and say thus much: ’You
want your son, ma’am--good. I, knowing those who tempt him to remain among
them, can restore him to you, ma’am--good. You must pay a price, ma’am, for his
restoration--good again. The price is small, and easy to be paid-- dear ma’am,
that’s best of all.’"
"What mockery is
this?"
"Very likely, she
may reply in those words. ’No mockery at all,’ I answer: ’Madam, a person said
to be your husband (identity is difficult of proof after the lapse of many
years) is in prison, his life in peril--the charge against him, murder. Now, ma’am,
your husband has been dead a long, long time. The gentleman never can be
confounded with him, if you will have the goodness to say a few words, on oath,
as to when he died, and how; and that this person (who I am told resembles him
in some degree) is no more he than I am. Such testimony will set the question
quite at rest. Pledge yourself to me to give it, ma’am, and I will undertake to
keep your son (a fine lad) out of harm’s way until you have done this trifling
service, when he shall he delivered up to you, safe and sound. On the other
hand, if you decline to do so, I fear he will be betrayed, and handed over to
the law, which will assuredly sentence him to suffer death. It is, in fact, a
choice between his life and death. If you refuse, he swings. If you comply, the
timber is not grown, nor the hemp sown, that shall do him any harm.’"
"There is a gleam
of hope in this!" cried the prisoner.
"A gleam!"
returned his friend, "a noon-blaze; a full and glorious daylight. Hush! I
hear the tread of distant feet. Rely on me."
"When shall I hear
more?"
"As soon as I do.
I should hope, to-morrow. They are coming to say that our time for talk is
over. I hear the jingling of the keys. Not another word of this just now, or
they may overhear us."
As he said these words,
the lock was turned, and one of the prison turnkeys appearing at the door,
announced that it was time for visitors to leave the jail.
"So soon!"
said Stagg, meekly. "But it can’t be helped. Cheer up, friend. This
mistake will soon be set at rest, and then you are a man again! If this
charitable gentleman will lead a blind man (who has nothing in return but
prayers) to the prison-porch, and set him with his face towards the west, he
will do a worthy deed. Thank you, good sir. I thank you very kindly."
So saying, and pausing
for an instant at the door to turn his grinning face towards his friend, he
departed.
When the officer had
seen him to the porch, he returned, and again unlocking and unbarring the door
of the cell, set it wide open, informing its inmate that he was at liberty to
walk in the adjacent yard, if he thought proper, for an hour.
The prisoner answered
with a sullen nod; and being left alone again, sat brooding over what he had
heard, and pondering upon the hopes the recent conversation had awakened;
gazing abstractedly, the while he did so, on the light without, and watching
the shadows thrown by one wall on another, and on the stone-paved ground.
It was a dull, square
yard, made cold and gloomy by high walls, and seeming to chill the very
sunlight. The stone, so bare, and rough, and obdurate, filled even him with
longing thoughts of meadow-land and trees; and with a burning wish to be at
liberty. As he looked, he rose, and leaning against the door-post, gazed up at
the bright blue sky, smiling even on that dreary home of crime. He seemed, for
a moment, to remember lying on his back in some sweet-scented place, and gazing
at it through moving branches, long ago.
His attention was
suddenly attracted by a clanking sound--he knew what it was, for he had
startled himself by making the same noise in walking to the door. Presently a
voice began to sing, and he saw the shadow of a figure on the pavement. It
stopped--was silent all at once, as though the person for a moment had
forgotten where he was, but soon remembered--and so, with the same clanking
noise, the shadow disappeared.
He walked out into the
court and paced it to and fro; startling the echoes, as he went, with the harsh
jangling of his fetters. There was a door near his, which, like his, stood
ajar.
He had not taken
half-a-dozen turns up and down the yard, when, standing still to observe this
door, he heard the clanking sound again. A face looked out of the grated
window--he saw it very dimly, for the cell was dark and the bars were heavy--and
directly afterwards, a man appeared, and came towards him.
For the sense of
loneliness he had, he might have been in jail a year. Made eager by the hope of
companionship, he quickened his pace, and hastened to meet the man half way--
What was this! His son!
They stood face to
face, staring at each other. He shrinking and cowed, despite himself; Barnahy
struggling with his imperfect memory, and wondering where he had seen that face
before. He was not uncertain long, for suddenly he laid hands upon him, and
striving to bear him to the ground, cried:
"Ah! I know! You
are the robber!"
He said nothing in
reply at first, but held down his head, and struggled with him silently.
Finding the younger man too strong for him, he raised his face, looked close
into his eyes, and said,
"I am your
father."
God knows what magic
the name had for his ears; but Barnaby released his hold, fell back, and looked
at him aghast. Suddenly he sprung towards him, put his arms about his neck, and
pressed his head against his cheek.
Yes, yes, he was; he
was sure he was. But where had he been so long, and why had he left his mother
by herself, or worse than by herself, with her poor foolish boy? And had she
really been as happy as they said? And where was she? Was she near there? She
was not happy now, and he in jail? Ah, no.
Not a word was said in
answer; but Grip croaked loudly, and hopped about them, round and round, as if
enclosing them in a magic circle, and invoking all the powers of mischief.
DURING the whole of
this day, every regiment in or near the metropolis was on duty in one or other
part of the town; and the regulars and militia, in obedience to the orders
which were sent to every barrack and station within twenty-four hours’ journey,
began to pour in by all the roads. But the disturbance had attained to such a
formidable height, and the rioters had grown, with impunity, to be so
audacious, that the sight of this great force, continually augmented by new
arrivals, instead of operating as a check, stimulated them to outrages of
greater hardihood than any they had yet committed; and helped to kindle a flame
in London, the like of which had never been beheld, even in its ancient and
rebellious times.
All yesterday, and on
this day likewise, the commander-in-chief endeavoured to arouse the magistrates
to a sense of their duty, and in particular the Lord Mayor, who was the
faintest-hearted and most timid of them all. With this object, large bodies of
the soldiery were several times despatched to the Mansion House to await his
orders: but as he could, by no threats or persuasions, be induced to give any,
and as the men remained in the open street, fruitlessly for any good purpose,
and thrivingly for a very bad one; these laudable attempts did harm rather than
good. For the crowd, becoming speedily acquainted with the Lord Mayor’s temper,
did not fail to take advantage of it by boasting that even the civil
authorities were opposed to the Papists, and could not find it in their hearts
to molest those who were guilty of no other offence. These vaunts they took
care to make within the hearing of the soldiers; and they, being naturally loth
to quarrel with the people, received their advances kindly enough: answering,
when they were asked if they desired to fire upon their countrymen, "No,
they would be damned if they did;" and showing much honest simplicity and
good nature. The feeling that the military were No-Popery men, and were ripe
for disobeying orders and joining the mob, soon became very prevalent in
consequence. Rumours of their disaffection, and of their leaning towards the
popular cause, spread from mouth to mouth with astonishing rapidity; and
whenever they were drawn up idly in the streets or squares, there was sure to
be a crowd about them, cheering and shaking hands, and treating them with a
great show of confidence and affection.
By this time, the crowd
was everywhere; all concealment and disguise were laid aside, and they pervaded
the whole town. If any man among them wanted money, he had but to knock at the
door of a dwelling-house, or walk into a shop, and demand it in the rioters
name; and his demand was instantly complied with. The peaceable citizens being
afraid to lay hands upon them, singly and alone, it may be easily supposed that
when gathered together in bodies, they were perfectly secure from interruption.
They assembled in the streets, traversed them at their will and pleasure, and
publicly concerted their plans. Business was quite suspended; the greater part
of the shops were closed; most of the houses displayed a blue flag in token of
their adherence to the popular side; and even the Jews in Houndsditch,
Whitechapel, and those quarters, wrote upon their doors or window-shutters,
"This House is a True Protestant." The crowd was the law, and never
was the law held in greater dread, or more implicitly obeyed.
It was about six o’clock
in the evening, when a vast mob poured into Lincoln’s Inn Fields by every
avenue, and divided--evidently in pursuance of a previous design--into several
parties. It must not be understood that this arrangement was known to the whole
crowd, but that it was the work of a few leaders; who, mingling with the men as
they came upon the ground, and calling to them to fall into this or that parry,
effected it as rapidly as if it had been determined on by a council of the
whole number, and every man had known his place.
It was perfectly
notorious to the assemblage that the largest body, which comprehended about
two-thirds of the whole, was designed for the attack on Newgate. It
comprehended all the rioters who had been conspicuous in any of their former
proceedings; all those whom they recommended as daring hands and fit for the
work; all those whose companions had been taken in the riots; and a great
number of people who were relatives or friends of felons in the jail. This last
class included, not only the most desperate and utterly abandoned villains in
London, but some who were comparatively innocent. There was more than one woman
there, disguised in man’s attire, and bent upon the rescue of a child or
brother. There were the two sons of a man who lay under sentence of death, and
who was to be executed along with three others, on the next day but one. There
was a great parry of boys whose fellow-pickpockets were in the prison; and at
the skirts of all, a score of miserable women, outcasts from the world, seeking
to release some other fallen creature as miserable as themselves, or moved by a
general sympathy perhaps--God knows--with all who were without hope, and
wretched.
Old swords, and pistols
without ball or powder; sledge-hammers, knives, axes, saws, and weapons
pillaged from the butchers’ shops; a forest of iron bars and wooden clubs; long
ladders for scaling the walls, each carried on the shoulders of a dozen men;
lighted torches; tow smeared with pitch, and tar, and brimstone; staves roughly
plucked from fence and paling; and even crutches taken from crippled beggars in
the streets; composed their arms. When all was ready, Hugh and Dennis, with
Simon Tappertit between them, led the way. Roaring and chafing like an angry
sea, the crowd pressed after them.
Instead of going
straight down Holborn to the jail, as all expected, their leaders took the way
to Clerkenwell, and pouring down a quiet street, halted before a locksmith’s
house--the Golden Key.
"Beat at the
door," cried Hugh to the men about him. "We want one of his craft
to-night. Beat it in, if no one answers."
The shop was shut. Both
door and shutters were of a strong and sturdy kind, and they knocked without
effect. But the impatient crowd raising a cry of "Set fire to the
house!" and torches being passed to the front, an upper window was thrown
open, and the stout old locksmith stood before them.
"What now, you
villains!" he demanded. "Where is my daughter?"
"Ask no questions
of us, old man," retorted Hugh, waving his comrades to be silent,
"but come down, and bring the tools of your trade. We want you."
"Want me!"
cried the locksmith, glancing at the regimental dress he wore: "Ay, and if
some that I could name possessed the hearts of mice, ye should have had me long
ago. Mark me, my lad--and you about him do the same. There are a score among ye
whom I see now and know, who are dead men from this hour. Begone! and rob an
undertaker’s while you can! You’ll want some coffins before long."
"Will you come
down?" cried Hugh.
"Will you give me
my daughter, ruffian?" cried the locksmith.
"I know nothing of
her," Hugh rejoined. "Burn the door!"
"Stop!" cried
the locksmith, in a voice that made them falter-- presenting, as he spoke, a
gun. "Let an old man do that. You can spare him better."
The young fellow who
held the light, and who was stooping down before the door, rose hastily at
these words, and fell back. The locksmith ran his eye along the upturned faces,
and kept the weapon levelled at the threshold of his house. It had no other
rest than his shoulder, but was as steady as the house itself.
"Let the man who
does it, take heed to his prayers," he said firmly; "I warn
him."
Snatching a torch from
one who stood near him, Hugh was stepping forward with an oath, when he was
arrested by a shrill and piercing shriek, and, looking upward, saw a fluttering
garment on the house- top.
There was another
shriek, and another, and then a shrill voice cried, "Is Simmun
below!" At the same moment a lean neck was stretched over the parapet, and
Miss Miggs, indistinctly seen in the gathering gloom of evening, screeched in a
frenzied manner, "Oh! dear gentlemen, let me hear Simmuns’s answer from
his own lips. Speak to me, Simmun. Speak to me!"
Mr. Tappertit, who was
not at all flattered by this compliment, looked up, and bidding her hold her
peace, ordered her to come down and open the door, for they wanted her master,
and would take no denial.
"Oh good
gentlemen!" cried Miss Miggs. "Oh my own precious, precious
Simmun--"
"Hold your
nonsense, will you!" retorted Mr. Tappertit; "and come down and open
the door.--G. Varden, drop that gun, or it will be worse for you."
"Don’t mind his
gun," screamed Miggs. "Simmun and gentlemen, I poured a mug of
table-beer right down the barrel."
The crowd gave a loud
shout, which was followed by a roar of laughter.
"It wouldn’t go
off, not if you was to load it up to the muzzle," screamed Miggs.
"Simmun and gentlemen, I’m locked up in the front attic, through the
little door on the right hand when you think you’ve got to the very top of the
stairs--and up the flight of corner steps, being careful not to knock your
heads against the rafters, and not to tread on one side in case you should fall
into the two-pair bedroom through the lath and plasture, which do not bear, but
the contrairy. Simmun and gentlemen, I’ve been locked up here for safety, but
my endeavours has always been, and always will be, to be on the right side--the
blessed side and to prenounce the Pope of Babylon, and all her inward and her
outward workings, which is Pagin. My sentiments is of little consequences, I
know," cried Miggs, with additional shrillness, "for my positions is
but a servant, and as sich, of humilities, still I gives expressions to my
feelings, and places my reliances on them which entertains my own
opinions!"
Without taking much
notice of these outpourings of Miss Miggs after she had made her first announcement
in relation to the gun, the crowd raised a ladder against the window where the
locksmith stood, and notwithstanding that he closed, and fastened, and defended
it manfully, soon forced an entrance by shivering the glass and breaking in the
frames. After dealing a few stout blows about him, he found himself
defenceless, in the midst of a furious crowd, which overflowed the room and
softened off in a confused heap of faces at the door and window.
They were very wrathful
with him (for he had wounded two men), and even called out to those in front,
to bring him forth and hang him on a lamp-post. But Gabriel was quite
undaunted, and looked from Hugh and Dennis, who held him by either arm, to
Simon Tappertit, who confronted him.
"You have robbed
me of my daughter," said the locksmith, "who is far dearer to me than
my life; and you may take my life, if you will. I bless God that I have been
enabled to keep my wife free of this scene; and that He has made me a man who
will not ask mercy at such hands as yours."
"And a wery game
old gentleman you are," said Mr. Dennis, approvingly; "and you
express yourself like a man. What’s the odds, brother, whether it’s a lamp-post
to-night, or a feather- bed ten year to come, eh?"
The locksmith glanced
at him disdainfully, but returned no other answer.
"For my
part," said the hangman, who particularly favoured the lamp-post
suggestion, "I honour your principles. They’re mine exactly. In such
sentiments as them," and here he emphasised his discourse with an oath,
"I’m ready to meet you or any man halfway.-- Have you got a bit of cord
anywheres handy? Don’t put yourself out of the way, if you haven’t. A
handkecher will do."
"Don’t be a fool,
master," whispered Hugh, seizing Varden roughly by the shoulder; "but
do as you’re bid. You’ll soon hear what you’re wanted for. Do it!"
"I’ll do nothing
at your request, or that of any scoundrel here," returned the locksmith.
"If you want any service from me, you may spare yourselves the pains of
telling me what it is. I tell you, beforehand, I’ll do nothing for you."
Mr. Dennis was so
affected by this constancy on the part of the staunch old man, that he
protested--almost with tears in his eyes-- that to baulk his inclinations would
be an act of cruelty and hard dealing to which he, for one, never could
reconcile his conscience. The gentleman, he said, had avowed in so many words
that he was ready for working off; such being the case, he considered it their
duty, as a civilised and enlightened crowd, to work him off. It was not often,
he observed, that they had it in their power to accommodate themselves to the
wishes of those from whom they had the misfortune to differ. Having now found
an individual who expressed a desire which they could reasonably indulge (and
for himself he was free to confess that in his opinion that desire did honour
to his feelings), he hoped they would decide to accede to his proposition
before going any further. It was an experiment which, skilfully and dexterously
performed, would be over in five minutes, with great comfort and satisfaction
to all parties; and though it did not become him (Mr. Dennis) to speak well of
himself he trusted he might be allowed to say that he had practical knowledge
of the subject, and, being naturally of an obliging and friendly disposition,
would work the gentleman off with a deal of pleasure.
These remarks, which
were addressed in the midst of a frightful din and turmoil to those immediately
about him, were received with great favour; not so much, perhaps, because of
the hangman’s eloquence, as on account of the locksmith’s obstinacy. Gabriel
was in imminent peril, and he knew it; but he preserved a steady silence; and
would have done so, if they had been debating whether they should roast him at
a slow fire.
As the hangman spoke,
there was some stir and confusion on the ladder; and directly he was silent--so
immediately upon his holding his peace, that the crowd below had no time to
learn what he had been saying, or to shout in response--some one at the window
cried:
"He has a grey
head. He is an old man: Don’t hurt him!"
The locksmith turned,
with a start, towards the place from which the words had come, and looked
hurriedly at the people who were hanging on the ladder and clinging to each
other.
"Pay no respect to
my grey hair, young man," he said, answering the voice and not any one he
saw. "I don’t ask it. My heart is green enough to scorn and despise every
man among you, band of robbers that you are!"
This incautious speech
by no means tended to appease the ferocity of the crowd. They cried again to
have him brought out; and it would have gone hard with the honest locksmith,
but that Hugh reminded them, in answer, that they wanted his services, and must
have them.
"So, tell him what
we want," he said to Simon Tappertit, "and quickly. And open your
ears, master, if you would ever use them after to-night."
Gabriel folded his
arms, which were now at liberty, and eyed his old ’prentice in silence.
"Lookye,
Varden," said Sim, "we’re bound for Newgate."
"I know you
are," returned the locksmith. "You never said a truer word than
that."
"To burn it down,
I mean," said Simon, "and force the gates, and set the prisoners at
liberty. You helped to make the lock of the great door."
"I did," said
the locksmith. "You owe me no thanks for that--as you’ll find before
long."
"Maybe,"
returned his journeyman, "but you must show us how to force it."
"Must I!"
"Yes; for you
know, and I don’t. You must come along with us, and pick it with your own hands."
"When I do,"
said the locksmith quietly, "my hands shall drop off at the wrists, and
you shall wear them, Simon Tappertit, on your shoulders for epaulettes."
"We’ll see
that," cried Hugh, interposing, as the indignation of the crowd again
burst forth. "You fill a basket with the tools he’ll want, while I bring
him downstairs. Open the doors below, some of you. And light the great captain,
others! Is there no business afoot, my lads, that you can do nothing but stand
and grumble?"
They looked at one
another, and quickly dispersing, swarmed over the house, plundering and
breaking, according to their custom, and carrying off such articles of value as
happened to please their fancy. They had no great length of time for these
proceedings, for the basket of tools was soon prepared and slung over a man’s
shoulders. The preparations being now completed, and everything ready for the
attack, those who were pillaging and destroying in the other rooms were called
down to the workshop. They were about to issue forth, when the man who had been
last upstairs, stepped forward, and asked if the young woman in the garret (who
was making a terrible noise, he said, and kept on screaming without the least
cessation) was to be released?
For his own part, Simon
Tappertit would certainly have replied in the negative, but the mass of his
companions, mindful of the good service she had done in the matter of the gun,
being of a different opinion, he had nothing for it but to answer, Yes. The
man, accordingly, went back again to the rescue, and presently returned with
Miss Miggs, limp and doubled up, and very damp from much weeping.
As the young lady had
given no tokens of consciousness on their way downstairs, the bearer reported
her either dead or dying; and being at some loss what to do with her, was
looking round for a convenient bench or heap of ashes on which to place her
senseless form, when she suddenly came upon her feet by some mysterious means,
thrust back her hair, stared wildly at Mr. Tappertit, cried, "My Simmuns’s
life is not a wictim!" and dropped into his arms with such promptitude
that he staggered and reeled some paces back, beneath his lovely burden.
"Oh bother!"
said Mr. Tappertit. "Here. Catch hold of her, somebody. Lock her up again;
she never ought to have been let out."
"My Simmun!"
cried Miss Miggs, in tears, and faintly. "My for ever, ever blessed
Simmun!"
"Hold up, will
you," said Mr. Tappertit, in a very unresponsive tone, "I’ll let you
fall if you don’t. What are you sliding your feet off the ground for?"
"My angel
Simmuns!" murmured Miggs--"he promised--"
"Promised! Well,
and I’ll keep my promise," answered Simon, testily. "I mean to
provide for you, don’t I? Stand up!"
"Where am I to go?
What is to become of me after my actions of this night!" cried Miggs.
"What resting-places now remains but in the silent tombses!"
"I wish you was in
the silent tombses, I do," cried Mr. Tappertit, "and boxed up tight,
in a good strong one. Here," he cried to one of the bystanders, in whose
ear he whispered for a moment: "Take her off, will you. You understand
where?"
The fellow nodded; and
taking her in his arms, notwithstanding her broken protestations, and her
struggles (which latter species of opposition, involving scratches, was much
more difficult of resistance), carried her away. They who were in the house
poured out into the street; the locksmith was taken to the head of the crowd,
and required to walk between his two conductors; the whole body was put in
rapid motion; and without any shouts or noise they bore down straight on
Newgate, and halted in a dense mass before the prison-gate.
BREAKING the silence
they had hitherto preserved, they raised a great cry as soon as they were
ranged before the jail, and demanded to speak to the governor. This visit was
not wholly unexpected, for his house, which fronted the street, was strongly
barricaded, the wicket-gate of the prison was closed up, and at no loophole or
grating was any person to be seen. Before they had repeated their summons many
times, a man appeared upon the roof of the governor’s house, and asked what it
was they wanted.
Some said one thing,
some another, and some only groaned and hissed. It being now nearly dark, and
the house high, many persons in the throng were not aware that any one had come
to answer them, and continued their clamour until the intelligence was
gradually diffused through the whole concourse. Ten minutes or more elapsed
before any one voice could be heard with tolerable distinctness; during which
interval the figure remained perched alone, against the summer-evening sky,
looking down into the troubled street.
"Are you,"
said Hugh at length, "Mr. Akerman, the head jailer here?"
"Of course he is,
brother," whispered Dennis. But Hugh, without minding him, took his answer
from the man himself.
"Yes," he
said. "I am."
"You have got some
friends of ours in your custody, master."
"I have a good
many people in my custody." He glanced downward, as he spoke, into the
jail: and the feeling that he could see into the different yards, and that he
overlooked everything which was hidden from their view by the rugged walls, so
lashed and goaded the mob, that they howled like wolves.
"Deliver up our
friends," said Hugh, "and you may keep the rest."
"It’s my duty to
keep them all. I shall do my duty."
"If you don’t
throw the doors open, we shall break ’em down," said Hugh; "for we
will have the rioters out."
"All I can do,
good people," Akerman replied, "is to exhort you to disperse; and to
remind you that the consequences of any disturbance in this place, will be very
severe, and bitterly repented by most of you, when it is too late."
He made as though he
would retire when he said these words, but he was checked by the voice of the
locksmith.
"Mr.
Akerman," cried Gabriel, "Mr. Akerman."
"I will hear no
more from any of you," replied the governor, turning towards the speaker,
and waving his hand.
"But I am not one
of them," said Gabriel. "I am an honest man, Mr. Akerman; a
respectable tradesman--Gabriel Varden, the locksmith. You know me?"
"You among the
crowd!" cried the governor in an altered voice.
"Brought here by
force--brought here to pick the lock of the great door for them," rejoined
the locksmith. "Bear witness for me, Mr. Akerman, that I refuse to do it;
and that I will not do it, come what may of my refusal. If any violence is done
to me, please to remember this."
"Is there no way
(if helping you?" said the governor.
"None, Mr.
Akerman. You’ll do your duty, and I’ll do mine. Once again, you robbers and
cut-throats," said the locksmith, turning round upon them, "I refuse.
Ah! Howl till you’re hoarse. I refuse."
"Stay--stay!"
said the jailer, hastily. "Mr. Varden, I know you for a worthy man, and
one who would do no unlawful act except upon compulsion--"
"Upon compulsion,
sir," interposed the locksmith, who felt that the tone in which this was
said, conveyed the speaker’s impression that he had ample excuse for yielding
to the furious multitude who beset and hemmed him in, on every side, and among
whom he stood, an old man, quite alone; "upon compulsion, sir, I’ll do
nothing."
"Where is that
man," said the keeper, anxiously, "who spoke to me just now?"
"Here!" Hugh
replied.
"Do you know what
the guilt of murder is, and that by keeping that honest tradesman at your side
you endanger his life!"
"We know it very
well," he answered, "for what else did we bring him here? Let’s have
our friends, master, and you shall have your friend. Is that fair, lads?"
The mob replied to him
with a loud Hurrah!
"You see how it
is, sir?" cried Varden. "Keep ’em out, in King George’s name.
Remember what I have said. Good night!"
There was no more
parley. A shower of stones and other missiles compelled the keeper of the jail
to retire; and the mob, pressing on, and swarming round the walls, forced
Gabriel Varden close up to the door.
In vain the basket of
tools was laid upon the ground before him, and he was urged in turn by
promises, by blows, by offers of reward, and threats of instant death, to do
the office for which they had brought him there. "No," cried the
sturdy locksmith, "I will not!"
He had never loved his
life so well as then, but nothing could move him. The savage faces that glared
upon him, look where he would; the cries of those who thirsted, like wild
animals, for his blood; the sight of men pressing forward, and trampling down
their fellows, as they strove to reach him, and struck at him above the heads
of other men, with axes and with iron bars; all failed to daunt him. He looked
from man to man, and face to face, and still, with quickened breath and
lessening colour, cried firmly, "I will not!"
Dennis dealt him a blow
upon the face which felled him to the ground. He sprung up again like a man in
the prime of life, and with blood upon his forehead, caught him by the throat.
"You cowardly
dog!" he said: "Give me my daughter. Give me my daughter."
They struggled
together. Some cried "Kill him," and some (but they were not near
enough) strove to trample him to death. Tug as he would at the old man’s
wrists, the hangman could not force him to unclench his hands.
"Is this all the
return you make me, you ungrateful monster?" he articulated with great
difficulty, and with many oaths.
"Give me my
daughter!" cried the locksmith, who was now as fierce as those who
gathered round him: "Give me my daughter!"
He was down again, and
up, and down once more, and buffeting with a score of them, who bandied him
from hand to hand, when one tall fellow, fresh from a slaughter-house, whose
dress and great thigh- boots smoked hot with grease and blood, raised a
pole-axe, and swearing a horrible oath, aimed it at the old man’s uncovered
head. At that instant, and in the very act, he fell himself, as if struck by
lightning, and over his body a one-armed man came darting to the locksmith’s
side. Another man was with him, and both caught the locksmith roughly in their
grasp.
"Leave him to
us!" they cried to Hugh--struggling, as they spoke, to force a passage
backward through the crowd. "Leave him to us. Why do you waste your whole
strength on such as he, when a couple of men can finish him in as many minutes!
You lose time. Remember the prisoners! remember Barnaby!"
The cry ran through the
mob. Hammers began to rattle on the walls; and every man strove to reach the
prison, and be among the foremost rank. Fighting their way through the press
and struggle, as desperately as if they were in the midst of enemies rather
than their own friends, the two men retreated with the locksmith between them,
and dragged him through the very heart of the concourse.
And now the strokes
began to fall like hail upon the gate, and on the strong building; for those
who could not reach the door, spent their fierce rage on anything--even on the
great blocks of stone, which shivered their weapons into fragments, and made
their hands and arms to tingle as if the walls were active in their stout
resistance, and dealt them back their blows. The clash of iron ringing upon
iron, mingled with the deafening tumult and sounded high above it, as the great
sledge-hammers rattled on the nailed and plated door: the sparks flew off in
showers; men worked in gangs, and at short intervals relieved each other, that
all their strength might be devoted to the work; but there stood the portal
still, as grim and dark and strong as ever, and, saving for the dints upon its
battered surface, quite unchanged.
While some brought all
their energies to bear upon this toilsome task; and some, rearing ladders
against the prison, tried to clamber to the summit of the walls they were too
short to scale; and some again engaged a body of police a hundred strong, and
beat them back and trod them under foot by force of numbers; others besieged
the house on which the jailer had appeared, and driving in the door, brought
out his furniture, and piled it up against the prison-gate, to make a bonfire
which should burn it down. As soon as this device was understood, all those who
had laboured hitherto, cast down their tools and helped to swell the heap;
which reached half-way across the street, and was so high, that those who threw
more fuel on the top, got up by ladders. When all the keeper’s goods were flung
upon this costly pile, to the last fragment, they smeared it with the pitch,
and tar, and rosin they had brought, and sprinkled it with turpentine. To all
the woodwork round the prison-doors they did the like, leaving not a joist or
beam untouched. This infernal christening performed, they fired the pile with
lighted matches and with blazing tow, and then stood by, awaiting the result.
The furniture being
very dry, and rendered more combustible by wax and oil, besides the arts they
had used, took fire at once. The flames roared high and fiercely, blackening
the prison-wall, and twining up its loftly front like burning serpents. At
first they crowded round the blaze, and vented their exultation only in their
looks: but when it grew hotter and fiercer--when it crackled, leaped, and
roared, like a great furnace--when it shone upon the opposite houses, and
lighted up not only the pale and wondering faces at the windows, but the inmost
corners of each habitation-- when through the deep red heat and glow, the fire
was seen sporting and toying with the door, now clinging to its obdurate
surface, now gliding off with fierce inconstancy and soaring high into the sky,
anon returning to fold it in its burning grasp and lure it to its ruin--when it
shone and gleamed so brightly that the church clock of St Sepulchre’s so often
pointing to the hour of death, was legible as in broad day, and the vane upon
its steeple-top glittered in the unwonted light like something richly
jewelled--when blackened stone and sombre brick grew ruddy in the deep
reflection, and windows shone like burnished gold, dotting the longest distance
in the fiery vista with their specks of brightness--when wall and tower, and
roof and chimney-stack, seemed drunk, and in the flickering glare appeared to
reel and stagger--when scores of objects, never seen before, burst out upon the
view, and things the most familiar put on some new aspect--then the mob began
to join the whirl, and with loud yells, and shouts, and clamour, such as
happily is seldom heard, bestirred themselves to feed the fire, and keep it at
its height.
Although the heat was
so intense that the paint on the houses over against the prison, parched and
crackled up, and swelling into boils, as it were from excess of torture, broke
and crumbled away; although the glass fell from the window-sashes, and the lead
and iron on the roofs blistered the incautious hand that touched them, and the
sparrows in the eaves took wing, and rendered giddy by the smoke, fell
fluttering down upon the blazing pile; still the fire was tended unceasingly by
busy hands, and round it, men were going always. They never slackened in their
zeal, or kept aloof, but pressed upon the flames so hard, that those in front
had much ado to save themselves from being thrust in; if one man swooned or
dropped, a dozen struggled for his place, and that although they knew the pain,
and thirst, and pressure to be unendurable. Those who fell down in
fainting-fits, and were not crushed or burnt, were carried to an inn-yard close
at hand, and dashed with water from a pump; of which buckets full were passed
from man to man among the crowd; but such was the strong desire of all to
drink, and such the fighting to be first, that, for the most part, the whole
contents were spilled upon the ground, without the lips of one man being
moistened.
Meanwhile, and in the
midst of all the roar and outcry, those who were nearest to the pile, heaped up
again the burning fragments that came toppling down, and raked the fire about
the door, which, although a sheet of flame, was still a door fast locked and
barred, and kept them out. Great pieces of blazing wood were passed, besides,
above the people’s heads to such as stood about the ladders, and some of these,
climbing up to the topmost stave, and holding on with one hand by the prison
wall, exerted all their skill and force to cast these fire-brands on the roof,
or down into the yards within. In many instances their efforts were successful;
which occasioned a new and appalling addition to the horrors of the scene: for
the prisoners within, seeing from between their bars that the fire caught in
many places and thrived fiercely, and being all locked up in strong cells for
the night, began to know that they were in danger of being burnt alive. This
terrible fear, spreading from cell to cell and from yard to yard, vented itself
in such dismal cries and wailings, and in such dreadful shrieks for help, that
the whole jail resounded with the noise; which was loudly heard even above the
shouting of the mob and roaring of the flames, and was so full of agony and
despair, that it made the boldest tremble.
It was remarkable that
these cries began in that quarter of the jail which fronted Newgate Street,
where, it was well known, the men who were to suffer death on Thursday were
confined. And not only were these four who had so short a time to live, the
first to whom the dread of being burnt occurred, but they were, throughout, the
most importunate of all: for they could be plainly heard, notwithstanding the
great thickness of the walls, crying that the wind set that way, and that the
flames would shortly reach them; and calling to the officers of the jail to
come and quench the fire from a cistern which was in their yard, and full of
water. Judging from what the crowd outside the walls could hear from time to
time, these four doomed wretches never ceased to call for help; and that with
as much distraction, and in as great a frenzy of attachment to existence, as
though each had an honoured, happy life before him, instead of eight-and-forty
hours of miserable imprisonment, and then a violent and shameful death.
But the anguish and
suffering of the two sons of one of these men, when they heard, or fancied that
they heard, their father’s voice, is past description. After wringing their
hands and rushing to and fro as if they were stark mad, one mounted on the
shoulders of his brother, and tried to clamber up the face of the high wall,
guarded at the top with spikes and points of iron. And when he fell among the
crowd, he was not deterred by his bruises, but mounted up again, and fell again,
and, when he found the feat impossible, began to beat the stones and tear them
with his hands, as if he could that way make a breach in the strong building,
and force a passage in. At last, they cleft their way among the mob about the
door, though many men, a dozen times their match, had tried in vain to do so,
and were seen, in--yes, in--the fire, striving to prize it down, with crowbars.
Nor were they alone
affected by the outcry from within the prison. The women who were looking on,
shrieked loudly, beat their hands together, stopped their ears; and many
fainted: the men who were not near the walls and active in the siege, rather
than do nothing, tore up the pavement of the street, and did so with a haste
and fury they could not have surpassed if that had been the jail, and they were
near their object. Not one living creature in the throng was for an instant
still. The whole great mass were mad.
A shout! Another!
Another yet, though few knew why, or what it meant. But those around the gate
had seen it slowly yield, and drop from its topmost hinge. It hung on that side
by but one, but it was upright still, because of the bar, and its having sunk,
of its own weight, into the heap of ashes at its foot. There was now a gap at
the top of the doorway, through which could be descried a gloomy passage,
cavernous and dark. Pile up the fire!
It burnt fiercely. The
door was red-hot, and the gap wider. They vainly tried to shield their faces
with their hands, and standing as if in readiness for a spring, watched the
place. Dark figures, some crawling on their hands and knees, some carried in
the arms of others, were seen to pass along the roof. It was plain the jail
could hold out no longer. The keeper, and his officers, and their wives and
children, were escaping. Pile up the fire!
The door sank down
again: it settled deeper in the cinders-- tottered--yielded--was down!
As they shouted again,
they fell back, for a moment, and left a clear space about the fire that lay
between them and the jail entry. Hugh leapt upon the blazing heap, and
scattering a train of sparks into the air, and making the dark lobby glitter
with those that hung upon his dress, dashed into the jail.
The hangman followed.
And then so many rushed upon their track, that the fire got trodden down and
thinly strewn about the street; but there was no need of it now, for, inside
and out, the prison was in flames.
DURING the whole course
of the terrible scene which was now at its height, one man in the jail suffered
a degree of fear and mental torment which had no parallel in the endurance,
even of those who lay under sentence of death.
When the rioters first
assembled before the building, the murderer was roused from sleep--if such
slumbers as his may have that blessed name--by the roar of voices, and the
struggling of a great crowd. He started up as these sounds met his ear, and,
sitting on his bedstead, listened.
After a short interval
of silence the noise burst out again. Still listening attentively, he made out,
in course of time, that the jail was besieged by a furious multitude. His
guilty conscience instantly arrayed these men against himself, and brought the
fear upon him that he would be singled out, and torn to pieces.
Once impressed with the
terror of this conceit, everything tended to confirm and strengthen it. His
double crime, the circumstances under which it had been committed, the length
of time that had elapsed, and its discovery in spite of all, made him, as it
were, the visible object of the Almighty’s wrath. In all the crime and vice and
moral gloom of the great pest-house of the capital, he stood alone, marked and
singled out by his great guilt, a Lucifer among the devils. The other prisoners
were a host, hiding and sheltering each other--a crowd like that without the
walls. He was one man against the whole united concourse; a single, solitary,
lonely man, from whom the very captives in the jail fell off and shrunk
appalled.
It might be that the
intelligence of his capture having been bruited abroad, they had come there
purposely to drag him out and kill him in the street; or it might be that they
were the rioters, and, in pursuance of an old design, had come to sack the
prison. But in either case he had no belief or hope that they would spare him.
Every shout they raised, and every sound they made, was a blow upon his heart.
As the attack went on, he grew more wild and frantic in his terror: tried to
pull away the bars that guarded the chimney and prevented him from climbing up:
called loudly on the turnkeys to cluster round the cell and save him from the
fury of the rabble; or put him in some dungeon underground, no matter of what
depth, how dark it was, or loathsome, or beset with rats and creeping things,
so that it hid him and was hard to find.
But no one came, or
answered him. Fearful, even while he cried to them, of attracting attention, he
was silent. By and bye, he saw, as he looked from his grated window, a strange
glimmering on the stone walls and pavement of the yard. It was feeble at first,
and came and went, as though some officers with torches were passing to and fro
upon the roof of the prison. Soon it reddened, and lighted brands came whirling
down, spattering the ground with fire, and burning sullenly in corners. One
rolled beneath a wooden bench, and set it in a blaze; another caught a
water-spout, and so went climbing up the wall, leaving a long straight track of
fire behind it. After a time, a slow thick shower of burning fragments, from some
upper portion of the prison which was blazing nigh, began to fall before his
door. Remembering that it opened outwards, he knew that every spark which fell
upon the heap, and in the act lost its bright life, and died an ugly speck of
dust and rubbish, helped to entomb him in a living grave. Still, though the
jail resounded with shrieks and cries for help,--though the fire bounded up as
if each separate flame had had a tiger’s life, and roared as though, in every
one, there were a hungry voice--though the heat began to grow intense, and the
air suffocating, and the clamour without increased, and the danger of his
situation even from one merciless element was every moment more extreme,--still
he was afraid to raise his voice again, lest the crowd should break in, and
should, of their own ears or from the information given them by the other
prisoners, get the clue to his place of confinement. Thus fearful alike, of
those within the prison and of those without; of noise and silence; light and
darkness; of being released, and being left there to die; he was so tortured
and tormented, that nothing man has ever done to man in the horrible caprice of
power and cruelty, exceeds his self-inflicted punishment.
Now, now, the door was
down. Now they came rushing through the jail, calling to each other in the
vaulted passages; clashing the iron gates dividing yard from yard; beating at
the doors of cells and wards; wrenching off bolts and locks and bars; tearing
down the door-posts to get men out; endeavouring to drag them by main force
through gaps and windows where a child could scarcely pass; whooping and
yelling without a moment’s rest; and running through the heat and flames as if
they were cased in metal. By their legs, their arms, the hair upon their heads,
they dragged the prisoners out. Some threw themselves upon the captives as they
got towards the door, and tried to file away their irons; some danced about
them with a frenzied joy, and rent their clothes, and were ready, as it seemed,
to tear them limb from limb. Now a party of a dozen men came darting through
the yard into which the murderer cast fearful glances from his darkened window;
dragging a prisoner along the ground whose dress they had nearly torn from his
body in their mad eagerness to set him free, and who was bleeding and senseless
in their hands. Now a score of prisoners ran to and fro, who had lost
themselves in the intricacies of the prison, and were so bewildered with the
noise and glare that they knew not where to turn or what to do, and still cried
out for help, as loudly as before. Anon some famished wretch whose theft had
been a loaf of bread or scrap of butcher’s meat, came skulking past,
barefooted--going slowly away because that jail, his house, was burning; not
because he had any other, or had friends to meet, or old haunts to revisit, or
any liberty to gain, but liberty to starve and die. And then a knot of
highwaymen went trooping by, conducted by the friends they had among the crowd,
who muffled their fetters as they went along, with handkerchiefs and bands of
hay, and wrapped them in coats and cloaks, and gave them drink from bottles,
and held it to their lips, because of their handcuffs which there was no time
to remove. All this, and Heaven knows how much more, was done amidst a noise, a
hurry, and distraction, like nothing that we know of, even in our dreams; which
seemed for ever on the rise, and never to decrease for the space of a single
instant.
He was still looking
down from his window upon these things, when a band of men with torches,
ladders, axes, and many kinds of weapons, poured into the yard, and hammering
at his door, inquired if there were any prisoner within. He left the window
when he saw them coming, and drew back into the remotest corner of the cell;
but although he returned them no answer, they had a fancy that some one was
inside, for they presently set ladders against it, and began to tear away the
bars at the casement; not only that, indeed, but with pickaxes to hew down the
very stones in the wall.
As soon as they had
made a breach at the window, large enough for the admission of a man’s head,
one of them thrust in a torch and looked all round the room. He followed this
man’s gaze until it rested on himself, and heard him demand why he had not
answered, but made him no reply.
In the general surprise
and wonder, they were used to this; without saying anything more, they enlarged
the breach until it was large enough to admit the body of a man, and then came
dropping down upon the floor, one after another, until the cell was full. They
caught him up among them, handed him to the window, and those who stood upon
the ladders passed him down upon the pavement of the yard. Then the rest came
out, one after another, and, bidding him fly, and lose no time, or the way would
be choked up, hurried away to rescue others.
It seemed not a minute’s
work from first to last. He staggered to his feet, incredulous of what had
happened, when the yard was filled again, and a crowd rushed on, hurrying
Barnaby among them. In another minute--not so much: another minute! the same
instant, with no lapse or interval between!--he and his son were being passed
from hand to hand, through the dense crowd in the street, and were glancing
backward at a burning pile which some one said was Newgate.
From the moment of
their first entrance into the prison, the crowd dispersed themselves about it,
and swarmed into every chink and crevice, as if they had a perfect acquaintance
with its innermost parts, and bore in their minds an exact plan of the whole. For
this immediate knowledge of the place, they were, no doubt, in a great degree,
indebted to the hangman, who stood in the lobby, directing some to go this way,
some that, and some the other; and who materially assisted in bringing about
the wonderful rapidity with which the release of the prisoners was effected.
But this functionary of
the law reserved one important piece of intelligence, and kept it snugly to
himself. When he had issued his instructions relative to every other part of
the building, and the mob were dispersed from end to end, and busy at their
work, he took a bundle of keys from a kind of cupboard in the wall, and going
by a kind of passage near the chapel (it joined the governors house, and was
then on fire), betook himself to the condemned cells, which were a series of
small, strong, dismal rooms, opening on a low gallery, guarded, at the end at
which he entered, by a strong iron wicket, and at its opposite extremity by two
doors and a thick grate. Having double locked the wicket, and assured himself
that the other entrances were well secured, he sat down on a bench in the
gallery, and sucked the
head of his stick with the utmost complacency, tranquillity, and contentment.
It would have been
strange enough, a man’s enjoying himself in this quiet manner, while the prison
was burning, and such a tumult was cleaving the air, though he had been outside
the walls. But here, in the very heart of the building, and moreover with the
prayers and cries of the four men under sentence sounding in his ears, and
their hands, stretched our through the gratings in their cell- doors, clasped
in frantic entreaty before his very eyes, it was particularly remarkable.
Indeed, Mr. Dennis appeared to think it an uncommon circumstance, and to banter
himself upon it; for he thrust his hat on one side as some men do when they are
in a waggish humour, sucked the head of his stick with a higher relish, and
smiled as though he would say, "Dennis, you’re a rum dog; you’re a queer
fellow; you’re capital company, Dennis, and quite a character!"
He sat in this way for
some minutes, while the four men in the cells, who were certain that somebody
had entered the gallery, but could not see who, gave vent to such piteous
entreaties as wretches in their miserable condition may be supposed to have
been inspired with: urging, whoever it was, to set them at liberty, for the
love of Heaven; and protesting, with great fervour, and truly enough, perhaps,
for the time, that if they escaped, they would amend their ways, and would never,
never, never again do wrong before God or man, but would lead penitent and
sober lives, and sorrowfully repent the crimes they had committed. The terrible
energy with which they spoke, would have moved any person, no matter how good
or just (if any good or just person could have strayed into that sad place that
night), to have set them at liberty: and, while he would have left any other
punishment to its free course, to have saved them from this last dreadful and
repulsive penalty; which never turned a man inclined to evil, and has hardened
thousands who were half inclined to good.
Mr. Dennis, who had
been bred and nurtured in the good old school, and had administered the good
old laws on the good old plan, always once and sometimes twice every six weeks,
for a long time, bore these appeals with a deal of philosophy. Being at last,
however, rather disturbed in his pleasant reflection by their repetition, he
rapped at one of the doors with his stick, and cried:
"Hold your noise
there, will you?"
At this they all cried
together that they were to be hanged on the next day but one; and again
implored his aid.
"Aid! For
what!" said Mr. Dennis, playfully rapping the knuckles of the hand nearest
him.
"To save us!"
they cried.
"Oh,
certainly," said Mr. Dennis, winking at the wall in the absence of any
friend with whom he could humour the joke. "And so you’re to be worked
off, are you, brothers?"
"Unless we are
released to-night," one of them cried, "we are dead men!"
"I tell you what
it is," said the hangman, gravely; "I’m afraid, my friend, that you’re
not in that ’ere state of mind that’s suitable to your condition, then; you’re
not a-going to be released: don’t think it--Will you leave off that ’ere
indecent row? I wonder you an’t ashamed of yourselves, I do."
He followed up this
reproof by rapping every set of knuckles one after the other, and having done
so, resumed his seat again with a cheerful countenance.
"You’ve had
law," he said, crossing his legs and elevating his eyebrows: "laws
have been made a’ purpose for you; a wery handsome prison’s been made a’
purpose for you; a parson’s kept a purpose for you; a constitootional officer’s
appointed a’ purpose for you; carts is maintained a’ purpose for you--and yet
you’re not contented!--Will you hold that noise, you sir in the furthest?"
A groan was the only
answer.
"So well as I can
make out," said Mr. Dennis, in a tone of mingled badinage and
remonstrance, "there’s not a man among you. I begin to think I’m on the
opposite side, and among the ladies; though for the matter of that, I’ve seen a
many ladies face it out, in a manner that did honour to the sex.--You in number
two, don’t grind them teeth of yours. Worse manners," said the hangman,
rapping at the door with his stick, "I never see in this place afore. I’m
ashamed of you. You’re a disgrace to the Bailey."
After pausing for a
moment to hear if anything could be pleaded in justification, Mr. Dennis
resumed in a sort of coaxing tone:
"Now look’ee here,
you four. I’m come here to take care of you, and see that you an’t burnt,
instead of the other thing. It’s no use your making any noise, for you won’t be
found out by them as has broken in, and you’ll only be hoarse when you come to
the speeches,--which is a pity. What I say in respect to the speeches always
is, ’Give it mouth.’ That’s my maxim. Give it mouth. I’ve heerd," said the
hangman, pulling off his hat to take his handkerchief from the crown and wipe
his face, and then putting it on again a little more on one side than before,
"I’ve heerd a eloquence on them boards--you know what boards I mean--and
have heerd a degree of mouth given to them speeches, that they was as clear as
a bell, and as good as a play. There’s a pattern! And always, when a thing of
this natur’s to come off, what I stand up for, is, a proper frame of mind. Let’s
have a proper frame of mind, and we can go through with it
creditable--pleasant--sociable. Whatever you do (and I address myself in
particular, to you in the furthest), never snivel. I’d sooner by half, though I
lose by it, see a man tear his clothes a’ purpose to spile ’em before they come
to me, than find him snivelling. It’s ten to one a better frame of mind, every
way!"
While the hangman
addressed them to this effect, in the tone and with the air of a pastor in
familiar conversation with his flock, the noise had been in some degree
subdued; for the rioters were busy in conveying the prisoners to the Sessions
House, which was beyond the main walls of the prison, though connected with it,
and the crowd were busy too, in passing them from thence along the street. But
when he had got thus far in his discourse, the sound of voices in the yard
showed plainly that the mob had returned and were coming that way; and directly
afterwards a violent crashing at the grate below, gave note of their attack
upon the cells (as they were called) at last.
It was in vain the
hangman ran from door to door, and covered the grates, one after another, with
his hat, in futile efforts to stifle the cries of the four men within; it was
in vain he dogged their outstretched hands, and beat them with his stick, or
menaced them with new and lingering pains in the execution of his office; the
place resounded with their cries. These, together with the feeling that they
were now the last men in the jail, so worked upon and stimulated the besiegers,
that in an incredibly short space of time they forced the strong grate down
below, which was formed of iron rods two inches square, drove in the two other
doors, as if they had been but deal partitions, and stood at the end of the
gallery with only a bar or two between them and the cells.
"Halloa!"
cried Hugh, who was the first to look into the dusky passage: "Dennis
before us! Well done, old boy. Be quick, and open here, for we shall be suffocated
in the smoke, going out."
"Go out at once,
then," said Dennis. "What do you want here?"
"Want!"
echoed Hugh. "The four men."
"Four
devils!" cried the hangman. "Don’t you know they’re left for death on
Thursday? Don’t you respect the law--the constitootion-- nothing? Let the four
men be."
"Is this a time
for joking?" cried Hugh. "Do you hear ’em? Pull away these bars that
have got fixed between the door and the ground; and let us in."
"Brother,"
said the hangman, in a low voice, as he stooped under pretence of doing what
Hugh desired, but only looked up in his face, "can’t you leave these here
four men to me, if I’ve the whim! You do what you like, and have what you like
of everything for your share,--give me my share. I want these four men left
alone, I tell you!"
"Pull the bars
down, or stand out of the way," was Hugh’s reply.
"You can turn the
crowd if you like, you know that well enough, brother," said the hangman,
slowly. "What! You will come in, will you?"
"Yes."
"You won’t let
these men alone, and leave ’em to me? You’ve no respect for nothing--haven’t
you?" said the hangman, retreating to the door by which he had entered,
and regarding his companion with a scowl. "You will come in, will you,
brother!"
"I tell you, yes.
What the devil ails you? Where are you going?"
"No matter where I’m
going," rejoined the hangman, looking in again at the iron wicket, which
he had nearly shut upon himself, and held ajar. "Remember where you’re
coming. That’s all!"
With that, he shook his
likeness at Hugh, and giving him a grin, compared with which his usual smile
was amiable, disappeared, and shut the door.
Hugh paused no longer,
but goaded alike by the cries of the convicts, and by the impatience of the
crowd, warned the man immediately behind him--the way was only wide enough for
one abreast--to stand back, and wielded a sledge-hammer with such strength,
that after a few blows the iron bent and broke, and gave them free admittance.
It the two sons of one
of these men, of whom mention has been made, were furious in their zeal before,
they had now the wrath and vigour of lions. Calling to the man within each
cell, to keep as far back as he could, lest the axes crashing through the door
should wound him, a party went to work upon each one, to beat it in by sheer
strength, and force the bolts and staples from their hold. But although these
two lads had the weakest party, and the worst armed, and did not begin until
after the others, having stopped to whisper to him through the grate, that door
was the first open, and that man was the first out. As they dragged him into
the gallery to knock off his irons, he fell down among them, a mere heap of
chains, and was carried out in that state on men’s shoulders, with no sign of
life.
The release of these
four wretched creatures, and conveying them, astounded and bewildered, into the
streets so full of life--a spectacle they had never thought to see again, until
they emerged from solitude and silence upon that last journey, when the air
should be heavy with the pent-up breath of thousands, and the streets and
houses should be built and roofed with human faces, not with bricks and tiles
and stones--was the crowning horror of the scene. Their pale and haggard looks
and hollow eyes; their staggering feet, and hands stretched out as if to save
themselves from falling; their wandering and uncertain air; the way they heaved
and gasped for breath, as though in water, when they were first plunged into
the crowd; all marked them for the men. No need to say "this one was doomed
to die;" for there were the words broadly stamped and branded on his face.
The crowd fell off, as if they had been laid out for burial, and had risen in
their shrouds; and many were seen to shudder, as though they had been actually
dead men, when they chanced to touch or brush against their garments.
At the bidding of the
mob, the houses were all illuminated that night--lighted up from top to bottom
as at a time of public gaiety and joy. Many years afterwards, old people who
lived in their youth near this part of the city, remembered being in a great
glare of light, within doors and without, and as they looked, timid and
frightened children, from the windows, seeing a face go by. Though the whole
great crowd and all its other terrors had faded from their recollection, this
one object remained; alone, distinct, and well remembered. Even in the
unpractised minds of infants, one of these doomed men darting past, and but an
instant seen, was an image of force enough to dim the whole concourse; to find
itself an all-absorbing place, and hold it ever after.
When this last task had
been achieved, the shouts and cries grew fainter; the clank of fetters, which
had resounded on all sides as the prisoners escaped, was heard no more; all the
noises of the crowd subsided into a hoarse and sullen murmur as it passed into
the distance; and when the human tide had rolled away, a melancholy heap of
smoking ruins marked the spot where it had lately chafed and roared.
ALTHOUGH he had had no
rest upon the previous night, and had watched with little intermission for some
weeks past, sleeping only in the day by starts and snatches, Mr. Haredale, from
the dawn of morning until sunset, sought his niece in every place where he
deemed it possible she could have taken refuge. All day long, nothing, save a
draught of water, passed his lips; though he prosecuted his inquiries far and
wide, and never so much as sat down, once.
In every quarter he
could think of; at Chigwell and in London; at the houses of the tradespeople
with whom he dealt, and of the friends he knew; he pursued his search. A prey
to the most harrowing anxieties and apprehensions, he went from magistrate to
magistrate, and finally to the Secretary of State. The only comfort he received
was from this minister, who assured him that the Government, being now driven
to the exercise of the extreme prerogatives of the Crown, were determined to
exert them; that a proclamation would probably be out upon the morrow, giving to
the military, discretionary and unlimited power in the suppression of the
riots; that the sympathies of the King, the Administration, and both Houses of
Parliament, and indeed of all good men of every religious persuasion, were
strongly with the injured Catholics; and that justice should be done them at
any cost or hazard. He told him, moreover, that other persons whose houses had
been burnt, had for a time lost sight of their children or their relatives, but
had, in every case, within his knowledge, succeeded in discovering them; that
his complaint should be remembered, and fully stated in the instructions given
to the officers in command, and to all the inferior myrmidons of justice; and
that everything that could be done to help him, should be done, with a goodwill
and in good faith.
Grateful for this
consolation, feeble as it was in its reference to the past, and little hope as
it afforded him in connection with the subject of distress which lay nearest to
his heart; and really thankful for the interest the minister expressed, and
seemed to feel, in his condition; Mr. Haredale withdrew. He found himself, with
the night coming on, alone in the streets; and destitute of any place in which
to lay his head.
He entered an hotel
near Charing Cross, and ordered some refreshment and a bed. He saw that his
faint and worn appearance attracted the attention of the landlord and his
waiters; and thinking that they might suppose him to be penniless, took out his
purse, and laid it on the table. It was not that, the landlord said, in a
faltering voice. If he were one of those who had suffered by the rioters, he
durst not give him entertainment. He had a family of children, and had been
twice warned to be careful in receiving guests. He heartily prayed his
forgiveness, but what could he do?
Nothing. No man felt
that more sincerely than Mr. Haredale. He told the man as much, and left the
house.
Feeling that he might
have anticipated this occurrence, after what he had seen at Chigwell in the
morning, where no man dared to touch a spade, though he offered a large reward
to all who would come and dig among the ruins of his house, he walked along the
Strand; too proud to expose himself to another refusal, and of too generous a
spirit to involve in distress or ruin any honest tradesman who might be weak
enough to give him shelter. He wandered into one of the streets by the side of
the river, and was pacing in a thoughtful manner up and down, thinking of
things that had happened long ago, when he heard a servant-man at an upper
window call to another on the opposite side of the street, that the mob were
setting fire to Newgate.
To Newgate! where that
man was! His failing strength returned, his energies came back with tenfold
vigour, on the instant. If it were possible--if they should set the murderer
free--was he, after all he had undergone, to die with the suspicion of having
slain his own brother, dimly gathering about him--
He had no consciousness
of going to the jail; but there he stood, before it. There was the crowd wedged
and pressed together in a dense, dark, moving mass; and there were the flames
soaring up into the air. His head turned round and round, lights flashed before
his eyes, and he struggled hard with two men.
"Nay, nay,"
said one. "Be more yourself, my good sir. We attract attention here. Come
away. What can you do among so many men?"
"The gentleman’s
always for doing something," said the other, forcing him along as he
spoke. "I like him for that. I do like him for that."
They had by this time
got him into a court, hard by the prison. He looked from one to the other, and
as he tried to release himself, felt that he tottered on his feet. He who had
spoken first, was the old gentleman whom he had seen at the Lord Mayor’s. The
other was John Grueby, who had stood by him so manfully at Westminster.
"What does this
mean?" he asked them faintly. "How came we together?"
"On the skirts of
the crowd," returned the distiller; "but come with us. Pray come with
us. You seem to know my friend here?"
"Surely,"
said Mr. Haredale, looking in a kind of stupor at John.
"He’ll tell you
then," returned the old gentleman, "that I am a man to be trusted. He’s
my servant. He was lately (as you know, I have no doubt) in Lord George Gordon’s
service; but he left it, and brought, in pure good-will to me and others, who
are marked by the rioters, such intelligence as he had picked up, of their
designs."
"--On one
condition, please, sir," said John, touching his hat. No evidence against
my lord--a misled man--a kind-hearted man, sir. My lord never intended
this."
"The condition
will be observed, of course," rejoined the old distiller. "It’s a
point of honour. But come with us, sir; pray come with us."
John Grueby added no
entreaties, but he adopted a different kind of persuasion, by putting his arm
through one of Mr. Haredale’s, while his master took the other, and leading him
away with all speed.
Sensible, from a
strange lightness in his head, and a difficulty in fixing his thoughts on
anything, even to the extent of bearing his companions in his mind for a minute
together without looking at them, that his brain was affected by the agitation
and suffering through which he had passed, and to which he was still a prey,
Mr. Haredale let them lead him where they would. As they went along, he was
conscious of having no command over what he said or thought, and that he had a
fear of going mad.
The distiller lived, as
he had told him when they first met, on Holborn Hill, where he had great
storehouses and drove a large trade. They approached his house by a back
entrance, lest they should attract the notice of the crowd, and went into an
upper room which faced towards the street; the windows, however, in common with
those of every other room in the house, were boarded up inside, in order that,
out of doors, all might appear quite dark.
They laid him on a sofa
in this chamber, perfectly insensible; but John immediately fetching a surgeon,
who took from him a large quantity of blood, he gradually came to himself. As
he was, for the time, too weak to walk, they had no difficulty in persuading
him to remain there all night, and got him to bed without loss of a minute.
That done, they gave him cordial and some toast, and presently a pretty strong
composing-draught, under the influence of which he soon fell into a lethargy,
and, for a time, forgot his troubles.
The vintner, who was a
very hearty old fellow and a worthy man, had no thoughts of going to bed
himself, for he had received several threatening warnings from the rioters, and
had indeed gone out that evening to try and gather from the conversation of the
mob whether his house was to be the next attacked. He sat all night in an
easy-chair in the same room--dozing a little now and then--and received from
time to time the reports of John Grueby and two or three other trustworthy
persons in his employ, who went out into the streets as scouts; and for whose
entertainment an ample allowance of good cheer (which the old vintner, despite
his anxiety, now and then attacked himself) was set forth in an adjoining
chamber.
These accounts were of
a sufficiently alarming nature from the first; but as the night wore on, they
grew so much worse, and involved such a fearful amount of riot and destruction,
that in comparison with these new tidings all the previous disturbances sunk to
nothing.
The first intelligence
that came, was of the taking of Newgate, and the escape of all the prisoners,
whose track, as they made up Holborn and into the adjacent streets, was
proclaimed to those citizens who were shut up in their houses, by the rattling
of their chains, which formed a dismal concert, and was heard in every
direction, as though so many forges were at work. The flames too, shone so
brightly through the vintner’s skylights, that the rooms and staircases below
were nearly as light as in broad day; while the distant shouting of the mob
seemed to shake the very walls and ceilings.
At length they were
heard approaching the house, and some minutes of terrible anxiety ensued. They
came close up, and stopped before it; but after giving three loud yells, went
on. And although they returned several times that night, creating new alarms
each time, they did nothing there; having their hands full. Shortly after they
had gone away for the first time, one of the scouts came running in with the
news that they had stopped before Lord Mansfield’s house in Bloomsbury Square.
Soon afterwards there
came another, and another, and then the first returned again, and so, by little
and little, their tale was this:-- That the mob gathering round Lord Mansfield’s
house, had called on those within to open the door, and receiving no reply (for
Lord and Lady Mansfield were at that moment escaping by the backway), forced an
entrance according to their usual custom. That they then began to demolish the
house with great fury, and setting fire to it in several parts, involved in a
common ruin the whole of the costly furniture, the plate and jewels, a
beautiful gallery of pictures, the rarest collection of manuscripts ever
possessed by any one private person in the world, and worse than all, because
nothing could replace this loss, the great Law Library, on almost every page of
which were notes in the Judge’s own hand, of inestimable value,--being the
results of the study and experience of his whole life. That while they were
howling and exulting round the fire, a troop of soldiers, with a magistrate
among them, came up, and being too late (for the mischief was by that time
done), began to disperse the crowd. That the Riot Act being read, and the crowd
still resisting, the soldiers received orders to fire, and levelling their
muskets shot dead at the first discharge six men and a woman, and wounded many
persons; and loading again directly, fired another volley, but over the people’s
heads it was supposed, as none were seen to fall. That thereupon, and daunted
by the shrieks and tumult, the crowd began to disperse, and the soldiers went
away, leaving the killed and wounded on the ground: which they had no sooner
done than the rioters came back again, and taking up the dead bodies, and the
wounded people, formed into a rude procession, having the bodies in the front.
That in this order they paraded off with a horrible merriment; fixing weapons
in the dead men’s hands to make them look as if alive; and preceded by a fellow
ringing Lord Mansfield’s dinner-bell with all his might.
The scouts reported
further, that this party meeting with some others who had been at similar work
elsewhere, they all united into one, and drafting off a few men with the killed
and wounded, marched away to Lord Mansfield’s country seat at Caen Wood,
between Hampstead and Highgate; bent upon destroying that house likewise, and
lighting up a great fire there, which from that height should be seen all over
London. But in this, they were disappointed, for a party of horse having
arrived before them, they retreated faster than they went, and came straight
back to town.
There being now a great
many parties in the streets, each went to work according to its humour, and a
dozen houses were quickly blazing, including those of Sir John Fielding and two
other justices, and four in Holborn--one of the greatest thoroughfares in
London--which were all burning at the same time, and burned until they went out
of themselves, for the people cut the engine hose, and would not suffer the
firemen to play upon the flames. At one house near Moorfields, they found in
one of the rooms some canary birds in cages, and these they cast into the fire
alive. The poor little creatures screamed, it was said, like infants, when they
were flung upon the blaze; and one man was so touched that he tried in vain to
save them, which roused the indignation of the crowd, and nearly cost him his
life.
At this same house, one
of the fellows who went through the rooms, breaking the furniture and helping
to destroy the building, found a child’s doll--a poor toy--which he exhibited
at the window to the mob below, as the image of some unholy saint which the
late occupants had worshipped. While he was doing this, another man with an
equally tender conscience (they had both been foremost in throwing down the
canary birds for roasting alive), took his seat on the parapet of the house,
and
harangued the crowd
from a pamphlet circulated by the Association, relative to the true principles
of Christianity! Meanwhile the Lord Mayor, with his hands in his pockets,
looked on as an idle man might look at any other show, and seemed mightily
satisfied to have got a good place.
Such were the accounts
brought to the old vintner by his servants as he sat at the side of Mr.
Haredale’s bed, having been unable even to doze, after the first part of the
night; too much disturbed by his own fears; by the cries of the mob, the light
of the fires, and the firing of the soldiers. Such, with the addition of the
release of all the prisoners in the New Jail at Clerkenwell, and as many
robberies of passengers in the streets, as the crowd had leisure to indulge in,
were the scenes of which Mr. Haredale was happily unconscious, and which were
all enacted before midnight.
WHEN darkness broke
away and morning began to dawn, the town wore a strange aspect indeed.
Sleep had hardly been
thought of all night. The general alarm was so apparent in the faces of the
inhabitants, and its expression was so aggravated by want of rest (few persons,
with any property to lose, having dared go to bed since Monday), that a
stranger coming into the streets would have supposed some mortal pest or plague
to have been raging. In place of the usual cheerfulness and animation of
morning, everything was dead and silent. The shops remained closed, offices and
warehouses were shut, the coach and chair stands were deserted, no carts or
waggons rumbled through the slowly waking streets, the early cries were all
hushed; a universal gloom prevailed. Great numbers of people were out, even at
daybreak, but they flitted to and fro as though they shrank from the sound of
their own footsteps; the public ways were haunted rather than frequented; and
round the smoking ruins people stood apart from one another and in silence, not
venturing to condemn the rioters, or to be supposed to do so, even in whispers.
At the Lord President’s
in Piccadilly, at Lambeth Palace, at the Lord Chancellor’s in Great Ormond
Street, in the Royal Exchange, the Bank, the Guildhall, the Inns of Court, the
Courts of Law, and every chamber fronting the streets near Westminster Hall and
the Houses of Parliament, parties of soldiers were posted before daylight. A
body of Horse Guards paraded Palace Yard; an encampment was formed in the Park,
where fifteen hundred men and five battalions of Militia were under arms; the
Tower was fortified, the drawbridges were raised, the cannon loaded and
pointed, and two regiments of artillery busied in strengthening the fortress
and preparing it for defence. A numerous detachment of soldiers were stationed
to keep guard at the New River Head, which the people had threatened to attack,
and where, it was said, they meant to cut off the main-pipes, so that there
might be no water for the extinction of the flames. In the Poultry, and on
Cornhill, and at several other leading points, iron chains were drawn across
the street; parties of soldiers were distributed in some of the old city
churches while it was yet dark; and in several private houses (among them, Lord
Rockingham’s in Grosvenor Square); which were blockaded as though to sustain a
siege, and had guns pointed from the windows. When the sun rose, it shone into
handsome apartments filled with armed men; the furniture hastily heaped away in
corners, and made of little or no account, in the terror of the time--on arms
glittering in city chambers, among desks and stools, and dusty books--into
little smoky churchyards in odd lanes and by- ways, with soldiers lying down
among the tombs, or lounging under the shade of the one old tree, and their
pile of muskets sparkling in the light--on solitary sentries pacing up and down
in courtyards, silent now, but yesterday resounding with the din and hum of
business--everywhere on guard-rooms, garrisons, and threatening preparations.
As the day crept on,
still more unusual sights were witnessed in the streets. The gates of the King’s
Bench and Fleet Prisons being opened at the usual hour, were found to have
notices affixed to them, announcing that the rioters would come that night to
burn them down. The wardens, too well knowing the likelihood there was of this
promise being fulfilled, were fain to set their prisoners at liberty, and give
them leave to move their goods; so, all day, such of them as had any furniture
were occupied in conveying it, some to this place, some to that, and not a few
to the brokers’ shops, where they gladly sold it, for any wretched price those
gentry chose to give. There were some broken men among these debtors who had
been in jail so long, and were so miserable and destitute of friends, so dead
to the world, and utterly forgotten and uncared for, that they implored their
jailers not to set them free, and to send them, if need were, to some other
place of custody. But they, refusing to comply, lest they should incur the
anger of the mob, turned them into the streets, where they wandered up and down
hardly remembering the ways untrodden by their feet so long, and crying--such
abject things those rotten-hearted jails had made them--as they slunk off in
their rags, and dragged their slipshod feet along the pavement.
Even of the three
hundred prisoners who had escaped from Newgate, there were some--a few, but
there were some--who sought their jailers out and delivered themselves up:
preferring imprisonment and punishment to the horrors of such another night as
the last. Many of the convicts, drawn back to their old place of captivity by
some indescribable attraction, or by a desire to exult over it in its downfall
and glut their revenge by seeing it in ashes, actually went back in broad noon,
and loitered about the cells. Fifty were retaken at one time on this next day,
within the prison walls; but their fate did not deter others, for there they
went in spite of everything, and there they were taken in twos and threes,
twice or thrice a day, all through the week. Of the fifty just mentioned, some
were occupied in endeavouring to rekindle the fire; but in general they seemed
to have no object in view but to prowl and lounge about the old place: being
often found asleep in the ruins, or sitting talking there, or even eating and
drinking, as in a choice retreat.
Besides the notices on
the gates of the Fleet and the King’s Bench, many similar announcements were
left, before one o’clock at noon, at the houses of private individuals; and
further, the mob proclaimed their intention of seizing on the Bank, the Mint,
the Arsenal at Woolwich, and the Royal Palaces. The notices were seldom
delivered by more than one man, who, if it were at a shop, went in, and laid
it, with a bloody threat perhaps, upon the counter; or if it were at a private
house, knocked at the door, and thrust it in the servant’s hand.
Notwithstanding the presence of the military in every quarter of the town, and
the great force in the Park, these messengers did their errands with impunity
all through the day. So did two boys who went down Holborn alone, armed with
bars taken from the railings of Lord Mansfield’s house, and demanded money for
the rioters. So did a tall man on horseback who made a collection for the same
purpose in Fleet Street, and refused to take anything but gold.
A rumour had now got
into circulation, too, which diffused a greater dread all through London, even
than these publicly announced intentions of the rioters, though all men knew
that if they were successfully effected, there must ensue a national bankruptcy
and general ruin. It was said that they meant to throw the gates of Bedlam
open, and let all the madmen loose. This suggested such dreadful images to the
people’s minds, and was indeed an act so fraught with new and unimaginable
horrors in the contemplation, that it beset them more than any loss or cruelty
of which they could foresee the worst, and drove many sane men nearly mad
themselves.
So the day passed on:
the prisoners moving their goods; people running to and fro in the streets,
carrying away their property; groups standing in silence round the ruins; all
business suspended; and the soldiers disposed as has been already mentioned, remaining
quite inactive. So the day passed on, and dreaded night drew near again.
At last, at seven o’clock
in the evening, the Privy Council issued a solemn proclamation that it was now
necessary to employ the military, and that the officers had most direct and
effectual orders, by an immediate exertion of their utmost force, to repress
the disturbances; and warning all good subjects of the King to keep themselves,
their servants, and apprentices, within doors that night. There was then
delivered out to every soldier on duty, thirty-six rounds of powder and ball;
the drums beat; and the whole force was under arms at sunset.
The City authorities,
stimulated by these vigorous measures, held a Common Council; passed a vote
thanking the military associations who had tendered their aid to the civil
authorities; accepted it; and placed them under the direction of the two
sheriffs. At the Queen’s palace, a double guard, the yeomen on duty, the groom-
porters, and all other attendants, were stationed in the passages and on the
staircases at seven o’clock, with strict instructions to be watchful on their
posts all night; and all the doors were locked. The gentlemen of the Temple,
and the other Inns, mounted guard within their gates, and strengthened them
with the great stones of the pavement, which they took up for the purpose. In
Lincoln’s Inn, they gave up the hall and commons to the Northumberland Militia,
under the command of Lord Algernon Percy; in some few of the city wards, the
burgesses turned out, and without making a very fierce show, looked brave
enough. Some hundreds of stout gentlemen threw themselves, armed to the teeth,
into the halls of the different companies, double-locked and bolted all the
gates, and dared the rioters (among themselves) to come on at their peril.
These arrangements being all made simultaneously, or nearly so, were completed
by the time it got dark; and then the streets were comparatively clear, and
were guarded at all the great corners and chief avenues by the troops: while
parties of the officers rode up and down in all directions, ordering chance
stragglers home, and admonishing the residents to keep within their houses,
and, if any firing ensued, not to approach the windows. More chains were drawn
across such of the thoroughfares as were of a nature to favour the approach of
a great crowd, and at each of these points a considerable force was stationed.
All these precautions having been taken, and it being now quite dark, those in
command awaited the result in some anxiety: and not without a hope that such
vigilant demonstrations might of themselves dishearten the populace, and
prevent any new outrages.
But in this reckoning
they were cruelly mistaken, for in half an hour, or less, as though the setting
in of night had been their preconcerted signal, the rioters having previously,
in small parties, prevented the lighting of the street lamps, rose like a great
sea; and that in so many places at once, and with such inconceivable fury, that
those who had the direction of the troops knew not, at first, where to turn or
what to do. One after another, new fires blazed up in every quarter of the
town, as though it were the intention of the insurgents to wrap the city in a
circle of flames, which, contracting by degrees, should burn the whole to
ashes; the crowd swarmed and roared in every street; and none but rioters and
soldiers being out of doors, it seemed to the latter as if all London were
arrayed against them, and they stood alone against the town.
In two hours,
six-and-thirty fires were raging--six-and-thirty great conflagrations: among
them the Borough Clink in Tooley Street, the King’s Bench, the Fleet, and the
New Bridewell. In almost every street, there was a battle; and in every quarter
the muskets of the troops were heard above the shouts and tumult of the mob.
The firing began in the Poultry, where the chain was drawn across the road,
where nearly a score of people were killed on the first discharge. Their bodies
having been hastily carried into St Mildred’s Church by the soldiers, the
latter fired again, and following fast upon the crowd, who began to give way
when they saw the execution that was done, formed across Cheapside, and charged
them at the point of the bayonet.
The streets were now a
dreadful spectacle. The shouts of the rabble, the shrieks of women, the cries
of the wounded, and the constant firing, formed a deafening and an awful
accompaniment to the sights which every corner presented. Wherever the road was
obstructed by the chains, there the fighting and the loss of life were
greatest; but there was hot work and bloodshed in almost every leading
thoroughfare.
At Holborn Bridge, and
on Holborn Hill, the confusion was greater than in any other part; for the
crowd that poured out of the city in two great streams, one by Ludgate Hill,
and one by Newgate Street, united at that spot, and formed a mass so dense,
that at every volley the people seemed to fall in heaps. At this place a large
detachment of soldiery were posted, who fired, now up Fleet Market, now up
Holborn, now up Snow Hill--constantly raking the streets in each direction. At
this place too, several large fires were burning, so that all the terrors of
that terrible night seemed to be concentrated in one spot.
Full twenty times, the
rioters, headed by one man who wielded an axe in his right hand, and bestrode a
brewer’s horse of great size and strength, caparisoned with fetters taken out
of Newgate, which clanked and jingled as he went, made an attempt to force a
passage at this point, and fire the vintner’s house. Full twenty times they
were repulsed with loss of life, and still came back again; and though the
fellow at their head was marked and singled out by all, and was a conspicuous
object as the only rioter on horseback, not a man could hit him. So surely as
the smoke cleared away, so surely there was he; calling hoarsely to his
companions, brandishing his axe above his head, and dashing on as though he
bore a charmed life, and was proof against ball and powder.
This man was Hugh; and
in every part of the riot, he was seen. He headed two attacks upon the Bank,
helped to break open the Toll- houses on Blackfriars Bridge, and cast the money
into the street: fired two of the prisons with his own hand: was here, and
there, and everywhere--always foremost--always active--striking at the
soldiers, cheering on the crowd, making his horse’s iron music heard through
all the yell and uproar: but never hurt or stopped. Turn him at one place, and
he made a new struggle in anotlter; force him to retreat at this point, and he
advanced on that, directly. Driven from Holborn for the twentieth time, he rode
at the head of a great crowd straight upon Saint Paul’s, attacked a guard of
soldiers who kept watch over a body of prisoners within the iron railings,
forced them to retreat, rescued the men they had in custody, and with this
accession to his party, came back again, mad with liquor and excitement, and
hallooing them on like a demon.
It would have been no
easy task for the most careful rider to sit a horse in the midst of such a
throng and tumult; but though this madman rolled upon his back (he had no
saddle) like a boat upon the sea, he never for an instant lost his seat, or
failed to guide him where he would. Through the very thickest of the press,
over dead bodies and burning fragments, now on the pavement, now in the road,
now riding up a flight of steps to make himself the more conspicuous to his
party, and now forcing a passage through a mass of human beings, so closely
squeezed together that it seemed as if the edge of a knife would scarcely part
them,--on he went, as though he could surmount all obstacles by the mere
exercise of his will. And perhaps his not being shot was in some degree
attributable to this very circumstance; for his extreme audacity, and the conviction
that he must be one of those to whom the proclamation referred, inspired the
soldiers with a desire to take him alive, and diverted many an aim which
otherwise might have been more near the mark.
The vintner and Mr.
Haredale, unable to sit quietly listening to the noise without seeing what went
on, had climbed to the roof of the house, and hiding behind a stack of
chimneys, were looking cautiously down into the street, almost hoping that
after so many repulses the rioters would be foiled, when a great shout
proclaimed that a parry were coming round the other way; and the dismal
jingling of those accursed fetters warned them next moment that they too were
led by Hugh. The soldiers had advanced into Fleet Market and were dispersing
the people there; so that they came on with hardly any check, and were soon
before the house.
"All’s over
now," said the vintner. "Fifty thousand pounds will be scattered in a
minute. We must save ourselves. We can do no more, and shall have reason to be
thankful if we do as much."
Their first impulse
was, to clamber along the roofs of the houses, and, knocking at some garret
window for admission, pass down that way into the street, and so escape. But
another fierce cry from below, and a general upturning of the faces of the crowd,
apprised them that they were discovered, and even that Mr. Haredale was
recognised; for Hugh, seeing him plainly in the bright glare of the fire, which
in that part made it as light as day, called to him by his name, and swore to
have his life.
"Leave me
here," said Mr. Haredale, "and in Heaven’s name, my good friend, save
yourself! Come on!" he muttered, as he turned towards Hugh and faced him
without any further effort at concealment: "This roof is high, and if we
close, we will die together!"
"Madness,"
said the honest vintner, pulling him back, "sheer madness. Hear reason,
sir. My good sir, hear reason. I could never make myself heard by knocking at a
window now; and even if I could, no one would be bold enough to connive at my
escape. Through the cellars, there’s a kind of passage into the back street by
which we roll casks in and out. We shall have time to get down there before
they can force an entry. Do not delay an instant, but come with me--for both
our sakes--for mine--my dear good sir!"
As he spoke, and drew
Mr. Haredale back, they had both a glimpse of the street. It was but a glimpse,
but it showed them the crowd, gathering and clustering round the house: some of
the armed men pressing to the front to break down the doors and windows, some
bringing brands from the nearest fire, some with lifted faces following their
course upon the roof and pointing them out to their companions: all raging and
roaring like the flames they lighted up. They saw some men thirsting for the
treasures of strong liquor which they knew were stored within; they saw others,
who had been wounded, sinking down into the opposite doorways and dying,
solitary wretches, in the midst of all the vast assemblage; here a frightened
woman trying to escape; and there a lost child; and there a drunken ruffian,
unconscious of the death-wound on his head, raving and fighting to the last.
All these things, and even such trivial incidents as a man with his hat off, or
turning round, or stooping down, or shaking hands with another, they marked
distinctly; yet in a glance so brief, that, in the act of stepping back, they
lost the whole, and saw but the pale faces of each other, and the red sky above
them.
Mr. Haredale yielded to
the entreaties of his companion--more because he was resolved to defend him,
than for any thought he had of his own life, or any care he entertained for his
own safety--and quickly re-entering the house, they descended the stairs
together. Loud blows were thundering on the shutters, crowbars were already thrust
beneath the door, the glass fell from the sashes, a deep light shone through
every crevice, and they heard the voices of the foremost in the crowd so close
to every chink and keyhole, that they seemed to be hoarsely whispering their
threats into their very ears. They had but a moment reached the bottom of the
cellar-steps and shut the door behind them, when the mob broke in.
The vaults were
profoundly dark, and having no torch or candle--for they had been afraid to
carry one, lest it should betray their place of refuge--they were obliged to
grope with their hands. But they were not long without light, for they had not
gone far when they heard the crowd forcing the door; and, looking back among
the low-arched passages, could see them in the distance, hurrying to and fro
with flashing links, broaching the casks, staving the great vats, turning off
upon the right hand and the left, into the different cellars, and lying down to
drink at the channels of strong spirits which were already flowing on the
ground.
They hurried on, not
the less quickly for this; and had reached the only vault which lay between
them and the passage out, when suddenly, from the direction in which they were
going, a strong light gleamed upon their faces; and before they could slip aside,
or turn back, or hide themselves, two men (one bearing a torch)
came upon them, and
cried in an astonished whisper, "Here they are!"
At the same instant
they pulled off what they wore upon their heads. Mr. Haredale saw before him
Edward Chester, and then saw, when the vintner gasped his name, Joe Willet.
Ay, the same Joe,
though with an arm the less, who used to make the quarterly journey on the grey
mare to pay the bill to the purple- faced vintner; and that very same
purple-faced vintner, formerly of Thames Street, now looked him in the face,
and challenged him by name.
"Give me your
hand," said Joe softly, taking it whether the astonished vintner would or
no. "Don’t fear to shake it; it’s a friendly one and a hearty one, though
it has no fellow. Why, how well you look and how bluff you are! And you--God
bless you, sir. Take heart, take heart. We’ll find them. Be of good cheer; we
have not been idle."
There was something so
honest and frank in Joe’s speech, that Mr. Haredale put his hand in his involuntarily,
though their meeting was suspicious enough. But his glance at Edward Chester,
and that gentleman’s keeping aloof, were not lost upon Joe, who said bluntly,
glancing at Edward while he spoke:
"Times are
changed, Mr. Haredale, and times have come when we ought to know friends from
enemies, and make no confusion of names. Let me tell you that but for this
gentleman, you would most likely have been dead by this time, or badly wounded
at the best."
"What do you
say?" cried Mr. Haredale.
"I say," said
Joe, "first, that it was a bold thing to be in the crowd at all disguised
as one of them; though I won’t say much about that, on second thoughts, for
that’s my case too. Secondly, that it was a brave and glorious action--that’s
what I call it--to strike that fellow off his horse before their eyes!"
"What fellow!
Whose eyes!"
"What fellow,
sir!" cried Joe: "a fellow who has no goodwill to you, and who has
the daring and devilry in him of twenty fellows. I know him of old. Once in the
house, he would have found you, here or anywhere. The rest owe you no
particular grudge, and, unless they see you, will only think of drinking
themselves dead. But we lose time. Are you ready?"
"Quite," said
Edward. "Put out the torch, Joe, and go on. And be silent, there’s a good
fellow."
"Silent or not
silent," murmured Joe, as he dropped the flaring link upon the ground,
crushed it with his foot, and gave his hand to Mr. Haredale, "it was a
brave and glorious action;--no man can alter that."
Both Mr. Haredale and
the worthy vintner were too amazed and too much hurried to ask any further
questions, so followed their conductors in silence. It seemed, from a short
whispering which presently ensued between them and the vintner relative to the
best way of escape, that they had entered by the back-door, with the connivance
of John Grueby, who watched outside with the key in his pocket, and whom they
had taken into their confidence. A party of the crowd coming up that way, just
as they entered, John had double-locked the door again, and made off for the
soldiers, so that means of retreat was cut off from under them.
However, as the
front-door had been forced, and this minor crowd, being anxious to get at the
liquor, had no fancy for losing time in breaking down another, but had gone
round and got in from Holborn with the rest, the narrow lane in the rear was
quite free of people. So, when they had crawled through the passage indicated
by the vintner (which was a mere shelving-trap for the admission of casks), and
had managed with some difficulty to unchain and raise the door at the upper
end, they emerged into the street without being observed or interrupted. Joe
still holding Mr. Haredale tight, and Edward taking the same care of the
vintner, they hurried through the streets at a rapid pace; occasionally
standing aside to let some fugitives go by, or to keep out of the way of the
soldiers who followed them, and whose questions, when they halted to put any,
were speedily stopped by one whispered word from Joe.
WHILE Newgate was
burning on the previous night, Barnaby and his father, having been passed among
the crowd from hand to hand, stood in Smithfield, on the outskirts of the mob,
gazing at the flames like men who had been suddenly roused from sleep. Some
moments elapsed before they could distinctly remember where they were, or how
they got there; or recollected that while they were standing idle and listless
spectators of the fire, they had tools in their hands which had been hurriedly
given them that they might free themselves from their fetters.
Barnaby, heavily ironed
as he was, if he had obeyed his first impulse, or if he had been alone, would
have made his way back to the side of Hugh, who to his clouded intellect now
shone forth with the new lustre of being his preserver and truest friend. But
his father’s terror of remaining in the streets, communicated itself to him
when he comprehended the full extent of his fears, and impressed him with the
same eagerness to fly to a place of safety.
In a corner of the market
among the pens for cattle, Barnaby knelt down, and pausing every now and then
to pass his hand over his father’s face, or look up to him with a smile,
knocked off his irons. When he had seen him spring, a free man, to his feet,
and had given vent to the transport of delight which the sight awakened, he
went to work upon his own, which soon fell rattling down upon the ground, and
left his limbs unfettered.
Gliding away together
when this task was accomplished, and passing several groups of men, each gathered
round a stooping figure to hide him from those who passed, but unable to
repress the clanking sound of hammers, which told that they too were busy at
the same work,--the two fugitives made towards Clerkenwell, and passing thence
to Islington, as the nearest point of egress, were quickly in the fields. After
wandering about for a long time, they found in a pasture near Finchley a poor
shed, with walls of mud, and roof of grass and brambles, built for some
cowherd, but now deserted. Here, they lay down for the rest of the night.
They wandered to and
fro when it was day, and once Barnaby went off alone to a cluster of little
cottages two or three miles away, to purchase some bread and milk. But finding
no better shelter, they returned to the same place, and lay down again to wait
for night.
Heaven alone can tell,
with what vague hopes of duty, and affection; with what strange promptings of
nature, intelligible to him as to a man of radiant mind and most enlarged
capacity; with what dim memories of children he had played with when a child
himself, who had prattled of their fathers, and of loving them, and being
loved; with how many half-remembered, dreamy associations of his mother’s grief
and tears and widowhood; he watched and tended this man. But that a vague and
shadowy crowd of such ideas came slowly on him; that they taught him to be
sorry when he looked upon his haggard face, that they overflowed his eyes when
he stooped to kiss him, that they kept him waking in a tearful gladness,
shading him from the sun, fanning him with leaves, soothing him when he started
in his sleep--ah! what a troubled sleep it was--and wondering when she would
come to join them and be happy, is the truth. He sat beside him all that day;
listening for her footsteps in every breath of air, looking for her shadow on
the gently-waving grass, twining the hedge flowers for her pleasure when she
came, and his when he awoke; and stooping down from time to time to listen to
his mutterings, and wonder why he was so restless in that quiet place. The sun
went down, and night came on, and he was still quite tranquil; busied with
these thoughts, as if there were no other people in the world, and the dull
cloud of smoke hanging on the immense city in the distance, hid no vices, no
crimes, no life or death, or cause of disquiet--nothing but clear air.
But the hour had now
come when he must go alone to find out the blind man (a task that filled him
with delight) and bring him to that place; taking especial care that he was not
watched or followed on his way back. He listened to the directions he must
observe, repeated them again and again, and after twice or thrice returning to
surprise his father with a light-hearted laugh, went forth, at last, upon his
errand: leaving Grip, whom he had carried from the jail in his arms, to his
care.
Fleet of foot, and
anxious to return, he sped swiftly on towards the city, but could not reach it
before the fires began, and made the night angry with their dismal lustre. When
he entered the town--it might be that he was changed by going there without his
late companions, and on no violent errand; or by the beautiful solitude in
which he had passed the day, or by the thoughts that had come upon him,--but it
seemed peopled by a legion of devils. This flight and pursuit, this cruel
burning and destroying, these dreadful cries and stunning noises, were they the
good lord’s noble cause!
Though almost stupefied
by the bewildering scene, still be found the blind man’s house. It was shut up
and tenantless.
He waited for a long
while, but no one came. At last he withdrew; and as he knew by this time that
the soldiers were firing, and many people must have been killed, he went down
into Holborn, where he heard the great crowd was, to try if he could find Hugh,
and persuade him to avoid the danger, and return with him.
If he had been stunned
and shocked before, his horror was increased a thousandfold when he got into
this vortex of the riot, and not being an actor in the terrible spectacle, had
it all before his eyes. But there, in the midst, towering above them all, close
before the house they were attacking now, was Hugh on horseback, calling to the
rest!
Sickened by the sights
surrounding him on every side, and by the heat and roar, and crash, he forced
his way among the crowd (where many recognised him, and with shouts pressed
back to let him pass), and in time was nearly up with Hugh, who was savagely
threatening some one, but whom or what he said, he could not, in the great
confusion, understand. At that moment the crowd forced their way into the
house, and Hugh--it was impossible to see by what means, in such a
concourse--fell headlong down.
Barnaby was beside him
when he staggered to his feet. It was well he made him hear his voice, or Hugh,
with his uplifted axe, would have cleft his skull in twain.
"Barnaby--you!
Whose hand was that, that struck me down?"
"Not mine."
"Whose!--I say,
whose!" he cried, reeling back, and looking wildly round. "What are
you doing? Where is he? Show me!"
"You are
hurt," said Barnaby--as indeed he was, in the head, both by the blow he
had received, and by his horse’s hoof. "Come away with me."
As he spoke, he took
the horse’s bridle in his hand, turned him, and dragged Hugh several paces.
This brought them out of the crowd, which was pouring from the street into the
vintner’s cellars.
"Where’s--where’s
Dennis?" said Hugh, coming to a stop, and checking Barnaby with his strong
arm. "Where has he been all day? What did he mean by leaving me as he did,
in the jail, last night? Tell me, you--d’ye hear!"
With a flourish of his
dangerous weapon, he fell down upon the ground like a log. After a minute,
though already frantic with drinking and with the wound in his head, he crawled
to a stream of burning spirit which was pouring down the kennel, and began to
drink at it as if it were a brook of water.
Barnaby drew him away,
and forced him to rise. Though he could neither stand nor walk, he
involuntarily staggered to his horse, climbed upon his back, and clung there.
After vainly attempting to divest the animal of his clanking trappings, Barnaby
sprung up behind him, snatched the bridle, turned into Leather Lane, which was
close at hand, and urged the frightened horse into a heavy trot.
He looked back, once,
before he left the street; and looked upon a sight not easily to be erased,
even from his remembrance, so long as he had life.
The vintner’s house
with a half-a-dozen others near at hand, was one great, glowing blaze. All
night, no one had essayed to quench the flames, or stop their progress; but now
a body of soldiers were actively engaged in pulling down two old wooden houses,
which were every moment in danger of taking fire, and which could scarcely
fail, if they were left to burn, to extend the conflagration immensely. The
tumbling down of nodding walls and heavy blocks of wood, the hooting and the
execrations of the crowd, the distant firing of other military detachments, the
distracted looks and cries of those whose habitations were in danger, the
hurrying to and fro of frightened people with their goods; the reflections in
every quarter of the sky, of deep, red, soaring flames, as though the last day
had come and the whole universe were burning; the dust, and smoke, and drift of
fiery particles, scorching and kindling all it fell upon; the hot unwholesome
vapour, the blight on everything; the stars, and moon, and very sky,
obliterated;--made up such a sum of dreariness and ruin, that it seemed as if
the face of Heaven were blotted out, and night, in its rest and quiet, and
softened light, never could look upon the earth again.
But there was a worse
spectacle than this--worse by far than fire and smoke, or even the rabble’s
unappeasable and maniac rage. The gutters of the street, and every crack and
fissure in
the stones, ran with
scorching spirit, which being dammed up by busy hands, overflowed the road and
pavement, and formed a great pool, into which the people dropped down dead by
dozens. They lay in heaps all round this fearful pond, husbands and wives,
fathers and sons, mothers and daughters, women with children in their arms and
babies at their breasts, and drank until they died. While some stooped with
their lips to the brink and never raised their heads again, others sprang up
from their fiery draught, and danced, half in a mad triumph, and half in the
agony of suffocation, until they fell, and steeped their corpses in the liquor
that had killed them. Nor was even this the worst or most appalling kind of
death that happened on this fatal night. From the burning cellars, where they
drank out of hats, pails, buckets, tubs, and shoes, some men were drawn, alive,
but all alight from head to foot; who, in their unendurable anguish and
suffering, making for anything that had the look of water, rolled, hissing, in
this hideous lake, and splashed up liquid fire which lapped in all it met with
as it ran along the surface, and neither spared the living nor the dead. On
this last night of the great riots--for the last night it was--the wretched
victims of a senseless outcry, became themselves the dust and ashes of the
flames they had kindled, and strewed the public streets of London.
With all he saw in this
last glance fixed indelibly upon his mind, Barnaby hurried from the city which
enclosed such horrors; and holding down his head that he might not even see the
glare of the fires upon the quiet landscape, was soon in the still country
roads.
He stopped at about
half-a-mile from the shed where his father lay, and with some difficulty making
Hugh sensible that he must dismount, sunk the horse’s furniture in a pool of
stagnant water, and turned the animal loose. That done, he supported his
companion as well as he could, and led him slowly forward.
IT was the dead of
night, and very dark, when Barnaby, with his stumbling comrade, approached the
place where he had left his father; but he could see him stealing away into the
gloom, distrustful even of him, and rapidly retreating. After calling to him
twice or thrice that there was nothing to fear, but without effect, he suffered
Hugh to sink upon the ground, and followed to bring him back.
He continued to creep
away, until Barnaby was close upon him; then turned, and said in a terrible,
though suppressed voice:
"Let me go. Do not
lay hands upon me. You have told her; and you and she together have betrayed
me!"
Barnaby looked at him,
in silence.
"You have seen
your mother!"
"No," cried
Barnaby, eagerly. "Not for a long time--longer than I can tell. A whole
year, I think. Is she here?"
His father looked upon
him steadfastly for a few moments, and then said--drawing nearer to him as he
spoke, for, seeing his face, and hearing his words, it was impossible to doubt
his truth:
"What man is
that?"
"Hugh--Hugh. Only
Hugh. You know him. He will not harm you. Why, you’re afraid of Hugh! Ha ha ha!
Afraid of gruff, old, noisy Hugh!"
"What man is he, I
ask you," he rejoined so fiercely, that Barnaby stopped in his laugh, and
shrinking back, surveyed him with a look of terrified amazement.
"Why, how stern
you are! You make me fear you, though you are my father. Why do you speak to me
so?"
"I want," he
answered, putting away the hand which his son, with a timid desire to
propitiate him, laid upon his sleeve,--"I want an answer, and you give me
only jeers and questions. Who have you brought with you to this hiding-place,
poor fool; and where is the blind man?"
"I don’t know
where. His house was close shut. I waited, but no person came; that was no
fault of mine. This is Hugh--brave Hugh, who broke into that ugly jail, and set
us free. Aha! You like him now, do you? You like him now!"
"Why does he lie
upon the ground?"
"He has had a fall,
and has been drinking. The fields and trees go round, and round, and round with
him, and the ground heaves under his feet. You know him? You remember?
See!"
They had by this time
returned to where he lay, and both stooped over him to look into his face.
"I recollect the
man," his father murmured. "Why did you bring him here?"
"Because he would
have been killed if I had left him over yonder. They were firing guns and
shedding blood. Does the sight of blood turn you sick, father? I see it does,
by your face. That’s like me--What are you looking at?"
"At nothing!"
said the murderer softly, as he started back a pace or two, and gazed with
sunken jaw and staring eyes above his son’s head. "At nothing!"
He remained in the same
attitude and with the same expression on his face for a minute or more; then
glanced slowly round as if he had lost something; and went shivering back,
towards the shed.
"Shall I bring him
in, father?" asked Barnaby, who had looked on, wondering.
He only answered with a
suppressed groan, and lying down upon the ground, wrapped his cloak about his
head, and shrunk into the darkest corner.
Finding that nothing
would rouse Hugh now, or make him sensible for a moment, Barnaby dragged him
along the grass, and laid him on a little heap of refuse hay and straw which
had been his own bed; first having brought some water from a running stream
hard by, and washed his wound, and laved his hands and face. Then he lay down
himself, between the two, to pass the night; and looking at the stars, fell
fast asleep.
Awakened early in the
morning, by the sunshine and the songs of birds, and hum of insects, he left
them sleeping in the hut, and walked into the sweet and pleasant air. But he
felt that on his jaded senses, oppressed and burdened with the dreadful scenes
of last night, and many nights before, all the beauties of opening day, which
he had so often tasted, and in which he had had such deep delight, fell
heavily. He thought of the blithe mornings when he and the dogs went bounding
on together through the woods and fields; and the recollection filled his eyes
with tears. He had no consciousness, God help him, of having done wrong, nor
had he any new perception of the merits of the cause in which he had been
engaged, or those of the men who advocated it; but he was full of cares now,
and regrets, and dismal recollections, and wishes (quite unknown to him before)
that this or that event had never happened, and that the sorrow and suffering
of so many people had been spared. And now he began to think how happy they
would be--his father, mother, he, and Hugh--if they rambled away together, and
lived in some lonely place, where there were none of these troubles; and that
perhaps the blind man, who had talked so wisely about gold, and told him of the
great secrets he knew, could teach them how to live without being pinched by
want. As this occurred to him, he was the more sorry that he had not seen him
last night; and he was still brooding over this regret, when his father came,
and touched him on the shoulder.
"Ah!" cried
Barnaby, starting from his fit of thoughtfulness. "Is it only you?"
"Who should it
be?"
"I almost
thought," he answered, "it was the blind man. I must have some talk
with him, father."
"And so must I,
for without seeing him, I don’t know where to fly or what to do, and lingering
here, is death. You must go to him again, and bring him here."
"Must I!"
cried Barnaby, delighted; "that’s brave, father. That’s what I want to
do."
"But you must
bring only him, and none other. And though you wait at his door a whole day and
night, still you must wait, and not come back without him."
"Don’t you fear
that," he cried gaily. "He shall come, he shall come."
"Trim off these
gewgaws," said his father, plucking the scraps of ribbon and the feathers
from his hat, "and over your own dress wear my cloak. Take heed how you
go, and they will be too busy in the streets to notice you. Of your coming back
you need take no account, for he’ll manage that, safely."
"To be sure!"
said Barnaby. "To be sure he will! A wise man, father, and one who can
teach us to be rich. Oh! I know him, I know him."
He was speedily
dressed, and as well disguised as he could be. With a lighter heart he then set
off upon his second journey, leaving Hugh, who was still in a drunken stupor,
stretched upon the ground within the shed, and his father walking to and fro
before it.
The murderer, full of
anxious thoughts, looked after him, and paced up and down, disquieted by every
breath of air that whispered among the boughs, and by every light shadow thrown
by the passing clouds upon the daisied ground. He was anxious for his safe
return, and yet, though his own life and safety hung upon it, felt a relief
while he was gone. In the intense selfishness which the constant presence
before him of his great crimes, and their consequences here and hereafter,
engendered, every thought of Barnaby, as his son, was swallowed up and lost.
Still, his presence was a torture and reproach; in his wild eyes, there were
terrible images of that guilty night; with his unearthly aspect, and his
half-formed mind, he seemed to the murderer a creature who had sprung into
existence from his victim’s blood. He could not bear his look, his voice, his
touch; and yet he was forced, by his own desperate condition and his only hope
of cheating the gibbet, to have him by his side, and to know that he was inseparable
from his single chance of escape.
He walked to and fro,
with little rest, all day, revolving these things in his mind; and still Hugh
lay, unconscious, in the shed. At length, when the sun was setting, Barnaby
returned, leading the blind man, and talking earnestly to him as they came
along together.
The murderer advanced
to meet them, and bidding his son go on and speak to Hugh, who had just then
staggered to his feet, took his place at the blind man’s elbow, and slowly
followed, towards the shed.
"Why did you send
him?" said Stagg. "Don’t you know it was the way to have him lost, as
soon as found?"
"Would you have
had me come myself?" returned the other.
"Humph! Perhaps
not. I was before the jail on Tuesday night, but missed you in the crowd. I was
out last night, too. There was good work last night--gay work--profitable
work"--he added, rattling the money in his pockets.
"Have you--"
"--Seen your good
lady? Yes."
"Do you mean to
tell me more, or not?"
"I’ll tell you
all," returned the blind man, with a laugh. "Excuse me--but I love to
see you so impatient. There’s energy in it."
"Does she consent
to say the word that may save me?"
"No,"
returned the blind man emphatically, as he turned his face towards him.
"No. Thus it is. She has been at death’s door since she lost her
darling--has been insensible, and I know not what. I tracked her to a hospital,
and presented myself (with your leave) at her bedside. Our talk was not a long
one, for she was weak, and there being people near I was not quite easy. But I
told her all that you and I agreed upon, and pointed out the young gentleman’s
position, in strong terms. She tried to soften me, but that, of course (as I
told her), was lost time. She cried and moaned, you may be sure; all women do.
Then, of a sudden, she found her voice and strength, and said that Heaven would
help her and her innocent son; and that to Heaven she appealed against
us--which she did; in really very pretty language, I assure you. I advised her,
as a friend, not to count too much on assistance from any such distant
quarter--recommended her to think of it--told her where I lived-- said I knew
she would send to me before noon, next day--and left her, either in a faint or
shamming."
When he had concluded
this narration, during which he had made several pauses, for the convenience of
cracking and eating nuts, of which he seemed to have a pocketful, the blind man
pulled a flask from his pocket, took a draught himself, and offered it to his
companion.
"You won’t, won’t
you?" he said, feeling that he pushed it from him. "Well! Then the
gallant gentleman who’s lodging with you, will. Hallo, bully!"
"Death!" said
the other, holding him back. "Will you tell me what I am to do!"
"Do! Nothing
easier. Make a moonlight flitting in two hours’ time with the young gentleman
(he’s quite ready to go; I have been giving him good advice as we came along),
and get as far from London as you can. Let me know where you are, and leave the
rest to me. She must come round; she can’t hold out long; and as to the chances
of your being retaken in the meanwhile, why it wasn’t one man who got out of
Newgate, but three hundred. Think of that, for your comfort."
"We must support
life. How?"
"How!"
repeated the blind man. "By eating and drinking. And how get meat and
drink, but by paying for it! Money!" he cried, slapping his pocket.
"Is money the word? Why, the streets have been running money. Devil send
that the sport’s not over yet, for these are jolly times; golden, rare,
roaring, scrambling times. Hallo, bully! Hallo! Hallo! Drink, bully, drink.
Where are ye there! Hallo!"
With such
vociferations, and with a boisterous manner which bespoke his perfect
abandonment to the general licence and disorder, he groped his way towards the
shed, where Hugh and Barnaby were sitting on the ground.
"Put it
about!" he cried, handing his flask to Hugh. "The kennels run with
wine and gold. Guineas and strong water flow from the very pumps. About with
it, don’t spare it!"
Exhausted, unwashed,
unshorn, begrimed with smoke and dust, his hair clotted with blood, his voice
quite gone, so that he spoke in whispers; his skin parched up by fever, his
whole body bruised and cut, and beaten about, Hugh still took the flask, and
raised it to his lips. He was in the act of drinking, when the front of the
shed was suddenly darkened, and Dennis stood before them.
"No offence, no
offence," said that personage in a conciliatory tone, as Hugh stopped in
his draught, and eyed him, with no pleasant look, from head to foot. "No
offence, brother. Barnaby here too, eh? How are you, Barnaby? And two other
gentlemen! Your humble servant, gentlemen. No offence to you either, I hope.
Eh, brothers?"
Notwithstanding that he
spoke in this very friendly and confident manner, he seemed to have considerable
hesitation about entering, and remained outside the roof. He was rather better
dressed than usual: wearing the same suit of threadbare black, it is true, but
having round his neck an unwholesome-looking cravat of a yellowish white; and,
on his hands, great leather gloves, such as a gardener might wear in following
his trade. His shoes were newly greased, and ornamented with a pair of rusty
iron buckles; the packthread at his knees had been renewed; and where he wanted
buttons, he wore pins. Altogether, he had something the look of a tipstaff, or
a bailiff’s follower, desperately faded, but who had a notion of keeping up the
appearance of a professional character, and making the best of the worst means.
"You’re very snug
here," said Mr. Dennis, pulling out a mouldy pocket-handkerchief, which
looked like a decomposed halter, and wiping his forehead in a nervous manner.
"Not snug enough
to prevent your finding us, it seems," Hugh answered, sulkily.
"Why I’ll tell you
what, brother," said Dennis, with a friendly smile, "when you don’t
want me to know which way you’re riding, you must wear another sort of bells on
your horse. Ah! I know the sound of them you wore last night, and have got
quick ears for ’em; that’s the truth. Well, but how are you, brother?"
He had by this time
approached, and now ventured to sit down by him.
"How am I?"
answered Hugh. "Where were you yesterday? Where did you go when you left
me in the jail? Why did you leave me? And what did you mean by rolling your
eyes and shaking your fist at me, eh?"
"I shake my
fist!--at you, brother!" said Dennis, gently checking Hugh’s uplifted
hand, which looked threatening.
"Your stick, then;
it’s all one."
"Lord love you,
brother, I meant nothing. You don’t understand me by half. I shouldn’t wonder
now," he added, in the tone of a desponding and an injured man, "but
you thought, because I wanted them chaps left in the prison, that I was a going
to desert the banners?"
Hugh told him, with an
oath, that he had thought so.
"Well!" said
Mr. Dennis, mournfully, "if you an’t enough to make a man mistrust his
feller-creeturs, I don’t know what is. Desert the banners! Me! Ned Dennis, as
was so christened by his own father!--Is this axe yourn, brother?"
"Yes, it’s
mine," said Hugh, in the same sullen manner as before; "it might have
hurt you, if you had come in its way once or twice last night. Put it
down."
"Might have hurt
me!" said Mr. Dennis, still keeping it in his hand, and feeling the edge
with an air of abstraction. "Might have hurt me! and me exerting myself
all the time to the wery best advantage. Here’s a world! And you’re not a-going
to ask me to take a sup out of that ’ere bottle, eh?"
Hugh passed it towards
him. As he raised it to his lips, Barnaby jumped up, and motioning them to be silent,
looked eagerly out.
"What’s the
matter, Barnaby?" said Dennis, glancing at Hugh and dropping the flask,
but still holding the axe in his hand.
"Hush!" he
answered softly. "What do I see glittering behind the hedge?"
"What!" cried
the hangman, raising his voice to its highest pitch, and laying hold of him and
Hugh. "Not SOLDIERS, surely!"
That moment, the shed
was filled with armed men; and a body of horse, galloping into the field, drew
up before it.
"There!" said
Dennis, who remained untouched among them when they had seized their prisoners;
"it’s them two young ones, gentlemen, that the proclamation puts a price
on. This other’s an escaped felon.--I’m sorry for it, brother," he added,
in a tone of resignation, addressing himself to Hugh; "but you’ve brought
it on yourself; you forced me to do it; you wouldn’t respect the soundest
constitootional principles, you know; you went and wiolated the wery framework
of society. I had sooner have given away a trifle in charity than done this, I
would upon my soul.--If you’ll keep fast hold on ’em, gentlemen, I think I can
make a shift to tie ’em better than you can."
But this operation was
postponed for a few moments by a new occurrence. The blind man, whose ears were
quicker than most people’s sight, had been alarmed, before Barnaby, by a
rustling in the bushes, under cover of which the soldiers had advanced. He
retreated instantly--had hidden somewhere for a minute--and probably in his
confusion mistaking the point at which he had emerged, was now seen running
across the open meadow.
An officer cried
directly that he had helped to plunder a house last night. He was loudly called
on, to surrender. He ran the harder, and in a few seconds would have been out
of gunshot. The word was given, and the men fired.
There was a breathless
pause and a profound silence, during which all eyes were fixed upon him. He had
been seen to start at the discharge, as if the report had frightened him. But
he neither stopped nor slackened his pace in the least, and ran on full forty
yards further. Then, without one reel or stagger, or sign of faintness, or
quivering of any limb, he dropped.
Some of them hurried up
to where he lay;--the hangman with them. Everything had passed so quickly, that
the smoke had not yet scattered, but curled slowly off in a little cloud, which
seemed like the dead man’s spirit moving solemnly away. There were a few drops
of blood upon the grass--more, when they turned him over-- that was all.
"Look here! Look
here!" said the hangman, stooping one knee beside the body, and gazing up
with a disconsolate face at the officer and men. "Here’s a pretty
sight!"
"Stand out of the
way," replied the officer. "Sergeant! see what he had about
him."
The man turned his
pockets out upon the grass, and counted, besides some foreign coins and two
rings, five-and-forty guineas in gold. These were bundled up in a handkerchief
and carried away; the body remained there for the present, but six men and the
sergeant were left to take it to the nearest public-house.
"Now then, if you’re
going," said the sergeant, clapping Dennis on the back, and pointing after
the officer who was walking towards the shed.
To which Mr. Dennis
only replied, "Don’t talk to me!" and then repeated what he had said
before, namely, "Here’s a pretty sight!"
"It’s not one that
you care for much, I should think," observed the sergeant coolly.
"Why, who,"
said Mr. Dennis rising, "should care for it, if I don’t?"
"Oh! I didn’t know
you was so tender-hearted," said the sergeant. "That’s all!"
"Tender-hearted!"
echoed Dennis. "Tender-hearted! Look at this man. Do you call this
constitootional? Do you see him shot through and through instead of being
worked off like a Briton? Damme, if I know which party to side with. You’re as
bad as the other. What’s to become of the country if the military power’s to go
a superseding the ciwilians in this way? Where’s this poor feller-creetur’s
rights as a citizen, that he didn’t have me in his last moments! I was here. I
was willing. I was ready. These are nice times, brother, to have the dead
crying out against us in this way, and sleep comfortably in our beds
arterwards; wery nice!"
Whether he derived any
material consolation from binding the prisoners, is uncertain; most probably he
did. At all events his being summoned to that work, diverted him, for the time,
from these painful reflections, and gave his thoughts a more congenial
occupation.
They were not all three
carried off together, but in two parties; Barnaby and his father, going by one
road in the centre of a body of foot; and Hugh, fast bound upon a horse, and
strongly guarded by a troop of cavalry, being taken by another.
They had no opportunity
for the least communication, in the short interval which preceded their
departure; being kept strictly apart. Hugh only observed that Barnaby walked
with
a drooping head among
his guard, and, without raising his eyes, that he tried to wave his fettered
hand when he passed. For himself, he buoyed up his courage as he rode along,
with the assurance that the mob would force his jail wherever it might be, and
set him at liberty. But when they got into London, and more especially into
Fleet Market, lately the stronghold of the rioters, where the military were
rooting out the last remnant of the crowd, he saw that this hope was gone, and
felt that he was riding to his death.
MR. DENNIS, having
dispatched this piece of business without any personal hurt or inconvenience,
and having now retired into the tranquil respectability of private life,
resolved to solace himself with half an hour or so of female society. With this
amiable purpose in his mind, he bent his steps towards the house where Dolly
and Miss Haredale were still confined, and whither Miss Miggs had also been
removed by order of Mr. Simon Tappertit.
As he walked along the
streets with his leather gloves clasped behind him, and his face indicative of
cheerful thought and pleasant calculation, Mr. Dennis might have been likened
unto a farmer ruminating among his crops, and enjoying by anticipation the
bountiful gifts of Providence. Look where he would, some heap of ruins afforded
him rich promise of a working off; the whole town appeared to have been
ploughed and sown, and nurtured by most genial weather; and a goodly harvest
was at hand.
Having taken up arms
and resorted to deeds of violence, with the great main object of preserving the
Old Bailey in all its purity, and the gallows in all its pristine usefulness
and moral grandeur, it would perhaps be going too far to assert that Mr. Dennis
had ever distinctly contemplated and foreseen this happy state of things. He
rather looked upon it as one of those beautiful dispensations which are
inscrutably brought about for the behoof and advantage of good men. He felt, as
it were, personally referred to, in this prosperous ripening for the gibbet; and
had never considered himself so much the pet and favourite child of Destiny, or
loved that lady so well or with such a calm and virtuous reliance, in all his
life.
As to being taken up,
himself, for a rioter, and punished with the rest, Mr. Dennis dismissed that
possibility from his thoughts as an idle chimera; arguing that the line of
conduct he had adopted at Newgate, and the service he had rendered that day,
would be more than a set-off against any evidence which might identify him as a
member of the crowd. That any charge of companionship which might be made
against him by those who were themselves in danger, would certainly go for
nought. And that if any trivial indiscretion on his part should unluckily come
out, the uncommon usefulness of his office, at present, and the great demand
for the exercise of its functions, would certainly cause it to be winked at,
and passed over. In a word, he had played his cards throughout, with great
care; had changed sides at the very nick of time; had delivered up two of the
most notorious rioters, and a distinguished felon to boot; and was quite at his
ease.
Saving--for there is a
reservation; and even Mr. Dennis was not perfectly happy--saving for one
circumstance; to wit, the forcible detention of Dolly and Miss Haredale, in a
house almost adjoining his own. This was a stumbling-block; for if they were
discovered and released, they could, by the testimony they had it in their
power to give, place him in a situation of great jeopardy; and to set them at
liberty, first extorting from them an oath of secrecy and silence, was a thing
not to be thought of. It was more, perhaps, with an eye to the danger which
lurked in this quarter, than from his abstract love of conversation with the
sex, that the hangman, quickening his steps, now hastened into their society,
cursing the amorous natures of Hugh and Mr. Tappertit with great heartiness, at
every step he took.
When be entered the
miserable room in which they were confined, Dolly and Miss Haredale withdrew in
silence to the remotest corner. But Miss Miggs, who was particularly tender of
her reputation, immediately fell upon her knees and began to scream very loud,
crying, "What will become of me!"--"Where is my
Simmuns!"--"Have mercy, good gentlemen, on my sex’s weaknesses!"--with
other doleful lamentations of that nature, which she delivered with great
propriety and decorum.
"Miss, miss,"
whispered Dennis, beckoning to her with his forefinger, "come here--I won’t
hurt you. Come here, my lamb, will you?"
On hearing this tender
epithet, Miss Miggs, who had left off screaming when he opened his lips, and
had listened to him attentively, began again, crying: "Oh I’m his lamb! He
says I’m his lamb! Oh gracious, why wasn’t I born old and ugly! Why was I ever
made to be the youngest of six, and all of ’em dead and in their blessed
graves, excepting one married sister, which is settled in Golden Lion Court,
number twenty-sivin, second bell- handle on the--!"
"Don’t I say I an’t
a-going to hurt you?" said Dennis, pointing to a chair. "Why miss,
what’s the matter?"
"I don’t know what
mayn’t be the matter!" cried Miss Miggs, clasping her hands distractedly.
"Anything may be the matter!"
"But nothing is, I
tell you," said the hangman. "First stop that noise and come and sit
down here, will you, chuckey?"
The coaxing tone in
which he said these latter words might have failed in its object, if he had not
accompanied them with sundry sharp jerks of his thumb over one shoulder, and
with divers winks and thrustings of his tongue into his cheek, from which
signals the damsel gathered that he sought to speak to her apart, concerning
Miss Haredale and Dolly. Her curiosity being very powerful, and her jealousy by
no means inactive, she arose, and with a great deal of shivering and starting back,
and much muscular action among all the small bones in her throat, gradually
approached him.
"Sit down,"
said the hangman.
Suiting the action to
the word, he thrust her rather suddenly and prematurely into a chair, and
designing to reassure her by a little harmless jocularity, such as is adapted
to please and fascinate the sex, converted his right forefinger into an ideal
bradawl or gimlet, and made as though he would screw the same into her side--
whereat Miss Miggs shrieked again, and evinced symptoms of faintness.
"Lovey, my
dear," whispered Dennis, drawing his chair close to hers. "When was
your young man here last, eh?"
"My young man,
good gentleman!" answered Miggs in a tone of exquisite distress.
"Ah! Simmuns, you
know--him?" said Dennis.
"Mine
indeed!" cried Miggs, with a burst of bitterness--and as she said it, she
glanced towards Dolly. "Mine, good gentleman!"
This was just what Mr.
Dennis wanted, and expected.
"Ah!" he
said, looking so soothingly, not to say amorously on Miggs, that she sat, as
she afterwards remarked, on pins and needles of the sharpest Whitechapel kind,
not knowing what intentions might be suggesting that expression to his
features: "I was afraid of that. I saw as much myself. It’s her fault. She
will entice ’em."
"I wouldn’t,"
cried Miggs, folding her hands and looking upwards with a kind of devout
blankness, "I wouldn’t lay myself out as she does; I wouldn’t be as bold
as her; I wouldn’t seem to say to all male creeturs ’Come and kiss me’"--and
here a shudder quite convulsed her frame--"for any earthly crowns as might
be offered. Worlds," Miggs added solemnly, "should not reduce me. No.
Not if I was Wenis."
"Well, but you are
Wenus, you know," said Mr. Dennis, confidentially.
"No, I am not,
good gentleman," answered Miggs, shaking her head with an air of
self-denial which seemed to imply
that she might be if
she chose, but she hoped she knew better. "No, I am not, good gentleman.
Don’t charge me with it."
Up to this time she had
turned round, every now and then, to where Dolly and Miss Haredale had retired
and uttered a scream, or groan, or laid her hand upon her heart and trembled
excessively, with a view of keeping up appearances, and giving them to understand
that she conversed with the visitor, under protest and on compulsion, and at a
great personal sacrifice, for their common good. But at this point, Mr. Dennis
looked so very full of meaning, and gave such a singularly expressive twitch to
his face as a request to her to come still nearer to him, that she abandoned
these little arts, and gave him her whole and undivided attention.
"When was Simmuns
here, I say?" quoth Dennis, in her ear.
"Not since
yesterday morning; and then only for a few minutes. Not all day, the day
before."
"You know he meant
all along to carry off that one!" said Dennis, indicating Dolly by the
slightest possible jerk of his head:--"And to hand you over to somebody
else."
Miss Miggs, who had
fallen into a terrible state of grief when the first part of this sentence was
spoken, recovered a little at the second, and seemed by the sudden check she
put upon her tears, to intimate that possibly this arrangement might meet her
views; and that it might, perhaps, remain an open question.
"--But unfort’nately,"
pursued Dennis, who observed this: "somebody else was fond of her too, you
see; and even if he wasn’t, somebody else is took for a rioter, and it’s all
over with him."
Miss Miggs relapsed.
"Now I want,"
said Dennis, "to clear this house, and to see you righted. What if I was
to get her off, out of the way, eh?"
Miss Miggs, brightening
again, rejoined, with many breaks and pauses from excess of feeling, that
temptations had been Simmuns’s bane. That it was not his faults, but hers
(meaning Dolly’s). That men did not see through these dreadful arts as women
did, and therefore was caged and trapped, as Simmun had been. That she had no
personal motives to serve--far from it--on the contrary, her intentions was
good towards all parties. But forasmuch as she knowed that Simmun, if united to
any designing and artful minxes (she would name no names, for that was not her
dispositions)--to any designing and artful minxes--must be made miserable and
unhappy for life, she did incline towards prewentions. Such, she added, was her
free confessions. But as this was private feelings, and might perhaps be looked
upon as wengeance, she begged the gentleman would say no more. Whatever he
said, wishing to do her duty by all mankind, even by them as had ever been her
bitterest enemies, she would not listen to him. With that she stopped her ears,
and shook her head from side to side, to intimate to Mr. Dennis that though he
talked until he had no breath left, she was as deaf as any adder.
"Lookee here, my
sugar-stick," said Mr. Dennis, "if your view’s the same as mine, and
you’ll only be quiet and slip away at the right time, I can have the house
clear to-morrow, and be out of this trouble.--Stop though! there’s the
other."
"Which other,
sir?" asked Miggs--still with her fingers in her ears and her head shaking
obstinately.
"Why, the tallest
one, yonder," said Dennis, as he stroked his chin, and added, in an
undertone to himself, something about not crossing Muster Gashford.
Miss Miggs replied
(still being profoundly deaf) that if Miss Haredale stood in the way at all, he
might make himself quite easy on that score; as she had gathered, from what
passed between Hugh and Mr. Tappertit when they were last there, that she was
to be removed alone (not by them, but by somebody else), to-morrow night.
Mr. Dennis opened his
eyes very wide at this piece of information, whistled once, considered once,
and finally slapped his head once and nodded once, as if he had got the clue to
this mysterious removal, and so dismissed it. Then he imparted his design
concerning Dolly to Miss Miggs, who was taken more deaf than before, when he
began; and so remained, all through.
The notable scheme was
this. Mr. Dennis was immediately to seek out from among the rioters, some daring
young fellow (and he had one in his eye, he said), who, terrified by the
threats he could hold out to him, and alarmed by the capture of so many who
were no better and no worse than he, would gladly avail himself of any help to
get abroad, and out of harm’s way, with his plunder, even though his journey
were incumbered by an unwilling companion; indeed, the unwilling companion
being a beautiful girl, would probably be an additional inducement and
temptation. Such a person found, he proposed to bring him there on the ensuing
night, when the tall one was taken off, and Miss Miggs had purposely retired;
and then that Dolly should be gagged, muffled in a cloak, and carried in any
handy conveyance down to the river’s side; where there were abundant means of getting
her smuggled snugly off in any small craft of doubtful character, and no
questions asked. With regard to the expense of this removal, he would say, at a
rough calculation, that two or three silver tea or coffee-pots, with something
additional for drink (such as a muffineer, or toast- rack), would more than
cover it. Articles of plate of every kind having been buried by the rioters in
several lonely parts of London, and particularly, as he knew, in St James’s
Square, which, though easy of access, was little frequented after dark, and had
a convenient piece of water in the midst, the needful funds were close at hand,
and could be had upon the shortest notice. With regard to Dolly, the gentleman
would exercise his own discretion. He would be bound to do nothing but to take
her away, and keep her away. All other arrangements and dispositions would rest
entirely with himself.
If Miss Miggs had had
her hearing, no doubt she would have been greatly shocked by the indelicacy of
a young female’s going away with a stranger by night (for her moral feelings,
as we have said, were of the tenderest kind); but directly Mr. Dennis ceased to
speak, she reminded him that he had only wasted breath. She then went on to say
(still with her fingers in her ears) that nothing less than a severe practical
lesson would save the locksmith’s daughter from utter ruin; and that she felt
it, as it were, a moral obligation and a sacred duty to the family, to wish
that some one would devise one for her reformation. Miss Miggs remarked, and
very justly, as an abstract sentiment which happened to occur to her at the
moment, that she dared to say the locksmith and his wife would murmur, and
repine, if they were ever, by forcible abduction or otherwise, to lose their
child; but that we seldom knew, in this world, what was best for us: such being
our sinful and imperfect natures, that very few arrived at that clear
understanding.
Having brought their
conversation to this satisfactory end, they parted: Dennis, to pursue his
design, and take another walk about his farm; Miss Miggs, to launch, when he
left her, into such a burst of mental anguish (which she gave them to
understand was occasioned by certain tender things he had had the presumption
and audacity to say), that little Dolly’s heart was quite melted. Indeed, she
said and did so much to soothe the outraged feelings of Miss Miggs, and looked
so beautiful while doing so, that if that young maid had not had ample vent for
her surpassing spite, in a knowledge of the mischief that was brewing, she must
have scratched her features on the spot.
ALL next day, Emma
Haredale, Dolly, and Miggs, remained cooped up together in what had now been
their prison for so many days, without seeing any person, or hearing any sound
but the murmured conversation, in an outer room, of the men who kept watch over
them. There appeared to be more of these fellows than there had been hitherto;
and they could no longer hear the voices of women, which they had before
plainly distinguished. Some new excitement, too, seemed to prevail among them;
for there was much stealthy going in and out, and a constant questioning of
those who were newly arrived. They had previously been quite reckless in their
behaviour; often making a great uproar; quarrelling among themselves, fighting,
dancing, and singing. They were now very subdued and silent, conversing almost
in whispers, and stealing in and out with a soft and stealthy tread, very
different from the boisterous trampling in which their arrivals and departures
had hitherto been announced to the trembling captives.
Whether this change was
occasioned by the presence among them of some person of authority in their
ranks, or by any other cause, they were unable to decide. Sometimes they
thought it was in part attributable to there being a sick man in the chamber,
for last night there had been a shuffling of feet, as though a burden were
brought in, and afterwards a moaning noise. But they had no means of
ascertaining the truth: for any question or entreaty on their parts only
provoked a storm of execrations, or something worse; and they were too happy to
be left alone, unassailed by threats or admiration, to risk even that comfort,
by any voluntary communication with those who held them in durance.
It was sufficiently
evident, both to Emma and to the locksmith’s poor little daughter herself, that
she, Dolly, was the great object of attraction; and that so soon as they should
have leisure to indulge in the softer passion, Hugh and Mr. Tappertit would
certainly fall to blows for her sake; in which latter case, it was not very
difficult to see whose prize she would become. With all her old horror of that
man revived, and deepened into a degree of aversion and abhorrence which no
language can describe; with a thousand old recollections and regrets, and
causes of distress, anxiety, and fear, besetting her on all sides; poor Dolly
Varden-- sweet, blooming, buxom Dolly--began to hang her head, and fade, and
droop, like a beautiful flower. The colour fled from her cheeks, her courage
forsook her, her gentle heart failed. Unmindful of all her provoking caprices,
forgetful of all her conquests and inconstancy, with all her winning little
vanities quite gone, she nestled all the livelong day in Emma Haredale’s bosom;
and, sometimes calling on her dear old grey-haired father, sometimes on her
mother, and sometimes even on her old home, pined slowly away, like a poor bird
in its cage.
Light hearts, light
hearts, that float so gaily on a smooth stream, that are so sparkling and
buoyant in the sunshine--down upon fruit, bloom upon flowers, blush in summer
air, life of the winged insect, whose whole existence is a day--how soon ye
sink in troubled water! Poor Dolly’s heart--a little, gentle, idle, fickle
thing; giddy, restless, fluttering; constant to nothing but bright looks, and
smiles and laughter--Dolly’s heart was breaking.
Emma had known grief,
and could bear it better. She had little comfort to impart, but she could
soothe and tend her, and she did so; and Dolly clung to her like a child to its
nurse. In endeavouring to inspire her with some fortitude, she increased her
own; and though the nights were long, and the days dismal, and she felt the
wasting influence of watching and fatigue, and had perhaps a more defined and
clear perception of their destitute condition and its worst dangers, she
uttered no complaint. Before the ruffians, in whose power they were, she bore
herself so calmly, and with such an appearance, in the midst of all her terror,
of a secret conviction that they dared not harm her, that there was not a man
among them but held her in some degree of dread; and more than one believed she
had a weapon hidden in her dress, and was prepared to use it.
Such was their
condition when they were joined by Miss Miggs, who gave them to understand that
she too had been taken prisoner because of her charms, and detailed such feats
of resistance she had performed (her virtue having given her supernatural
strength), that they felt it quite a happiness to have her for a champion. Nor
was this the only comfort they derived at first from Miggs’s presence and
society: for that young lady displayed such resignation and long-suffering, and
so much meek endurance, under her trials, and breathed in all her chaste
discourse a spirit of such holy confidence and resignation, and devout belief
that all would happen for the best, that Emma felt her courage strengthened by
the bright example; never doubting but that everything she said was true, and
that she, like them, was torn from all she loved, and agonised by doubt and
apprehension. As to poor Dolly, she was roused, at first, by seeing one who
came from home; but when she heard under what circumstances she had left it,
and into whose hands her father had fallen, she wept more bitterly than ever,
and refused all comfort.
Miss Miggs was at some
trouble to reprove her for this state of mind, and to entreat her to take
example by herself, who, she said, was now receiving back, with interest,
tenfold the amount of her subscriptions to the red-brick dwelling-house, in the
articles of peace of mind and a quiet conscience. And, while on serious topics,
Miss Miggs considered it her duty to try her hand at the conversion of Miss
Haredale; for whose improvement she launched into a polemical address of some
length, in the course whereof, she likened herself unto a chosen missionary,
and that young lady to a cannibal in darkness. Indeed, she returned so often to
these sublects, and so frequently called upon them to take a lesson from
her,--at the same time vaunting and, as it were, rioting in, her huge
unworthiness, and abundant excess of sin,--that, in the course of a short time,
she became, in that small chamber, rather a nuisance than a comfort, and
rendered them, if possible, even more unhappy than they had been before.
The night had now come;
and for the first time (for their jailers had been regular in bringing food and
candles), they were left in darkness. Any change in their condition in such a
place inspired new fears; and when some hours had passed, and the gloom was
still unbroken, Emma could no longer repress her alarm.
They listened
attentively. There was the same murmuring in the outer room, and now and then a
moan which seemed to be wrung from a person in great pain, who made an effort
to subdue it, but could not. Even these men seemed to be in darkness too; for
no light shone through the chinks in the door, nor were they moving, as their
custom was, but quite still: the silence being unbroken by so much as the
creaking of a board.
At first, Miss Miggs
wondered greatly in her own mind who this sick person might be; but arriving,
on second thoughts, at the conclusion that he was a part of the schemes on
foot, and an artful device soon to be employed with great success, she opined,
for Miss Haredale’s comfort, that it must be some misguided Papist who had been
wounded: and this happy supposition encouraged her to say, under her breath,
"Ally Looyer!" several times.
"Is it
possible," said Emma, with some indignation, "that you who have seen
these men committing the outrages you have told us of, and who have fallen into
their hands, like us, can exult in their cruelties!"
"Personal
considerations, miss," rejoined Miggs, "sinks into nothing, afore a
noble cause. Ally Looyer! Ally Looyer! Ally Looyer, good gentlemen!"
It seemed from the
shrill pertinacity with which Miss Miggs repeated this form of acclamation,
that she was calling the same through the keyhole of the door; but in the
profound darkness she could not be seen.
"If the time has
come--Heaven knows it may come at any moment--when they are bent on prosecuting
the designs, whatever they may be, with which they have brought us here, can
you still encourage, and take part with them?" demanded Emma.
"I thank my
goodness-gracious-blessed-stars I can, miss," returned Miggs, with
increased energy.--"Ally Looyer, good gentlemen!"
Even Dolly, cast down
and disappointed as she was, revived at this, and bade Miggs hold her tongue
directly.
"Which, was you
pleased to observe, Miss Varden?" said Miggs, with a strong emphasis on
the irrelative pronoun.
Dolly repeated her
request.
"Ho, gracious
me!" cried Miggs, with hysterical derision. "Ho, gracious me! Yes, to
be sure I will. Ho yes! I am a abject slave, and a toiling, moiling,
constant-working, always-being- found-fault-with, never-giving-satisfactions,
nor-having-no- time-to-clean-oneself, potter’s wessel--an’t I, miss! Ho yes! My
situations is lowly, and my capacities is limited, and my duties is to humble
myself afore the base degenerating daughters of their blessed mothers as
is--fit to keep companies with holy saints but is born to persecutions from
wicked relations--and to demean myself before them as is no better than
Infidels--an’t it, miss! Ho yes! My only becoming occupations is to help young
flaunting pagins to brush and comb and titiwate theirselves into whitening and
suppulchres, and leave the young men to think that there an’t a bit of padding
in it nor no pinching ins nor fillings out nor pomatums nor deceits nor earthly
wanities--an’t it, miss! Yes, to be sure it is--ho yes!"
Having delivered these
ironical passages with a most wonderful volubility, and with a shrillness
perfectly deafening (especially when she jerked out the interjections), Miss
Miggs, from mere habit, and not because weeping was at all appropriate to the
occasion, which was one of triumph, concluded by bursting into a flood of
tears, and calling in an impassioned manner on the name of Simmuns.
What Emma Haredale and
Dolly would have done, or how long Miss Miggs, now that she had hoisted her
true colours, would have gone on waving them before their astonished senses, it
is impossible to tell. Nor is it necessary to speculate on these matters, for a
startling interruption occurred at that moment, which took their whole
attention by storm.
This was a violent
knocking at the door of the house, and then its sudden bursting open; which was
immediately succeeded by a scuffle in the room without, and the clash of
weapons. Transported with the hope that rescue had at length arrived, Emma and
Dolly shrieked aloud for help; nor were their shrieks unanswered; for after a
hurried interval, a man, bearing in one hand a drawn sword, and in the other a
taper, rushed into the chamber where they were confined.
It was some check upon
their transport to find in this person an entire stranger, but they appealed to
him, nevertheless, and besought him, in impassioned language, to restore them
to their friends.
"For what other
purpose am I here?" he answered, closing the door, and standing with his
back against it. "With what object have I made my way to this place, through
difficulty and danger, but to preserve you?"
With a joy for which it
was impossible to find adequate expression, they embraced each other, and
thanked Heaven for this most timely aid. Their deliverer stepped forward for a
moment to put the light upon the table, and immediately returning to his former
position against the door, bared his head, and looked on smilingly.
"You have news of
my uncle, sir?" said Emma, turning hastily towards him.
"And of my father
and mother?" added Dolly.
"Yes," he said.
"Good news."
"They are alive
and unhurt?" they both cried at once.
"Yes, and
unhurt," he rejoined.
"And close at
hand?"
"I did not say
close at hand," he answered smoothly; "they are at no great distance.
Your friends, sweet one," he added, addressing Dolly, "are within a
few hours’ journey. You will be restored to them, I hope, to-night."
"My uncle,
sir--" faltered Emma.
"Your uncle, dear
Miss Haredale, happily--I say happily, because he has succeeded where many of
our creed have failed, and is safe--has crossed the sea, and is out of
Britain."
"I thank God for
it," said Emma, faintly.
"You say well. You
have reason to be thankful: greater reason than it is possible for you, who
have seen but one night of these cruel outrages, to imagine."
"Does he
desire," said Emma, "that I should follow him?"
"Do you ask if he
desires it?" cried the stranger in surprise. "If he desires it! But
you do not know the danger of remaining in England, the difficulty of escape,
or the price hundreds would pay to secure the means, when you make that inquiry.
Pardon me. I had forgotten that you could not, being prisoner here."
"I gather,
sir," said Emma, after a moment’s pause, "from what you hint at, but
fear to tell me, that I have witnessed but the beginning, and the least, of the
violence to which we are exposed, and that it has not yet slackened in its
fury?"
He shrugged his
shoulders, shook his head, lifted up his hands; and with the same smooth smile,
which was not a pleasant one to see, cast his eyes upon the ground, and
remained silent.
"You may venture,
sir, to speak plain," said Emma, "and to tell me the worst. We have
undergone some preparation for it."
But here Dolly
interposed, and entreated her not to hear the worst, but the best; and besought
the gentleman to tell them the best, and to keep the remainder of his news
until they were safe among their friends again.
"It is told in
three words," he said, glancing at the locksmith’s daughter with a look of
some displeasure. "The people have risen, to a man, against us; the
streets are filled with soldiers, who support them and do their bidding. We
have no protection but from above, and no safety but in flight; and that is a
poor resource; for we are watched on every hand, and detained here, both by
force and fraud. Miss Haredale, I cannot bear--believe me, that I cannot
bear--by speaking of myself, or what I have done, or am prepared to do, to seem
to vaunt my services before you. But, having powerful Protestant connections,
and having my whole wealth embarked with theirs in shipping and commerce, I
happily possessed the means of saving your uncle. I have the means of saving
you; and in redemption of my sacred promise, made to him, I am here; pledged
not to leave you until I have placed you in his arms. The treachery or
penitence of one of the men about you, led to the discovery of your place of
confinement; and that I have forced my way here, sword in hand, you see."
"You bring,"
said Emma, faltering, "some note or token from my uncle?"
"No, he doesn’t,"
cried Dolly, pointing at him earnestly; "now I am sure he doesn’t. Don’t
go with him for the world!"
"Hush, pretty
fool--be silent," he replied, frowning angrily upon her. "No, Miss
Haredale, I have no letter, nor any token of any kind; for while I sympathise
with you, and such as you, on whom misfortune so heavy and so undeserved has
fallen, I value my life. I carry, therefore, no writing which, found upon me,
would lead to its certain loss. I never thought of bringing any other token,
nor did Mr. Haredale think of entrusting me with one--possibly because he had
good experience of my faith and honesty, and owed his life to me."
There was a reproof
conveyed in these words, which to a nature like Emma Haredale’s, was well
addressed. But Dolly, who was differently constituted, was by no means touched
by it, and still conjured her, in all the terms of affection and attachment she
could think of, not to be lured away.
"Time
presses," said their visitor, who, although he sought to express the
deepest interest, had something cold and even in his speech, that grated on the
ear; "and danger surrounds us. If I have exposed myself to it, in vain,
let it be so; but if you and he should ever meet again, do me justice. If you
decide to remain (as I think you do), remember, Miss Haredale, that I left you
with a solemn caution, and acquitting myself of all the consequences to which
you expose yourself."
"Stay, sir!"
cried Emma--one moment, I beg you. Cannot we--and she drew Dolly closer to
her--"cannot we go together?"
"The task of
conveying one female in safety through such scenes as we must encounter, to say
nothing of attracting the attention of those who crowd the streets," he
answered, "is enough. I have said that she will be restored to her friends
to-night. If you accept the service I tender, Miss Haredale, she shall be
instantly placed in safe conduct, and that promise redeemed. Do you decide to
remain? People of all ranks and creeds are flying from the town, which is
sacked from end to end. Let me be of use in some quarter. Do you stay, or
go?"
"Dolly," said
Emma, in a hurried manner, "my dear girl, this is our last hope. If we
part now, it is only that we may meet again in happiness and honour. I will
trust to this gentleman."
"No-no-no!"
cried Dolly, clinging to her. "Pray, pray, do not!"
"You hear,"
said Emma, "that to-night--only to-night--within a few hours--think of
that!--you will be among those who would die of grief to lose you, and who are
now plunged in the deepest misery for your sake. Pray for me, dear girl, as I
will for you; and never forget the many quiet hours we have passed together.
Say one "God bless you!" Say that at parting!"
But Dolly could say
nothing; no, not when Emma kissed her cheek a hundred times, and covered it
with tears, could she do more than hang upon her neck, and sob, and clasp, and
hold her tight.
"We have time for
no more of this," cried the man, unclenching her hands, and pushing her
roughly off, as he drew Emma Haredale towards the door: "Now! Quick,
outside there! are you ready?"
"Ay!" cried a
loud voice, which made him start. "Quite ready! Stand back here, for your
lives!"
And in an instant he
was felled like an ox in the butcher’s shambles--struck down as though a block
of marble had fallen from the roof and crushed him--and cheerful light, and
beaming faces came pouring in--and Emma was clasped in her uncle’s embrace, and
Dolly, with a shriek that pierced the air, fell into the arms of her father and
mother.
What fainting there
was, what laughing, what crying, what sobbing, what smiling, how much
questioning, no answering, all talking together, all beside themselves with
joy; what kissing, congratulating, embracing, shaking of hands, and falling
into all these raptures, over and over and over again; no language can
describe.
At length, and after a
long time, the old locksmith went up and fairly hugged two strangers, who had
stood apart and left them to themselves; and then they saw--whom? Yes, Edward
Chester and Joseph Willet.
"See here!"
cried the locksmith. "See here! where would any of us have been without
these two? Oh, Mr. Edward, Mr. Edward--oh, Joe, Joe, how light, and yet how
full, you have made my old heart to- night!"
"It was Mr. Edward
that knocked him down, sir," said Joe: "I longed to do it, but I gave
it up to him. Come, you brave and honest gentleman! Get your senses together,
for you haven’t long to lie here."
He had his foot upon
the breast of their sham deliverer, in the absence of a spare arm; and gave him
a gentle roll as he spoke. Gashford, for it was no other, crouching yet
malignant, raised his scowling face, like sin subdued, and pleaded to be gently
used.
"I have access to
all my lord’s papers, Mr. Haredale," he said, in a submissive voice: Mr.
Haredale keeping his back towards him, and not once looking round: "there
are very important documents among them. There are a great many in secret
drawers, and distributed in various places, known only to my lord and me. I can
give some very valuable information, and render important assistance to any
inquiry. You will have to answer it, if I receive ill usage."
"Pah!" cried
Joe, in deep disgust. "Get up, man; you’re waited for, outside. Get up, do
you hear?"
Gashford slowly rose;
and picking up his hat, and looking with a baffled malevolence, yet with an air
of despicable humility, all round the room, crawled out.
"And now,
gentlemen," said Joe, who seemed to be the spokesman of the party, for all
the rest were silent; "the sooner we get back to the Black Lion, the
better, perhaps."
Mr. Haredale nodded
assent, and drawing his niece’s arm through his, and taking one of her hands
between his own, passed out straightway; followed by the locksmith, Mrs.
Varden, and Dolly--who would scarcely have presented a sufficient surface for
all the hugs and caresses they bestowed upon her though she had been a dozen
Dollys. Edward Chester and Joe followed.
And did Dolly never
once look behind--not once? Was there not one little fleeting glimpse of the
dark eyelash, almost resting on her flushed cheek, and of the downcast
sparkling eye it shaded? Joe thought there was--and he is not likely to have
been mistaken; for there were not many eyes like Dolly’s, that’s the truth.
The outer room through
which they had to pass, was full of men; among them, Mr. Dennis in safe
keeping; and there, had been since yesterday, lying in hiding behind a wooden
screen which was now thrown down, Simon Tappertit, the recreant ’prentice,
burnt and bruised, and with a gun-shot wound in his body; and his legs--his
perfect legs, the pride and glory of his life, the comfort of his
existence--crushed into shapeless ugliness. Wondering no longer at the moans
they had heard, Dolly kept closer to her father, and shuddered at the sight;
but neither bruises, burns, nor gun-shot wound, nor all the torture of his
shattered limbs, sent half so keen a pang to Simon’s breast, as Dolly passing
out, with Joe for her preserver.
A coach was ready at
the door, and Dolly found herself safe and whole inside, between her father and
mother, with Emma Haredale and her uncle, quite real, sitting opposite. But
there was no Joe, no Edward; and they had said nothing. They had only bowed
once, and kept at a distance. Dear heart! what a long way it was to the Black
Lion!
THE Black Lion was so
far off, and occupied such a length of time in the getting at, that
notwithstanding the strong presumptive evidence she had about her of the late
events being real and of actual occurrence, Dolly could not divest herself of
the belief that she must be in a dream which was lasting all night. Nor was she
quite certain that she saw and heard with her own proper senses, even when the
coach, in the fulness of time, stopped at the Black Lion, and the host of that
tavern approached in a gush of cheerful light to help them to dismount, and
give them hearty welcome.
There too, at the coach
door, one on one side, one upon the other, were already Edward Chester and Joe
Willet, who must have followed in another coach: and this was such a strange
and unaccountable proceeding, that Dolly was the more inclined to favour the
idea of her being fast asleep. But when Mr. Willet appeared--old John
himself--so heavy-headed and obstinate, and with such a double chin as the
liveliest imagination could never in its boldest flights have conjured up in
all its vast proportions--then she stood corrected, and unwillingly admitted to
herself that she was broad awake.
And Joe had lost an
arm--he--that well-made, handsome, gallant fellow! As Dolly glanced towards
him, and thought of the pain he must have suffered, and the far-off places in
which he had been wandering, and wondered who had been his nurse, and hoped
that whoever it was, she had been as kind and gentle and considerate as she
would have been, the tears came rising to her bright eyes, one by one, little
by little, until she could keep them back no longer, and so before them all,
wept bitterly.
"We are all safe
now, Dolly," said her father, kindly. "We shall not be separated any
more. Cheer up, my love, cheer up!"
The locksmith’s wife
knew better perhaps, than he, what ailed her daughter. But Mrs. Varden being
quite an altered woman--for the riots had done that good--added her word to
his, and comforted her with similar representations.
"Mayhap,"
said Mr. Willet, senior, looking round upon the company, "she’s hungry.
That’s what it is, depend upon it--I am, myself."
The Black Lion, who,
like old John, had been waiting supper past all reasonable and conscionable
hours, hailed this as a philosophical discovery of the profoundest and most
penetrating kind; and the table being already spread, they sat down to supper
straightway.
The conversation was
not of the liveliest nature, nor were the appetites of some among them very
keen. But, in both these respects, old John more than atoned for any deficiency
on the part of the rest, and very much distinguished himself.
It was not in point of
actual conversation that Mr. Willet shone so brilliantly, for he had none of
his old cronies to "tackle," and was rather timorous of venturing on
Joe; having certain vague misgivings within him, that he was ready on the
shortest notice, and on receipt of the slightest offence, to fell the Black
Lion to the floor of his own parlour, and immediately to withdraw to China or
some other remote and unknown region, there to dwell for evermore, or at least
until he had got rid of his remaining arm and both legs, and perhaps an eye or
so, into the bargain. It was with a peculiar kind of pantomime that Mr. Willet
filled up every pause; and in this he was considered by the Black Lion, who had
been his familiar for some years, quite to surpass and go beyond himself, and
outrun the expectations of his most admiring friends.
The subject that worked
in Mr. Willet’s mind, and occasioned these demonstrations, was no other than
his son’s bodily disfigurement, which he had never yet got himself thoroughly
to believe or comprehend. Shortly after their first meeting, he had been
observed to wander, in a state of great perplexity, to the kitchen, and to
direct his gaze towards the fire, as if in search of his usual adviser in all
matters of doubt and difficulty. But there being no boiler at the Black Lion,
and the rioters having so beaten and battered his own that it was quite unfit
for further service, he wandered out again, in a perfect bog of uncertainty and
mental confusion, and in that state took the strangest means of resolving his
doubts: such as feeling the sleeve of his son’s greatcoat as deeming it
possible that his arm might be there; looking at his own arms and those of
everybody else, as if to assure himself that two and not one was the usual
allowance; sitting by the hour together in a brown study, as if he were
endeavouring to recall Joe’s image in his younger days, and to remember whether
he really had in those times one arm or a pair; and employing himself in many
other speculations of the same kind.
Finding himself at this
supper, surrounded by faces with which he had been so well acquainted in old
times, Mr. Willet recurred to the subject with uncommon vigour; apparently
resolved to understand it now or never. Sometimes, after every two or three
mouthfuls, he laid down his knife and fork, and stared at his son with all his
might--particularly at his maimed side; then, he looked slowly round the table
until he caught some person’s eye, when he shook his head with great solemnity,
patted his shoulder, winked, or as one may say--for winking was a very slow
process with him--went to sleep with one eye for a minute or two; and so, with
another solemn shaking of his head, took up his knife and fork again, and went
on eating. Sometimes, he put his food into his mouth abstractedly, and, with
all his faculties concentrated on Joe, gazed at him in a fit of stupefaction as
he cut his meat with one hand, until he was recalled to himself by symptoms of
choking on his own part, and was by that means restored to consciousness. At
other times he resorted to such small devices as asking him for the salt, the
pepper, the vinegar, the mustard--anything that was on his maimed side--and
watching him as he handed it. By dint of these experiments, he did at last so
satisfy and convince himself, that, after a longer silence than he had yet
maintained, he laid down his knife and fork on either side his plate, drank a
long draught from a tankard beside him (still keeping his eyes on Joe), and
leaning backward in his chair and fetching a long breath, said, as he looked
all round the board:
"It’s been took
off!"
"By George!"
said the Black Lion, striking the table with his hand, "he’s got it!"
"Yes, sir,"
said Mr. Willet, with the look of a man who felt that he had earned a
compliment, and deserved it. "That’s where it is. It’s been took
off."
"Tell him where it
was done," said the Black Lion to Joe.
"At the defence of
the Savannah, father."
"At the defence of
the Salwanners," repeated Mr. Willet, softly; again looking round the
table.
"In America, where
the war is," said Joe.
"In America, where
the war is," repeated Mr. Willet. "It was took off in the defence of
the Salwanners in America where the war is." Continuing to repeat these
words to himself in a low tone of voice (the same information had been conveyed
to him in the same terms, at least fifty times before), Mr. Willet arose from
table, walked round to Joe, felt his empty sleeve all the way up, from the
cuff, to where the stump of his arm remained; shook his hand; lighted his pipe
at the fire, took a long whiff, walked to the door, turned round once when he
had reached it, wiped his left eye with the back of his forefinger, and said,
in a faltering voice: "My son’s arm-- was took off--at the defence of
the--Salwanners--in America--where the war is"--with which words he
withdrew, and returned no more that night.
Indeed, on various
pretences, they all withdrew one after another, save Dolly, who was left
sitting there alone. It was a great relief to be alone, and she was crying to
her heart’s content, when she heard Joe’s voice at the end of the passage,
bidding somebody good night.
Good night! Then he was
going elsewhere--to some distance, perhaps. To what kind of home could he be
going, now that it was so late!
She heard him walk
along the passage, and pass the door. But there was a hesitation in his
footsteps. He turned back--Dolly’s heart beat high--he looked in.
"Good
night!"--he didn’t say Dolly, but there was comfort in his not saying Miss
Varden.
"Good night!"
sobbed Dolly.
"I am sorry you
take on so much, for what is past and gone," said Joe kindly. "Don’t.
I can’t bear to see you do it. Think of it no longer. You are safe and happy
now."
Dolly cried the more.
"You must have
suffered very much within these few days--and yet you’re not changed, unless it’s
for the better. They said you were, but I don’t see it. You were--you were
always very beautiful," said Joe, "but you are more beautiful than
ever, now. You are indeed. There can be no harm in my saying so, for you must
know it. You are told so very often, I am sure."
As a general principle,
Dolly did know it, and was told so, very often. But the coachmaker had turned
out, years ago, to be a special donkey; and whether she had been afraid of
making similar discoveries in others, or had grown by dint of long custom to be
careless of compliments generally, certain it is that although she cried so
much, she was better pleased to be told so now, than ever she had been in all
her life.
"I shall bless
your name," sobbed the locksmith’s little daughter, "as long as I
live. I shall never hear it spoken without feeling as if my heart would burst.
I shall remember it in my prayers, every night and morning till I die!"
"Will you?"
said Joe, eagerly. "Will you indeed? It makes me-- well, it makes me very
glad and proud to hear you say so."
Dolly still sobbed, and
held her handkerchief to her eyes. Joe still stood, looking at her.
"Your voice,"
said Joe, "brings up old times so pleasantly, that, for the moment, I feel
as if that night--there can be no harm in talking of that night now--had come
back, and nothing had happened in the mean time. I feel as if I hadn’t suffered
any hardships, but had knocked down poor Tom Cobb only yesterday, and had come
to see you with my bundle on my shoulder before running away.--You
remember?"
Remember! But she said
nothing. She raised her eyes for an instant. It was but a glance; a little,
tearful, timid glance. It kept Joe silent though, for a long time.
"Well!" he
said stoutly, "it was to be otherwise, and was. I have been abroad,
fighting all the summer and frozen up all the winter, ever since. I have come
back as poor in purse as I went, and crippled for life besides. But, Dolly, I
would rather have lost this other arm--ay, I would rather have lost my
head--than have come back to find you dead, or anything but what I always
pictured you to myself, and what I always hoped and wished to find you. Thank God
for all!"
Oh how much, and how
keenly, the little coquette of five years ago, felt now! She had found her
heart at last. Never having known its worth till now, she had never known the
worth of his. How priceless it appeared!
"I did hope
once," said Joe, in his homely way, "that I might come back a rich
man, and marry you. But I was a boy then, and have long known better than that.
I am a poor, maimed, discharged soldier, and must be content to rub through
life as I can. I can’t say, even now, that I shall be glad to see you married,
Dolly; but I am glad--yes, I am, and glad to think I can say so--to know that
you are admired and courted, and can pick and choose for a happy life. It’s a
comfort to me to know that you’ll talk to your husband about me; and I hope the
time will come when I may be able to like him, and to shake hands with him, and
to come and see you as a poor friend who knew you when you were a girl. God
bless you!"
His hand did tremble;
but for all that, he took it away again, and left her.
BY this Friday
night--for it was on Friday in the riot week, that Emma and Dolly were rescued,
by the timely aid of Joe and Edward Chester--the disturbances were entirely
quelled, and peace and order were restored to the affrighted city. True, after
what had happened, it was impossible for any man to say how long this better
state of things might last, or how suddenly new outrages, exceeding even those
so lately witnessed, might burst forth and fill its streets with ruin and
bloodshed; for this reason, those who had fled from the recent tumults still
kept at a distance, and many families, hitherto unable to procure the means of
flight, now availed themselves of the calm, and withdrew into the country. The
shops, too, from Tyburn to Whitechapel, were still shut; and very little
business was transacted in any of the places of great commercial resort. But,
notwithstanding, and in spite of the melancholy forebodings of that numerous
class of society who see with the greatest clearness into the darkest
perspectives, the town remained profoundly quiet. The strong military force
disposed in every advantageous quarter, and stationed at every commanding
point, held the scattered fragments of the mob in check; the search after
rioters was prosecuted with unrelenting vigour; and if there were any among
them so desperate and reckless as to be inclined, after the terrible scenes
they had beheld, to venture forth again, they were so daunted by these resolute
measures, that they quickly shrunk into their hiding-places, and had no thought
but for their safety.
In a word, the crowd
was utterly routed. Upwards of two hundred had been shot dead in the streets.
Two hundred and fifty more were lying, badly wounded, in the hospitals; of whom
seventy or eighty died within a short time afterwards. A hundred were already
in custody, and more were taken every hour. How many perished in the
conflagrations, or by their own excesses, is unknown; but that numbers found a
terrible grave in the hot ashes of the flames they had kindled, or crept into
vaults and cellars to drink in secret or to nurse their sores, and never saw
the light again, is certain. When the embers of the fires had been black and
cold for many weeks, the labourers’ spades proved this, beyond a doubt.
Seventy-two private
houses and four strong jails were destroyed in the four great days of these
riots. The total loss of property, as estimated by the sufferers, was one
hundred and fifty-five thousand pounds; at the lowest and least partial
estimate of disinterested persons, it exceeded one hundred and twenty-five
thousand pounds. For this immense loss, compensation was soon afterwards made
out of the public purse, in pursuance of a vote of the House of Commons; the
sum being levied on the various wards in the city, on the county, and the
borough of Southwark. Both Lord Mansfield and Lord Saville, however, who had
been great sufferers, refused to accept of any compensation whatever.
The House of Commons,
sitting on Tuesday with locked and guarded doors, had passed a resolution to
the effect that, as soon as the tumults subsided, it would immediately proceed
to consider the petitions presented from many of his Majesty’s Protestant
subjects, and would take the same into its serious consideration. While this
question was under debate, Mr. Herbert, one of the members present, indignantly
rose and called upon the House to observe that Lord George Gordon was then
sitting under the gallery with the blue cockade, the signal of rebellion, in
his hat. He was not only obliged, by those who sat near, to take it out; but
offering to go into the street to pacify the mob with the somewhat indefinite
assurance that the House was prepared to give them "the satisfaction they
sought," was actually held down in his seat by the combined force of
several members. In short, the disorder and violence which reigned triumphant
out of doors, penetrated into the senate, and there, as elsewhere, terror and
alarm prevailed, and ordinary forms were for the time forgotten.
On the Thursday, both
Houses had adjourned until the following Monday se’nnight, declaring it
impossible to pursue their deliberations with the necessary gravity and
freedom, while they were surrounded by armed troops. And now that the rioters
were dispersed, the citizens were beset with a new fear; for, finding the
public thoroughfares and all their usual places of resort filled with soldiers
entrusted with the free use of fire and sword, they began to lend a greedy ear
to the rumours which were afloat of martial law being declared, and to dismal
stories of prisoners having been seen hanging on lamp-posts in Cheapside and
Fleet Street. These terrors being promptly dispelled by a Proclamation
declaring that all the rioters in custody would be tried by a special
commission in due course of law, a fresh alarm was engendered by its being
whispered abroad that French money had been found on some of the rioters, and
that the disturbances had been fomented by foreign powers who sought to compass
the overthrow and ruin of England. This report, which was strengthened by the
diffusion of anonymous handbills, but which, if it had any foundation at all,
probably owed its origin to the circumstance of some few coins which were not
English money having been swept into the pockets of the insurgents with other
miscellaneous booty, and afterwards discovered on the prisoners or the dead
bodies,--caused a great sensation; and men’s minds being in that excited state
when they are most apt to catch at any shadow of apprehension, was bruited
about with much industry.
All remaining quiet,
however, during the whole of this Friday, and on this Friday night, and no new
discoveries being made, confidence began to be restored, and the most timid and
desponding breathed again. In Southwark, no fewer than three thousand of the
inhabitants formed themselves into a watch, and patrolled the streets every
hour. Nor were the citizens slow to follow so good an example: and it being the
manner of peaceful men to be very bold when the danger is over, they were
abundantly fierce and daring; not scrupling to question the stoutest passenger
with great severity, and carrying it with a very high hand over all errand-
boys, servant-girls, and ’prentices.
As day deepened into
evening, and darkness crept into the nooks and corners of the town as if it
were mustering in secret and gathering strength to venture into the open ways,
Barnaby sat in his dungeon, wondering at the silence, and listening in vain for
the noise and outcry which had ushered in the night of late. Beside him, with
his hand in hers, sat one in whose companionship he felt at peace. She was
worn, and altered, full of grief, and heavy-hearted; but the same to him.
"Mother," he
said, after a long silence: "how long,--how many days and nights,--shall I
be kept here?"
"Not many, dear. I
hope not many."
"You hope! Ay, but
your hoping will not undo these chains. I hope, but they don’t mind that. Grip
hopes, but who cares for Grip?"
The raven gave a short,
dull, melancholy croak. It said "Nobody," as plainly as a croak could
speak.
"Who cares for
Grip, except you and me?" said Barnaby, smoothing the bird’s rumpled
feathers with his hand. "He never speaks in this place; he never says a
word in jail; he sits and mopes all day in his dark corner, dozing sometimes,
and sometimes looking at the light that creeps in through the bars, and shines
in his bright eye as if a spark from those great fires had fallen into the room
and was burning yet. But who cares for Grip?"
The raven croaked
again--Nobody.
"And by the
way," said Barnaby, withdrawing his hand from the bird, and laying it upon
his mother’s arm, as he looked eagerly in her face; "if they kill me--they
may: I heard it said they would--what will become of Grip when I am dead?"
The sound of the word,
or the current of his own thoughts, suggested to Grip his old phrase
"Never say die!" But he stopped short in the middle of it, drew a
dismal cork, and subsided into a faint croak, as if he lacked the heart to get
through the shortest sentence.
"Will they take
his life as well as mine?" said Barnaby. "I wish they would. If you
and I and he could die together, there would be none to feel sorry, or to
grieve for us. But do what they will, I don’t fear them, mother!"
"They will not
harm you," she said, her tears choking her utterance. "They never
will harm you, when they know all. I am sure they never will."
"Oh! Don’t be too
sure of that," cried Barnaby, with a strange pleasure in the belief that
she was self-deceived, and in his own sagacity. "They have marked me from
the first. I heard them say so to each other when they brought me to this place
last night; and I believe them. Don’t you cry for me. They said that I was
bold, and so I am, and so I will be. You may think that I am silly, but I can
die as well as another.--I have done no harm, have I?" he added quickly.
"None before
Heaven," she answered.
"Why then,"
said Barnaby, "let them do their worst. You told me once--you--when I asked
you what death meant, that it was nothing to be feared, if we did no harm--Aha!
mother, you thought I had forgotten that!"
His merry laugh and
playful manner smote her to the heart. She drew him closer to her, and besought
him to talk to her in whispers and to be very quiet, for it was getting dark,
and their time was short, and she would soon have to leave him for the night.
"You will come
to-morrow?" said Barnaby.
Yes. And every day. And
they would never part again.
He joyfully replied
that this was well, and what he wished, and what he had felt quite certain she
would tell him; and then he asked her where she had been so long, and why she
had not come to see him when he had been a great soldier, and ran through the
wild schemes he had had for their being rich and living prosperously, and with
some faint notion in his mind that she was sad and he had made her so, tried to
console and comfort her, and talked of their former life and his old sports and
freedom: little dreaming that every word he uttered only increased her sorrow,
and that her tears fell faster at the freshened recollection of their lost
tranquillity.
"Mother,"
said Barnaby, as they heard the man approaching to close the cells for the
night," when I spoke to you just now about my father you cried
"Hush!" and turned away your head. Why did you do so? Tell me why, in
a word. You thought he was dead. You are not sorry that he is alive and has
come back to us. Where is he? Here?"
"Do not ask any
one where he is, or speak about him," she made answer.
"Why not?"
said Barnaby. "Because he is a stern man, and talks roughly? Well! I don’t
like him, or want to be with him by myself; but why not speak about him?"
"Because I am
sorry that he is alive; sorry that he has come back; and sorry that he and you
have ever met. Because, dear Barnaby, the endeavour of my life has been to keep
you two asunder."
"Father and son
asunder! Why?"
"He has," she
whispered in his ear, "he has shed blood. The time has come when you must
know it. He has shed the blood of one who loved him well, and trusted him, and
never did him wrong in word or deed."
Barnaby recoiled in
horror, and glancing at his stained wrist for an instant, wrapped it,
shuddering, in his dress.
"But," she
added hastily as the key turned in the lock, "although we shun him, he is
your father, dearest, and I am his wretched wife. They seek his life, and he
will lose it. It must not be by our means; nay, if we could win him back to
penitence, we should be bound to love him yet. Do not seem to know him, except
as one who fled with you from the jail, and if they question you about him, do
not answer them. God be with you through the night, dear boy! God be with
you!"
She tore herself away,
and in a few seconds Barnaby was alone. He stood for a long time rooted to the
spot, with his face hidden in his hands; then flung himself, sobbing, on his
miserable bed.
But the moon came
slowly up in all her gentle glory, and the stars looked out, and through the
small compass of the grated window, as through the narrow crevice of one good
deed in a murky life of guilt, the face of Heaven shone bright and merciful. He
raised his head; gazed upward at the quiet sky, which seemed to smile upon the
earth in sadness, as if the night, more thoughtful than the day, looked down in
sorrow on the sufferings and evil deeds of men; and felt its peace sink deep
into his heart. He, a poor idiot, caged in his narrow cell, was as much lifted
up to God, while gazing on the mild light, as the freest and most favoured man
in all the spacious city; and in his ill-remembered prayer, and in the fragment
of the childish hymn, with which he sung and crooned himself asleep, there
breathed as true a spirit as ever studied homily expressed, or old cathedral
arches echoed.
As his mother crossed a
yard on her way out, she saw, through a grated door which separated it from
another court, her husband, walking round and round, with his hands folded on
his breast, and his head hung down. She asked the man who conducted her, if she
might speak a word with this prisoner. Yes, but she must be quick for he was
locking up for the night, and there was but a minute or so to spare. Saying
this, he unlocked the door, and bade her go in.
It grated harshly as it
turned upon its hinges, but he was deaf to the noise, and still walked round
and round the little court, without raising his head or changing his attitude
in the least. She spoke to him, but her voice was weak, and failed her. At
length she put herself in his track, and when he came near, stretched out her
hand and touched him.
He started backward,
trembling from head to foot; but seeing who it was, demanded why she came
there. Before she could reply, he spoke again.
"Am I to live or
die? Do you murder too, or spare?"
"My son--our
son," she answered, "is in this prison."
"What is that to
me?" he cried, stamping impatiently on the stone pavement. "I know
it. He can no more aid me than I can aid him. If you are come to talk of him,
begone!"
As he spoke he resumed
his walk, and hurried round the court as before. When he came again to where
she stood, he stopped, and said,
"Am I to live or
die? Do you repent?"
"Oh!--do
you?" she answered. "Will you, while time remains? Do not believe
that I could save you, if I dared."
"Say if you
would," he answered with an oath, as he tried to disengage himself and
pass on. "Say if you would."
"Listen to me for
one moment," she returned; "for but a moment. I am but newly risen
from a sick-bed, from which I never hoped to rise again. The best among us
think, at such a time, of good intentions half-performed and duties left
undone. If I have ever, since that fatal night, omitted to pray for your
repentance before death--if I omitted, even then, anything which might tend to
urge it on you when the horror of your crime was fresh--if, in our later
meeting, I yielded to the dread that was upon me, and forgot to fall upon my
knees and solemnly adjure you, in the name of him you sent to his account with
Heaven, to prepare for the retribution which must come, and which is stealing
on you now--I humbly before you, and in the agony of supplication in which you
see me, beseech that you will let me make atonement."
"What is the
meaning of your canting words?" he answered roughly. "Speak so that I
may understand you."
"I will," she
answered, "I desire to. Bear with me for a moment more. The hand of Him
who set His curse on murder, is heavy on us now. You cannot doubt it. Our son,
our innocent boy, on whom His anger fell before his birth, is in this place in
peril of his life-- brought here by your guilt; yes, by that alone, as Heaven
sees and knows, for he has been led astray in the darkness of his intellect,
and that is the terrible consequence of your crime."
"If you come,
woman-like, to load me with reproaches--" he muttered, again endeavouring
to break away.
"I do not. I have
a different purpose. You must hear it. If not to-night, to-morrow; if not
to-morrow, at another time. You must hear it. Husband, escape is hopeless--impossible."
"You tell me so,
do you?" he said, raising his manacled hand, and shaking it.
"You!"
"Yes," she
said, with indescribable earnestness. "But why?"
"To make me easy
in this jail. To make the time ’twixt this and death, pass pleasantly. For my
good--yes, for my good, of course," he said, grinding his teeth, and
smiling at her with a livid face.
"Not to load you
with reproaches," she replied; "not to aggravate the tortures and
miseries of your condition, not to give you one hard word, but to restore you
to peace and hope. Husband, dear husband, if you will but confess this dreadful
crime; if you will but implore forgiveness of Heaven and of those whom you have
wronged on earth; if you will dismiss these vain uneasy thoughts, which never
can be realised, and will rely on Penitence and on the Truth, I promise you, in
the great name of the Creator, whose image you have defaced, that He will
comfort and console you. And for myself," she cried, clasping her hands,
and looking upward, "I swear before Him, as He knows my heart and reads it
now, that from that hour I will love and cherish you as I did of old, and watch
you night and day in the short interval that will remain to us, and soothe you
with my truest love and duty, and pray with you, that one threatening judgment
may be arrested, and that our boy may be spared to bless God, in his poor way,
in the free air and light!"
He fell back and gazed
at her while she poured out these words, as though he were for a moment awed by
her manner, and knew not what to do. But anger and fear soon got the mastery of
him, and he spurned her from him.
"Begone!" he
cried. "Leave me! You plot, do you! You plot to get speech with me, and
let them know I am the man they say I am. A curse on you and on your boy."
"On him the curse
has already fallen," she replied, wringing her hands.
"Let it fall
heavier. Let it fall on one and all. I hate you both. The worst has come to me.
The only comfort that I seek or I can have, will be the knowledge that it comes
to you. Now go!"
She would have urged
him gently, even then, but he menaced her with his chain.
"I say go--I say
it for the last time. The gallows has me in its grasp, and it is a black
phantom that may urge me on to something more. Begone! I curse the hour that I was
born, the man I slew, and all the living world!"
In a paroxysm of wrath,
and terror, and the fear of death, he broke from her, and rushed into the
darkness of his cell, where he cast himself jangling down upon the stone floor,
and smote it with his ironed hands. The man returned to lock the dungeon door,
and having done so, carried her away.
On that warm, balmy
night in June, there were glad faces and light hearts in all quarters of the
town, and sleep, banished by the late horrors, was doubly welcomed. On that
night, families made merry in their houses, and greeted each other on the
common danger they had escaped; and those who had been denounced, ventured into
the streets; and they who had been plundered, got good shelter. Even the
timorous Lord Mayor, who was summoned that night before the Privy Council to
answer for his conduct,
came back contented; observing to all his friends that he had got off very well
with a reprimand, and repeating with huge satisfaction his memorable defence
before the Council, "that such was his temerity, he thought death would
have been his portion."
On that night, too,
more of the scattered remnants of the mob were traced to their lurking-places,
and taken; and in the hospitals, and deep among the ruins they had made, and in
the ditches, and fields, many unshrouded wretches lay dead: envied by those who
had been active in the disturbances, and who pillowed their doomed heads in the
temporary jails.
And in the Tower, in a
dreary room whose thick stone walls shut out the hum of life, and made a
stillness which the records left by former prisoners with those silent
witnesses seemed to deepen and intensify; remorseful for every act that had
been done by every man among the cruel crowd; feeling for the time their guilt
his own, and their lives put in peril by himself; and finding, amidst such
reflections, little comfort in fanaticism, or in his fancied call; sat the
unhappy author of all--Lord George Gordon.
He had been made
prisoner that evening. "If you are sure it’s me you want," he said to
the officers, who waited outside with the warrant for his arrest on a charge of
High Treason, "I am ready to accompany you--" which he did without
resistance. He was conducted first before the Privy Council, and afterwards to
the Horse Guards, and then was taken by way of Westminster Bridge, and back
over London Bridge (for the purpose of avoiding the main streets), to the
Tower, under the strongest guard ever known to enter its gates with a single
prisoner.
Of all his forty
thousand men, not one remained to bear him company. Friends, dependents,
followers,--none were there. His fawning secretary had played the traitor; and
he whose weakness had been goaded and urged on by so many for their own
purposes, was desolate and alone.
MR. DENNIS, having been
made prisoner late in the evening, was removed to a neighbouring round-house
for that night, and carried before a justice for examination on the next day,
Saturday. The charges against him being numerous and weighty, and it being in
particular proved, by the testimony of Gabriel Varden, that he had shown a
special desire to take his life, he was committed for trial. Moreover he was
honoured with the distinction of being considered a chief among the insurgents,
and received from the magistrate’s lips the complimentary assurance that he was
in a position of imminent danger, and would do well to prepare himself for the
worst.
To say that Mr. Dennis’s
modesty was not somewhat startled by these honours, or that he was altogether
prepared for so flattering a reception, would be to claim for him a greater
amount of stoical philosophy than even he possessed. Indeed this gentleman’s
stoicism was of that not uncommon kind, which enables a man to bear with
exemplary fortitude the afflictions of his friends, but renders him, by way of
counterpoise, rather selfish and sensitive in respect of any that happen to
befall himself. It is therefore no disparagement to the great officer in
question to state, without disguise or concealment, that he was at first very much
alarmed, and that he betrayed divers emotions of fear, until his reasoning
powers came to his relief, and set before him a more hopeful prospect.
In proportion as Mr.
Dennis exercised these intellectual qualities with which he was gifted, in
reviewing his best chances of coming off handsomely and with small personal
inconvenience, his spirits rose, and his confidence increased. When he
remembered the great estimation in which his office was held, and the constant
demand for his services; when he bethought himself, how the Statute Book
regarded him as a kind of Universal Medicine applicable to men, women, and
children, of every age and variety of criminal constitution; and how high he
stood, in his official capacity, in the favour of the Crown, and both Houses of
Parliament, the Mint, the Bank of England, and the Judges of the land; when he
recollected that whatever Ministry was in or out, he remained their peculiar
pet and panacea, and that for his sake England stood single and conspicuous
among the civilised nations of the earth: when he called these things to mind
and dwelt upon them, he felt certain that the national gratitude must relieve
him from the consequences of his late proceedings, and would certainly restore
him to his old place in the happy social system.
With these crumbs, or
as one may say, with these whole loaves of comfort to regale upon, Mr. Dennis
took his place among the escort that awaited him, and repaired to jail with a
manly indifference. Arriving at Newgate, where some of the ruined cells had
been hastily fitted up for the safe keeping of rioters, he was warmly received
by the turnkeys, as an unusual and interesting case, which agreeably relieved
their monotonous duties. In this spirit, he was fettered with great care, and
conveyed into the interior of the prison.
"Brother,"
cried the hangman, as, following an officer, he traversed under these novel
circumstances the remains of passages with which he was well acquainted,
"am I going to be along with anybody?"
"If you’d have
left more walls standing, you’d have been alone," was the reply. "As
it is, we’re cramped for room, and you’ll have company."
"Well,"
returned Dennis, "I don’t object to company, brother. I rather like
company. I was formed for society, I was."
"That’s rather a
pity, ain’t it?" said the man.
"No,"
answered Dennis, "I’m not aware that it is. Why should it be a pity,
brother?"
"Oh! I don’t
know," said the man carelessly. "I thought that was what you meant.
Being formed for society, and being cut off in your flower, you know--"
"I say,"
interposed the other quickly, "what are you talking of? Don’t. Who’s
a-going to be cut off in their flowers?"
"Oh, nobody
particular. I thought you was, perhaps," said the man.
Mr. Dennis wiped his
face, which had suddenly grown very hot, and remarking in a tremulous voice to
his conductor that he had always been fond of his joke, followed him in silence
until he stopped at a door.
"This is my
quarters, is it?" he asked facetiously.
"This is the shop,
sir," replied his friend.
He was walking in, but
not with the best possible grace, when he suddenly stopped, and started back.
"Halloa!"
said the officer. "You’re nervous."
"Nervous!"
whispered Dennis in great alarm. "Well I may be. Shut the door."
"I will, when you’re
in," returned the man.
"But I can’t go in
there," whispered Dennis. "I can’t be shut up with that man. Do you
want me to be throttled, brother?"
The officer seemed to
entertain no particular desire on the subject one way or other, but briefly
remarking that he had his orders, and intended to obey them, pushed him in,
turned the key, and retired.
Dennis stood trembling
with his back against the door, and involuntarily raising his arm to defend
himself, stared at a man, the only other tenant of the cell, who lay, stretched
at his fall length, upon a stone bench, and who paused in his deep breathing as
if he were about to wake. But he rolled over on one side, let his arm fall
negligently down, drew a long sigh, and murmuring indistinctly, fell fast
asleep again.
Relieved in some degree
by this, the hangman took his eyes for an instant from the slumbering figure,
and glanced round the cell in search of some ’vantage-ground or weapon of
defence. There was nothing moveable within it, but a clumsy table which could
not be displaced without noise, and a heavy chair. Stealing on tiptoe towards
this latter piece of furniture, he retired with it into the remotest corner,
and intrenching himself behind it, watched the enemy with the utmost vigilance
and caution.
The sleeping man was
Hugh; and perhaps it was not unnatural for Dennis to feel in a state of very
uncomfortable suspense, and to wish with his whole soul that he might never
wake again. Tired of standing, he crouched down in his corner after some time,
and rested on the cold pavement; but although Hugh’s breathing still proclaimed
that he was sleeping soundly, he could not trust him out of his sight for an
instant. He was so afraid of him, and of some sudden onslaught, that he was not
content to see his closed eyes through the chair-back, but every now and then,
rose stealthily to his feet, and peered at him with outstretched neck, to
assure himself that he really was still asleep, and was not about to spring
upon him when he was off his guard.
He slept so long and so
soundly, that Mr. Dennis began to think he might sleep on until the turnkey
visited them. He was congratulating himself upon these promising appearances,
and blessing his stars with much fervour, when one or two unpleasant symptoms
manifested themselves: such as another motion of the arm, another sigh, a
restless tossing of the head. Then, just as it seemed that he was about to fall
heavily to the ground from his narrow bed, Hugh’s eyes opened.
It happened that his
face was turned directly towards his unexpected visitor. He looked lazily at
him for some half-dozen seconds without any aspect of surprise or recognition;
then suddenly jumped up, and with a great oath pronounced his name.
"Keep off,
brother, keep off!" cried Dennis, dodging behind the chair. "Don’t do
me a mischief. I’m a prisoner like you. I haven’t the free use of my limbs. I’m
quite an old man. Don’t hurt me!"
He whined out the last
three words in such piteous accents, that Hugh, who had dragged away the chair,
and aimed a blow at him with it, checked himself, and bade him get up.
"I’ll get up
certainly, brother," cried Dennis, anxious to propitiate him by any means
in his power. "I’ll comply with any request of yours, I’m sure. There--I’m
up now. What can I do for you? Only say the word, and I’ll do it."
"What can you do
for me!" cried Hugh, clutching him by the collar with both hands, and
shaking him as though he were bent on stopping his breath by that means.
"What have you done for me?"
"The best. The
best that could be done," returned the hangman.
Hugh made him no
answer, but shaking him in his strong grip until his teeth chattered in his
head, cast him down upon the floor, and flung himself on the bench again.
"If it wasn’t for
the comfort it is to me, to see you here," he muttered, "I’d have
crushed your head against it; I would."
It was some time before
Dennis had breath enough to speak, but as soon as he could resume his
propitiatory strain, he did so.
"I did the best
that could be done, brother," he whined; "I did indeed. I was forced
with two bayonets and I don’t know how many bullets on each side of me, to
point you out. If you hadn’t been taken, you’d have been shot; and what a sight
that would have been-- a fine young man like you!"
"Will it be a
better sight now?" asked Hugh, raising his head, with such a fierce
expression, that the other durst not answer him just then.
"A deal
better," said Dennis meekly, after a pause. "First, there’s all the
chances of the law, and they’re five hundred strong. We may get off scot-free.
Unlikelier things than that have come to pass. Even if we shouldn’t, and the
chances fail, we can but be worked off once: and when it’s well done, it’s so
neat, so skilful, so captiwating, if that don’t seem too strong a word, that
you’d hardly believe it could be brought to sich perfection. Kill one’s
fellow-creeturs off, with muskets!--Pah!" and his nature so revolted at
the bare idea, that he spat upon the dungeon pavement.
His warming on this
topic, which to one unacquainted with his pursuits and tastes appeared like
courage; together with his artful suppression of his own secret hopes, and
mention of himself as being in the same condition with Hugh; did more to soothe
that ruffian than the most elaborate arguments could have done, or the most
abject submission. He rested his arms upon his knees, and stooping forward,
looked from beneath his shaggy hair at Dennis, with something of a smile upon
his face.
"The fact is,
brother," said the hangman, in a tone of greater confidence, "that
you got into bad company. The man that was with you was looked after more than
you, and it was him I wanted. As to me, what have I got by it? Here we are, in
one and the same plight."
"Lookee,
rascal," said Hugh, contracting his brows, "I’m not altogether such a
shallow blade but I know you expected to get something by it, or you wouldn’t
have done it. But it’s done, and you’re here, and it will soon be all over with
you and me; and I’d as soon die as live, or live as die. Why should I trouble
myself to have revenge on you? To eat, and drink, and go to sleep, as long as I
stay here, is all I care for. If there was but a little more sun to bask in,
than can find its way into this cursed place, I’d lie in it all day, and not
trouble myself to sit or stand up once. That’s all the care I have for myself.
Why should I care for you?"
Finishing this speech
with a growl like the yawn of a wild beast, he stretched himself upon the bench
again, and closed his eyes once more.
After looking at him in
silence for some moments, Dennis, who was greatly relieved to find him in this
mood, drew the chair towards his rough couch and sat down near him--taking the
precaution, however, to keep out of the range of his brawny arm.
"Well said,
brother; nothing could be better said," he ventured to observe. "We’ll
eat and drink of the best, and sleep our best, and make the best of it every
way. Anything can be got for money. Let’s spend it merrily."
"Ay," said
Hugh, coiling himself into a new position.--"Where is it?"
"Why, they took
mine from me at the lodge," said Mr. Dennis; "but mine’s a peculiar
case."
"Is it? They took
mine too."
"Why then, I tell
you what, brother," Dennis began. "You must look up your
friends--"
"My friends!"
cried Hugh, starting up and resting on his hands. "Where are my
friends?"
"Your relations
then," said Dennis.
"Ha ha ha!"
laughed Hugh, waving one arm above his head. "He talks of friends to
me--talks of relations to a man whose mother died the death in store for her
son, and left him, a hungry brat, without a face he knew in all the world! He
talks of this to me!"
"Brother,"
cried the hangman, whose features underwent a sudden change, "you don’t
mean to say--"
"I mean to
say," Hugh interposed, "that they hung her up at Tyburn. What was
good enough for her, is good enough for me. Let them do the like by me as soon
as they please--the sooner the better. Say no more to me. I’m going to
sleep."
"But I want to
speak to you; I want to hear more about that," said Dennis, changing
colour.
"If you’re a wise
man," growled Hugh, raising his head to look at him with a frown,
"you’ll hold your tongue. I tell you I’m going to sleep."
Dennis venturing to say
something more in spite of this caution, the desperate fellow struck at him
with all his force, and missing him, lay down again with many muttered oaths
and imprecations, and turned his face towards the wall. After two or three
ineffectual twitches at his dress, which he was hardy enough to venture upon,
notwithstanding his dangerous humour, Mr. Dennis, who burnt, for reasons of his
own, to pursue the conversation, had no alternative but to sit as patiently as
he could, waiting his further pleasure.
A MONTH has
elapsed,--and we stand in the bedchamber of Sir John Chester. Through the
half-opened window, the Temple Garden looks green and pleasant; the placid
river, gay with boat and barge, and dimpled with the plash of many an oar,
sparkles in the distance; the sky is blue and clear; and the summer air steals
gently in, filling the room with perfume. The very town, the smoky town, is
radiant. High roofs and steeple-tops, wont to look black and sullen, smile a
cheerful grey; every old gilded vane, and ball, and cross, glitters anew in the
bright morning sun; and, high among them all, St Paul’s towers up, showing its
lofty crest in burnished gold.
Sir John was
breakfasting in bed. His chocolate and toast stood upon a little table at his
elbow; books and newspapers lay ready to his hand, upon the coverlet; and, sometimes
pausing to glance with an air of tranquil satisfaction round the well-ordered
room, and sometimes to gaze indolently at the summer sky, he ate, and drank,
and read the news luxuriously.
The cheerful influence
of the morning seemed to have some effect, even upon his equable temper. His
manner was unusually gay; his smile more placid and agreeable than usual; his
voice more clear and pleasant. He laid down the newspaper he had been reading;
leaned back upon his pillow with the air of one who resigned himself to a train
of charming recollections; and after a pause, soliloquised as follows:
"And my friend the
centaur, goes the way of his mamma! I am not surprised. And his mysterious
friend Mr. Dennis, likewise! I am not surprised. And my old postman, the
exceedingly free-and-easy young madman of Chigwell! I am quite rejoiced. It’s
the very best thing that could possibly happen to him."
After delivering
himself of these remarks, he fell again into his smiling train of reflection;
from which he roused himself at length to finish his chocolate, which was
getting cold, and ring the bell for more.
The new supply
arriving, he took the cup from his servant’s hand; and saying, with a charming
affability, "I am obliged to you, Peak," dismissed him.
"It is a remarkable
circumstance," he mused, dallying lazily with the teaspoon, "that my
friend the madman should have been within an ace of escaping, on his trial; and
it was a good stroke of chance (or, as the world would say, a providential
occurrence) that the brother of my Lord Mayor should have been in court, with
other country justices, into whose very dense heads curiosity had penetrated.
For though the brother of my Lord Mayor was decidedly wrong; and established
his near relationship to that amusing person beyond all doubt, in stating that
my friend was sane, and had, to his knowledge, wandered about the country with
a vagabond parent, avowing revolutionary and rebellious sentiments; I am not
the less obliged to him for volunteering that evidence. These insane creatures
make such very odd and embarrassing remarks, that they really ought to be
hanged for the comfort of society."
The country justice had
indeed turned the wavering scale against poor Barnaby, and solved the doubt
that trembled in his favour. Grip little thought how much he had to answer for.
"They will be a
singular party," said Sir John, leaning his head upon his hand, and
sipping his chocolate; "a very curious party. The hangman himself; the
centaur; and the madman. The centaur would make a very handsome preparation in
Surgeons’ Hall, and would benefit science extremely. I hope they have taken
care to bespeak him.--Peak, I am not at home, of course, to anybody but the
hairdresser."
This reminder to his
servant was called forth by a knock at the door, which the man hastened to
open. After a prolonged murmur of question and answer, he returned; and as he
cautiously closed the room-door behind him, a man was heard to cough in the
passage.
"Now, it is of no
use, Peak," said Sir John, raising his hand in deprecation of his
delivering any message; "I am not at home. I cannot possibly hear you. I
told you I was not at home, and my word is sacred. Will you never do as you are
desired?"
Having nothing to
oppose to this reproof, the man was about to withdraw, when the visitor who had
given occasion to it, probably rendered impatient by delay, knocked with his
knuckles at the chamber-door, and called out that he had urgent business with
Sir John Chester, which admitted of no delay.
"Let him in,"
said Sir John. "My good fellow," he added, when the door was opened,
"how come you to intrude yourself in this extraordinary manner upon the
privacy of a gentleman? How can you be so wholly destitute of self-respect as
to be guilty of such remarkable ill-breeding?"
"My business, Sir
John, is not of a common kind, I do assure you," returned the person he
addressed. "If I have taken any uncommon course to get admission to you, I
hope I shall be pardoned on that account."
"Well! we shall
see; we shall see," returned Sir John, whose face cleared up when he saw
who it was, and whose prepossessing smile was now restored. "I am sure we
have met before," he added in his winning tone, "but really I forget
your name?"
"My name is
Gabriel Varden, sir."
"Varden, of
course, Varden," returned Sir John, tapping his forehead. "Dear me,
how very defective my memory becomes! Varden to be sure--Mr. Varden the
locksmith. You have a charming wife, Mr. Varden, and a most beautiful daughter.
They are well?"
Gabriel thanked him,
and said they were.
"I rejoice to hear
it," said Sir John. "Commend me to them when you return, and say that
I wished I were fortunate enough to convey, myself, the salute which I entrust
you to deliver. And what," he asked very sweetly, after a moment’s pause,
"can I do for you? You may command me freely."
"I thank you, Sir
John," said Gabriel, with some pride in his manner, "but I have come
to ask no favour of you, though I come on business.--Private," he added,
with a glance at the man who stood looking on, "and very pressing
business."
"I cannot say you
are the more welcome for being independent, and having nothing to ask of
me," returned Sir John, graciously, "for I should have been happy to
render you a service; still, you are welcome on any terms. Oblige me with some
more chocolate, Peak, and don’t wait."
The man retired, and
left them alone.
"Sir John,"
said Gabriel, "I am a working-man, and have been so, all my life. If I don’t
prepare you enough for what I have to tell; if I come to the point too abruptly;
and give you a shock, which a gentleman could have spared you, or at all events
lessened very much; I hope you will give me credit for meaning well. I wish to
be careful and considerate, and I trust that in a straightforward person like
me, you’ll take the will for the deed."
"Mr. Varden,"
returned the other, perfectly composed under this exordium; "I beg you’ll
take a chair. Chocolate, perhaps, you don’t relish? Well! it is an acquired
taste, no doubt."
"Sir John,"
said Gabriel, who had acknowledged with a bow the invitation to be seated, but
had not availed himself of it. "Sir John"--he dropped his voice and
drew nearer to the bed--"I am just now come from Newgate--"
"Good Gad!"
cried Sir John, hastily sitting up in bed; "from Newgate, Mr. Varden! How
could you be so very imprudent as to come from Newgate! Newgate, where there
are jail-fevers, and ragged people, and bare-footed men and women, and a thousand
horrors! Peak, bring the camphor, quick! Heaven and earth, Mr. Varden, my dear,
good soul, how could you come from Newgate?"
Gabriel returned no
answer, but looked on in silence while Peak (who had entered with the hot
chocolate) ran to a drawer, and returning with a bottle, sprinkled his master’s
dressing-gown and the bedding; and besides moistening the locksmith himself,
plentifully, described a circle round about him on the carpet. When he had done
this, he again retired; and Sir John, reclining in an easy attitude upon his
pillow, once more turned a smiling face towards his visitor.
"You will forgive
me, Mr. Varden, I am sure, for being at first a little sensitive both on your
account and my own. I confess I was startled, notwithstanding your delicate
exordium. Might I ask you to do me the favour not to approach any nearer?--You
have really come from Newgate!"
The locksmith inclined
his head.
"In-deed! And now,
Mr. Varden, all exaggeration and embellishment apart," said Sir John
Chester, confidentially, as he sipped his chocolate, "what kind of place
is Newgate?"
"A strange place,
Sir John," returned the locksmith, "of a sad and doleful kind. A
strange place, where many strange things are heard and seen; but few more
strange than that I come to tell you of. The case is urgent. I am sent
here."
"Not--no, no--not
from the jail?"
"Yes, Sir John;
from the jail."
"And my good,
credulous, open-hearted friend," said Sir John, setting down his cup, and
laughing,--"by whom?"
"By a man called
Dennis--for many years the hangman, and to-morrow morning the hanged,"
returned the locksmith.
Sir John had
expected--had been quite certain from the first --that he would say he had come
from Hugh, and was prepared to meet him on that point. But this answer
occasioned him a degree of astonishment, which, for the moment, he could not,
with all his command of feature, prevent his face from expressing. He quickly
subdued it, however, and said in the same light tone:
"And what does the
gentleman require of me? My memory may be at fault again, but I don’t recollect
that I ever had the pleasure of an introduction to him, or that I ever numbered
him among my personal friends, I do assure you, Mr. Varden."
"Sir John,"
returned the locksmith, gravely, "I will tell you, as nearly as I can, in
the words he used to me, what he desires that you should know, and what you
ought to know without a moment’s loss of time."
Sir John Chester
settled himself in a position of greater repose, and looked at his visitor with
an expression of face which seemed to say, "This is an amusing fellow! I’ll
hear him out."
"You may have seen
in the newspapers, sir," said Gabriel, pointing to the one which lay by
his side, "that I was a witness against this man upon his trial some days
since; and that it was not his fault I was alive, and able to speak to what I
knew."
"May have
seen!" cried Sir John. "My dear Mr. Varden, you are quite a public
character, and live in all men’s thoughts most deservedly. Nothing can exceed
the interest with which I read your testimony, and remembered that I had the
pleasure of a slight acquaintance with you.---I hope we shall have your
portrait published?"
"This morning,
sir," said the locksmith, taking no notice of these compliments,
"early this morning, a message was brought to me from Newgate, at this man’s
request, desiring that I would go and see him, for he had something particular
to communicate. I needn’t tell you that he is no friend of
mine, and that I had
never seen him, until the rioters beset my house."
Sir John fanned himself
gently with the newspaper, and nodded.
"I knew, however,
from the general report," resumed Gabriel, "that the order for his
execution to-morrow, went down to the prison last night; and looking upon him
as a dying man, I complied with his request."
"You are quite a
Christian, Mr. Varden," said Sir John; "and in that amiable capacity,
you increase my desire that you should take a chair."
"He said,"
continued Gabriel, looking steadily at the knight, "that he had sent to
me, because he had no friend or companion in the whole world (being the common
hangman), and because he believed, from the way in which I had given my
evidence, that I was an honest man, and would act truly by him. He said that,
being shunned by every one who knew his calling, even by people of the lowest
and most wretched grade, and finding, when he joined the rioters, that the men
he acted with had no suspicion of it (which I believe is true enough, for a
poor fool of an old ’prentice of mine was one of them), he had kept his own counsel,
up to the time of his being taken and put in jail."
"Very discreet of
Mr. Dennis," observed Sir John with a slight yawn, though still with the
utmost affability, "but--except for your admirable and lucid manner of
telling it, which is perfect--not very interesting to me."
"When,"
pursued the locksmith, quite unabashed and wholly regardless of these
interruptions, "when he was taken to the jail, he found that his
fellow-prisoner, in the same room, was a young man, Hugh by name, a leader in
the riots, who had been betrayed and given up by himself. From something which
fell from this unhappy creature in the course of the angry words they had at
meeting, he discovered that his mother had suffered the death to which they
both are now condemned.--The time is very short, Sir John."
The knight laid down
his paper fan, replaced his cup upon the table at his side, and, saving for the
smile that lurked about his mouth, looked at the locksmith with as much
steadiness as the locksmith looked at him.
"They have been in
prison now, a month. One conversation led to many more; and the hangman soon
found, from a comparison of time, and place, and dates, that he had executed
the sentence of the law upon this woman, himself. She had been tempted by
want--as so many people are--into the easy crime of passing forged notes. She
was young and handsome; and the traders who employ men, women, and children in
this traffic, looked upon her as one who was well adapted for their business,
and who would probably go on without suspicion for a long time. But they were
mistaken; for she was stopped in the commission of her very first offence, and
died for it. She was of gipsy blood, Sir John--"
It might have been the
effect of a passing cloud which obscured the sun, and cast a shadow on his
face; but the knight turned deadly pale. Still he met the locksmith’s eye, as
before.
"She was of gipsy
blood, Sir John," repeated Gabriel, "and had a high, free spirit.
This, and her good looks, and her lofty manner, interested some gentlemen who
were easily moved by dark eyes; and efforts were made to save her. They might
have been successful, if she would have given them any clue to her history. But
she never would, or did. There was reason to suspect that she would make an
attempt upon her life. A watch was set upon her night and day; and from that
time she never spoke again--"
Sir John stretched out
his hand towards his cup. The locksmith going on, arrested it half-way.
--"Until she had
but a minute to live. Then she broke silence, and said, in a low firm voice
which no one heard but this executioner, for all other living creatures had
retired and left her to her fate, ’If I had a dagger within these fingers and
he was within my reach, I would strike him dead before me, even now!’ The man
asked ’Who?’ She said, ’The father of her boy.’"
Sir John drew back his
outstretched hand, and seeing that the locksmith paused, signed to him with
easy politeness and without any new appearance of emotion, to proceed.
"It was the first
word she had ever spoken, from which it could be understood that she had any
relative on earth. ’Was the child alive?’ he asked. ’Yes.’ He asked her where
it was, its name, and whether she had any wish respecting it. She had but one,
she said. It was that the boy might live and grow, in utter ignorance of his
father, so that no arts might teach him to be gentle and forgiving. When he
became a man, she trusted to the God of their tribe to bring the father and the
son together, and revenge her through her child. He asked her other questions,
but she spoke no more. Indeed, he says, she scarcely said this much, to him,
but stood with her face turned upwards to the sky, and never looked towards him
once."
Sir John took a pinch
of snuff; glanced approvingly at an elegant little sketch, entitled
"Nature," on the wall; and raising his eyes to the locksmith’s face
again, said, with an air of courtesy and patronage, "You were observing,
Mr. Varden--"
"That she never,"
returned the locksmith, who was not to be diverted by any artifice from his
firm manner, and his steady gaze, "that she never looked towards him once,
Sir John; and so she died, and he forgot her. But, some years afterwards, a man
was sentenced to die the same death, who was a gipsy too; a sunburnt, swarthy
fellow, almost a wild man; and while he lay in prison, under sentence, he, who
had seen the hangman more than once while he was free, cut an image of him on
his stick, by way of braving death, and showing those who attended on him, how
little he cared or thought about it. He gave this stick into his hands at
Tyburn, and told him then, that the woman I have spoken of had left her own
people to join a fine gentleman, and that, being deserted by him, and cast off
by her old friends, she had sworn within her own proud breast, that whatever
her misery might be, she would ask no help of any human being. He told him that
she had kept her word to the last; and that, meeting even him in the
streets--he had been fond of her once, it seems--she had slipped from him by a
trick, and he never saw her again, until, being in one of the frequent crowds
at Tyburn, with some of his rough companions, he had been driven almost mad by
seeing, in the criminal under another name, whose death he had come to witness,
herself. Standing in the same place in which she had stood, he told the hangman
this, and told him, too, her real name, which only her own people and the
gentleman for whose sake she had left them, knew.--That name he will tell
again, Sir John, to none but you."
"To none but
me!" exclaimed the knight, pausing in the act of raising his cup to his
lips with a perfectly steady hand, and curling up his little finger for the
better display of a brilliant ring with which it was ornamented: "but
me!--My dear Mr. Varden, how very preposterous, to select me for his
confidence! With you at his elbow, too, who are so perfectly trustworthy!"
"Sir John, Sir
John," returned the locksmith, "at twelve tomorrow, these men die.
Hear the few words I have to add, and do not hope to deceive me; for though I
am a plain man of humble station, and you are a gentleman of rank and learning,
the truth raises me to your level, and I KNOW that you anticipate the
disclosure with which I am about to end, and that you believe this doomed man,
Hugh, to be your son."
"Nay," said
Sir John, bantering him with a gay air; "the wild gentleman, who died so
suddenly, scarcely went as far as that, I think?"
"He did not,"
returned the locksmith, "for she had bound him by some pledge, known only
to these people, and which the worst among them respect, not to tell your name:
but, in a fantastic pattern on the stick, he had carved some letters, and when
the hangman asked it, he bade him, especially if he should ever meet with her
son in after life, remember that place well."
"What place?"
"Chester."
The knight finished his
cup of chocolate with an appearance of infinite relish, and carefully wiped his
lips upon his handkerchief.
"Sir John,"
said the locksmith, "this is all that has been told to me; but since these
two men have been left for death, they have conferred together closely. See
them, and hear what they can add. See this Dennis, and learn from him what he
has not trusted to me. If you, who hold the clue to all, want corroboration
(which you do not), the means are easy."
"And to
what," said Sir John Chester, rising on his elbow, after smoothing the
pillow for its reception; "my dear, good-natured, estimable Mr.
Varden--with whom I cannot be angry if I would--to what does all this
tend?"
"I take you for a
man, Sir John, and I suppose it tends to some pleading of natural affection in
your breast," returned the locksmith. "I suppose to the straining of
every nerve, and the exertion of all the influence you have, or can make, in
behalf of your miserable son, and the man who has disclosed his existence to
you. At the worst, I suppose to your seeing your son, and awakening him to a
sense of his crime and danger. He has no such sense now. Think what his life must
have been, when he said in my hearing, that if I moved you to anything, it
would be to hastening his death, and ensuring his silence, if you had it in
your power!"
"And have you, my
good Mr. Varden," said Sir John in a tone of mild reproof, "have you
really lived to your present age, and remained so very simple and credulous, as
to approach a gentleman of established character with such credentials as
these, from desperate men in their last extremity, catching at any straw? Oh
dear! Oh fie, fie!"
The locksmith was going
to interpose, but he stopped him:
"On any other
subject, Mr. Varden, I shall be delighted--I shall be charmed--to converse with
you, but I owe it to my own character not to pursue this topic for another
moment."
"Think better of
it, sir, when I am gone," returned the locksmith; "think better of
it, sir. Although you have, thrice within as many weeks, turned your lawful
son, Mr. Edward, from your door, you may have time, you may have years to make
your peace with him, Sir John: but that twelve o’clock will soon be here, and
soon be past for ever."
"I thank you very
much," returned the knight, kissing his delicate hand to the locksmith,
"for your guileless advice; and I only wish, my good soul, although your
simplicity is quite captivating, that you had a little more worldly wisdom. I
never so much regretted the arrival of my hairdresser as I do at this moment.
God bless you! Good morning! You’ll not forget my message to the ladies, Mr.
Varden? Peak, show Mr. Varden to the door."
Gabriel said no more,
but gave the knight a parting look, and left him. As he quitted the room, Sir
John’s face changed; and the smile gave place to a haggard and anxious
expression, like that of a weary actor jaded by the performance of a difficult
part. He rose from his bed with a heavy sigh, and wrapped himself in his
morning-gown.
"So she kept her
word," he said, "and was constant to her threat! I would I had never
seen that dark face of hers,--I might have read these consequences in it, from
the first. This affair would make a noise abroad, if it rested on better
evidence; but, as it is, and by not joining the scattered links of the chain, I
can afford to slight it.--Extremely distressing to be the parent of such an
uncouth creature! Still, I gave him very good advice. I told him he would
certainly be hanged. I could have done no more if I had known of our
relationship; and there are a great many fathers who have never done as much
for their natural children.--The hairdresser may come in, Peak!"
The hairdresser came
in; and saw in Sir John Chester (whose accommodating conscience was soon
quieted by the numerous precedents that occurred to him in support of his last
observation), the same imperturbable, fascinating, elegant gentleman he had
seen yesterday, and many yesterdays before.
AS the locksmith walked
slowly away from Sir John Chester’s chambers, he lingered under the trees which
shaded the path, almost hoping that he might be summoned to return. He had
turned back thrice, and still loitered at the corner, when the clock struck
twelve.
It was a solemn sound,
and not merely for its reference to to- morrow; for he knew that in that chime
the murderer’s knell was rung. He had seen him pass along the crowded street,
amidst the execration of the throng; and marked his quivering lip, and
trembling limbs; the ashy hue upon his face, his clammy brow, the wild
distraction of his eye--the fear of death that swallowed up all other thoughts,
and gnawed without cessation at his heart and brain. He had marked the
wandering look, seeking for hope, and finding, turn where it would, despair. He
had seen the remorseful, pitiful, desolate creature, riding, with his coffin by
his side, to the gibbet. He knew that, to the last, he had been an unyielding,
obdurate man; that in the savage terror of his condition he had hardened,
rather than relented, to his wife and child; and that the last words which had
passed his white lips were curses on them as his enemies.
Mr. Haredale had
determined to be there, and see it done. Nothing but the evidence of his own
senses could satisfy that gloomy thirst for retribution which had been
gathering upon him for so many years. The locksmith knew this, and when the
chimes had ceased to vibrate, hurried away to meet him.
"For these two
men," he said, as he went, "I can do no more. Heaven have mercy on
them!--Alas! I say I can do no more for them, but whom can I help? Mary Rudge
will have a home, and a firm friend when she most wants one; but Barnaby--poor
Barnaby--willing Barnaby--what aid can I render him? There are many, many men
of sense, God forgive me," cried the honest locksmith, stopping in a
narrow count to pass his hand across his eyes, "I could better afford to
lose than Barnaby. We have always been good friends, but I never knew, till
now, how much I loved the lad."
There were not many in
the great city who thought of Barnaby that day, otherwise than as an actor in a
show which was to take place to-morrow. But if the whole population had had him
in their minds, and had wished his life to be spared, not one among them could
have done so with a purer zeal or greater singleness of heart than the good
locksmith.
Barnaby was to die.
There was no hope. It is not the least evil attendant upon the frequent
exhibition of this last dread punishment, of Death, that it hardens the minds
of those who deal it out, and makes them, though they be amiable men in other
respects, indifferent to, or unconscious of, their great responsibility. The
word had gone forth that Barnaby was to die. It went forth, every month, for
lighter crimes. It was a thing so common, that very few were startled by the
awful sentence, or cared to question its propriety. Just then, too, when the
law had been so flagrantly outraged, its dignity must be asserted. The symbol
of its dignity,--stamped upon every page of the criminal statute-book,--was the
gallows; and Barnaby was to die.
They had tried to save
him. The locksmith had carried petitions and memorials to the fountain-head,
with his own hands. But the well was not one of mercy, and Barnaby was to die.
From the first his
mother had never left him, save at night; and with her beside him, he was as
usual contented. On this last day, he was more elated and more proud than he
had been yet; and when she dropped the book she had been reading to him aloud,
and fell upon his neck, he stopped in his busy task of
folding a piece of
crape about his hat, and wondered at her anguish. Grip uttered a feeble croak,
half in encouragement, it seemed, and half in remonstrance, but he wanted heart
to sustain it, and lapsed abruptly into silence.
With them who stood
upon the brink of the great gulf which none can see beyond, Time, so soon to
lose itself in vast Eternity, rolled on like a mighty river, swollen and rapid
as it nears the sea. It was morning but now; they had sat and talked together
in a dream; and here was evening. The dreadful hour of separation, which even
yesterday had seemed so distant, was at hand.
They walked out into
the courtyard, clinging to each other, but not speaking. Barnaby knew that the
jail was a dull, sad, miserable place, and looked forward to to-morrow, as to a
passage from it to something bright and beautiful. He had a vague impression
too, that he was expected to be brave--that he was a man of great consequence,
and that the prison people would be glad to make him weep. He trod the ground
more firmly as he thought of this, and bade her take heart and cry no more, and
feel how steady his hand was. "They call me silly, mother. They shall see
to-morrow!"
Dennis and Hugh were in
the courtyard. Hugh came forth from his cell as they did, stretching himself as
though he had been sleeping. Dennis sat upon a bench in a corner, with his
knees and chin huddled together, and rocked himself to and fro like a person in
severe pain.
The mother and son
remained on one side of the court, and these two men upon the other. Hugh
strode up and down, glancing fiercely every now and then at the bright summer
sky, and looking round, when he had done so, at the walls.
"No reprieve, no
reprieve! Nobody comes near us. There’s only the night left now!" moaned
Dennis faintly, as he wrung his hands. "Do you think they’ll reprieve me
in the night, brother? I’ve known reprieves come in the night, afore now. I’ve
known ’em come as late as five, six, and seven o’clock in the morning. Don’t
you think there’s a good chance yet,--don’t you? Say you do. Say you do, young
man," whined the miserable creature, with an imploring gesture towards
Barnaby, "or I shall go mad!"
"Better be mad
than sane, here," said Hugh. "Go mad."
"But tell me what
you think. Somebody tell me what he thinks!" cried the wretched
object,--so mean, and wretched, and despicable, that even Pity’s self might
have turned away, at sight of such a being in the likeness of a man--"isn’t
there a chance for me,-- isn’t there a good chance for me? Isn’t it likely they
may be doing this to frighten me? Don’t you think it is? Oh!" he almost
shrieked, as he wrung his hands, "won’t anybody give me comfort!"
"You ought to be
the best, instead of the worst," said Hugh, stopping before him. "Ha,
ha, ha! See the hangman, when it comes home to him!"
"You don’t know
what it is," cried Dennis, actually writhing as he spoke: "I do. That
I should come to be worked off! I! I! That I should come!"
"And why
not?" said Hugh, as he thrust back his matted hair to get a better view of
his late associate. "How often, before I knew your trade, did I hear you
talking of this as if it was a treat?"
"I an’t
unconsistent," screamed the miserable creature; "I’d talk so again,
if I was hangman. Some other man has got my old opinions at this minute. That
makes it worse. Somebody’s longing to work me off. I know by myself that
somebody must be!"
"He’ll soon have
his longing," said Hugh, resuming his walk. "Think of that, and be
quiet."
Although one of these
men displayed, in his speech and bearing, the most reckless hardihood; and the
other, in his every word and action, testified such an extreme of abject
cowardice that it was humiliating to see him; it would be difficult to say
which of them would most have repelled and shocked an observer. Hugh’s was the
dogged desperation of a savage at the stake; the hangman was reduced to a
condition little better, if any, than that of a hound with the halter round his
neck. Yet, as Mr. Dennis knew and could have told them, these were the two
commonest states of mind in persons brought to their pass. Such was the
wholesome growth of the seed sown by the law, that this kind of harvest was
usually looked for, as a matter of course.
In one respect they all
agreed. The wandering and uncontrollable train of thought, suggesting sudden
recollections of things distant and long forgotten and remote from each
other--the vague restless craving for something undefined, which nothing could
satisfy--the swift flight of the minutes, fusing themselves into hours, as if
by enchantment--the rapid coming of the solemn night--the shadow of death
always upon them, and yet so dim and faint, that objects the meanest and most
trivial started from the gloom beyond, and forced themselves upon the view--the
impossibility of holding the mind, even if they had been so disposed, to
penitence and preparation, or of keeping it to any point while one hideous
fascination tempted it away--these things were common to them all, and varied
only in their outward tokens.
"Fetch me the book
I left within--upon your bed," she said to Barnaby, as the clock struck.
"Kiss me first."
He looked in her face, and
saw there, that the time was come. After a long embrace, he tore himself away,
and ran to bring it to her; bidding her not stir till he came back. He soon
returned, for a shriek recalled him,--but she was gone.
He ran to the
yard-gate, and looked through. They were carrying her away. She had said her
heart would break. It was better so.
"Don’t you
think," whimpered Dennis, creeping up to him, as he stood with his feet
rooted to the ground, gazing at the blank walls--"don’t you think there’s
still a chance? It’s a dreadful end; it’s a terrible end for a man like me. Don’t
you think there’s a chance? I don’t mean for you, I mean for me. Don’t let him
hear us" (meaning Hugh); "he’s so desperate."
"Now then,"
said the officer, who had been lounging in and out with his hands in his
pockets, and yawning as if he were in the last extremity for some subject of
interest: "it’s time to turn in, boys."
"Not yet,"
cried Dennis, "not yet. Not for an hour yet."
"I say,--your
watch goes different from what it used to," returned the man. "Once
upon a time it was always too fast. It’s got the other fault now."
"My friend,"
cried the wretched creature, falling on his knees, "my dear friend--you
always were my dear friend--there’s some mistake. Some letter has been mislaid,
or some messenger has been stopped upon the way. He may have fallen dead. I saw
a man once, fall down dead in the street, myself, and he had papers in his
pocket. Send to inquire. Let somebody go to inquire. They never will hang me.
They never can.--Yes, they will," he cried, starting to his feet with a
terrible scream. "They’ll hang me by a trick, and keep the pardon back. It’s
a plot against me. I shall lose my life!" And uttering another yell, he
fell in a fit upon the ground.
"See the hangman
when it comes home to him!" cried Hugh again, as they bore him
away--"Ha ha ha! Courage, bold Barnaby, what care we? Your hand! They do
well to put us out of the world, for if we got loose a second time, we wouldn’t
let them off so easy, eh? Another shake! A man can die but once. If you wake in
the night, sing that out lustily, and fall asleep again. Ha ha ha!"
Barnaby glanced once
more through the grate into the empty yard; and then watched Hugh as he strode
to the steps leading to his sleeping-cell. He heard him shout, and burst into a
roar of laughter, and saw him flourish his hat. Then he turned away himself,
like one who walked in his sleep; and, without any sense of fear or sorrow, lay
down on his pallet, listening for the clock to strike again.
THE time wore on. The
noises in the streets became less frequent by degrees, until silence was
scarcely broken save by the bells in church towers, marking the
progress--softer and more stealthy while the city slumbered--of that Great
Watcher with the hoary head, who never sleeps or rests. In the brief interval
of darkness and repose which feverish towns enjoy, all busy sounds were hushed;
and those who awoke from dreams lay listening in their beds, and longed for
dawn, and wished the dead of the night were past.
Into the street outside
the jail’s main wall, workmen came straggling at this solemn hour, in groups of
two or three, and meeting in the centre, cast their tools upon the ground and
spoke in whispers. Others soon issued from the jail itself, bearing on their
shoulders planks and beams: these materials being all brought forth, the rest
bestirred themselves, and the dull sound of hammers began to echo through the
stillness.
Here and there among
this knot of labourers, one, with a lantern or a smoky link, stood by to light
his fellows at their work; and by its doubtful aid, some might be dimly seen
taking up the pavement of the road, while others held great upright posts, or
fixed them in the holes thus made for their reception. Some dragged slowly on,
towards the rest, an empty cart, which they brought rumbling from the
prison-yard; while others erected strong barriers across the street. All were
busily engaged. Their dusky figures moving to and fro, at that unusual hour, so
active and so silent, might have been taken for those of shadowy creatures
toiling at midnight on some ghostly unsubstantial work, which, like themselves,
would vanish with the first gleam of day, and leave but morning mist and
vapour.
While it was yet dark,
a few lookers-on collected, who had plainly come there for the purpose and
intended to remain: even those who had to pass the spot on their way to some
other place, lingered, and lingered yet, as though the attraction of that were irresistible.
Meanwhile the noise of saw and mallet went on briskly, mingled with the
clattering of boards on the stone pavement of the road, and sometimes with the
workmen’s voices as they called to one another. Whenever the chimes of the
neighbouring church were heard--and that was every quarter of an hour--a
strange sensation, instantaneous and indescribable, but perfectly obvious,
seemed to pervade them all.
Gradually, a faint
brightness appeared in the east, and the air, which had been very warm all through
the night, felt cool and chilly. Though there was no daylight yet, the darkness
was diminished, and the stars looked pale. The prison, which had been a mere
black mass with little shape or form, put on its usual aspect; and ever and
anon a solitary watchman could be seen upon its roof, stopping to look down
upon the preparations in the street. This man, from forming, as it were, a part
of the jail, and knowing or being supposed to know all that was passing within,
became an object of as much interest, and was as eagerly looked for, and as
awfully pointed out, as if he had been a spirit.
By and by, the feeble
light grew stronger, and the houses with their signboards and inscriptions,
stood plainly out, in the dull grey morning. Heavy stage waggons crawled from
the inn-yard opposite; and travellers peeped out; and as they rolled sluggishly
away, cast many a backward look towards the jail. And now, the sun’s first
beams came glancing into the street; and the night’s work, which, in its
various stages and in the varied fancies of the lookers-on had taken a hundred
shapes, wore its own proper form--a scaffold, and a gibbet.
As the warmth of the
cheerful day began to shed itself upon the scanty crowd, the murmur of tongues
was heard, shutters were thrown open, and blinds drawn up, and those who had
slept in rooms over against the prison, where places to see the execution were
let at high prices, rose hastily from their beds. In some of the houses, people
were busy taking out the window-sashes for the better accommodation of
spectators; in others, the spectators were already seated, and beguiling the
time with cards, or drink, or jokes among themselves. Some had purchased seats
upon the house-tops, and were already crawling to their stations from parapet
and garret- window. Some were yet bargaining for good places, and stood in them
in a state of indecision: gazing at the slowly-swelling crowd, and at the
workmen as they rested listlessly against the scaffold-- affecting to listen
with indifference to the proprietor’s eulogy of the commanding view his house
afforded, and the surpassing cheapness of his terms.
A fairer morning never
shone. From the roofs and upper stories of these buildings, the spires of city
churches and the great cathedral dome were visible, rising up beyond the
prison, into the blue sky, and clad in the colour of light summer clouds, and
showing in the clear atmosphere their every scrap of tracery and fretwork, and
every niche and loophole. All was brightness and promise, excepting in the street
below, into which (for it yet lay in shadow) the eye looked down as into a dark
trench, where, in the midst of so much life, and hope, and renewal of
existence, stood the terrible instrument of death. It seemed as if the very sun
forbore to look upon it.
But it was better, grim
and sombre in the shade, than when, the day being more advanced, it stood
confessed in the full glare and glory of the sun, with its black paint
blistering, and its nooses dangling in the light like loathsome garlands. It
was better in the solitude and gloom of midnight with a few forms clustering
about it, than in the freshness and the stir of morning: the centre of an eager
crowd. It was better haunting the street like a spectre, when men were in their
beds, and influencing perchance the city’s dreams, than braving the broad day,
and thrusting its obscene presence upon their waking senses.
Five o’clock had
struck--six--seven--and eight. Along the two main streets at either end of the
cross-way, a living stream had now set in, rolling towards the marts of gain
and business. Carts, coaches, waggons, trucks, and barrows, forced a passage
through the outskirts of the throng, and clattered onward in the same
direction. Some of these which were public conveyances and had come from a short
distance in the country, stopped; and the driver pointed to the gibbet with his
whip, though he might have spared himself the pains, for the heads of all the
passengers were turned that way without his help, and the coach-windows were
stuck full of staring eyes. In some of the carts and waggons, women might be
seen, glancing fearfully at the same unsightly thing; and even little children
were held up above the people’s heads to see what kind of a toy a gallows was,
and learn how men were hanged.
Two rioters were to die
before the prison, who had been concerned in the attack upon it; and one
directly afterwards in Bloomsbury Square. At nine o’clock, a strong body of
military marched into the street, and formed and lined a narrow passage into
Holborn, which had been indifferently kept all night by constables. Through
this, another cart was brought (the one already mentioned had been employed in
the construction of the scaffold), and wheeled up to the prison-gate. These
preparations made, the soldiers stood at ease; the officers lounged to and fro,
in the alley they had made, or talked together at the scaffold’s foot; and the
concourse, which had been rapidly augmenting for some hours, and still received
additions every minute, waited with an impatience which increased with every
chime of St Sepulchre’s clock, for twelve at noon.
Up to this time they
had been very quiet, comparatively silent, save when the arrival of some new
party at a window, hitherto unoccupied, gave them something new to look at or
to talk of. But, as the hour approached, a buzz and hum arose, which, deepening
every moment, soon swelled into a roar, and seemed to fill the air. No words or
even voices could be distinguished in this clamour, nor did they speak much to
each other; though such as were better informed upon the topic than the rest,
would tell their neighbours, perhaps, that they might know the hangman when he
came out, by his being the shorter one: and that the man who was to suffer with
him was named Hugh: and that it was Barnaby Rudge who would be hanged in
Bloomsbury Square.
The hum grew, as the
time drew near, so loud, that those who were at the windows could not hear the
church-clock strike, though it was close at hand. Nor had they any need to hear
it, either, for they could see it in the people’s faces. So surely as another
quarter chimed, there was a movement in the crowd--as if something had passed
over it--as if the light upon them had been changed--in which the fact was
readable as on a brazen dial, figured by a giant’s hand.
Three quarters past
eleven! The murmur now was deafening, yet every man seemed mute. Look where you
would among the crowd, you saw strained eyes and lips compressed; it would have
been difficult for the most vigilant observer to point this way or that, and
say that yonder man had cried out. It were as easy to detect the motion of lips
in a sea-shell.
Three quarters past
eleven! Many spectators who had retired from the windows, came back refreshed,
as though their watch had just begun. Those who had fallen asleep, roused
themselves; and every person in the crowd made one last effort to better his
position-- which caused a press against the sturdy barriers that made them bend
and yield like twigs. The officers, who until now had kept together, fell into
their several positions, and gave the words of command. Swords were drawn,
muskets shouldered, and the bright steel winding its way among the crowd,
gleamed and glittered in the sun like a river. Along this shining path, two men
came hurrying on, leading a horse, which was speedily harnessed to the cart at
the prison door. Then, a profound silence replaced the tumult that had so long
been gathering, and a breathless pause ensued. Every window was now choked up
with heads; the house-tops teemed with people--clinging to chimneys, peering
over gable-ends, and holding on where the sudden loosening of any brick or
stone would dash them down into the street. The church tower, the church roof,
the church yard, the prison leads, the very water-spouts and lampposts--every
inch of room--swarmed with human life.
At the first stroke of
twelve the prison-bell began to toll. Then the roar--mingled now with cries of
"Hats off!" and "Poor fellows!" and, from some specks in
the great concourse, with a shriek or groan--burst forth again. It was terrible
to see--if any one in that distraction of excitement could have seen--the world
of eager eyes, all strained upon the scaffold and the beam.
The hollow murmuring
was heard within the jail as plainly as without. The three were brought forth
into the yard, together, as it resounded through the air. They knew its import
well.
"D’ye hear?"
cried Hugh, undaunted by the sound. "They expect us! I heard them
gathering when I woke in the night, and turned over on t’other side and fell
asleep again. We shall see how they welcome the hangman, now that it comes home
to him. Ha, ha, ha!"
The Ordinary coming up
at this moment, reproved him for his indecent mirth, and advised him to alter
his demeanour.
"And why,
master?" said Hugh. "Can I do better than bear it easily? You bear it
easily enough. Oh! never tell me," he cried, as the other would have
spoken, "for all your sad look and your solemn air, you think little
enough of it! They say you’re the best maker of lobster salads in London. Ha,
ha! I’ve heard that, you see, before now. Is it a good one, this morning--is
your hand in? How does the breakfast look? I hope there’s enough, and to spare,
for all this hungry company that’ll sit down to it, when the sight’s
over."
"I fear,"
observed the clergyman, shaking his head, "that you are
incorrigible."
"You’re right. I
am," rejoined Hugh sternly. "Be no hypocrite, master! You make a
merry-making of this, every month; let me be merry, too. If you want a
frightened fellow there’s one that’ll suit you. Try your hand upon him."
He pointed, as he
spoke, to Dennis, who, with his legs trailing on the ground, was held between
two men; and who trembled so, that all his joints and limbs seemed racked by
spasms. Turning from this wretched spectacle, he called to Barnaby, who stood
apart.
"What cheer,
Barnaby? Don’t be downcast, lad. Leave that to him."
"Bless you,"
cried Barnaby, stepping lightly towards him, "I’m not frightened, Hugh. I’m
quite happy. I wouldn’t desire to live now, if they’d let me. Look at me! Am I
afraid to die? Will they see me tremble?"
Hugh gazed for a moment
at his face, on which there was a strange, unearthly smile; and at his eye,
which sparkled brightly; and interposing between him and the Ordinary, gruffly
whispered to the latter:
"I wouldn’t say
much to him, master, if I was you. He may spoil your appetite for breakfast,
though you are used to it."
He was the only one of
the three who had washed or trimmed himself that morning. Neither of the others
had done so, since their doom was pronounced. He still wore the broken peacock’s
feathers in his hat; and all his usual scraps of finery were carefully disposed
about his person. His kindling eye, his firm step, his proud and resolute
bearing, might have graced some lofty act of heroism; some voluntary sacrifice,
born of a noble cause and pure enthusiasm; rather than that felon’s death.
But all these things
increased his guilt. They were mere assumptions. The law had declared it so,
and so it must be. The good minister had been greatly shocked, not a quarter of
an hour before, at his parting with Grip. For one in his condition, to fondle a
bird!--The yard was filled with people; bluff civic functionaries, officers of
justice, soldiers, the curious in such matters, and guests who had been bidden
as to a wedding. Hugh looked about him, nodded gloomily to some person in
authority, who indicated with his hand in what direction he was to proceed; and
clapping Barnaby on the shoulder, passed out with the gait of a lion.
They entered a large
room, so near to the scaffold that the voices of those who stood about it,
could be plainly heard: some beseeching the javelin-men to take them out of the
crowd: others crying to those behind, to stand back, for they were pressed to
death, and suffocating for want of air.
In the middle of this
chamber, two smiths, with hammers, stood beside an anvil. Hugh walked straight
up to them, and set his foot upon it with a sound as though it had been struck
by a heavy weapon. Then, with folded arms, he stood to have his irons knocked
off: scowling haughtily round, as those who were present eyed him narrowly and
whispered to each other.
It took so much time to
drag Dennis in, that this ceremony was over with Hugh, and nearly over with
Barnaby, before he appeared. He no sooner came into the place he knew so well,
however, and among faces with which he was so familiar, than he recovered
strength and sense enough to clasp his hands and make a last appeal.
"Gentlemen, good
gentlemen," cried the abject creature, grovelling down upon his knees, and
actually prostrating himself upon the stone floor: "Governor, dear
governor--honourable sheriffs--worthy gentlemen--have mercy upon a wretched man
that has served His Majesty, and the Law, and Parliament, for so many years,
and don’t-- don’t let me die--because of a mistake."
"Dennis,"
said the governor of the jail, "you know what the course is, and that the
order came with the rest. You know that we could do nothing, even if we
would."
"All I ask,
sir,--all I want and beg, is time, to make it sure," cried the trembling
wretch, looking wildly round for sympathy. "The King and Government can’t
know it’s me; I’m sure they can’t know it’s me; or they never would bring me to
this dreadful slaughterhouse. They know my name, but they don’t know it’s the
same man. Stop my execution--for charity’s sake stop my execution,
gentlemen--till they can be told that I’ve been hangman here, nigh thirty year.
Will no one go and tell them?" he implored, clenching his hands and glaring
round, and round, and round again--"will no charitable person go and tell
them!"
"Mr.
Akerman," said a gentleman who stood by, after a moment’s pause,
"since it may possibly produce in this unhappy man a better frame of mind,
even at this last minute, let me assure him that he was well known to have been
the hangman, when his sentence was considered."
"--But perhaps
they think on that account that the punishment’s not so great," cried the
criminal, shuffling towards this speaker on his knees, and holding up his
folded hands; "whereas it’s worse, it’s worse a hundred times, to me than
any man. Let them know that, sir. Let them know that. They’ve made it worse to
me by giving me so much to do. Stop my execution till they know that!"
The governor beckoned
with his hand, and the two men, who had supported him before, approached. He
uttered a piercing cry:
"Wait! Wait. Only
a moment--only one moment more! Give me a last chance of reprieve. One of us
three is to go to Bloomsbury Square. Let me be the one. It may come in that
time; it’s sure to come. In the Lord’s name let me be sent to Bloomsbury
Square. Don’t hang me here. It’s murder."
They took him to the
anvil: but even then he could be heard above the clinking of the smiths’
hammers, and the hoarse raging of the crowd, crying that he knew of Hugh’s
birth--that his father was living, and was a gentleman of influence and
rank--that he had family secrets in his possession--that he could tell nothing
unless they gave him time, but must die with them on his mind; and he continued
to rave in this sort until his voice failed him, and he sank down a mere heap
of clothes between the two attendants.
It was at this moment
that the clock struck the first stroke of twelve, and the bell began to toll.
The various officers, with the two sheriffs at their head, moved towards the
door. All was ready when the last chime came upon the ear.
They told Hugh this,
and asked if he had anything to say.
"To say!" he
cried. "Not I. I’m ready.--Yes," he added, as his eye fell upon
Barnaby, "I have a word to say, too. Come hither, lad."
There was, for the
moment, something kind, and even tender, struggling in his fierce aspect, as he
wrung his poor companion by the hand.
"I’ll say
this," he cried, looking firmly round, "that if I had ten lives to
lose, and the loss of each would give me ten times the agony of the hardest
death, I’d lay them all down--ay, I would, though you gentlemen may not believe
it--to save this one. This one," he added, wringing his hand again,
"that will be lost through me."
"Not through
you," said the idiot, mildly. "Don’t say that. You were not to blame.
You have always been very good to me.--Hugh, we shall know what makes the stars
shine, now!"
"I took him from
her in a reckless mood, and didn’t think what harm would come of it," said
Hugh, laying his hand upon his head, and speaking in a lower voice. "I ask
her pardon; and his.--Look here," he added roughly, in his former tone.
"You see this lad?"
They murmured
"Yes," and seemed to wonder why he asked.
"That gentleman
yonder--" pointing to the clergyman--"has often in the last few days
spoken to me of faith, and strong belief. You see what I am--more brute than
man, as I have been often told--but I had faith enough to believe, and did believe
as strongly as any of you gentlemen can believe anything, that this one life
would be spared. See what he is!--Look at him!"
Barnaby had moved
towards the door, and stood beckoning him to follow.
"If this was not
faith, and strong belief!" cried Hugh, raising his right arm aloft, and
looking upward like a savage prophet whom the near approach of Death had filled
with inspiration, "where are they! What else should teach me--me, born as
I was born, and reared as I have been reared--to hope for any mercy in this hardened,
cruel, unrelenting place! Upon these human shambles, I, who never raised this
hand in prayer till now, call down the wrath of God! On that black tree, of
which I am the ripened fruit, I do invoke the curse of all its victims, past,
and present, and to come. On the head of that man, who, in his conscience, owns
me for his son, I leave the wish that he may never sicken on his bed of down,
but die a violent death as I do now, and have the night-wind for his only
mourner. To this I say, Amen, amen!"
His arm fell downward
by his side; he turned; and moved towards them with a steady step, the man he
had been before.
"There is nothing
more?" said the governor.
Hugh motioned Barnaby
not to come near him (though without looking in the direction where he stood)
and answered, "There is nothing more."
"Move
forward!"
"--Unless,"
said Hugh, glancing hurriedly back,--"unless any person here has a fancy
for a dog; and not then, unless he means to use him well. There’s one, belongs
to me, at the house I came from, and it wouldn’t be easy to find a better. He’ll
whine at first, but he’ll soon get over that.--You wonder that I think about a
dog just now," he added, with a kind of laugh. "If any man deserved
it of me half as well, I’d think of him."
He spoke no more, but
moved onward in his place, with a careless air, though listening at the same
time to the Service for the Dead, with something between sullen attention, and
quickened curiosity. As soon as he had passed the door, his miserable associate
was carried out; and the crowd beheld the rest.
Barnaby would have
mounted the steps at the same time--indeed he would have gone before them, but
in both attempts he was restrained, as he was to undergo the sentence
elsewhere. In a few minutes the sheriffs reappeared, the same procession was
again formed, and they passed through various rooms and passages to another
door--that at which the cart was waiting. He held down his head to avoid seeing
what he knew his eyes must otherwise encounter, and took his seat sorrowfully,--and
yet with something of a childish pride and pleasure,--in the vehicle. The
officers fell into their places at the sides, in front and in the rear; the
sheriffs’ carriages rolled on; a guard of soldiers surrounded the whole; and
they moved slowly forward through the throng and pressure toward Lord Mansfield’s
ruined house.
It was a sad sight--all
the show, and strength, and glitter, assembled round one helpless creature--and
sadder yet to note, as he rode along, how his wandering thoughts found strange
encouragement in the crowded windows and the concourse in the streets; and how,
even then, he felt the influence of the bright sky, and looked up, smiling,
into its deep unfathomable blue. But there had been many such sights since the
riots were over--some so moving in their nature, and so repulsive too, that
they were far more calculated to awaken pity for the sufferers, than respect
for that law whose strong arm seemed in more than one case to be as wantonly
stretched forth now that all was safe, as it had been basely paralysed in time
of danger.
Two cripples--both mere
boys--one with a leg of wood, one who dragged his twisted limbs along by the
help of a crutch, were hanged in this same Bloomsbury Square. As the cart was
about to glide from under them, it was observed that they stood with their
faces from, not to, the house they had assisted to despoil; and their misery
was protracted that this omission might be remedied. Another boy was hanged in
Bow Street; other young lads in various quarters of the town. Four wretched
women, too, were put to death. In a word, those who suffered as rioters were,
for the most part, the weakest, meanest, and most miserable among them. It was
a most exquisite satire upon the false religious cry which had led to so much
misery, that some of these people owned themselves to be Catholics, and begged
to be attended by their own priests.
One young man was
hanged in Bishopsgate Street, whose aged grey- headed father waited for him at
the gallows, kissed him at its foot when he arrived, and sat there, on the
ground, till they took him down. They would have given him the body of his
child; but he had no hearse, no coffin, nothing to remove it in, being too
poor--and walked meekly away beside the cart that took it back to prison,
trying, as he went, to touch its lifeless hand.
But the crowd had
forgotten these matters, or cared little about them if they lived in their
memory: and while one great multitude fought and hustled to get near the gibbet
before Newgate, for a parting look, another followed in the train of poor lost
Barnaby, to swell the throng that waited for him on the spot.
ON this same day, and
about this very hour, Mr. Willet the elder sat smoking his pipe in a chamber at
the Black Lion. Although it was hot summer weather, Mr. Willet sat close to the
fire. He was in a state of profound cogitation, with his own thoughts, and it
was his custom at such times to stew himself slowly, under the impression that
that process of cookery was favourable to the melting out of his ideas, which,
when he began to simmer, sometimes oozed forth so copiously as to astonish even
himself.
Mr. Willet had been
several thousand times comforted by his friends and acquaintance, with the
assurance that for the loss he had sustained in the damage done to the Maypole,
he could "come upon the county." But as this phrase happened to bear
an unfortunate resemblance to the popular expression of "coming on the
parish," it suggested to Mr. Willet’s mind no more consolatory visions
than pauperism on an extensive scale, and ruin in a capacious aspect.
Consequently, he had never failed to receive the intelligence with a rueful
shake of the head, or a dreary stare, and had been always observed to appear
much more melancholy after a visit of condolence than at any other time in the
whole four-and-twenty hours.
It chanced, however,
that sitting over the fire on this particular occasion--perhaps because he was,
as it were, done to a turn; perhaps because he was in an unusually bright state
of mind; perhaps because he had considered the subject so long; perhaps because
of all these favouring circumstances taken together--it chanced that, sitting
over the fire on this particular occasion, Mr. Willet did, afar off and in the
remotest depths of his intellect, perceive a kind of lurking hint or faint
suggestion, that out of the public purse there might issue funds for the
restoration of the Maypole to its former high place among the taverns of the
earth. And this dim ray of light did so diffuse itself within him, and did so
kindle up and shine, that at last he had it as plainly and visibly before him
as the blaze by which he sat; and, fully persuaded that he was the first to
make the discovery, and that he had started, hunted down, fallen upon, and knocked
on the head, a perfectly original idea which had never presented itself to any
other man, alive or dead, he laid down his pipe, rubbed his hands, and chuckled
audibly.
"Why,
father!" cried Joe, entering at the moment, "you’re in spirits
to-day!"
"It’s nothing
partickler," said Mr. Willet, chuckling again. "It’s nothing at all
partickler, Joseph. Tell me something about the Salwanners." Having
preferred this request, Mr. Willet chuckled a third time, and after these
unusual demonstrations of levity, he put his pipe in his mouth again.
"What shall I tell
you, father?" asked Joe, laying his hand upon his sire’s shoulder, and
looking down into his face. "That I have come back, poorer than a church
mouse? You know that. That I have come back, maimed and crippled? You know
that."
"It was took
off," muttered Mr. Willet,with his eyes upon the fire, "at the
defence of the Salwanners, in America, where the war is."
"Quite
right," returned Joe, smiling, and leaning with his remaining elbow on the
back of his father’s chair; "the very subject I came to speak to you
about. A man with one arm, father, is not of much use in the busy world."
This was one of those
vast propositions which Mr. Willet had never considered for an instant, and
required time to "tackle." Wherefore he made no answer.
"At all
events," said Joe, "he can’t pick and choose his means of earning a
livelihood, as another man may. He can’t say ’I will turn my hand to this,’ or ’I
won’t turn my hand to that,’ but must take what he can do, and be thankful it’s
no worse.--What did you say?"
Mr. Willet had been
softly repeating to himself, in a musing tone, the words "defence of the
Salwanners:" but he seemed embarrassed at having been overheard, and
answered "Nothing."
"Now look here,
father.--Mr. Edward has come to England from the West Indies. When he was lost
sight of (I ran away on the same day, father), he made a voyage to one of the
islands, where a school-friend of his had settled; and, finding him, wasn’t too
proud to be employed on his estate, and--and in short, got on well, and is
prospering, and has come over here on business of his own, and is going back
again speedily. Our returning nearly at the same time, and meeting in the
course of the late troubles, has been a good thing every way; for it has not
only enabled us to do old friends some service, but has opened a path in life
for me which I may tread without being a burden upon you. To be plain, father,
he can employ me; I have satisfied myself that I can be of real use to him; and
I am going to carry my one arm away with him, and to make the most of it."
In the mind’s eye of
Mr. Willet, the West Indies, and indeed all foreign countries, were inhabited
by savage nations, who were perpetually burying pipes of peace, flourishing
tomahawks, and puncturing strange patterns in their bodies. He no sooner heard
this announcement, therefore, than he leaned back in his chair, took his pipe
from his lips, and stared at his son with as much dismay as if he already
beheld him tied to a stake, and tortured for the entertainment of a lively
population. In what form of expression his feelings would have found a vent, it
is impossible to say. Nor is it necessary: for, before a syllable occurred to
him, Dolly Varden came running into the room in
tears, threw herself on
Joe’s breast without a word of explanation, and clasped her white arms round
his neck.
"Dolly!"
cried Joe. "Dolly!"
"Ay, call me that;
call me that always," exclaimed the locksmith’s little daughter;
"never speak coldly to me, never be distant, never again reprove me for
the follies I have long repented, or I shall die, Joe."
"I reprove
you!" said Joe.
"Yes--for every
kind and honest word you uttered, went to my heart. For you, who have borne so
much from me--for you, who owe your sufferings and pain to my caprice--for you
to be so kind--so noble to me, Joe--"
He could say nothing to
her. Not a syllable. There was an odd sort of eloquence in his one arm, which
had crept round her waist: but his lips were mute.
"If you had
reminded me by a word--only by one short word," sobbed Dolly, clinging yet
closer to him, "how little I deserved that you should treat me with so
much forbearance; if you had exulted only for one moment in your triumph, I
could have borne it better."
"Triumph!"
repeated Joe, with a smile which seemed to say, "I am a pretty figure for
that."
"Yes,
triumph," she cried, with her whole heart and soul in her earnest voice,
and gushing tears; "for it is one. I am glad to think and know it is. I
wouldn’t be less humbled, dear--I wouldn’t be without the recollection of that
last time we spoke together in this place--no, not if I could recall the past,
and make our parting, yesterday."
Did ever lover look as
Joe looked now!
"Dear Joe,"
said Dolly, "I always loved you--in my own heart I always did, although I
was so vain and giddy. I hoped you would come back that night. I made quite
sure you would. I prayed for it on my knees. Through all these long, long years,
I have never once forgotten you, or left off hoping that this happy time might
come."
The eloquence of Joe’s
arm surpassed the most impassioned language; and so did that of his lips--yet
he said nothing, either.
"And now, at
last," cried Dolly, trembling with the fervour of her speech, "if you
were sick, and shattered in your every limb; if you were ailing, weak, and
sorrowful; if, instead of being what you are, you were in everybody’s eyes but
mine the wreck and ruin of a man; I would be your wife, dear love, with greater
pride and joy, than if you were the stateliest lord in England!"
"What have I
done," cried Joe, "what have I done to meet with this reward?"
"You have taught
me," said Dolly, raising her pretty face to his, "to know myself, and
your worth; to be something better than I was; to be more deserving of your
true and manly nature. In years to come, dear Joe, you shall find that you have
done so; for I will be, not only now, when we are young and full of hope, but
when we have grown old and weary, your patient, gentle, never-tiring wife. I
will never know a wish or care beyond our home and you, and I will always study
how to please you with my best affection and my most devoted love. I will:
indeed I will!"
Joe could only repeat
his former eloquence--but it was very much to the purpose.
"They know of
this, at home," said Dolly. "For your sake, I would leave even them;
but they know it, and are glad of it, and are as proud of you as I am, and as
full of gratitude.--You’ll not come and see me as a poor friend who knew me
when I was a girl, will you, dear Joe?"
Well, well! It don’t
matter what Joe said in answer, but he said a great deal; and Dolly said a
great deal too: and he folded Dolly in his one arm pretty tight, considering
that it was but one; and Dolly made no resistance: and if ever two people were
happy in this world--which is not an utterly miserable one, with all its
faults-- we may, with some appearance of certainty, conclude that they were.
To say that during
these proceedings Mr. Willet the elder underwent the greatest emotions of
astonishment of which our common nature is susceptible--to say that he was in a
perfect paralysis of surprise, and that he wandered into the most stupendous
and theretofore unattainable heights of complicated amazement--would be to
shadow forth his state of mind in the feeblest and lamest terms. If a roc, an
eagle, a griffin, a flying elephant, a winged sea-horse, had suddenly appeared,
and, taking him on its back, carried him bodily into the heart of the "Salwanners,"
it would have been to him as an everyday occurrence, in comparison with what he
now beheld. To be sitting quietly by, seeing and hearing these things; to be
completely overlooked, unnoticed, and disregarded, while his son and a young
lady were talking to each other in the most impassioned manner, kissing each
other, and making themselves in all respects perfectly at home; was a position
so tremendous, so inexplicable, so utterly beyond the widest range of his
capacity of comprehension, that he fell into a lethargy of wonder, and could no
more rouse himself than an enchanted sleeper in the first year of his fairy
lease, a century long.
"Father,"
said Joe, presenting Dolly. "You know who this is?"
Mr. Willet looked first
at her, then at his son, then back again at Dolly, and then made an ineffectual
effort to extract a whiff from his pipe, which had gone out long ago.
"Say a word,
father, if it’s only ’how d’ye do,’" urged Joe.
"Certainly,
Joseph," answered Mr. Willet. "Oh yes! Why not?"
"To be sure,"
said Joe. "Why not?"
"Ah!" replied
his father. "Why not?" and with this remark, which he uttered in a
low voice as though he were discussing some grave question with himself, he
used the little finger--if any of his fingers can be said to have come under
that denomination--of his right hand as a tobacco-stopper, and was silent
again.
And so he sat for half
an hour at least, although Dolly, in the most endearing of manners, hoped, a
dozen times, that he was not angry with her. So he sat for half an hour, quite
motionless, and looking all the while like nothing so much as a great Dutch Pin
or Skittle. At the expiration of that period, he suddenly, and without the
least notice, burst (to the great consternation of the young people) into a
very loud and very short laugh; and repeating, "Certainly, Joseph. Oh yes!
Why not?" went out for a walk.
OLD John did not walk
near the Golden Key, for between the Golden Key and the Black Lion there lay a
wilderness of streets--as everybody knows who is acquainted with the relative
bearings of Clerkenwell and Whitechapel--and he was by no means famous for
pedestrian exercises. But the Golden Key lies in our way, though it was out of
his; so to the Golden Key this chapter goes.
The Golden Key itself,
fair emblem of the locksmith’s trade, had been pulled down by the rioters, and
roughly trampled under foot. But, now, it was hoisted up again in all the glory
of a new coat of paint, and shewed more bravely even than in days of yore.
Indeed the whole house-front was spruce and trim, and so freshened up
throughout, that if there yet remained at large any of the rioters who had been
concerned in the attack upon it, the sight of the old, goodly, prosperous
dwelling, so revived, must have been to them as gall and wormwood.
The shutters of the
shop were closed, however, and the window- blinds above were all pulled down,
and in place of its usual cheerful appearance, the house had a look of sadness
and an air of mourning; which the neighbours, who in old days had often seen
poor Barnaby go in and out, were at no loss to understand. The door stood
partly open; but the locksmith’s hammer was unheard; the cat sat moping on the
ashy forge; all was deserted, dark, and silent.
On the threshold of
this door, Mr. Haredale and Edward Chester met. The younger man gave place; and
both passing in with a familiar air, which seemed to denote that they were
tarrying there, or were well-accustomed to go to and fro unquestioned, shut it
behind them.
Entering the old
back-parlour, and ascending the flight of stairs, abrupt and steep, and
quaintly fashioned as of old, they turned into the best room; the pride of Mrs.
Varden’s heart, and erst the scene of Miggs’s household labours.
"Varden brought
the mother here last evening, he told me?" said Mr. Haredale.
"She is
above-stairs now--in the room over here," Edward rejoined. "Her
grief, they say, is past all telling. I needn’t add--for that you know
beforehand, sir--that the care, humanity, and sympathy of these good people
have no bounds."
"I am sure of
that. Heaven repay them for it, and for much more! Varden is out?"
"He returned with
your messenger, who arrived almost at the moment of his coming home himself. He
was out the whole night--but that of course you know. He was with you the
greater part of it?"
"He was. Without
him, I should have lacked my right hand. He is an older man than I; but nothing
can conquer him."
"The cheeriest,
stoutest-hearted fellow in the world."
"He has a right to
be. He has a right to he. A better creature never lived. He reaps what he has
sown--no more."
"It is not all
men," said Edward, after a moment’s hesitation, "who have the
happiness to do that."
"More than you
imagine," returned Mr. Haredale. "We note the harvest more than the
seed-time. You do so in me."
In truth his pale and
haggard face, and gloomy bearing, had so far influenced the remark, that Edward
was, for the moment, at a loss to answer him.
"Tut, tut,"
said Mr. Haredale, "’twas not very difficult to read a thought so natural.
But you are mistaken nevertheless. I have had my share of sorrows--more than
the common lot, perhaps, but I have borne them ill. I have broken where I
should have bent; and have mused and brooded, when my spirit should have mixed
with all God’s great creation. The men who learn endurance, are they who call
the whole world, brother. I have turned from the world, and I pay the
penalty."
Edward would have
interposed, but he went on without giving him time.
"It is too late to
evade it now. I sometimes think, that if I had to live my life once more, I
might amend this fault--not so much, I discover when I search my mind, for the
love of what is right, as for my own sake. But even when I make these better
resolutions, I instinctively recoil from the idea of suffering again what I
have undergone; and in this circumstance I find the unwelcome assurance that I
should still be the same man, though I could cancel the past, and begin anew,
with its experience to guide me."
"Nay, you make too
sure of that," said Edward.
"You think
so," Mr. Haredale answered, "and I am glad you do. I know myself
better, and therefore distrust myself more. Let us leave this subject for
another--not so far removed from it as it might, at first sight, seem to be.
Sir, you still love my niece, and she is still attached to you."
"I have that
assurance from her own lips," said Edward, "and you know--I am sure
you know--that I would not exchange it for any blessing life could yield
me."
"You are frank,
honourable, and disinterested," said Mr. Haredale; "you have forced
the conviction that you are so, even on my once- jaundiced mind, and I believe
you. Wait here till I come back."
He left the room as he
spoke; but soon returned with his niece. "On that first and only
time," he said, looking from the one to the other, "when we three
stood together under her father’s roof, I told you to quit it, and charged you
never to return."
"It is the only
circumstance arising out of our love," observed Edward, "that I have
forgotten."
"You own a
name," said Mr. Haredale, "I had deep reason to remember. I was moved
and goaded by recollections of personal wrong and injury, I know, but, even now
I cannot charge myself with having, then, or ever, lost sight of a heartfelt desire
for her true happiness; or with having acted--however much I was mistaken--with
any other impulse than the one pure, single, earnest wish to be to her, as far
as in my inferior nature lay, the father she had lost."
"Dear uncle,"
cried Emma, "I have known no parent but you. I have loved the memory of
others, but I have loved you all my life. Never was father kinder to his child
than you have been to me, without the interval of one harsh hour, since I can
first remember."
"You speak too
fondly," he answered, "and yet I cannot wish you were less partial;
for I have a pleasure in hearing those words, and shall have in calling them to
mind when we are far asunder, which nothing else could give me. Bear with me
for a moment longer, Edward, for she and I have been together many years; and
although I believe that in resigning her to you I put the seal upon her future
happiness, I find it needs an effort."
He pressed her tenderly
to his bosom, and after a minute’s pause, resumed:
"I have done you
wrong, sir, and I ask your forgiveness--in no common phrase, or show of sorrow;
but with earnestness and sincerity. In the same spirit, I acknowledge to you
both that the time has been when I connived at treachery and falsehood--which
if I did not perpetrate myself, I still permitted--to rend you two
asunder."
"You judge
yourself too harshly," said Edward. "Let these things rest."
"They rise in
judgment against me when I look back, and not now for the first time," he
answered. "I cannot part from you without your full forgiveness; for busy
life and I have little left in common now, and I have regrets enough to carry
into solitude, without addition to the stock."
"You bear a
blessing from us both," said Emma. "Never mingle thoughts of me--of
me who owe you so much love and duty--with anything but undying affection and
gratitude for the past, and bright hopes for the future."
"The future,"
returned her uncle, with a melancholy smile, "is a bright word for you,
and its image should be wreathed with cheerful hopes. Mine is of another kind,
but it will be one of peace, and free, I trust, from care or passion. When you
quit England I shall leave it too. There are cloisters abroad; and now that the
two great objects of my life are set at rest, I know no better home. You droop
at that, forgetting that I am growing old, and that my course is nearly run.
Well, we will speak of it again-- not once or twice, but many times; and you
shall give me cheerful counsel, Emma."
"And you will take
it?" asked his niece.
"I’ll listen to
it," he answered, with a kiss, "and it will have its weight, be
certain. What have I left to say? You have, of late, been much together. It is
better and more fitting that the circumstances attendant on the past, which
wrought your separation, and sowed between you suspicion and distrust, should
not be entered on by me."
"Much, much
better," whispered Emma.
"I avow my share
in them," said Mr. Haredale, "though I held it, at the time, in
detestation. Let no man turn aside, ever so slightly, from the broad path of
honour, on the plausible pretence that he is justified by the goodness of his
end. All good ends can he worked out by good means. Those that cannot, are bad;
and may be counted so at once, and left alone."
He looked from her to
Edward, and said in a gentler tone:
"In goods and
fortune you are now nearly equal. I have been her faithful steward, and to that
remnant of a richer property which my brother left her, I desire to add, in
token of my love, a poor pittance, scarcely worth the mention, for which I have
no longer any need. I am glad you go abroad. Let our ill-fated house remain the
ruin it is. When you return, after a few
thriving years, you
will command a better, and a more fortunate one. We are friends?"
Edward took his
extended hand, and grasped it heartily.
"You are neither
slow nor cold in your response," said Mr. Haredale, doing the like by him,
"and when I look upon you now, and know you, I feel that I would choose
you for her husband. Her father had a generous nature, and you would have
pleased him well. I give her to you in his name, and with his blessing. If the
world and I part in this act, we part on happier terms than we have lived for
many a day."
He placed her in his
arms, and would have left the room, but that he was stopped in his passage to
the door by a great noise at a distance, which made them start and pause.
It was a loud shouting,
mingled with boisterous acclamations, that rent the very air. It drew nearer
and nearer every moment, and approached so rapidly, that, even while they
listened, it burst into a deafening confusion of sounds at the street corner.
"This must be
stopped--quieted," said Mr. Haredale, hastily. "We should have
foreseen this, and provided against it. I will go out to them at once."
But, before he could
reach the door, and before Edward could catch up his hat and follow him, they
were again arrested by a loud shriek from above-stairs: and the locksmith’s
wife, bursting in, and fairly running into Mr. Haredale’s arms, cried out:
"She knows it all,
dear sir!--she knows it all! We broke it out to her by degrees, and she is
quite prepared." Having made this communication, and furthermore thanked
Heaven with great fervour and heartiness, the good lady, according to the
custom of matrons, on all occasions of excitement, fainted away directly.
They ran to the window,
drew up the sash, and looked into the crowded street. Among a dense mob of
persons, of whom not one was for an instant still, the locksmith’s ruddy face
and burly form could be descried, beating about as though he was struggling
with a rough sea. Now, he was carried back a score of yards, now onward nearly
to the door, now back again, now forced against the opposite houses, now
against those adjoining his own: now carried up a flight of steps, and greeted
by the outstretched hands of half a hundred men, while the whole tumultuous
concourse stretched their throats, and cheered with all their might. Though he
was really in a fair way to be torn to pieces in the general enthusiasm, the
locksmith, nothing discomposed, echoed their shouts till he was as hoarse as
they, and in a glow of joy and right good-humour, waved his hat until the
daylight shone between its brim and crown.
But in all the
bandyings from hand to hand, and strivings to and fro, and sweepings here and
there, which--saving that he looked more jolly and more radiant after every
struggle-- troubled his peace of mind no more than if he had been a straw upon
the water’s surface, he never once released his firm grasp of an arm, drawn
tight through his. He sometimes turned to clap this friend upon the back, or
whisper in his ear a word of staunch encouragement, or cheer him with a smile;
but his great care was to shield him from the pressure, and force a passage for
him to the Golden Key. Passive and timid, scared, pale, and wondering, and
gazing at the throng as if he were newly risen from the dead, and felt himself
a ghost among the living, Barnaby--not Barnaby in the spirit, but in flesh and
blood, with pulses, sinews, nerves, and beating heart, and strong
affections--clung to his stout old friend, and followed where he led.
And thus, in course of
time, they reached the door, held ready for their entrance by no unwilling
hands. Then slipping in, and shutting out the crowd by main force, Gabriel
stood between Mr. Haredale and Edward Chester, and Barnaby, rushing up the
stairs, fell upon his knees beside his mother’s bed.
"Such is the
blessed end, sir," cried the panting locksmith, to Mr. Haredale, "of
the best day’s work we ever did. The rogues! it’s been hard fighting to get
away from ’em. I almost thought, once or twice, they’d have been too much for
us with their kindness!"
They had striven, all
the previous day, to rescue Barnaby from his impending fate. Failing in their
attempts, in the first quarter to which they addressed themselves, they renewed
them in another. Failing there, likewise, they began afresh at midnight; and
made their way, not only to the judge and jury who had tried him, but to men of
influence at court, to the young Prince of Wales, and even to the ante-chamber
of the King himself. Successful, at last, in awakening an interest in his
favour, and an inclination to inquire more dispassionately into his case, they
had had an interview with the minister, in his bed, so late as eight o’clock
that morning. The result of a searching inquiry (in which they, who had known
the poor fellow from his childhood, did other good service, besides bringing it
about) was, that between eleven and twelve o’clock, a free pardon to Barnaby
Rudge was made out and signed, and entrusted to a horse-soldier for instant
conveyance to the place of execution. This courier reached the spot just as the
cart appeared in sight; and Barnaby being carried back to jail, Mr. Haredale,
assured that all was safe, had gone straight from Bloomsbury Square to the
Golden Key, leaving to Gabriel the grateful task of bringing him home in
triumph.
"I needn’t
say," observed the locksmith, when he had shaken hands with all the males
in the house, and hugged all the females, five- and-forty times, at least,
"that, except among ourselves, I didn’t want to make a triumph of it. But,
directly we got into the street we were known, and this hubbub began. Of the
two," he added, as he wiped his crimson face, "and after experience
of both, I think I’d rather be taken out of my house by a crowd of enemies,
than escorted home by a mob of friends!"
It was plain enough,
however, that this was mere talk on Gabriel’s part, and that the whole
proceeding afforded him the keenest delight; for the people continuing to make
a great noise without, and to cheer as if their voices were in the freshest
order, and good for a fortnight, he sent upstairs for Grip (who had come home
at his master’s back, and had acknowledged the favours of the multitude by
drawing blood from every finger that came within his reach), and with the bird
upon his arm presented himself at the first-floor window, and waved his hat
again until it dangled by a shred, between his finger and thumb. This
demonstration having been received with appropriate shouts, and silence being
in some degree restored, he thanked them for their sympathy; and taking the
liberty to inform them that there was a sick person in the house, proposed that
they should give three cheers for King George, three more for Old England, and
three more for nothing particular, as a closing ceremony. The crowd assenting,
substituted Gabriel Varden for the nothing particular; and giving him one over,
for good measure, dispersed in high good-humour.
What congratulations
were exchanged among the inmates at the Golden Key, when they were left alone;
what an overflowing of joy and happiness there was among them; how incapable it
was of expression in Barnaby’s own person; and how he went wildly from one to
another, until he became so far tranquillised, as to stretch himself on the
ground beside his mother’s couch and fall into a deep sleep; are matters that
need not be told. And it is well they happened to be of this class, for they
would be very hard to tell, were their narration ever so indispensable.
Before leaving this
bright picture, it may be well to glance at a dark and very different one which
was presented to only a few eyes, that same night.
The scene was a
churchyard; the time, midnight; the persons, Edward Chester, a clergyman, a
grave-digger, and the four bearers of a homely coffin. They stood about a grave
which had been newly dug, and one of the bearers held up a dim lantern,--the
only light there--which shed its feeble ray upon the book of prayer. He placed
it for a moment on the coffin, when he and his companions were about to lower
it down. There was no inscription on the lid.
The mould fell solemnly
upon the last house of this nameless man; and the rattling dust left a dismal
echo even in the accustomed ears of those who had borne it to its
resting-place. The grave was filled in to the top, and trodden down. They all
left the spot together.
"You never saw
him, living?" asked the clergyman, of Edward.
"Often, years ago;
not knowing him for my brother."
"Never
since?"
"Never. Yesterday,
he steadily refused to see me. It was urged upon him, many times, at my
desire."
"Still he refused?
That was hardened and unnatural."
"Do you think
so?"
"I infer that you
do not?"
"You are right. We
hear the world wonder, every day, at monsters of ingratitude. Did it never
occur to you that it often looks for monsters of affection, as though they were
things of course?"
They had reached the
gate by this time, and bidding each other good night, departed on their
separate ways.
THAT afternoon, when he
had slept off his fatigue; had shaved, and washed, and dressed, and freshened
himself from top to toe; when he had dined, comforted himself with a pipe, an
extra Toby, a nap in the great arm-chair, and a quiet chat with Mrs. Varden on
everything that had happened, was happening, or about to happen, within the
sphere of their domestic concern; the locksmith sat himself down at the
tea-table in the little back-parlour: the rosiest, cosiest, merriest,
heartiest, best-contented old buck, in Great Britain or out of it.
There he sat, with his
beaming eye on Mrs. V., and his shining face suffused with gladness, and his
capacious waistcoat smiling in every wrinkle, and his jovial humour peeping
from under the table in the very plumpness of his legs; a sight to turn the
vinegar of misanthropy into purest milk of human kindness. There he sat,
watching his wife as she decorated the room with flowers for the greater honour
of Dolly and Joseph Willet, who had gone out walking, and for whom the
tea-kettle had been singing gaily on the hob full twenty minutes, chirping as
never kettle chirped before; for whom the best service of real undoubted china,
patterned with divers round-faced mandarins holding up broad umbrellas, was now
displayed in all its glory; to tempt whose appetites a clear, transparent,
juicy ham, garnished with cool green lettuce-leaves and fragrant cucumber,
reposed upon a shady table, covered with a snow-white cloth; for whose delight,
preserves and jams, crisp cakes and other pastry, short to eat, with cunning
twists, and cottage loaves, and rolls of bread both white and brown, were all
set forth in rich profusion; in whose youth Mrs. V. herself had grown quite
young, and stood there in a gown of red and white: symmetrical in figure, buxom
in bodice, ruddy in cheek and lip, faultless in ankle, laughing in face and
mood, in all respects delicious to behold--there sat the locksmith among all
and every these delights, the sun that shone upon them all: the centre of the
system: the source of light, heat, life, and frank enjoyment in the bright
household world.
And when had Dolly ever
been the Dolly of that afternoon? To see how she came in, arm-in-arm with Joe;
and how she made an effort not to blush or seem at all confused; and how she
made believe she didn’t care to sit on his side of the table; and how she
coaxed the locksmith in a whisper not to joke; and how her colour came and went
in a little restless flutter of happiness, which made her do everything wrong,
and yet so charmingly wrong that it was better than right!--why, the locksmith
could have looked on at this (as he mentioned to Mrs. Varden when they retired
for the night) for four- and-twenty hours at a stretch, and never wished it
done.
The recollections, too,
with which they made merry over that long protracted tea! The glee with which
the locksmith asked Joe if he remembered that stormy night at the Maypole when
he first asked after Dolly--the laugh they all had, about that night when she
was going out to the party in the sedan-chair--the unmerciful manner in which
they rallied Mrs. Varden about putting those flowers outside that very
window--the difficulty Mrs. Varden found in joining the laugh against herself,
at first, and the extraordinary perception she had of the joke when she
overcame it--the confidential statements of Joe concerning the precise day and
hour when he was first conscious of being fond of Dolly, and Dolly’s blushing
admissions, half volunteered and half extorted, as to the time from which she
dated the discovery that she "didn’t mind" Joe--here was an
exhaustless fund of mirth and conversation.
Then, there was a great
deal to be said regarding Mrs. Varden’s doubts, and motherly alarms, and shrewd
suspicions; and it appeared that from Mrs. Varden’s penetration and extreme
sagacity nothing had ever been hidden. She had known it all along. She had seen
it from the first. She had always predicted it. She had been aware of it before
the principals. She had said within herself (for she remembered the exact
words) "that young Willet is certainly looking after our Dolly, and I must
look after him." Accordingly, she had looked after him, and had observed
many little circumstances (all of which she named) so exceedingly minute that
nobody else could make anything out of them even now; and had, it seemed from
first to last, displayed the most unbounded tact and most consummate
generalship.
Of course the night
when Joe would ride homeward by the side of the chaise, and when Mrs. Varden
would insist upon his going back again, was not forgotten--nor the night when
Dolly fainted on his name being mentioned--nor the times upon times when Mrs.
Varden, ever watchful and prudent, had found her pining in her own chamber. In
short, nothing was forgotten; and everything by some means or other brought
them back to the conclusion, that that was the happiest hour in all their
lives; consequently, that everything must have occurred for the best, and
nothing could be suggested which would have made it better.
While they were in the
full glow of such discourse as this, there came a startling knock at the door,
opening from the street into the workshop, which had been kept closed all day
that the house might be more quiet. Joe, as in duty bound, would hear of nobody
but himself going to open it; and accordingly left the room for that purpose.
It would have been odd
enough, certainly, if Joe had forgotten the way to this door; and even if he
had, as it was a pretty large one and stood straight before him, he could not
easily have missed it. But Dolly, perhaps because she was in the flutter of
spirits before mentioned, or perhaps because she thought he would not be able
to open it with his one arm--she could have had no other reason-- hurried out
after him; and they stopped so long in the passage--no doubt owing to Joe’s
entreaties that she would not expose herself to the draught of July air which
must infallibly come rushing in on this same door being opened--that the knock
was repeated, in a yet more startling manner than before.
"Is anybody going
to open that door?" cried the locksmith. "Or shall I come?"
Upon that, Dolly went
running back into the parlour, all dimples and blushes; and Joe opened it with
a mighty noise, and other superfluous demonstrations of being in a violent hurry.
"Well," said
the locksmith, when he reappeared: "what is it? eh Joe? what are you
laughing at?"
"Nothing, sir. It’s
coming in."
"Who’s coming in?
what’s coming in?" Mrs. Varden, as much at a loss as her husband, could
only shake her head in answer to his inquiring look: so, the locksmith wheeled
his chair round to command a better view of the room-door, and stared at it
with his eyes wide open, and a mingled expression of curiosity and wonder
shining in his jolly face.
Instead of some person
or persons straightway appearing, divers remarkable sounds were heard, first in
the workshop and afterwards in the little dark passage between it and the
parlour, as though some unwieldy chest or heavy piece of furniture were being
brought in, by an amount of human strength inadequate to the task. At length
after much struggling and humping, and bruising of the wall on both sides, the
door was forced open as by a battering-ram; and the locksmith, steadily
regarding what appeared beyond, smote his thigh, elevated his eyebrows, opened
his mouth, and cried in a loud voice expressive of the utmost consternation:
"Damme, if it an’t
Miggs come back!"
The young damsel whom
he named no sooner heard these words, than deserting a small boy and a very
large box by
which she was
accompanied, and advancing with such precipitation that her bonnet flew off her
head, burst into the room, clasped her hands (in which she held a pair of
pattens, one in each), raised her eyes devotedly to the ceiling, and shed a
flood of tears.
"The old
story!" cried the locksmith, looking at her in inexpressible desperation.
"She was born to be a damper, this young woman! nothing can prevent
it!"
"Ho master, ho
mim!" cried Miggs, "can I constrain my feelings in these here once
agin united moments! Ho Mr. Warsen, here’s blessedness among relations, sir!
Here’s forgivenesses of injuries, here’s amicablenesses!"
The locksmith looked
from his wife to Dolly, and from Dolly to Joe, and from Joe to Miggs, with his
eyebrows still elevated, and his mouth still open. When his eyes got back to
Miggs, they rested on her; fascinated.
"To think,"
cried Miggs with hysterical joy, "that Mr. Joe, and dear Miss Dolly, has
raly come together after all as has been said and done contrairy! To see them
two a-settin’ along with him and her, so pleasant and in all respects so
affable and mild; and me not knowing of it, and not being in the ways to make
no preparations for their teas. Ho what a cutting thing it is, and yet what
sweet sensations is awoke within me!"
Either in clasping her
hands again, or in an ecstasy of pious joy, Miss Miggs clinked her pattens
after the manner of a pair of cymbals, at this juncture; and then resumed, in
the softest accents:
"And did my missis
think--ho goodness, did she think--as her own Miggs, which supported her under
so many trials, and understood her natur’ when them as intended well but acted
rough, went so deep into her feelings--did she think as her own Miggs would
ever leave her? Did she think as Miggs, though she was but a servant, and
knowed that servitudes was no inheritances, would forgit that she was the
humble instruments as always made it comfortable between them two when they
fell out, and always told master of the meekness and forgiveness of her blessed
dispositions! Did she think as Miggs had no attachments! Did she think that
wages was her only object!"
To none of these
interrogatories, whereof every one was more pathetically delivered than the
last, did Mrs. Varden answer one word: but Miggs, not at all abashed by this
circumstance, turned to the small boy in attendance--her eldest nephew--son of
her own married sister--born in Golden Lion Court, number twenty-sivin, and
bred in the very shadow of the second bell-handle on the right- hand
door-post--and with a plentiful use of her pocket- handkerchief, addressed
herself to him: requesting that on his return home he would console his parents
for the loss of her, his aunt, by delivering to them a faithful statement of
his having left her in the bosom of that family, with which, as his aforesaid
parents well knew, her best affections were incorporated; that he would remind
them that nothing less than her imperious sense of duty, and devoted attachment
to her old master and missis, likewise Miss Dolly and young Mr. Joe, should
ever have induced her to decline that pressing invitation which they, his
parents, had, as he could testify, given her, to lodge and board with them,
free of all cost and charge, for evermore; lastly, that he would help her with
her box upstairs, and then repair straight home, bearing her blessing and her
strong injunctions to mingle in his prayers a supplication that he might in
course of time grow up a locksmith, or a Mr. Joe, and have Mrs. Vardens and
Miss Dollys for his relations and friends.
Having brought this
admonition to an end--upon which, to say the truth, the young gentleman for
whose benefit it was designed, bestowed little or no heed, having to all
appearance his faculties absorbed in the contemplation of the sweetmeats,--Miss
Miggs signified to the company in general that they were not to be uneasy, for
she would soon return; and, with her nephew’s aid, prepared to bear her
wardrobe up the staircase.
"My dear,"
said the locksmith to his wife. "Do you desire this?"
"I desire
it!" she answered. "I am astonished--I am amazed--at her audacity.
Let her leave the house this moment."
Miggs, hearing this,
let her end of the box fall heavily to the floor, gave a very loud sniff,
crossed her arms, screwed down the corners of her mouth, and cried, in an
ascending scale, "Ho, good gracious!" three distinct times.
"You hear what
your mistress says, my love," remarked the locksmith. "You had better
go, I think. Stay; take this with you, for the sake of old service."
Miss Miggs clutched the
bank-note he took from his pocket-book and held out to her; deposited it in a
small, red leather purse; put the purse in her pocket (displaying, as she did
so, a considerable portion of some under-garment, made of flannel, and more
black cotton stocking than is commonly seen in public); and, tossing her head,
as she looked at Mrs. Varden, repeated--
"Ho, good
gracious!"
"I think you said
that once before, my dear," observed the locksmith.
"Times is changed,
is they, mim!" cried Miggs, bridling; "you can spare me now, can you?
You can keep ’em down without me? You’re not in wants of any one to scold, or
throw the blame upon, no longer, an’t you, mim? I’m glad to find you’ve grown
so independent. I wish you joy, I’m sure!"
With that she dropped a
curtsey, and keeping her head erect, her ear towards Mrs. Varden, and her eye
on the rest of the company, as she alluded to them in her remarks, proceeded:
"I’m quite
delighted, I’m sure, to find sich independency, feeling sorry though, at the
same time, mim, that you should have been forced into submissions when you
couldn’t help yourself--he he he! It must be great vexations, ’specially
considering how ill you always spoke of Mr. Joe--to have him for a son-in-law
at last; and I wonder Miss Dolly can put up with him, either, after being off
and on for so many years with a coachmaker. But I have heerd say, that the
coachmaker thought twice about it--he he he!--and that he told a young man as
was a frind of his, that he hoped he knowed better than to be drawed into that;
though she and all the family did pull uncommon strong!"
Here she paused for a
reply, and receiving none, went on as before.
"I have heerd say,
mim, that the illnesses of some ladies was all pretensions, and that they could
faint away, stone dead, whenever they had the inclinations so to do. Of course
I never see sich cases with my own eyes--ho no! He he he! Nor master
neither--ho no! He he he! I have heerd the neighbours make remark as some one
as they was acquainted with, was a poor good-natur’d mean-spirited creetur, as
went out fishing for a wife one day, and caught a Tartar. Of course I never to
my knowledge see the poor person himself. Nor did you neither, mim--ho no. I
wonder who it can be--don’t you, mim? No doubt you do, mim. Ho yes. He he
he!"
Again Miggs paused for
a reply; and none being offered, was so oppressed with teeming spite and
spleen, that she seemed like to burst.
"I’m glad Miss
Dolly can laugh," cried Miggs with a feeble titter. "I like to see
folks a-laughing--so do you, mim, don’t you? You was always glad to see people
in spirits, wasn’t you, mim? And you always did your best to keep ’em cheerful,
didn’t you, mim? Though there an’t such a great deal to laugh at now either; is
there, mim? It an’t so much of a catch, after looking out so sharp ever since
she was a little chit, and costing such a deal in dress and show, to get a
poor, common soldier, with one arm, is it, mim? He he! I wouldn’t have a
husband with one arm, anyways. I would have two arms. I would have two arms, if
it was me, though instead of hands they’d only got hooks at the end, like our
dustman!"
Miss Miggs was about to
add, and had, indeed, begun to add, that, taking them in the abstract, dustmen
were far more eligible matches than soldiers, though, to be sure, when people
were past choosing they must take the best they could get, and think themselves
well off too; but her vexation and chagrin being of that internally bitter sort
which finds no relief in words, and is aggravated to madness by want of
contradiction, she could hold out no longer, and burst into a storm of sobs and
tears.
In this extremity she
fell on the unlucky nephew, tooth and nail, and plucking a handful of hair from
his head, demanded to know how long she was to stand there to be insulted, and
whether or no he meant to help her to carry out the box again, and if he took a
pleasure in hearing his family reviled: with other inquiries of that nature; at
which disgrace and provocation, the small boy, who had been all this time
gradually lashed into rebellion by the sight of unattainable pastry, walked off
indignant, leaving his aunt and the box to follow at their leisure. Somehow or
other, by dint of pushing and pulling, they did attain the street at last;
where Miss Miggs, all blowzed with the exertion of getting there, and with her
sobs and tears, sat down upon her property to rest and grieve, until she could
ensnare some other youth to help her home.
"It’s a thing to
laugh at, Martha, not to care for," whispered the locksmith, as he
followed his wife to the window, and good- humouredly dried her eyes.
"What does it matter? You had seen your fault before. Come! Bring up Toby
again, my dear; Dolly shall sing us a song; and we’ll be all the merrier for
this interruption!"
ANOTHER month had
passed, and the end of August had nearly come, when Mr. Haredale stood alone in
the mail-coach office at Bristol. Although but a few weeks had intervened since
his conversation with Edward Chester and his niece, in the locksmith’s house, and
he had made no change, in the mean time, in his accustomed style of dress, his
appearance was greatly altered. He looked much older, and more care-worn.
Agitation and anxiety of mind scatter wrinkles and grey hairs with no unsparing
hand; but deeper traces follow on the silent uprooting of old habits, and
severing of dear, familiar ties. The affections may not be so easily wounded as
the passions, but their hurts are deeper, and more lasting. He was now a
solitary man, and the heart within him was dreary and lonesome.
He was not the less
alone for having spent so many years in seclusion and retirement. This was no
better preparation than a round of social cheerfulness: perhaps it even
increased the keenness of his sensibility. He had been so dependent upon her
for companionship and love; she had come to be so much a part and parcel of his
existence; they had had so many cares and thoughts in common, which no one else
had shared; that losing her was beginning life anew, and being required to
summon up the hope and elasticity of youth, amid the doubts, distrusts, and
weakened energies of age.
The effort he had made
to part from her with seeming cheerfulness and hope--and they had parted only
yesterday--left him the more depressed. With these feelings he was about to
revisit London for the last time, and look once more upon the walls of their
old home, before turning his back upon it, for ever.
The journey was a very
different one, in those days, from what the present generation find it; but it
came to an end, as the longest journey will, and he stood again in the streets
of the metropolis. He lay at the inn where the coach stopped, and resolved,
before he went to bed, that he would make his arrival known to no one; would
spend but another night in London; and would spare himself the pang of parting,
even with the honest locksmith.
Such conditions of the
mind as that to which he was a prey when he lay down to rest, are favourable to
the growth of disordered fancies, and uneasy visions. He knew this, even in the
horror with which he started from his first sleep, and threw up the window to
dispel it by the presence of some object, beyond the room, which had not been,
as it were, the witness of his dream. But it was not a new terror of the night;
it had been present to him before, in many shapes; it had haunted him in bygone
times, and visited his pillow again and again. If it had been but an ugly
object, a childish spectre, haunting his sleep, its return, in its old form,
might have awakened a momentary sensation of fear, which, almost in the act of
waking, would have passed away. This disquiet, however, lingered about him, and
would yield to nothing. When he closed his eyes again, he felt it hovering
near; as he slowly sunk into a slumber, he was conscious of its gathering
strength and purpose, and gradually assuming its recent shape; when he sprang
up from his bed, the same phantom vanished from his heated brain, and left him
filled with a dread against which reason and waking thought were powerless.
The sun was up, before
he could shake it off. He rose late, but not refreshed, and remained within
doors all that day. He had a fancy for paying his last visit to the old spot in
the evening, for he had been accustomed to walk there at that season, and
desired to see it under the aspect that was most familiar to him. At such an
hour as would afford him time to reach it a little before sunset, he left the
inn, and turned into the busy street.
He had not gone far,
and was thoughtfully making his way among the noisy crowd, when he felt a hand
upon his shoulder, and, turning, recognised one of the waiters from the inn,
who begged his pardon, but he had left his sword behind him.
"Why have you
brought it to me?" he asked, stretching out his hand, and yet not taking
it from the man, but looking at him in a disturbed and agitated manner.
The man was sorry to
have disobliged him, and would carry it back again. The gentleman had said that
he was going a little way into the country, and that he might not return until
late. The roads were not very safe for single travellers after dark; and, since
the riots, gentlemen had been more careful than ever, not to trust themselves
unarmed in lonely places. "We thought you were a stranger, sir," he
added, "and that you might believe our roads to be better than they are;
but perhaps you know them well, and carry fire-arms--"
He took the sword, and
putting it up at his side, thanked the man, and resumed his walk.
It was long remembered
that he did this in a manner so strange, and with such a trembling hand, that
the messenger stood looking after his retreating figure, doubtful whether he
ought not to follow, and watch him. It was long remembered that he had been
heard pacing his bedroom in the dead of the night; that the attendants had mentioned
to each other in the morning, how fevered and how pale he looked; and that when
this man went back to the inn, he told a fellow-servant that what he had
observed in this short interview lay very heavy on his mind, and that he feared
the gentleman intended to destroy himself, and would never come back alive.
With a
half-consciousness that his manner had attracted the man’s attention
(remembering the expression of his face when they parted), Mr. Haredale
quickened his steps; and arriving at a stand of coaches, bargained with the
driver of the best to carry him so far on his road as the point where the
footway struck across the fields, and to await his return at a house of
entertainment which was within a stone’s-throw of that place. Arriving there in
due course, he alighted and pursued his way on foot.
He passed so near the
Maypole, that he could see its smoke rising from among the trees, while a flock
of pigeons--some of its old inhabitants, doubtless--sailed gaily home to roost,
between him and the unclouded sky. "The old house will brighten up
now," he said, as he looked towards it, "and there will be a merry
fireside beneath its ivied roof. It is some comfort to know that everything
will not be blighted hereabouts. I shall be glad to have one picture of life
and cheerfulness to turn to, in my mind!"
He resumed his walk,
and bent his steps towards the Warren. It was a clear, calm, silent evening,
with hardly a breath of wind to stir the leaves, or any sound to break the
stillness of the time, but drowsy sheep-bells tinkling in the distance, and, at
intervals, the far-off lowing of cattle, or bark of village dogs. The sky was
radiant with the softened glory of sunset; and on the earth, and in the air, a
deep repose prevailed. At such an hour, he arrived at the deserted mansion
which had been his home so long, and looked for the last time upon its
blackened walls.
The ashes of the
commonest fire are melancholy things, for in them there is an image of death
and ruin,--of something that has been bright, and is but dull, cold, dreary
dust,--with which our nature forces us to sympathise. How much more sad the
crumbled embers of a home: the casting down of that great altar, where the
worst among us sometimes perform the worship of the heart; and where the best
have offered up such sacrifices, and done such deeds of heroism, as,
chronicled, would put the proudest temples of old Time, with all their vaunting
annals, to the blush!
He roused himself from
a long train of meditation, and walked slowly round the house. It was by this
time almost dark.
He had nearly made the
circuit of the building, when he uttered a half-suppressed exclamation,
started, and stood still. Reclining, in an easy attitude, with his back against
a tree, and contemplating the ruin with an expression of pleasure,--a pleasure
so keen that it overcame his habitual indolence and command of feature, and
displayed itself utterly free from all restraint or reserve,--before him, on
his own ground, and triumphing then, as he had triumphed in every misfortune
and disappointment of his life, stood the man whose presence, of all mankind,
in any place, and least of all in that, he could the least endure.
Although his blood so
rose against this man, and his wrath so stirred within him, that he could have
struck him dead, he put such fierce constraint upon himself that he passed him
without a word or look. Yes, and he would have gone on, and not turned, though
to resist the Devil who poured such hot temptation in his brain, required an
effort scarcely to be achieved, if this man had not himself summoned him to
stop: and that, with an assumed compassion in his voice which drove him
well-nigh mad, and in an instant routed all the self-command it had been
anguish--acute, poignant anguish--to sustain.
All consideration,
reflection, mercy, forbearance; everything by which a goaded man can curb his
rage and passion; fled from him as he turned back. And yet he said, slowly and
quite calmly--far more calmly than he had ever spoken to him before:
"Why have you called
to me?"
"To remark,"
said Sir John Chester with his wonted composure, "what an odd chance it is
that we should meet here."
"It is a strange
chance."
"Strange? The most
remarkable and singular thing in the world. I never ride in the evening; I have
not done so for years. The whim seized me, quite unaccountably, in the middle
of last night.--How very picturesque this is!"--He pointed, as he spoke,
to the dismantled house, and raised his glass to his eye.
"You praise your
own work very freely."
Sir John let fall his
glass; inclined his face towards him with an air of the most courteous inquiry;
and slightly shook his head as though he were remarking to himself, "I
fear this animal is going mad!"
"I say you praise
your own work very freely," repeated Mr. Haredale.
"Work!"
echoed Sir John, looking smilingly round. "Mine!--I beg your pardon, I
really beg your pardon--"
"Why, you
see," said Mr. Haredale, "those walls. You see those tottering
gables. You see on every side where fire and smoke have raged. You see the
destruction that has been wanton here. Do you not?"
"My good
friend," returned the knight, gently checking his impatience with his
hand, "of course I do. I see everything you speak of, when you stand aside,
and do not interpose yourself between the view and me. I am very sorry for you.
If I had not had the pleasure to meet you here, I think I should have written
to tell you so. But you don’t bear it as well as I had expected-- excuse
me--no, you don’t indeed."
He pulled out his
snuff-box, and addressing him with the superior air of a man who, by reason of
his higher nature, has a right to read a moral lesson to another, continued:
"For you are a
philosopher, you know--one of that stern and rigid school who are far above the
weaknesses of mankind in general. You are removed, a long way, from the
frailties of the crowd. You contemplate them from a height, and rail at them
with a most impressive bitterness. I have heard you."
"--And shall
again," said Mr. Haredale.
"Thank you,"
returned the other. "Shall we walk as we talk? The damp falls rather
heavily. Well,--as you please. But I grieve to say that I can spare you only a
very few moments."
"I would,"
said Mr. Haredale, "you had spared me none. I would, with all my soul, you
had been in Paradise (if such a monstrous lie could be enacted), rather than
here to-night."
"Nay,"
returned the other--"really--you do yourself injustice. You are a rough
companion, but I would not go so far to avoid you."
"Listen to
me," said Mr. Haredale. "Listen to me."
"While you
rail?" inquired Sir John.
"While I deliver
your infamy. You urged and stimulated to do your work a fit agent, but one who
in his nature--in the very essence of his being--is a traitor, and who has been
false to you (despite the sympathy you two should have together) as he has been
to all others. With hints, and looks, and crafty words, which told again are
nothing, you set on Gashford to this work--this work before us now. With these
same hints, and looks, and crafty words, which told again are nothing, you
urged him on to gratify the deadly hate he owes me--I have earned it, I thank
Heaven--by the abduction and dishonour of my niece. You did. I see denial in
your looks," he cried, abruptly pointing in his face, and stepping back,
"and denial is a lie!"
He had his hand upon
his sword; but the knight, with a contemptuous smile, replied to him as coldly
as before.
"You will take
notice, sir--if you can discriminate sufficiently-- that I have taken the trouble
to deny nothing. Your discernment is hardly fine enough for the perusal of
faces, not of a kind as coarse as your speech; nor has it ever been, that I
remember; or, in one face that I could name, you would have read indifference,
not to say disgust, somewhat sooner than you did. I speak of a long time
ago,--but you understand me."
"Disguise it as
you will, you mean denial. Denial explicit or reserved, expressed or left to be
inferred, is still a lie. You say you don’t deny. Do you admit?"
"You yourself,"
returned Sir John, suffering the current of his speech to flow as smoothly as
if it had been stemmed by no one word of interruption, "publicly
proclaimed the character of the gentleman in question (I think it was in
Westminster Hall) in terms which relieve me from the necessity of making any
further allusion to him. You may have been warranted; you may not have been; I
can’t say. Assuming the gentleman to be what you described, and to have made to
you or any other person any statements that may have happened to suggest
themselves to him, for the sake of his own security, or for the sake of money,
or for his own amusement, or for any other consideration,--I have nothing to
say of him, except that his extremely degrading situation appears to me to be shared
with his employers. You are so very plain yourself, that you will excuse a
little freedom in me, I am sure."
"Attend to me
again, Sir John but once," cried Mr. Haredale; "in your every look,
and word, and gesture, you tell me this was not your act. I tell you that it
was, and that you tampered with the man I speak of, and with your wretched son
(whom God forgive!) to do this deed. You talk of degradation and character. You
told me once that you had purchased the absence of the poor idiot and his mother,
when (as I have discovered since, and then suspected) you had gone to tempt
them, and had found them flown. To you I traced the insinuation that I alone
reaped any harvest from my brother’s death; and all the foul attacks and
whispered calumnies that followed in its train. In every action of my life,
from that first hope which you converted into grief and desolation, you have
stood, like an adverse fate, between me and peace. In all, you have ever been
the same cold-blooded, hollow, false, unworthy villain. For the second time,
and for the last, I cast these charges in your teeth, and spurn you from me as
I would a faithless dog!"
With that he raised his
arm, and struck him on the breast so that he staggered. Sir John, the instant
he recovered, drew his sword, threw away the scabbard and his hat, and running
on his adversary made a desperate lunge at his heart, which, but that his guard
was quick and true, would have stretched him dead upon the grass.
In the act of striking
him, the torrent of his opponent’s rage had reached a stop. He parried his
rapid thrusts, without returning them, and called to him, with a frantic kind
of terror in his face, to keep back.
"Not to-night! not
to-night!" he cried. "In God’s name, not tonight!"
Seeing that he lowered his
weapon, and that he would not thrust in turn, Sir John lowered his.
"Not
to-night!" his adversary cried. "Be warned in time!"
"You told me--it
must have been in a sort of inspiration--" said Sir John, quite
deliberately, though now he dropped his mask, and showed his hatred in his
face, "that this was the last time. Be assured it is! Did you believe our
last meeting was forgotten? Did you believe that your every word and look was
not to be accounted for, and was not well remembered? Do you believe that I
have waited your time, or you mine? What kind of man is he who entered, with
all his sickening cant of honesty and truth, into a bond with me to prevent a
marriage he affected to dislike, and when I had redeemed my part to the spirit
and the letter, skulked from his, and brought the match about in his own time,
to rid himself of a burden he had grown tired of, and cast a spurious lustre on
his house?"
"I have
acted," cried Mr. Haredale, "with honour and in good faith. I do so
now. Do not force me to renew this duel to-night!"
"You said my ’wretched’
son, I think?" said Sir John, with a smile. "Poor fool! The dupe of
such a shallow knave--trapped into marriage by such an uncle and by such a
niece--
he well deserves your
pity. But he is no longer a son of mine: you are welcome to the prize your
craft has made, sir."
"Once more,"
cried his opponent, wildly stamping on the ground, "although you tear me
from my better angel, I implore you not to come within the reach of my sword
to-night. Oh! why were you here at all! Why have we met! To-morrow would have
cast us far apart for ever!"
"That being the
case," returned Sir John, without the least emotion, "it is very
fortunate we have met to-night. Haredale, I have always despised you, as you
know, but I have given you credit for a species of brute courage. For the
honour of my judgment, which I had thought a good one, I am sorry to find you a
coward."
Not another word was
spoken on either side. They crossed swords, though it was now quite dusk, and
attacked each other fiercely. They were well matched, and each was thoroughly
skilled in the management of his weapon.
After a few seconds
they grew hotter and more furious, and pressing on each other inflicted and
received several slight wounds. It was directly after receiving one of these in
his arm, that Mr. Haredale, making a keener thrust as he felt the warm blood
spirting out, plunged his sword through his opponent’s body to the hilt.
Their eyes met, and
were on each other as he drew it out. He put his arm about the dying man, who
repulsed him, feebly, and dropped upon the turf. Raising himself upon his
hands, he gazed at him for an instant, with scorn and hatred in his look; but,
seeming to remember, even then, that this expression would distort his features
after death, he tried to smile, and, faintly moving his right hand, as if to
hide his bloody linen in his vest, fell back dead--the phantom of last night.
A PARTING glance at
such of the actors in this little history as it has not, in the course of its
events, dismissed, will bring it to an end.
Mr. Haredale fled that
night. Before pursuit could be begun, indeed before Sir John was traced or
missed, he had left the kingdom. Repairing straight to a religious establishment,
known throughout Europe for the rigour and severity of its discipline, and for
the merciless penitence it exacted from those who sought its shelter as a
refuge from the world, he took the vows which thenceforth shut him out from
nature and his kind, and after a few remorseful years was buried in its gloomy
cloisters.
Two days elapsed before
the body of Sir John was found. As soon as it was recognised and carried home,
the faithful valet, true to his master’s creed, eloped with all the cash and
movables he could lay his hands on, and started as a finished gentleman upon
his own account. In this career he met with great success, and would certainly
have married an heiress in the end, but for an unlucky check which led to his
premature decease. He sank under a contagious disorder, very prevalent at that
time, and vulgarly termed the jail fever.
Lord George Gordon,
remaining in his prison in the Tower until Monday the fifth of February in the
following year, was on that day solemnly tried at Westminster for High Treason.
Of this crime he was, after a patient investigation, declared Not Guilty; upon
the ground that there was no proof of his having called the multitude together
with any traitorous or unlawful intentions. Yet so many people were there,
still, to whom those riots taught no lesson of reproof or moderation, that a
public subscription was set on foot in Scotland to defray the cost of his
defence.
For seven years
afterwards he remained, at the strong intercession of his friends,
comparatively quiet; saving that he, every now and then, took occasion to
display his zeal for the Protestant faith in some extravagant proceeding which
was the delight of its enemies; and saving, besides, that he was formally
excommunicated by the Archbishop of Canterbury, for refusing to appear as a
witness in the Ecclesiastical Court when cited for that purpose. In the year
1788 he was stimulated by some new insanity to write and publish an injurious
pamphlet, reflecting on the Queen of France, in very violent terms. Being
indicted for the libel, and (after various strange demonstrations in court)
found guilty, he fled into Holland in place of appearing to receive sentence:
from whence, as the quiet burgomasters of Amsterdam had no relish for his
company, he was sent home again with all speed. Arriving in the month of July
at Harwich, and going thence to Birmingham, he made in the latter place, in
August, a public profession of the Jewish religion; and figured there as a Jew
until he was arrested, and brought back to London to receive the sentence he
had evaded. By virtue of this sentence he was, in the month of December, cast
into Newgate for five years and ten months, and required besides to pay a large
fine, and to furnish heavy securities for his future good behaviour.
After addressing, in
the midsummer of the following year, an appeal to the commiseration of the
National Assembly of France, which the English minister refused to sanction, he
composed himself to undergo his full term of punishment; and suffering his beard
to grow nearly to his waist, and conforming in all respects to the ceremonies
of his new religion, he applied himself to the study of history, and
occasionally to the art of painting, in which, in his younger days, he had
shown some skill. Deserted by his former friends, and treated in all respects
like the worst criminal in the jail, he lingered on, quite cheerful and
resigned, until the first of November, 1793, when he died in his cell, being
then only three-and-forty years of age.
Many men with fewer sympathies
for the distressed and needy, with less abilities and harder hearts, have made
a shining figure and left a brilliant fame. He had his mourners. The prisoners
bemoaned his loss, and missed him; for though his means were not large, his
charity was great, and in bestowing alms among them he considered the
necessities of all alike, and knew no distinction of sect or creed. There are
wise men in the highways of the world who may learn something, even from this
poor crazy lord who died in Newgate.
To the last, he was
truly served by bluff John Grueby. John was at his side before he had been
four-and-twenty hours in the Tower, and never left him until he died. He had
one other constant attendant, in the person of a beautiful Jewish girl; who
attached herself to him from feelings half religious, half romantic, but whose
virtuous and disinterested character appears to have been beyond the censure
even of the most censorious.
Gashford deserted him,
of course. He subsisted for a time upon his traffic in his master’s secrets;
and, this trade failing when the stock was quite exhausted, procured an
appointment in the honourable corps of spies and eavesdroppers employed by the
government. As one of these wretched underlings, he did his drudgery, sometimes
abroad, sometimes at home, and long endured the various miseries of such a
station. Ten or a dozen years ago--not more--a meagre, wan old man, diseased
and miserably poor, was found dead in his bed at an obscure inn in the Borough,
where he was quite unknown. He had taken poison. There was no clue to his name;
but it was discovered from certain entries in a pocket-book he carried, that he
had been secretary to Lord George Gordon in the time of the famous riots.
Many months after the
re-establishment of peace and order, and even when it had ceased to be the
town-talk, that every military officer, kept at free quarters by the City
during the late alarms, had cost for his board and lodging four pounds four per
day, and every private soldier two and twopence halfpenny; many months after
even this engrossing topic was forgotten, and the United Bulldogs were to a man
all killed, imprisoned, or transported, Mr. Simon Tappertit, being removed from
a hospital to prison, and thence to his place of trial, was discharged by proclamation,
on two wooden legs. Shorn of his graceful limbs, and brought down from his high
estate to circumstances of utter destitution, and the deepest misery, he made
shift to stump back to his old master, and beg for some relief. By the
locksmith’s advice and aid, he was established in business as a shoeblack, and
opened shop under an archway near the Horse Guards. This being a central
quarter, he quickly made a very large connection; and on levee days, was
sometimes known to have as many as twenty half-pay officers waiting their turn
for polishing. Indeed his trade increased to that extent, that in course of
time he entertained no less than two apprentices, besides taking for his wife
the widow of an eminent bone and rag collector, formerly of MilIbank. With this
lady (who assisted in the business) he lived in great domestic happiness, only
chequered by those little storms which serve to clear the atmosphere of
wedlock, and brighten its horizon. In some of these gusts of bad weather, Mr.
Tappertit would, in the assertion of his prerogative, so far forget himself, as
to correct his lady with a brush, or boot, or shoe; while she (but only in
extreme cases) would retaliate by taking off his legs, and leaving him exposed
to the derision of those urchins who delight in mischief.
Miss Miggs, baffled in
all her schemes, matrimonial and otherwise, and cast upon a thankless,
undeserving world, turned very sharp and sour; and did at length become so
acid, and did so pinch and slap and tweak the hair and noses of the youth of
Golden Lion Court, that she was by one consent expelled that sanctuary, and
desired to bless some other spot of earth in preference. It chanced at that
moment, that the justices of the peace for Middlesex proclaimed by public
placard that they stood in need of a female turnkey for the County Bridewell,
and appointed a day and hour for the inspection of candidates. Miss Miggs
attending at the time appointed, was instantly chosen and selected from one
hundred and twenty-four competitors, and at once promoted to the office; which
she held until her decease, more than thirty years afterwards, remaining single
all that time. It was observed of this lady that while she was inflexible and
grim to all her female flock, she was particularly so to those who could
establish any claim to beauty: and it was often remarked as a proof of her
indomitable virtue and severe chastity, that to such as had been frail she
showed no mercy; always falling upon them on the slightest occasion, or on no
occasion at all, with the fullest measure of her wrath. Among other useful
inventions which she practised upon this class of offenders and bequeathed to
posterity, was the art of inflicting an exquisitely vicious poke or dig with
the wards of a key in the small of the back, near the spine. She likewise
originated a mode of treading by accident (in pattens) on such as had small
feet; also very remarkable for its ingenuity, and previously quite unknown.
It was not very long,
you may be sure, before Joe Willet and Dolly Varden were made husband and wife,
and with a handsome sum in bank (for the locksmith could afford to give his
daughter a good dowry), reopened the Maypole. It was not very long, you may be
sure, before a red-faced little boy was seen staggering about the Maypole passage,
and kicking up his heels on the green before the door. It was not very long,
counting by years, before there was a red-faced little girl, another red-faced
little boy, and a whole troop of girls and boys: so that, go to Chigwell when
you would, there would surely be seen, either in the village street, or on the
green, or frolicking in the farm-yard--for it was a farm now, as well as a
tavern--more small Joes and small Dollys than could be easily counted. It was
not a very long time before these appearances ensued; but it was a very long
time before Joe looked five years older, or Dolly either, or the locksmith
either, or his wife either: for cheerfulness and content are great beautifiers,
and are famous preservers of youthful looks, depend upon it.
It was a long time,
too, before there was such a country inn as the Maypole, in all England: indeed
it is a great question whether there has ever been such another to this hour,
or ever will be. It was a long time too--for Never, as the proverb says, is a long
day-- before they forgot to have an interest in wounded soldiers at the
Maypole, or before Joe omitted to refresh them, for the sake of his old
campaign; or before the sergeant left off looking in there, now and then; or
before they fatigued themselves, or each other, by talking on these occasions
of battles and sieges, and hard weather and hard service, and a thousand things
belonging to a soldier’s life. As to the great silver snuff-box which the King
sent Joe with his own hand, because of his conduct in the Riots, what guest
ever went to the Maypole without putting finger and thumb into that box, and
taking a great pinch, though he had never taken a pinch of snuff before, and
almost sneezed himself into convulsions even then? As to the purple-faced vintner,
where is the man who lived in those times and never saw him at the Maypole: to
all appearance as much at home in the best room, as if he lived there? And as
to the feastings and christenings, and revellings at Christmas, and
celebrations of birthdays, wedding-days, and all manner of days, both at the
Maypole and the Golden Key,--if they are not notorious, what facts are?
Mr. Willet the elder,
having been by some extraordinary means possessed with the idea that Joe wanted
to be married, and that it would be well for him, his father, to retire into
private life, and enable him to live in comfort, took up his abode in a small
cottage at Chigwell; where they widened and enlarged the fireplace for him,
hung up the boiler, and furthermore planted in the little garden outside the
front-door, a fictitious Maypole; so that he was quite at home directly. To
this, his new habitation, Tom Cobb, Phil Parkes, and Solomon Daisy went
regularly every night: and in the chimney-corner, they all four quaffed, and
smoked, and prosed, and dozed, as they had done of old. It being accidentally
discovered after a short time that Mr. Willet still appeared to consider
himself a landlord by profession, Joe provided him with a slate, upon which the
old man regularly scored up vast accounts for meat, drink, and tobacco. As he
grew older this passion increased upon him; and it became his delight to chalk
against the name of each of his cronies a sum of enormous magnitude, and
impossible to be paid: and such was his secret joy in these entries, that he
would be perpetually seen going behind the door to look at them, and coming
forth again, suffused with the liveliest satisfaction.
He never recovered the
surprise the Rioters had given him, and remained in the same mental condition
down to the last moment of his life. It was like to have been brought to a
speedy termination by the first sight of his first grandchild, which appeared
to fill him with the belief that some alarming miracle had happened to Joe.
Being promptly blooded, however, by a skilful surgeon, he rallied; and although
the doctors all agreed, on his being attacked with symptoms of apoplexy six
months afterwards, that he ought to die, and took it very ill that he did not,
he remained alive--possibly on account of his constitutional slowness-- for
nearly seven years more, when he was one morning found speechless in his bed.
He lay in this state, free from all tokens of uneasiness, for a whole week,
when he was suddenly restored to consciousness by hearing the nurse whisper in
his son’s ear that he was going. "I’m a-going, Joseph," said Mr.
Willet, turning round upon the instant, "to the Salwanners"--and
immediately gave up the ghost.
He left a large sum of
money behind him; even more than he was supposed to have been worth, although
the neighbours, according to the custom of mankind in calculating the wealth
that other people ought to have saved, had estimated his property in good round
numbers. Joe inherited the whole; so that he became a man of great consequence
in those parts, and was perfectly independent.
Some time elapsed
before Barnaby got the better of the shock he had sustained, or regained his
old health and gaiety. But he recovered by degrees: and although he could never
separate his condemnation and escape from the idea of a terrific dream, he
became, in other respects, more rational. Dating from the time of his recovery,
he had a better memory and greater steadiness of purpose; but a dark cloud
overhung his whole previous existence, and never cleared away.
He was not the less
happy for this, for his love of freedom and interest in all that moved or grew,
or had its being in the elements, remained to him unimpaired. He lived with his
mother on the Maypole farm, tending the poultry and the cattle, working in a
garden of his own, and helping everywhere. He was known to every bird and beast
about the place, and had a name for every one. Never was there a
lighter-hearted husbandman, a creature more popular with young and old, a
blither or more happy soul than Barnaby; and though he was free to ramble where
he would, he never quitted Her, but was for evermore her stay and comfort.
It was remarkable that
although he had that dim sense of the past, he sought out Hugh’s dog, and took
him under his care; and that he never could be tempted into London. When the
Riots were many years old, and Edward and his wife came back to England with a
family almost as numerous as Dolly’s, and one day appeared at the Maypole
porch, he knew them instantly, and wept and leaped for joy. But neither to
visit them, nor on any other pretence, no matter how full of promise and
enjoyment, could he be persuaded to set foot in the streets: nor did he ever
conquer this repugnance or look upon the town again.
Grip soon recovered his
looks, and became as glossy and sleek as ever. But he was profoundly silent.
Whether he had forgotten the art of Polite Conversation in Newgate, or had made
a vow in those troubled times to forego, for a period, the display of his
accomplishments, is matter of uncertainty; but certain it is that for a whole
year he never indulged in any other sound than a grave, decorous croak. At the
expiration of that term, the morning being very bright and sunny, he was heard
to address himself to the horses in the stable, upon the subject of the Kettle,
so often mentioned in these pages; and before the witness who overheard him
could run into the house with the intelligence, and add to it upon his solemn
affirmation the statement that he had heard him laugh, the bird himself
advanced with fantastic steps to the very door of the bar, and there cried,
"I’m a devil, I’m a devil, I’m a devil!" with extraordinary rapture.
From that period
(although he was supposed to be much affected by the death of Mr. Willet
senior), he constantly practised and improved himself in the vulgar tongue;
and, as he was a mere infant for a raven when Barnaby was grey, he has very
probably gone on talking to the present time.
THE END.
VIRTUE AND CO.,
PRINTERS, CITY ROAD, LONDON.