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+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>A Reputed Changeling</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">A Reputed Changeling, by Charlotte M. Yonge</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Reputed Changeling, by Charlotte M. Yonge
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: A Reputed Changeling
+
+Author: Charlotte M. Yonge
+
+Release Date: May 26, 2004 [eBook #12449]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A REPUTED CHANGELING***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk</p>
+<h1>A REPUTED CHANGELING<br />
+or, THREE SEVENTH YEARS TWO CENTURIES AGO</h1>
+<h2>PREFACE</h2>
+<p>I do not think I have here forced the hand of history except by giving
+Portchester to two imaginary Rectors, and by a little injustice to her
+whom Princess Anne termed &lsquo;the brick-bat woman.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The trial is not according to present rules, but precedents for its
+irregularities are to be found in the doings of the seventeenth century,
+notably in the trial of Spencer Cowper by the same Judge Hatsel, and
+I have done my best to represent the habits of those country gentry
+who were not infected by the evils of the later Stewart reigns.</p>
+<p>There is some doubt as to the proper spelling of Portchester, but,
+judging by analogy, the <i>t</i> ought not to be omitted.</p>
+<p>C. M. YONGE. 2<i>d May</i> 1889.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER I<br />
+The Experiences Of Goody Madge</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Dear Madam, think me not to blame;<br />
+Invisible the fairy came.<br />
+Your precious babe is hence conveyed,<br />
+And in its place a changeling laid.<br />
+Where are the father&rsquo;s mouth and nose,<br />
+The mother&rsquo;s eyes as black as sloes?<br />
+See here, a shocking awkward creature,<br />
+That speaks a fool in every feature.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>GAY.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;He is an ugly ill-favoured boy&mdash;just like <i>Riquet &agrave;
+la Houppe</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That he is!&nbsp; Do you not know that he is a changeling?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Such were the words of two little girls walking home from a school
+for young ladies kept, at the Cathedral city of Winchester, by two Frenchwomen
+of quality, refugees from the persecutions preluding the Revocation
+of the Edict of Nantes, and who enlivened the studies of their pupils
+with the <i>Contes de Comm&egrave;re L&rsquo;Oie</i>.</p>
+<p>The first speaker was Anne Jacobina Woodford, who had recently come
+with her mother, the widow of a brave naval officer, to live with her
+uncle, the Prebendary then in residence.&nbsp; The other was Lucy Archfield,
+daughter to a knight, whose home was a few miles from Portchester, Dr.
+Woodford&rsquo;s parish on the southern coast of Hampshire.</p>
+<p>In the seventeenth century, when roads were mere ditches often impassable,
+and country-houses frequently became entirely isolated in the winter,
+it was usual with the wealthier county families to move into their local
+capital, where some owned mansions and others hired prebendal houses,
+or went into lodgings in the roomy dwellings of the superior tradesmen.&nbsp;
+For the elders this was the season of social intercourse, for the young
+people, of education.</p>
+<p>The two girls, who were about eight years old, had struck up a rapid
+friendship, and were walking hand in hand to the Close attended by the
+nurse in charge of Mistress Lucy.&nbsp; This little lady wore a black
+silk hood and cape, trimmed with light brown fur, and lined with pink,
+while Anne Woodford, being still in mourning for her father, was wrapped
+in a black cloak, unrelieved except by the white border of her round
+cap, fringed by fair curls, contrasting with her brown eyes.&nbsp; She
+was taller and had a more upright bearing of head and neck, with more
+promise of beauty than her companion, who was much more countrified
+and would not have been taken for the child of higher station.</p>
+<p>They had traversed the graveyard of the Cathedral, and were passing
+through a narrow archway known as the Slype, between the south-western
+angle of the Cathedral and a heavy mass of old masonry forming part
+of the garden wall of the present abode of the Archfield family, when
+suddenly both children stumbled and fell, while an elfish peal of laughter
+sounded behind them.</p>
+<p>Lucy came down uppermost, and was scarcely hurt, but Anne had fallen
+prone, striking her chin on the ground, so as to make her bite her lip,
+and bruising knees and elbows severely.&nbsp; Nurse detected the cause
+of the fall so as to avoid it herself.&nbsp; It was a cord fastened
+across the archway, close to the ground, and another shout of derision
+greeted the discovery; while Lucy, regaining her feet, beheld for a
+moment a weird exulting grimace on a visage peeping over a neighbouring
+headstone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is he! it is he!&nbsp; The wicked imp!&nbsp; There&rsquo;s
+no peace for him!&nbsp; I say,&rdquo; she screamed, &ldquo;see if you
+don&rsquo;t get a sound flogging!&rdquo; and she clenched her little
+fist as the provoking &ldquo;Ho! ho! ho!&rdquo; rang farther and farther
+off.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t cry, Anne dear; the Dean and Chapter shall
+take order with him, and he shall be soundly beaten.&nbsp; Are you hurt?&nbsp;
+O nurse, her mouth is all blood.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope she has not broken a tooth,&rdquo; said nurse, who
+had been attending to the sobbing child.&nbsp; &ldquo;Come in, my lamb,
+we will wash your face, and make you well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne, blinded with tears, jarred, bruised, bleeding, and bewildered,
+submitted to be led by kind nurse the more willingly because she knew
+that her mother, together with all the quality, were at Sir Thomas Charnock&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+They had dined at the fashionable hour of two, and were to stay till
+supper-time, the elders playing at Ombre, the juniors dancing.&nbsp;
+As a rule the ordinary clergy did not associate with the county families,
+but Dr. Woodford was of good birth and a royal chaplain, and his deceased
+brother had been a favourite officer of the Duke of York, and had been
+so severely wounded by his side in the battle of Southwold as to be
+permanently disabled.&nbsp; Indeed Anne Jacobina was godchild to the
+Duke and his first Duchess, whose favoured attendant her mother had
+been.&nbsp; Thus Mrs. Woodford was in great request, and though she
+had not hitherto gone into company since her widowhood, she had yielded
+to Lady Charnock&rsquo;s entreaty that she would come and show her how
+to deal with that strange new Chinese infusion, a costly packet of which
+had been brought to her from town by Sir Thomas, as the Queen&rsquo;s
+favourite beverage, wherewith the ladies of the place were to be regaled
+and astonished.</p>
+<p>It had been already arranged that the two little girls should spend
+the evening together, and as they entered the garden before the house
+a rude voice exclaimed, &ldquo;Holloa!&nbsp; London Nan whimpering.&nbsp;
+Has my fine lady met a spider or a cow?&rdquo; and a big rough lad of
+twelve, in a college gown, spread out his arms, and danced up and down
+in the doorway to bar the entrance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t, Sedley,&rdquo; said a sturdy but more gentlemanlike
+lad of the same age, thrusting him aside.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is she hurt?&nbsp;
+What is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That spiteful imp, Peregrine Oakshott,&rdquo; said Lucy passionately.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;He had a cord across the Slype to trip us up.&nbsp; I heard him
+laughing like a hobgoblin, and saw him too, grinning over a tombstone
+like the malicious elf he is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The college boy uttered a horse laugh, which made Lucy cry, &ldquo;Cousin
+Sedley, you are as bad!&rdquo; but the other boy was saying, &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
+cry, Anne None-so-pretty.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll give it him well!&nbsp; Though
+I&rsquo;m younger, I&rsquo;m bigger, and I&rsquo;ll show him reason
+for not meddling with my little sweetheart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have with you then!&rdquo; shouted Sedley, ready for a fray
+on whatever pretext, and off they rushed, as nurse led little Anne up
+the broad shallow steps of the dark oak staircase, but Lucy stood laughing
+with exultation in the intended vengeance, as her brother took down
+her father&rsquo;s hunting-whip.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He must be wellnigh a fiend to play such wicked pranks under
+the very Minster!&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And a rascal of a Whig, and that&rsquo;s worse,&rdquo; added
+Charles; &ldquo;but I&rsquo;ll have it out of him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take care, Charley; if you offend him, and he does really
+belong to those&mdash;those creatures&rdquo;&mdash;Lucy lowered her
+voice&mdash;&ldquo;who knows what they might do to you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charles laughed long and loud.&nbsp; &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll take care
+of that,&rdquo; he said, swinging out at the door.&nbsp; &ldquo;Elf
+or no elf, he shall learn what it is to play off his tricks on <i>my</i>
+sister and my little sweetheart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lucy betook herself to the nursery, where Anne was being comforted,
+her bleeding lip washed with essence, and repaired with a pinch of beaver
+from a hat, and her other bruises healed with lily leaves steeped in
+strong waters.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Charley is gone to serve him out!&rdquo; announced Lucy as
+the sovereign remedy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, but perhaps he did not mean it,&rdquo; Anne tried to say.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mean it?&nbsp; Small question of that, the cankered young
+slip!&nbsp; Nurse, do you think those he belongs to can do Charley any
+harm if he angers them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot say, missie.&nbsp; Only &rsquo;tis well we be not
+at home, or there might be elf knots in the horses&rsquo; manes to-night.&nbsp;
+I doubt me whether <i>that sort</i> can do much hurt here, seeing as
+&rsquo;tis holy ground.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But is he really a changeling?&nbsp; I thought there were
+no such things as&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hist, hist, Missie Anne!&rdquo; cried the dame; &ldquo;&rsquo;tis
+not good to name them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, but we are on the Minster ground, nurse,&rdquo; said Lucy,
+trembling a little however, looking over her shoulder, and coming closer
+to the old servant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why do they think so?&rdquo; asked Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is it
+because he is so ugly and mischievous and rude?&nbsp; Not like boys
+in London.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Prithee, nurse, tell her the tale,&rdquo; entreated Lucy,
+who had made large eyes over it many a time before.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, and who should tell you all about it save me, who had
+it all from Goody Madge Bulpett, as saw it all!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Goody Madge!&nbsp; It was she that came when poor little Kitty
+was born and died,&rdquo; suggested Lucy, as Anne, laying her aching
+head upon nurse&rsquo;s knees, prepared to listen to the story.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, deary darlings, you see poor Madam Oakshott never had
+her health since the Great Fire in London, when she was biding with
+her kinsfolk to be near Major Oakshott, who had got into trouble about
+some of his nonconforming doings.&nbsp; The poor lady had a mortal fright
+before she could be got out of Gracechurch Street as was all of a blaze,
+and she was so afeard of her husband being burnt as he lay in Newgate
+that she could scarce be got away, and whether it was that, or that
+she caught cold lying out in a tent on Highgate Hill, she has never
+had a day&rsquo;s health since.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the gentleman&mdash;her husband?&rdquo; asked Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They all broke prison, poor fellows, as they had need to do,
+and the Major&rsquo;s time was nearly up.&nbsp; He made himself busy
+in saving and helping the folk in the streets; and his brother, Sir
+Peregrine, who was thick with the King, and is in foreign parts now,
+took the chance to speak of the poor lady&rsquo;s plight and say it
+would be the death of her if he could not get his discharge, and his
+Majesty, bless his kind heart, gave the order at once.&nbsp; So they
+took madam home to the Chace, but she has been but an ailing body ever
+since.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But the fairy, the fairy, how did she change the babe?&rdquo;
+cried Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush, hush, dearie! name them not.&nbsp; I am coming to it
+all in good time.&nbsp; I was telling you how the poor lady failed and
+pined from that hour, and was like to die.&nbsp; My gossip Madge told
+me how when, next Midsummer, this unlucky babe was born they had to
+take him from her chamber at once because any sound of crying made her
+start in her sleep, and shriek that she heard a poor child wailing who
+had been left in a burning house.&nbsp; Moll Owens, the hind&rsquo;s
+wife, a comely lass, was to nurse him, and they had him at once to her
+in the nursery, where was the elder child, two years old, Master Oliver,
+as you know well, Mistress Lucy, a fine-grown, sturdy little Turk as
+ever was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I know him,&rdquo; answered Lucy; &ldquo;and if his brother&rsquo;s
+a changeling, he is a bear!&nbsp; The Whig bear is what Charley calls
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, what does that child do but trot out of the nursery,
+and try to scramble down the stairs.&mdash;Never tell me but that they
+you wot of trained him out&mdash;not that they had power over a Christian
+child, but that they might work their will on the little one.&nbsp;
+So they must needs trip him up, so that he rolled down the stair hollering
+and squalling all the way enough to bring the house down, and his poor
+lady mother, she woke up in a fit.&nbsp; The womenfolk ran, Molly and
+all, she being but a slip of a girl herself and giddy-pated, and when
+they came back after quieting Master Oliver, the babe was changed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then they didn&rsquo;t see the&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush, hush, missie! no one never sees &rsquo;em or they couldn&rsquo;t
+do nothing.&nbsp; They cannot, if a body is looking.&nbsp; But what
+had been as likely a child before as you would wish to handle was gone!&nbsp;
+The poor little mouth was all of a twist, and his eyelid drooped, and
+he never ceased mourn, mourn, mourn, wail, wail, wail, day and night,
+and whatever food he took he never was satisfied, but pined and peaked
+and dwined from day to day, so as his little legs was like knitting
+pins.&nbsp; The lady was nigh upon death as it seemed, so that no one
+took note of the child at first, but when Madge had time to look at
+him, she saw how it was, as plain as plain could be, and told his father.&nbsp;
+But men are unbelieving, my dears, and always think they know better
+than them as has the best right, and Major Oakshott would hear of no
+such thing, only if the boy was like to die, he must be christened.&nbsp;
+Well, Madge knew that sometimes they flee at touch of holy water, but
+no; though the thing mourned and moaned enough to curdle your blood
+and screeched out when the water touched him, there he was the same
+puny little canker.&nbsp; So when madam was better, and began to fret
+over the child that was nigh upon three months old, and no bigger than
+a newborn babe, Madge up and told her how it was, and the way to get
+her own again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was that, nurse?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There be different ways, my dear.&nbsp; Madge always held
+to breaking five and twenty eggs and have a pot boiling on a good sea-coal
+fire with the poker in it red hot, and then drop the shells in one by
+one, in sight of the creature in the cradle.&nbsp; Presently it will
+up and ask whatever you are about.&nbsp; Then you gets the poker in
+your hand as you says, &ldquo;A-brewing of egg shells.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Then it says, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m forty hundred years old and odd, and
+yet I never heard of a-brewing of egg shells.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then you
+ups with the poker and at him to thrust it down his ugly throat, and
+there&rsquo;s a hissing and a whirling, and he is snatched away, and
+the real darling, all plump and rosy, is put back in the cradle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And did they?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, my dears.&nbsp; Madam was that soft-hearted she could
+not bring her mind to it, though they promised her not to touch him
+unless he spoke.&nbsp; But nigh on two years later, Master Robert was
+born, as fine and lusty and straight-limbed as a chrisom could be, while
+the other could not walk a step, but sat himself about on the floor,
+a-moaning and a-fretting with the legs of him for all the world like
+the drumsticks of a fowl, and his hands like claws, and his face wizened
+up like an old gaffer of a hundred, or the jackanapes that Martin Boats&rsquo;n
+brought from Barbary.&nbsp; So after a while madam saw the rights of
+it, and gave consent that means should be taken as Madge and other wise
+folk would have it; but he was too old by that time for the egg shells,
+for he could talk, talk, and ask questions enough to drive you wild.&nbsp;
+So they took him out under the privet hedge, Madge and her gossip Deborah
+Clint, and had got his clothes off to flog him with nettles till they
+changed him, when the ill-favoured elf began to squall and shriek like
+a whole litter of pigs, and as ill luck would have it, the master was
+within hearing, though they had watched him safe off to one of his own
+&rsquo;venticles, but it seems there had been warning that the justices
+were on the look-out, so home he came.&nbsp; And behold, the thing that
+never knew the use of his feet before, ups and flies at him, and lays
+hold of his leg, hollering out, &ldquo;Sir, father, don&rsquo;t let
+them,&rdquo; and what not.&nbsp; So then it was all over with them,
+as though that were not proof enow what manner of thing it was!&nbsp;
+Madge tried to put him off with washing with yarbs being good for the
+limbs, but when he saw that Deb was there, he saith, saith he, as grim
+as may be, &ldquo;Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live,&rdquo; which
+was hard, for she is but a white witch; and he stormed and raved at
+them with Bible texts, and then he vowed (men are so headstrong, my
+dears) that if ever he ketched them at it again, he would see Deb burnt
+for a witch at the stake, and Madge hung for the murder of the child,
+and he is well known to be a man of his word.&nbsp; So they had to leave
+him to abide by his bargain, and a sore handful he has of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne drew a long sigh and asked whether the real boy in fairyland
+would never come back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no telling, missie dear.&nbsp; Some say they
+are bound there for ever and a day, some that they as holds &rsquo;em
+are bound to bring them back for a night once in seven years, and in
+the old times if they was sprinkled with holy water, and crossed, they
+would stay, but there&rsquo;s no such thing as holy water now, save
+among the Papists, and if one knew the way to cross oneself, it would
+be as much as one&rsquo;s life was worth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If Peregrine was to die,&rdquo; suggested Lucy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bless your heart, dearie, he&rsquo;ll never die!&nbsp; When
+the true one&rsquo;s time comes, you&rsquo;ll see, if so be you be alive
+to see it, as Heaven grant, he will go off like the flame of a candle
+and nothing be left in his place but a bit of a withered sting nettle.&nbsp;
+But come, my sweetings, &rsquo;tis time I got your supper.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll
+put some nice rosy-cheeked apples down to roast, to be soft for Mistress
+Woodford&rsquo;s sore mouth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before the apples were roasted, Charles Archfield and his cousin,
+the colleger Sedley Archfield, a big boy in a black cloth gown, came
+in with news of having&mdash;together with the other boys, including
+Oliver and Robert Oakshott&mdash;hunted Peregrine all round the Close,
+but he ran like a lapwing, and when they had pinned him up in the corner
+by Dr. Ken&rsquo;s house, he slipped through their fingers up the ivy,
+and grinned at them over the wall like the imp he was.&nbsp; Noll said
+it was always the way, he was no more to be caught than a bit of thistledown,
+but Sedley meant to call out all the college boys and hunt and bait
+him down like a badger on &lsquo;Hills.&rsquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II<br />
+High Treason</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Whate&rsquo;er it be that is within his reach,<br />
+The filching trick he doth his fingers teach.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Robin Badfellow.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>There was often a considerable distance between children and their
+parents in the seventeenth century, but Anne Woodford, as the only child
+of her widowed mother, was as solace, comfort, and companion; and on
+her pillow in early morning the child poured forth in grave earnest
+the entire story of the changeling, asking whether he could not be &ldquo;taken
+to good Dr. Ken, or the Dean, or the Bishop to be ex&mdash;ex&mdash;what
+is it, mother?&nbsp; Not whipped with nettles.&nbsp; Oh no! nor burnt
+with red hot pokers, but have holy words said so that the right one
+may come back.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear child, did you really believe that old nurse&rsquo;s
+tale?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O madam, she <i>knew</i> it.&nbsp; The other old woman saw
+it!&nbsp; I always thought fairies and elves were only in tales, but
+Lucy&rsquo;s nurse knows it is true.&nbsp; And <i>he</i> is not a bit
+like other lads, mamma dear.&nbsp; He is lean and small, and his eyes
+are of different colours, look two ways at once, and his mouth goes
+awry when he speaks, and he laughs just like&mdash;like a fiend.&nbsp;
+Lucy and I call him <i>Riquet &agrave; la Houppe</i>, because he is
+just like the picture in Mademoiselle&rsquo;s book, with a great stubbly
+bunch of hair sticking out on one side, and though he walks a little
+lame, he can hop and skip like a grasshopper, faster than any of the
+boys, and leap up a wall in a moment, and grin&mdash;oh most frightfully.&nbsp;
+Have you ever seen him, mamma?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think so.&nbsp; I saw a poor boy, who seemed to me to have
+had a stroke of some sort when he was an infant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, madam, that would not make him so spiteful and malicious!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If every one is against him and treats him as a wicked mischievous
+elf, it is only too likely to make him bitter and spiteful.&nbsp; Nay,
+Anne, if you come back stuffed with old wives&rsquo; tales, I shall
+not allow you to go home with Lucy Archfield.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The threat silenced Anne, who was a grave and rather silent little
+person, and when she mentioned it to her friend, the answer was, &ldquo;Did
+you tell your mother?&nbsp; If I had told mine, I should have been whipped
+for repeating lying tales.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh then you don&rsquo;t believe it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It must be true, for Madge knew it.&nbsp; But that&rsquo;s
+the way always if one lets out that one knows more than they think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is not the way with my mother,&rdquo; stoutly said Anne,
+drawing up her dignified little head.&nbsp; And she kept her resolution,
+for though a little excited by her first taste of lively youthful companionship,
+she was naturally a thoughtful reticent child, with a character advanced
+by companionship with her mother as an only child, through a great sorrow.&nbsp;
+Thus she was in every respect more developed than her contemporary Lucy,
+who regarded her with wonder as well as affection, and she was the object
+of the boyish devotion of Charley, who often defended her from his cousin
+Sedley&rsquo;s endeavours to put down what he considered upstart airs
+in a little nobody from London.&nbsp; Sedley teased and baited every
+weak thing in his way, and Lucy had been his chief butt till Anne Woodford&rsquo;s
+unconscious dignity and more cultivated manners excited his utmost spleen.</p>
+<p>Lucy might be incredulous, but she was eager to tell that when her
+cousin Sedley Archfield was going back to &lsquo;chambers,&rsquo; down
+from the Close gate came the imp on his shoulders in the twilight and
+twisted both legs round his neck, holding tight on in spite of plunges,
+pinches, and endeavours to scrape him off against the wall, which were
+frustrated or retaliated by hair pulling, choking, till just ere entering
+the college gateway, where Sedley looked to get his revenge among his
+fellows, he found his shoulders free, and heard &ldquo;Ho! ho! ho!&rdquo;
+from the top of a wall close at hand.&nbsp; All the more was the young
+people&rsquo;s faith in the changeling story confirmed, and child-world
+was in those days even more impenetrable to their elders than at present.</p>
+<p>Changeling or no, it was certain that Peregrine Oakshott was the
+plague of the Close, where his father, an ex-officer of the Parliamentary
+army, had unwillingly hired a house for the winter, for the sake of
+medical treatment for his wife, a sufferer from a complication of ailments.&nbsp;
+Oakwood, his home, was about five miles from Dr. Woodford&rsquo;s living
+of Portchester, and as the families would thus be country neighbours,
+Mrs. Woodford thought it well to begin the acquaintance at Winchester.&nbsp;
+While knocking at the door of the house on the opposite side of the
+Close, she was aware of an elfish visage peering from an upper window.&nbsp;
+There was the queer mop of dark hair, the squinting light eyes, the
+contorted grin crooking the mouth, the odd sallow face, making her quite
+glad to get out of sight of the strange grimaces which grew every moment
+more hideous.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Oakshott sat in an arm-chair beside a large fire in a wainscotted
+room, with a folding-screen shutting off the window.&nbsp; Her spinning-wheel
+was near, but it was only too plain that &lsquo;feeble was the hand,
+and silly the thread.&rsquo;&nbsp; She bent her head in its wadded black
+velvet hood, but excused herself from rising, as she was crippled by
+rheumatic pains.&nbsp; She had evidently once been a pretty little person,
+innocent and inane, and her face had become like that of a withered
+baby, piteous in its expression of pain and weariness, but otherwise
+somewhat vacant.&nbsp; At first, indeed, there was a look of alarm.&nbsp;
+Perhaps she expected every visitor to come with a complaint of her unlucky
+Peregrine, but when Mrs. Woodford spoke cheerfully of being her neighbour
+in the country, she was evidently relieved and even gratified, prattling
+in a soft plaintive tone about her sufferings and the various remedies,
+ranging from woodlice rolled into natural pills, and grease off the
+church bells, to diamond dust and Goa stones, since, as she said, there
+was no cost to which Major Oakshott would not go for her benefit.&nbsp;
+He had even procured for her a pound of the Queen&rsquo;s new Chinese
+herb, and it certainly was as nauseous as could be wished, when boiled
+in milk, but she was told that was not the way it was taken at my Lady
+Charnock&rsquo;s.&nbsp; She was quite animated when Mrs. Woodford offered
+to show her how to prepare it.</p>
+<p>Therewith the master of the house came in, and the aspect of affairs
+changed.&nbsp; He was a tall, dark, grave man, plainly though handsomely
+dressed, and in a gentlemanly way making it evident that visits to his
+wife were not welcome.&nbsp; He said that her health never permitted
+her to go abroad, and that his poor house contained nothing that could
+please a Court lady.&nbsp; Mrs. Oakshott shrank into herself, and became
+shy and silent, and Mrs. Woodford felt constrained to take leave, courteously
+conducted to the door by her unwilling host.</p>
+<p>She had not taken many steps before she was startled by a sharp shower
+from a squirt coming sidelong like a blow on her cheek and surprising
+her into a low cry, which was heard by the Major, so that he hastened
+out, exclaiming, &ldquo;Madam, I trust that you are not hurt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no, sir!&nbsp; It is nothing&mdash;not a stone&mdash;only
+water!&rdquo; she said, wiping it with her handkerchief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am grieved and ashamed at the evil pranks of my unhappy
+son, but he shall suffer for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, sir, I pray you.&nbsp; It was only childish mischief.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He had not waited to hear her pleadings, and before she was half
+across the Close he had overtaken her, dragging the cowering struggling
+boy in his powerful grasp.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Peregrine,&rdquo; he commanded, &ldquo;let me instantly
+hear you ask the lady&rsquo;s pardon for your dastardly trick.&nbsp;
+Or&mdash;!&rdquo; and his other hand was raised for a blow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sure he is sorry,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woodford, making a
+motion to ward off the stroke, and as the queer eyes glanced up at her
+in wondering inquiry, she laid her hand on the bony shoulder, saying,
+&ldquo;I know you did not mean to hurt me.&nbsp; You are sorry, are
+you not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; the boy muttered, and she saw a look of surprise
+on his father&rsquo;s face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;he has made his amends, and
+surely that may suffice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, madam, it would be a weak and ungodly tenderness that
+would spare to drive forth the evil spirit which possesses the child
+by the use of the rod.&nbsp; I should fail in my duty alike to God and
+man,&rdquo; he added, in reply to a fresh gesture of intercession, &ldquo;did
+I not teach him what it is to insult a lady at mine own door.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford could only go away, heartily sorry for the boy.&nbsp;
+From that time, however, both she and her little daughter were untouched
+by his tricks, though every one else had some complaint.&nbsp; Peas
+were shot from unknown recesses at venerable canons, mice darted out
+before shrieking ladies, frogs&rsquo; clammy forms descended on the
+nape of their necks, hedgehogs were curled up on their chairs, and though
+Peregrine Oakshott was not often caught in the act, no mischief ever
+took place that was not attributed to him; and it was popularly believed
+in the Close that his father flogged him every morning for what he was
+about to do, and his tutor repeated the castigation every evening for
+what he had done, besides interludes at each detection.</p>
+<p>Perhaps frequent usage had toughened his skin, or he had become expert
+in wriggling from the full force of the blow, or else, as many believed,
+the elfish nature was impervious; for he was as ready as ever for a
+trick the moment he was released, like, as his brother said, the dog
+Keeper, who, with a slaughtered chick hung round his neck in penance,
+rushed murderously upon the rest of the brood.</p>
+<p>Yet Mrs. Woodford, on her way through the Cathedral nave, was aware
+of something leaning against one of the great columns, crouching together
+so that the dark head, supported on the arms, rested against the pillar
+which fluted the pier.&nbsp; The organ was pealing softly and plaintively,
+and the little gray coat seemed to heave as with a sob.&nbsp; She stood,
+impelled to offer to take him with her into the choir, but a verger,
+spying him, began rating him in a tone fit for expelling a dog, &ldquo;Come,
+master, none of your pranks here!&nbsp; Be not you ashamed of yourself
+to be lying in wait for godly folk on their way to prayers?&nbsp; If
+I catch you here again the Dean shall hear of it, and you shall smart
+for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford began, &ldquo;He was only hearkening to the music,&rdquo;
+but she caught such a look of malignity cast upon the verger as perfectly
+appalled her, and in another moment the boy had dashed, head over heels,
+out at the nearest door.</p>
+<p>The next report that reached her related how a cloud of lime had
+suddenly descended from a broken arch of the cloister on the solemn
+verger, on his way to escort the Dean to the Minster, powdering his
+wig, whitening his black gown from collar to hem, and not a little endangering
+his eyesight.</p>
+<p>The culprit eluded all pursuit on this occasion; but Mrs. Woodford
+soon after was told that the Major had caught Peregrine listening at
+the little south door of the choir, had collared him, and flogged him
+worse than ever, for being seduced by the sounds of the popish and idolatrous
+worship, and had told all his sons that the like chastisement awaited
+them if they presumed to cross the threshold of the steeple house.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless the Senior Prefect of the college boys, when about to
+come out of the Cathedral on Sunday morning, found his gown pinned with
+a skewer so fast to the seat that he was only set free at the expense
+of a rent.&nbsp; Public opinion decided that the deed had been done
+by the imp of Oakshott, and accordingly the whole of the Wykeham scholars
+set on him with hue and cry the first time they saw him outside the
+Close, and hunted him as far as St. Cross, where he suddenly and utterly
+vanished from their sight.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford agreed with Anne that it was a very strange story.&nbsp;
+For how could he have been in the Cathedral at service time when it
+was well known that Major Oakshott had all his family together at his
+own form of worship in his house?&nbsp; Anne, who had been in hopes
+that her mother would be thus convinced of his supernatural powers,
+looked disappointed, but she had afterwards to confess that Charles
+Archfield had found out that it was his cousin Sedley Archfield who
+had played the audacious trick, in revenge for a well-merited tunding
+from the Prefect.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And then saddled it on young Oakshott?&rdquo; asked her mother.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Charley says one such matter more or less makes no odds to
+the Whig ape; but I cannot endure Sedley Archfield, mamma.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he lets another lad bear the blame of his malice he cannot
+indeed be a good lad.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So Charley and Lucy say,&rdquo; returned Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;We
+shall be glad to be away from Winchester, for while Peregrine Oakshott
+torments slyly, Sedley Archfield loves to frighten us openly, and to
+hurt us to see how much we can bear, and if Charley tries to stand up
+for us, Sedley calls him a puny wench, and a milksop, and knocks him
+down.&nbsp; But, dear madam, pray do not tell what I have said to her
+ladyship, for there is no knowing what Sedley would do to us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My little maid has not known before what boys can be!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; but indeed Charles Archfield is quite different, almost
+as if he had been bred in London.&nbsp; He is a very gentleman.&nbsp;
+He never is rude to any girl, and he is courteous and gentle and kind.&nbsp;
+He gathered walnuts for us yesterday, and cracked all mine, and I am
+to make him a purse with two of the shells.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford smiled, but there was a short thrill of anxiety in
+her motherly heart as her glance brought up a deeper colour into Anne&rsquo;s
+cheeks.&nbsp; There was a reserve to bring that glow, for the child
+knew that if she durst say that Charles called her his little sweetheart
+and wife, and that the walnut-shell purse would be kept as a token,
+she should be laughed at as a silly child, perhaps forbidden to make
+it, or else her uncle might hear and make a joke of it.&nbsp; It was
+not exactly disingenuousness, but rather the first dawn of maidenly
+reserve and modesty that reddened her cheek in a manner her mother did
+not fail to observe.</p>
+<p>Yet it was with more amusement than misgiving, for children played
+at courtship like other games in mimicry of being grown up, and a baronet&rsquo;s
+only son was in point of fact almost as much out of the reach of a sea
+captain&rsquo;s daughter and clergyman&rsquo;s niece as a prince of
+the blood royal; and Master Archfield would probably be contracted long
+before he could choose for himself, for his family were not likely to
+take into account that if Captain Woodford had not been too severely
+wounded to come forward after the battle of Southwold Bay he would have
+been knighted.&nbsp; On the strength of which Anne, as her companions
+sometimes said, gave herself in consequence more airs than Mistress
+Lucy ever did.</p>
+<p>Sedley, a poor cousin, a destitute cavalier&rsquo;s orphan, who had
+been placed on the foundation at Winchester College in hopes that he
+might be provided for in the Church, would have been far more on her
+level, and indeed Lady Archfield, a notable matchmaker, had already
+hinted how suitable such a thing would be.&nbsp; However, the present
+school character of Master Sedley, as well as her own observations,
+by no means inclined Mrs. Woodford towards the boy, large limbed and
+comely faced, but with a bullying, scowling air that did not augur well
+for his wife or his parish.</p>
+<p>Whether it were this lad&rsquo;s threats, or more likely, the fact
+that all the Close was on the alert, Peregrine&rsquo;s exploits were
+less frequent there, and began to extend to the outskirts of the city.&nbsp;
+There were some fine yew trees on the southern borders, towards the
+chalk down, with massive dark foliage upon stout ruddy branches, among
+which Peregrine, armed with a fishing-rod, line, and hook, sat perched,
+angling for what might be caught from unconscious passengers along a
+path which led beneath.</p>
+<p>From a market-woman&rsquo;s basket he abstracted thus a fowl!&nbsp;
+His &ldquo;Ho! ho! ho!&rdquo; startled her into looking up, and seeing
+it apparently resuscitated, and hovering aloft.&nbsp; Full of dismay,
+she hurried shrieking away to tell the story of the bewitched chick
+at the market-cross among her gossips.</p>
+<p>His next capture was a chop from a butcher boy&rsquo;s tray, but
+this involved more peril, for with a fierce oath that he would be revenged
+on the Whiggish imp, the lad darted at the tree, in vain, however, for
+Peregrine had dropped down on the other side, and crept unseen to another
+bush, where he lay <i>perdu</i>, under the thick green branches, rod
+and all, while the youth, swearing and growling, was shaking his former
+refuge.</p>
+<p>As soon as the coast was clear he went back to his post, and presently
+was aware of three gentlemen advancing over the down, pointing, measuring,
+and surveying.&nbsp; One was small and slight, as simply dressed as
+a gentleman of the period could be; another was clad in a gay coat with
+a good deal of fluttering ribbon and rich lace; the third, a tall well-made
+man, had a plain walking suit, surmounted by a flowing periwig and plumed
+beaver.&nbsp; Coming close beneath Peregrine&rsquo;s tree, and standing
+with their backs to it, they eagerly conversed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Such a
+cascade will drown the honours of the Versailles fountains, if only
+the water can be raised to such a height.&nbsp; Are you sure of it,
+Wren?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As certain as hydraulics can make me, sir,&rdquo; and the
+lesser man began drawing lines with his stick in the dust of the path
+in demonstration.</p>
+<p>The opportunity was irresistible, and the hook from above deftly
+caught the band of the feathered hat of the taller man, slowly and steadily
+drawing it up, entirely unperceived by the owner, on whose wig it had
+rested, and who was bending over the dust-traced diagram in absorbed
+attention.&nbsp; Peregrine deferred his hobgoblin laughter, for success
+emboldened him farther.&nbsp; Detaching the hat from his hook, and depositing
+it safely in a fork of the tree, he next cautiously let down his line,
+and contrived to get a strong hold of one of the black locks on the
+top of the wig, just as the wearer was observing, &ldquo;Oliver&rsquo;s
+Battery, eh?&nbsp; A cupola with a light to be seen out at sea?&nbsp;
+Our sailors will make another St. Christopher of you!&nbsp; Ha! what&rsquo;s
+this&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For feeling as if a branch were touching the structure on his head,
+he had stepped forward, thus favouring Peregrine&rsquo;s man&oelig;uvres
+so that the wig dangled in the air, suddenly disclosing the bare skull
+of a very dark man, with such marked features that it needed not the
+gentlemen&rsquo;s outcry to show the boy who was the victim of his mischief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What imp is there?&rdquo; cried the King, spying up into the
+tree, while his attendant drew his sword, &ldquo;How now?&rdquo; as
+Peregrine half climbed, half tumbled down, bringing hat and wig with
+him, and, whether by design or accident, fell at his feet.&nbsp; &ldquo;Will
+nothing content you but royal game?&rdquo; he continued laughing, as
+Sir Christopher Wren helped him to resume his wig.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why,
+what a shrimp it is! a mere goblin sprite!&nbsp; What&rsquo;s thy name,
+master wag?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Peregrine Oakshott, so please you,&rdquo; the boy answered,
+raising himself with a face scared indeed, but retaining its queer impishness.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Sir, I never guessed&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Young rogue! have you our licence to waylay our loyal subjects?&rdquo;
+demanded the King, with an affected fierceness.&nbsp; &ldquo;Know you
+not &rsquo;tis rank treason to discrown our sacred Majesty, far more
+to dishevel or destroy our locks?&nbsp; Why!&nbsp; I might behead you
+on the spot.&rdquo;&nbsp; To his great amazement the boy, with an eager
+face and clasped hands, exclaimed, &ldquo;O sir!&nbsp; Oh, please your
+Majesty, do so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do so!&rdquo; exclaimed the King astounded.&nbsp; &ldquo;Didst
+hear what I said?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir!&nbsp; You said it was a beheading matter, and I&rsquo;m
+willing, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of all the petitions that ever were made to me, this is the
+strangest!&rdquo; exclaimed Charles.&nbsp; &ldquo;An urchin like this
+weary of life!&nbsp; What next?&nbsp; So,&rdquo; with a wink to his
+companions, &ldquo;Peregrine Oakshott, we condemn thee for high treason
+against our most sacred Majesty&rsquo;s beaver and periwig, and sentence
+thee to die by having thine head severed from thy body.&nbsp; Kneel
+down, open thy collar, bare thy neck.&nbsp; Ay, so, lay thy neck across
+that bough.&nbsp; Killigrew, do thy duty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To the general surprise, the boy complied with all these directions,
+never flinching nor showing sign of fear, except that his lips were
+set and his cheek whitened.&nbsp; As he knelt, with closed eyes, the
+flat cold blade descended on his neck, the tension relaxed, and he sank!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; cried the King.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is gone too far!&nbsp;
+He has surely not carried out the jest by dying on our hands.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, sir,&rdquo; said Wren, after a moment&rsquo;s alarm,
+&ldquo;he has only swooned.&nbsp; Has any one here a flask of wine to
+revive him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Several gentlemen had come up, and as Peregrine stirred, some wine
+was held to his lips, and he presently asked in a faint voice, &ldquo;Is
+this fairyland?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not yet, my lad,&rdquo; said Charles, &ldquo;whatever it may
+be when Wren&rsquo;s work is done.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The boy opened his eyes, and as he beheld the same face, and the
+too familiar sky and trees, he sighed heavily, and said, &ldquo;Then
+it is all the same!&nbsp; O sir, would you but have cut off my head
+in good earnest, I might be at home again!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Home! what means the elf?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An elf!&nbsp; That is what they say I am&mdash;changed in
+the cradle,&rdquo; said Peregrine, incited to confidence by the good-natured
+eyes, &ldquo;and I thought if I were close on death mine own people
+might take me home, and bring back the right one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He really believes it!&rdquo; exclaimed Charles much diverted.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Tell me, good Master Elf, who is thy father, I mean not my brother
+Oberon, but him of the right one, as thou sayst.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Robert Oakshott of Oakwood, sir,&rdquo; said Peregrine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A sturdy squire of the country party,&rdquo; said the King.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I am much minded to secure the lad for an elfin page,&rdquo;
+he added aside to Killigrew.&nbsp; &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a fund of excellent
+humour and drollery in those queer eyes of his!&nbsp; So, Sir Hobgoblin,
+if you are proof against cold steel, I know not what is to be done with
+you.&nbsp; Get you back, and devise some other mode of finding your
+way home to fairyland.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peregrine said not a word of his adventure, so that the surprise
+of his family was the greater when overtures were made through Sir Christopher
+Wren for his appointment as a royal page.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would as soon send my son at once to be a page to Beelzebub,&rdquo;
+returned Major Oakshott.</p>
+<p>And though Sir Christopher did not return the answer exactly in those
+terms, he would not say that the Puritan Major did not judge rightly.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III<br />
+The Fairy King</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;She&rsquo;s turned her right and round about,<br />
+&nbsp; And thrice she blew on a grass-green horn,<br />
+And she sware by the moon and the stars above<br />
+&nbsp; That she&rsquo;d gar me rue the day I was born.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Old Ballad of Alison Cross.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Dr. Woodford&rsquo;s parish was Portchester, where stood the fine
+old royal castle at present ungarrisoned, and partly dismantled in the
+recent troubles, on a chalk peninsula, a spur from Portsdown, projecting
+above the alluvial flats, and even into the harbour, whose waves at
+high tide laved the walls.&nbsp; The church and churchyard were within
+the ample circuit of the fortifications, about two furlongs distant
+from the main building, where rose the mighty Norman keep, above the
+inner court, with a gate tower at this date, only inhabited by an old
+soldier as porter with his family.&nbsp; A massive square tower at each
+angle of the huge wall likewise defied decay.</p>
+<p>It was on Midsummer eve, that nearly about sundown, Dr. Woodford
+was summoned by the severe illness of the gatekeeper&rsquo;s old father,
+and his sister-in-law went with him to attempt what her skill could
+accomplish for the old man&rsquo;s relief.</p>
+<p>They were detained there till the sun had long set, though the air,
+saturated with his redness, was full of soft twilight, while the moon,
+scarcely past the full, was just high enough to silver the quiet sea,
+and throw the shadow of the battlements and towers on the sward whitened
+with dew.</p>
+<p>After the close atmosphere of the sickroom the freshness was welcome,
+and Mrs. Woodford, once a friend of Katherine Phillips, &lsquo;the Matchless
+Orinda,&rsquo; had an eye and a soul to appreciate the beauty, and she
+even murmured the lines of <i>Il Penseroso</i> as she leant on the arm
+of her brother-in-law, who, in his turn, thought of Homer.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, as they stood in the shadow, they were aware of a small,
+slight, fantastic figure in the midst of the grass-grown court, where
+there was a large green mushroom circle or fairy ring.&nbsp; On the
+borders of this ring it paused with an air of disappointment.&nbsp;
+Then entering it stood still, took off the hat, whose lopsided appearance
+had given so strange an outline, and bowed four times in opposite directions,
+when, as the face was turned towards the spectators, invisible in the
+dark shadow, the lady recognised Peregrine Oakshott.&nbsp; She pressed
+the Doctor&rsquo;s arm, and they both stood still watching the boy bathing
+his hand in the dew, and washing his face with it, then kneeling on
+one knee, and clasping his hands, as he cried aloud in a piteous chant&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fairy mother, fairy mother!&nbsp; Oh, come, come and take
+me home!&nbsp; My very life is sore to me.&nbsp; They all hate me!&nbsp;
+My brothers and the servants, every one of them.&nbsp; And my father
+and tutor say I am possessed with an evil spirit, and I am beaten daily,
+and more than daily.&nbsp; I can never, never get a good word from living
+soul!&nbsp; This is the second seven years, and Midsummer night!&nbsp;
+Oh, bring the other back again!&nbsp; I&rsquo;m weary, I&rsquo;m weary!&nbsp;
+Good elves, good elves, take me home.&nbsp; Fairy mother!&nbsp; Come,
+come, come!&rdquo;&nbsp; Shutting his eyes he seemed to be in a state
+of intense expectation.&nbsp; Tears filled Mrs. Woodford&rsquo;s eyes.&nbsp;
+The Doctor moved forward, but no sooner did the boy become conscious
+of human presence than he started up, and fled wildly towards a postern
+door, but no sooner had he disappeared in the shadow than there was
+a cry and a fall.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor child!&rdquo; exclaimed Dr. Woodford, &ldquo;he has fallen
+down the steps to the vault.&nbsp; It is a dangerous pitfall.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They both hurried to the place, and found the boy lying on the steps
+leading down to the vault, but motionless, and when they succeeded in
+lifting him up, he was quite unconscious, having evidently struck his
+head against the mouth of the vault.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We must carry him home between us,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woodford.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;That will be better than rousing Miles Gateward, and making a
+coil.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford, however, took the entire weight, which he declared
+to be very slight.&nbsp; &ldquo;No one would think the poor child fourteen
+years old,&rdquo; he observed, &ldquo;yet did he not speak of a second
+seven?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woodford, &ldquo;he was born after
+the Great Fire of London, which, as I have good cause to know, was in
+the year &rsquo;66.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was still little sign of revival about the boy when he had
+been carried into the Parsonage, undressed and laid in the Doctor&rsquo;s
+own bed, only a few moans when he was handled, and on his thin, sharp
+features there was a piteous look of sadness entirely unlike his ordinary
+expression of malignant fun, and which went to the kind hearts of the
+Doctor and Mrs. Woodford.&nbsp; After exhausting their own remedies,
+as soon as the early daylight was available Dr. Woodford called up a
+couple of servants, and sent one into Portsmouth for a surgeon, and
+another to Oakwood to the parents.</p>
+<p>The doctor was the first to arrive, though not till the morning was
+well advanced.&nbsp; He found that three ribs were broken against the
+edge of the stone step, and the head severely injured, and having had
+sufficient experience in the navy to be a reasonably safe practitioner,
+he did nothing worse than bleed the patient, and declared that absolute
+rest was the only hope of recovery.</p>
+<p>He was being regaled with cold roast pig and ale when Major Oakshott
+rode up to the door.&nbsp; Four horses were dragging the great lumbering
+coach over Portsdown hill, but he had gone on before, to thank Dr. and
+Mrs. Woodford for their care of his unfortunate son, and to make preparations
+for his transport home under the care of his wife&rsquo;s own woman,
+who was coming in the coach in the stead of the invalid lady.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, sir.&nbsp; Master Brent here has a word to say to that
+matter,&rdquo; replied the Doctor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Truly, sir, I have,&rdquo; said the surgeon; &ldquo;in his
+present state it is as much as your son&rsquo;s life is worth to move
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be that as it may seem to man, he is in the hand of Heaven,
+and he ought to be at home, whether for life or death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For death it will assuredly be, sir, if he be jolted and shaken
+along the Portsdown roads&mdash;yea, I question whether you would get
+him to Oakwood alive,&rdquo; said Brent, with naval roughness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, sir,&rdquo; added Mrs. Woodford, &ldquo;Mrs. Oakshott
+may be assured of my giving him as tender care as though he were mine
+own son.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am beholden to you, madam,&rdquo; said the Major; &ldquo;I
+know your kindliness of heart; but in good sooth, the unhappy and rebellious
+lad merits chastisement rather than pity, since what should he be doing
+at this distance from home, where he was shut up for his misdemeanours,
+save fleeing like the Prodigal of the parable, or else planning another
+of his malicious pranks, as I greatly fear, on you or your daughter,
+madam.&nbsp; If so, he hath fallen into the pit that he made for others.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The impulse was to tell what had occurred, but the surgeon&rsquo;s
+presence, and the dread of making all worse for the poor boy checked
+both the hosts, and Mrs. Woodford only declared that since the day of
+the apology he had never molested her or her little girl.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Still,&rdquo; said the Major, &ldquo;it is not possible to
+leave him in a stranger&rsquo;s house, where at any moment the evil
+spirit that is in him may break forth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come and see him, and judge,&rdquo; said Dr. Woodford.</p>
+<p>When the father beheld the deathly face and motionless form, stern
+as he was, he was greatly shocked.&nbsp; His heavy tread caused a moan,
+and when he said &ldquo;What, Perry, how now?&rdquo; there was a painful
+shrinking and twitching, which the surgeon greeted as evidence of returning
+animation, but which made him almost drag the Major out of the room
+for fear of immediate consequences.</p>
+<p>Major Oakshott, and still more the servant, who had arrived in the
+coach and come upstairs, could not but be convinced that removal was
+not to be thought of.&nbsp; The maid was, moreover, too necessary to
+her mistress to be left to undertake the nursing, much to her master&rsquo;s
+regret, but to the joy of Mrs. Woodford, who felt certain that by far
+the best chance for the poor boy was in his entire separation from all
+associations with the home where he had evidently suffered so much.</p>
+<p>There was, perhaps, nothing except the pageship at Court that could
+have gone more against Major Oakshott&rsquo;s principles than to leave
+his son in the house of a prelatical minister, but alternative there
+was none, and he could only express how much he was beholden to the
+Dr. and Mrs. Woodford.</p>
+<p>All their desire was that he would remain at a distance, for during
+the long and weary watch they had to keep over the half-conscious lad,
+the sound of a voice or even a horse&rsquo;s tread from Oakwood occasioned
+moans and restlessness.&nbsp; The Major rode over, or sent his sons,
+or a servant daily to inquire during the first fortnight, except on
+the Sundays, and on each of these the patient made a step towards improvement.</p>
+<p>At first he lay in a dull, death-like stupor, only groaning if disturbed,
+but by and by there was a babbling murmur of words, and soon the sound
+of his brother&rsquo;s loud voice at the door, demanding from the saddle
+how it went to-day with Peregrine, caused a shriek of terror and such
+a fit of trembling that Mrs. Woodford had to go out and make a personal
+request that Oliver would never again speak under the window.&nbsp;
+To her great relief, when the balance between life and death had decidedly
+turned, the inquiries became less frequent, and could often be forestalled
+by sending messengers to Oakwood.</p>
+<p>The boy usually lay still all day in the darkened room, only showing
+pain at light or noise, but at night he often talked and rambled a good
+deal.&nbsp; Sometimes it was Greek or Latin, sometimes whole chapters
+of Scripture, either denunciating portions or genealogies from the First
+Book of Chronicles, the polysyllabic names pouring from his mouth whenever
+he was particularly oppressed or suffering, so that when Mrs. Woodford
+had with some difficulty made out what they were, she concluded that
+they had been set as tasks of penance.</p>
+<p>At other times Peregrine talked as if he absolutely believed himself
+in fairyland, accepting a strawberry or cherry as elfin food, promising
+a tester in Anne&rsquo;s shoe when she helped to change his pillow,
+or conversing in the style of Puck, or Robin Goodfellow, on intended
+pranks.&nbsp; Often he fancied himself the lubber fiend resting at the
+fire his hairy strength, and watching for cock-crow as the signal for
+flinging out-of-doors.&nbsp; It was wonderful how in the grim and strict
+Puritanical household he could have imbibed so much fairy lore, but
+he must have eagerly assimilated and recollected whatever he heard,
+holding them as tidings from his true kith and kin; and, indeed, when
+he was running on thus, Mrs. Woodford sometimes felt a certain awe and
+chill, as of the preternatural, and could hardly believe that he belonged
+to ordinary human nature.&nbsp; Either she or the Doctor always took
+the night-watch after the talking mood set in, for they could not judge
+of the effect it might have on any of the servants.&nbsp; Indeed they
+sometimes doubted whether this were not the beginning of permanent insanity,
+as the delusion seemed to strengthen with symptoms of recovery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Dr. Woodford, &ldquo;Heaven help the poor
+lad!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For sad indeed was the lot in those days of even the most harmless
+lunatic.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yet,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;I scarcely think anything
+can be worse than what he undergoes at home.&nbsp; When I hear the terror
+and misery of his voice, I doubt whether we did him any true kindness
+by hindering his father from killing him outright by the shaking of
+his old coach.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, sister, we strove to do our duty, though it may be we
+have taken on ourselves a further charge.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV<br />
+Imp Or No Imp</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;But wist I of a woman bold<br />
+&nbsp; Who thrice my brow durst sign,<br />
+I might regain my mortal mould,<br />
+&nbsp; As fair a form as thine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>SCOTT.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>At last came a wakening with intelligence in the eyes.&nbsp; In the
+summer morning light that streamed through the chinks of the shutters
+Mrs. Woodford perceived the glance of inquiry, and when she brought
+some cool drink, a rational though feeble voice asked those first questions,
+&ldquo;Who? and where?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am Mrs. Woodford, my dear child.&nbsp; You remember me at
+Winchester.&nbsp; You are at Portchester.&nbsp; You fell down and hurt
+yourself, but you are getting better.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was grieved to see the look of utter disappointment and weariness
+that overspread the features, and the boy hardly spoke again all day.&nbsp;
+There was much drowsiness, but also depression, and more than once Mrs.
+Woodford detected tears, but at other times he received her attentions
+with smiles and looks of wondering gratitude, as though ordinary kindness
+and solicitude were so new to him that he did not know what to make
+of them, and perhaps was afraid of breaking a happy dream by saying
+too much.</p>
+<p>The surgeon saw him, and declared him so much better that he might
+soon be taken home, recommending his sitting up for a little while as
+a first stage.&nbsp; Peregrine, however, seemed far from being cheered,
+and showed himself so unwilling to undergo the fatigue of being dressed,
+even when good Dr. Woodford had brought up his own large chair&mdash;the
+only approach to an easy one in the house&mdash;that the proposal was
+dropped, and he was left in peace for the rest of the day.</p>
+<p>In the evening Mrs. Woodford was sitting by the window, letting her
+needlework drop as the light faded, and just beginning to doze, when
+her repose was broken by a voice saying &ldquo;Madam.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Peregrine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come near, I pray.&nbsp; Will you tell no one?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; what is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In so low a tone that she had to bend over him: &ldquo;Do you know
+how the Papists cross themselves?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I have seen the Queen&rsquo;s confessor and some of the
+ladies make the sign.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear lady, you have been very good to me!&nbsp; If you would
+only cross me thrice, and not be afraid!&nbsp; They could not hurt you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who?&nbsp; What do you mean?&rdquo; she asked, for fairy lore
+had not become a popular study, but comprehension came when he said
+in an awe-stricken voice, &ldquo;You know what I am.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know there have been old wives&rsquo; tales about you, my
+poor boy, but surely you do not believe them yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! if you will not believe them, there is no hope.&nbsp;
+I might have known.&nbsp; You were so good to me;&rdquo; and he hid
+his face.</p>
+<p>She took his unwilling hand and said, &ldquo;Be you what you will,
+my poor child, I am sorry for you, for I see you are very unhappy.&nbsp;
+Come, tell me all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, then you would be like the rest,&rdquo; said Peregrine,
+&ldquo;and I could not bear that,&rdquo; and he wrung her hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps not,&rdquo; she said gently, &ldquo;for I know that
+a story is afloat that you were changed in your cradle, and that there
+are folk ignorant enough to believe it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They all <i>know</i> it,&rdquo; he said impressively.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;My mother and brothers and all the servants.&nbsp; Every soul
+knows it except my father and Mr. Horncastle, and they will never hear
+a word, but will have it that I am possessed with a spirit of evil that
+is to be flogged out of me.&nbsp; Goody Madge and Moll Owens, they knew
+how it was at the first, and would fain have forced them&mdash;mine
+own people&mdash;to take me home, and bring the other back, but my father
+found it out and hindered them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To save your life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Much good does my life do me!&nbsp; Every one hates or fears
+me.&nbsp; No one has a word for me.&nbsp; Every mischance is laid on
+me.&nbsp; When the kitchen wench broke a crock, it was because I looked
+at it.&nbsp; If the keeper misses a deer, he swears at Master Perry!&nbsp;
+Oliver and Robert will not let me touch a thing of theirs; they bait
+me for a moon-calf, and grin when I am beaten for their doings.&nbsp;
+Even my mother quakes and trembles when I come near, and thinks I give
+her the creeps.&nbsp; As to my father and tutor, it is ever the rod
+with them, though I can learn my tasks far better than those jolter-heads
+Noll and Robin.&nbsp; I never heard so many kind words in all my life
+as you have given me since I have been lying here!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stopped in a sort of awe, for tears fell from her eyes, and she
+kissed his forehead.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you not help me, good madam?&rdquo; he entreated.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I went down to Goody Madge, and she said there was a chance for
+me every seven years.&nbsp; The first went by, but this is my fourteenth
+year.&nbsp; I had a hope when the King spoke of beheading me, but he
+was only in jest, as I might have known.&nbsp; Then methought I would
+try what Midsummer night in the fairy ring would do, but that was in
+vain; and now you, who could cross me if you would, will not believe.&nbsp;
+Oh, will you not make the trial?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas!&nbsp; Peregrine, supposing I could do it in good faith,
+would you become a mere tricksy sprite, a thing of the elements, and
+yield up your hopes as a Christian soul, a child of God and heir of
+Heaven?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My father says I am an heir of hell.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, never,&rdquo; she cried, shuddering at his quiet way
+of saying it.&nbsp; &ldquo;You are flesh and blood, christened, and
+with the hope set before you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The christening came too late,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;O
+lady, you who are so good and pitiful, let my mother get back her true
+Peregrine&mdash;a straight-limbed, comely dullard, such as would be
+welcome to her.&nbsp; She would bless and thank you, and for me, to
+be a Will-of-the-wisp, or what not, would be far better than the life
+I lead.&nbsp; Never did I know what my mother calls peace till I lay
+here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Peregrine, poor lad, your value for peace and for my poor
+kindness proves that you have a human heart and are no elf.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, I meant to flit about and give you good dreams, and
+keep off all that could hurt or frighten you,&rdquo; he said earnestly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only the human soul could feel so, dear boy,&rdquo; she answered
+tenderly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you <i>really</i> disbelieve&mdash;the other,&rdquo; he
+said wistfully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is what I verily believe, my child: that there were causes
+to make you weakly, and that you may have had some palsy stroke or convulsive
+fit perhaps at the moment you were left alone.&nbsp; Such would explain
+much of your oddness of face, which made the ignorant nurses deem you
+changed; and thus it was only your father who, by God&rsquo;s mercy,
+saved you from a miserable death, to become, as I trust, a good and
+true man, and servant of God.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then answering a hopeless
+groan, she added, &ldquo;Yes, it is harder for you than for many.&nbsp;
+I see that these silly servants have so nurtured you in this belief
+that you have never even thought it worth while to strive for goodness,
+but supposed tricksomeness and waywardness a part of your nature.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The only pleasure in life is paying folk off,&rdquo; said
+Peregrine, with a glitter in his eye.&nbsp; &ldquo;It serves them right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And thus,&rdquo; she said sadly, &ldquo;you have gone on hating
+and spiting, deeming yourself a goblin without hope or aim; but now
+you feel that you have a Christian soul you will strive with evil, you
+will so love as to win love, you will pray and conquer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My father and Mr. Horncastle pray,&rdquo; said Peregrine bitterly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I hate it!&nbsp; They go on for ever, past all bearing; I <i>must</i>
+do something&mdash;stand on my head, pluck some one&rsquo;s stool away,
+or tickle Robin with a straw, if I am birched the next moment.&nbsp;
+That&rsquo;s the goblin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yet you love the Minster music.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay!&nbsp; Father calls it rank Popery.&nbsp; I listened many
+a time he never guessed, hid away in the Holy Hole, or within old Bishop
+Wykeham&rsquo;s little house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Peregrine, could an imp of evil brook to lie hidden in
+the Holy Hole behind the very altar?&rdquo; said Mrs. Woodford.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But I hear Nick bringing in supper, and I must leave you for
+the present.&nbsp; God in His mercy bless you, His poor child, and lead
+you in His ways.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As she went Peregrine muttered, &ldquo;Is that a prayer?&nbsp; It
+is not like father&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was anxious to consult her brother-in-law on the strange mood
+of her patient.&nbsp; She found that he had heard more than he had told
+her of what Major Oakshott deemed the hopeless wickedness of his son,
+the antics at prayers, the hatred of everything good, the spiteful tricks
+that were the family torment.&nbsp; No doubt much was due to the boy&rsquo;s
+entire belief in his own elfship, and these two good people seriously
+considered how to save him from himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If we could only keep him here,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woodford,
+&ldquo;I think we might bring him to have some faith and love in God
+and man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You could, dear sister,&rdquo; said the Doctor, smiling affectionately;
+&ldquo;but Major Oakshott would never leave his son in our house.&nbsp;
+He abhors our principles too much, and besides, it is too near home.&nbsp;
+All the servants have heard rumours of this cruel fable, and would ascribe
+the least misadventure to his goblin origin.&nbsp; I must ride over
+to Oakwood and endeavour to induce his father to remove him to safe
+and judicious keeping.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Some days, however, elapsed before Dr. Woodford could do this, and
+in the meantime the good lady did her best to infuse into her poor young
+guest the sense that he had a human soul, responsible for his actions,
+and with hope set before him, and that he was not a mere frolicsome
+and malicious sprite, the creature of unreasoning impulse.</p>
+<p>It was a matter only to be attempted by gentle hints, for though
+reared in a strictly religious household, Peregrine&rsquo;s ears seemed
+to have been absolutely closed, partly by nursery ideas of his own exclusion
+from the pale of humanity, partly by the harsh treatment that he was
+continually bringing on himself.&nbsp; Preachings and prayers to him
+only meant a time of intolerable restraint, usually ending in disgrace
+and punishment; Scripture and the Westminster Catechism contained a
+collection of tasks more tedious and irksome than the Latin and Greek
+Grammar; Sunday was his worst day of the week, and these repugnances,
+as he had been taught to believe, were so many proofs that he was a
+being beyond the power of grace.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford scrupled to leave him to any one else on this first
+Sunday of his recovered consciousness, and in hopes of keeping him quiet
+through fatigue, she contrived that it should be the first day of his
+being dressed, and seated in the arm-chair, resting against cushions
+beside the open window, whence he could watch the church-goers, Anne
+in her little white cap, with her book in one hand, and a posy in the
+other, tripping demurely beside her uncle, stately in gown, cassock,
+and scarlet hood.</p>
+<p>Peregrine could not refrain from boasting to his hostess how he had
+once grimaced from outside the church window at Havant, and at the women
+shrieking that the fiend was there.&nbsp; She would not smile, and shook
+her head sadly, so that he said, &ldquo;I would never do so here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor anywhere, I hope.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Whereupon, thinking better to please the churchwoman, he related
+how, when imprisoned for popping a toad into the soup, he had escaped
+over the leads, and had beaten a drum outside the barn, during a discourse
+of the godly tinker, John Bunyan, tramping and rattling so that all
+thought the troopers were come, and rushed out, tumbling one over the
+other, while he yelled out his &ldquo;Ho! ho! ho!&rdquo; from the haystack
+where he had hidden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When you feel how kind and loving God is,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Woodford gravely, &ldquo;you will not like to disturb those who are
+doing Him honour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is He kind?&rdquo; asked Peregrine.&nbsp; &ldquo;I thought
+He was all wrath and anger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She replied, &ldquo;The Lord is loving unto every man, and His mercy
+is over all His works.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He made no answer.&nbsp; If he were sullen, this subsided into sleepiness,
+and when he awoke he found the lady on her knees going through the service
+with her Prayer-book.&nbsp; She encountered his wistful eyes, but no
+remark was made, though on her return from fetching him some broth,
+she found him peeping into her book, which he laid down hastily, as
+though afraid of detection.</p>
+<p>She had to go down to the Sunday dinner, where, according to good
+old custom, half a dozen of the poor and aged were regaled with the
+parish priest and his household.&nbsp; There she heard inquiries and
+remarks showing how widely spread and deeply rooted was the notion of
+Peregrine&rsquo;s elfish extraction.&nbsp; If Daddy Hoskins did ask
+after the poor young gentleman as if he were a human being, the three
+old dames present shook their heads, and while the more bashful only
+groaned, Granny Perkins demanded, &ldquo;Well, now, my lady, do he eat
+and sleep like other folk?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Exactly, granny, now that he&rsquo;s mending in health.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And don&rsquo;t he turn and writhe when there&rsquo;s prayers?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford deposed to having observed no such demonstrations.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Think of that now!&nbsp; Lauk-a-daisy!&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve heard
+tell by my nevvy Davy, as is turnspit at Oak&rsquo;ood, as how when
+there&rsquo;s prayers and expounding by Master Horncastle, as is a godly
+man, saving his Reverence&rsquo;s presence, he have seen him, have Davy&mdash;Master
+Perry, as they calls him, a-twisted round with his heels on the chair,
+and his head where his heels should be, and a grin on his face enough
+to give one a turn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did Davy never see a mischievous boy fidgeting at prayers?&rdquo;
+asked the Doctor, who was nearer than she thought.&nbsp; &ldquo;If so,
+he has been luckier than I have been.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a laugh, out of deference to the clergyman, but the old
+woman held to her point.&nbsp; &ldquo;Begging your Reverence&rsquo;s
+pardon, sir, there be more in this than we knows.&nbsp; They says up
+at Oakwood, there&rsquo;s no peace in the place for the spite of him,
+and when they thinks he is safe locked into his chamber, there he be
+a-clogging of the spit, or changing sugar into pepper, or making the
+stool break down under one.&nbsp; Oh, he be a strange one, sir, or summat
+worse.&nbsp; I have heerd him myself hollaing &lsquo;Ho! ho! ho!&rsquo;
+on the downs enough to make one&rsquo;s flesh creep.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will tell you what he is, dame,&rdquo; said the Doctor gravely.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;He is a poor child who had a fit in his cradle, and whom all
+around have joined in driving to folly, evil, and despair through your
+foolish superstitions.&nbsp; He is my guest, and I will have no more
+said against him at my table.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The village gossips might be silenced by awe of the parson, but their
+opinion was unshaken; and Silas Hewlett, a weather-beaten sailor with
+a wooden leg, was bold enough to answer, &ldquo;Ay, ay, sir, you parsons
+and gentlefolk don&rsquo;t believe naught; but you&rsquo;ve not seen
+what I have with my own two bodily eyes&mdash;&rdquo; and this of course
+was the prelude to the history of an encounter with a mermaid, which
+alternated with the Flying Dutchman and a combat with the Moors, as
+regular entertainment at the Sunday meal.</p>
+<p>When Mrs. Woodford went upstairs she was met by the servant Nicolas,
+declaring that she might get whom she would to wait on that there moon-calf,
+he would not go neist the spiteful thing, and exhibiting a swollen finger,
+stung by a dead wasp, which Peregrine had cunningly disposed on the
+edge of his empty plate.</p>
+<p>She soothed the man&rsquo;s wrath, and healed his wound as best she
+might, ere returning to her patient, who looked at her with an impish
+grin on his lips, and yet human deprecation in his eyes.&nbsp; Feeling
+unprepared for discussion, she merely asked whether the dinner had been
+relished, and sat down to her book; but there was a grave, sorrowful
+expression on her countenance, and, after an interval of lying back
+uneasily in his chair, he exclaimed, &ldquo;It is of no use; I could
+not help it.&nbsp; It is my nature.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is the nature of many lads to be mischievous,&rdquo; she
+answered; &ldquo;but grace can cure them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Therewith she began to read aloud.&nbsp; She had bought the <i>Pilgrim&rsquo;s
+Progress</i> (the first part) from a hawker, and she was glad to have
+at hand something that could hardly be condemned as frivolous or prelatical.&nbsp;
+The spell of the marvellous book fell on Peregrine; he listened intently,
+and craved ever to hear more, not being yet able to read without pain
+and dizziness.&nbsp; He was struck by hearing that the dream of Christian&rsquo;s
+adventures had visited that same tinker, whose congregation his own
+wicked practices had broken up.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He would take me for one of the hobgoblins that beset Master
+Christian.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woodford, &ldquo;he would say you were
+Christian floundering in the Slough of Despond, and deeming yourself
+one of its efts or tadpoles.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He made no answer, but on the whole behaved so well that the next
+day Mrs. Woodford ventured to bring her little daughter in after having
+extracted a promise that there should be no tricks nor teasing, a pledge
+honourably kept.</p>
+<p>Anne did not like the prospect of the interview.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh,
+ma&rsquo;am, don&rsquo;t leave me alone with him!&rdquo; she said.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Do you know what he did to Mistress Martha Browning, his own
+cousin, you know, who lives at Emsworth with her aunt?&nbsp; He put
+a horsehair slily round her glass of wine, and tipped it over her best
+gray taffeta, and her aunt whipped her for the stain.&nbsp; She never
+would say it was his doing, and yet he goes on teasing her the same
+as ever, though his brother Oliver found it out, and thrashed him for
+it: you know Oliver is to marry Mistress Martha.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear child, where did you hear all this?&rdquo; asked Mrs.
+Woodford, rather overwhelmed with this flood of gossip from her usually
+quiet daughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucy told me, mamma.&nbsp; She heard it from Sedley, who says
+he does not wonder at any one serving out Martha Browning, for she is
+as ugly as sin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush, hush, Anne!&nbsp; Such sayings do not become a young
+maid.&nbsp; This poor lad has scarce known kindness.&nbsp; Every one&rsquo;s
+hand has been against him, and so his hand has been against every one.&nbsp;
+I want my little daughter to be brave enough not to pain and anger him
+by shrinking from him as if he were not like other people.&nbsp; We
+must teach him to be happy before we can teach him to be good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madam, I will try,&rdquo; said the child, with a great gulp;
+&ldquo;only if you would be pleased not to leave me alone with him the
+first time!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This Mrs. Woodford promised.&nbsp; At first the boy lay and looked
+at Anne as if she were a rare curiosity brought for his examination,
+and it took all her resolution, even to a heroic exertion of childish
+fortitude, not to flinch under the gaze of those queer eyes.&nbsp; However,
+Mrs. Woodford diverted the glances by producing a box of spillekins,
+and in the interest of the game the children became better acquainted.</p>
+<p>Over their next day&rsquo;s game Mrs. Woodford left them, and Anne
+became at ease since Peregrine never attempted any tricks.&nbsp; She
+taught him to play at draughts, the elders thinking it expedient not
+to doubt whether such vanities were permissible at Oakwood.</p>
+<p>Soon there was such merriment between them that the kind Doctor said
+it did his heart good to hear the boy&rsquo;s hearty natural laugh in
+lieu of the &ldquo;Ho! ho! ho!&rdquo; of malice or derision.</p>
+<p>They were odd conversations that used to take place between that
+boy and girl.&nbsp; The King&rsquo;s offer of a pageship had oozed out
+in the Oakshott family, and Peregrine greatly resented the refusal,
+which he naturally attributed to his father&rsquo;s Whiggery and spite
+at all things agreeable, and he was fond of discussing his wrongs and
+longings with Anne, who, from her childish point of view, thought the
+walls of Portchester and the sluggish creek a very bad exchange for
+her enjoyments at Greenwich, where she had lived during her father&rsquo;s
+years of broken health, after he had been disabled at Southwold by a
+wound which had prevented his being knighted by the Duke of York for
+his daring in the excitement of the critical moment, a fact which Mistress
+Anne never forgot, though she only knew it by hearsay, as it happened
+a few weeks after she was born, and her father always averred that he
+was thankful to have missed the barren and expensive honour, and that
+the <i>worst</i> which had come of his exploit was the royal sponsorship
+to his little maid.</p>
+<p>Anne had, however, been the pet of her father&rsquo;s old friends,
+the sea captains, had played with the little Evelyns under the yew hedges
+of Says Court, had been taken to London to behold the Lord Mayor&rsquo;s
+show and more than one Court pageant, had been sometimes at the palaces
+as the plaything of the Ladies Mary and Anne of York, had been more
+than once kissed by their father, the Duke, and called a pretty little
+poppet, and had even shared with them a notable game at romps with their
+good-natured uncle the King, when she had actually caught him at Blind-man&rsquo;s-buff!</p>
+<p>Ignorant as she was of evil, her old surroundings appeared to her
+delightful, and Peregrine, bred in a Puritan home, was at fourteen not
+much more advanced than she was in the meaning of the vices and corruptions
+that he heard inveighed against in general or scriptural terms at home,
+and was only too ready to believe that all that his father proscribed
+must be enchanting.&nbsp; Thus they built castles together about brilliant
+lives at a Court of which they knew as little as of that at Timbuctoo.</p>
+<p>There was another Court, however, of which Peregrine seemed to know
+all the details, namely, that of King Oberon and Queen Mab.&nbsp; How
+much was village lore picked up from Moll Owens and her kind, or how
+much was the work of his own imagination, no one could tell, probably
+not himself, certainly not Anne.&nbsp; When he appeared on intimate
+terms with Hip, Nip, and Skip, and described catching Daddy Long Legs
+to make a fence with his legs, or dwelt upon a terrible fight between
+two armies of elves mounted on grasshoppers and crickets, and armed
+with lances tipped with stings of bees and wasps, she would exclaim,
+&ldquo;Is it true, Perry?&rdquo; and he would wink his green eye and
+look at her with his yellow one till she hardly knew where she was.</p>
+<p>He would tell of his putting a hornet in a sluttish maid&rsquo;s
+shoe, which was credible, if scarcely meriting that elfish laughter
+which made his auditor shrink, but when he told of dancing over the
+mud banks with a lantern, like a Will-of-the-wisp, till he lured boats
+to get stranded, or horsemen to get stuck, in the hopeless mud, Anne
+never questioned the possibility, but listened with wide open eyes,
+and a restrained shudder, feeling as if under a spell.&nbsp; That mysterious
+childish feeling which dreads even what common sense forbids the calmer
+mind to believe, made her credit Peregrine, for the time at least, with
+strange affinities to the underground folk, and kept her under a strange
+fascination, half attraction, half repulsion, which made her feel as
+if she must obey and follow him if he turned those eyes on her, whether
+she were willing or not.</p>
+<p>Nor did she ever tell her mother of these conversations.&nbsp; She
+had been rebuked once for repeating nurse&rsquo;s story of the changeling,
+and again for her shrinking from him; and this was quite enough in an
+essentially reserved, as well as proud and sensitive, nature, to prevent
+further confidences on a subject which she knew would be treated as
+a foolish fancy, bringing both herself and her companion into trouble.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V<br />
+Peregrine&rsquo;s Home</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;For, at a word, be it understood,<br />
+He was always for ill and never for good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>SCOTT.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>A week had passed since any of the family from Oakwood had come to
+make inquiries after the convalescent at Portchester, when Dr. Woodford
+mounted his sleek, sober-paced pad, and accompanied by a groom, rode
+over to make his report and tender his counsel to Major Oakshott.&nbsp;
+He arrived just as the great bell was clanging to summon the family
+to the mid-day meal, since he had reckoned on the Squire being more
+amenable as a &lsquo;full man,&rsquo; especially towards a guest, and
+he was well aware that the Major was thoroughly a gentleman in behaviour
+even to those with whom he differed in politics and religion.</p>
+<p>Accordingly there was a ready welcome at the door of the old red
+house, which was somewhat gloomy looking, being on the north side of
+the hill, and a good deal stifled with trees.&nbsp; In a brief interval
+the Doctor found himself seated beside the pale languid lady at the
+head of the long table, placed in a large hall, wainscotted with the
+blackest of oak, which seemed to absorb into itself all the light from
+the windows, large enough indeed but heavily mullioned, and with almost
+as much of leading as of octagons and lozenges&mdash;greenish glass&mdash;in
+them, while the coats of arms, repeated in upper portions and at the
+intersections of beams and rafters, were not more cheerful, being sable
+chevrons on an argent field.&nbsp; The crest, a horse shoe, was indeed
+azure, but the blue of this and of the coats of the serving-men only
+deepened the thunderous effect of the black.&nbsp; Strangely, however,
+among these sad-coloured men there moved a figure entirely differently.&nbsp;
+A negro, white turbaned, and with his blue livery of a lighter shade,
+of fantastic make and relieved by a great deal of white and shining
+silver, so as to have an entirely different effect.</p>
+<p>He placed himself behind the chair of Dr. Woodford&rsquo;s opposite
+neighbour, a shrewd business-like looking gentleman, soberly but handsomely
+dressed, with a certain foreign cut about his clothes, and a cravat
+of rich Flemish lace.&nbsp; He was presented to the Doctor as Major
+Oakshott&rsquo;s brother, Sir Peregrine.&nbsp; The rest of the party
+consisted of Oliver and Robert, sturdy, ruddy lads of fifteen and twelve,
+and their tutor, Mr. Horncastle, an elderly man, who twenty years before
+had resigned his living because he could not bring himself to accept
+all the Liturgy.</p>
+<p>While Sir Peregrine courteously relieved his sister-in-law of the
+trouble of carving the gammon of bacon which accompanied the veal which
+her husband was helping, Dr. Woodford informed her of her son&rsquo;s
+progress towards recovery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I knew you had come to tell us
+that he is ready to be brought home;&rdquo; and her tone was fretful.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are greatly beholden to you, sir,&rdquo; said the Major
+from the bottom of the table.&nbsp; &ldquo;The boy shall be fetched
+home immediately.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not so, sir, as yet, I beg of you.&nbsp; Neither his head
+nor his side can brook the journey for at least another week, and indeed
+my good sister Woodford will hardly know how to part with her patient.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She will not long be of that mind after Master Perry gets
+to his feet again,&rdquo; muttered the chaplain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed no,&rdquo; chimed in the mother.&nbsp; &ldquo;There
+will be no more peace in the house when he is come back.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I assure you, madam,&rdquo; said Dr. Woodford, &ldquo;that
+he has been a very good child, grateful and obedient, nor have I heard
+any complaints.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your kindness, or else that of Mrs. Woodford, carries you
+far, sir,&rdquo; answered his host.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What?&nbsp; Is my nephew and namesake so peevish a scapegrace?&rdquo;
+demanded the visitor.</p>
+<p>On which anecdotes broke forth from all quarters.&nbsp; Peregrine
+had greased the already slippery oak stairs, had exchanged Oliver&rsquo;s
+careful exercise for a ribald broadsheet, had filled Mr. Horncastle&rsquo;s
+pipe with gunpowder, and mixed snuff with the chocolate specially prepared
+for the peculiar godly guest Dame Priscilla Waller.&nbsp; Every one
+had something to adduce, even the serving-men behind the chairs; and
+if Oliver and Robert did not add their quota, it was because absolute
+silence at meals was the rule for nonage.&nbsp; However, the subject
+was evidently distasteful to the father, who changed the conversation
+by asking his brother questions about the young Prince of Orange and
+the Grand Pensionary De Witt.&nbsp; For the gentleman had been acting
+as English attach&eacute; to the Embassy at the Hague, whence he had
+come on affairs of State to London, and after being knighted by Charles,
+had newly arrived at the old home, which he had scarcely seen since
+his brother&rsquo;s marriage.&nbsp; Dr. Woodford enjoyed his conversation,
+and his information on foreign politics, and the Major, though now and
+then protesting, was evidently proud of his brother.</p>
+<p>When grace had been pronounced by the chaplain the lady withdrew
+to her parlour, the two boys, each with an obeisance and request for
+permission, departed for an hour&rsquo;s recreation, and Dr. Woodford
+intimated that he wished for some conversation with his host respecting
+the boy Peregrine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let us discuss it here,&rdquo; said Major Oakshott, turning
+towards a small table set in the deep bay window, and garnished with
+wine, fruit, and long slender glasses.&nbsp; &ldquo;Good Mr. Horncastle,&rdquo;
+he added, as he motioned his guest to one of the four seats, &ldquo;is
+with me in all that concerns my children, and I desire my brother&rsquo;s
+counsel respecting the untoward lad with whom it has pleased Heaven
+to afflict me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When the glasses had been filled with claret Dr. Woodford uttered
+a diplomatic compliment on the healthful and robust appearance of the
+eldest and youngest sons, and asked whether any cause had been assigned
+for the difference between them and the intermediate brother.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None, sir,&rdquo; returned the father with a sigh, &ldquo;save
+the will of the Almighty to visit us for our sins with a son who has
+thus far shown himself one of the marred vessels doomed to be broken
+by the potter.&nbsp; It may be in order to humble me and prove me that
+this hath been laid upon me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The chaplain groaned acquiescence, but there was vexation in the
+brother&rsquo;s face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said the Doctor, &ldquo;it is my opinion and that
+of my sister-in-law, an excellent, discreet, and devout woman, that
+the poor child would give you more cause for hope if the belief had
+not become fixed in his mind that he is really and truly a fairy elf&mdash;yes,
+in very sooth&mdash;a changeling!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>All the auditors broke out into exclamations that it was impossible
+that a boy of fourteen could entertain so absurd an idea, and the tutor
+evidently thought it a fresh proof of depravity that he should thus
+have tried to deceive his kind hosts.</p>
+<p>In proof that Peregrine veritably believed it himself, Dr. Woodford
+related what he had witnessed on Midsummer night, mentioning how in
+delirium the boy had evidently believed himself in fairyland, and how
+disappointed he had been, on regaining his senses, to find himself on
+common earth; telling also of the adventure with the King, which Sir
+Christopher Wren had described to him, but of which Major Oakshott was
+unaware, though it explained the offer of the pageship.&nbsp; He was
+a good deal struck by these revelations, proving misery that he had
+never suspected, though, as he said, he had often pleaded, &ldquo;Why
+will ye revolt more and more? ye <i>will</i> be stricken more and more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you ever sought his confidence?&rdquo; asked the travelled
+brother, a question evidently scarcely understood, for the reply was,
+&ldquo;I have always required of my sons to speak the truth, nor have
+they failed of late years save this unfortunate Peregrine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And,&rdquo; said Sir Peregrine, &ldquo;if the unlucky lad
+actually supposes himself to be no human being, admonitions and chastisements
+would naturally be vain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot believe it,&rdquo; exclaimed the Major.&nbsp; &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis
+true, as I now remember, I once came on a couple of beldames, my wife&rsquo;s
+nurse and another, who has since been ducked for witchcraft, and found
+them about to flog the babe with nettles, and lay him in the thorn hedge
+because he was a sickly child, whom, forsooth, they took to be a changeling;
+but I forbade the profane folly to be ever again mentioned in my household,
+nor did I ever hear thereof again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are a good many more things mentioned in a household,
+brother, than the master is wont to hear of,&rdquo; remarked Sir Peregrine.</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford then begged as a personal favour for an individual examination
+of the family and servants on their opinion.&nbsp; The master was reluctant
+thus, as he expressed it, to go a-fooling, but his brother backed the
+Doctor up, and further prevented a general assembly to put one another
+to shame, but insisted on the witnesses being called in one by one.&nbsp;
+Oliver, the first summoned, was beginning to be somewhat less overawed
+by his father than in his earlier boyhood.&nbsp; To the inquiry what
+he thought of his brother Peregrine, he made a tentative sort of reply,
+that he was a strange fellow, who never could keep out of disgrace.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is not the question,&rdquo; said his father.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+am almost ashamed to speak it!&nbsp; Do you&mdash;nay, have you ever
+supposed him to be a&mdash;&rdquo; he really could not bring out the
+word.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A changeling, sir?&rdquo; returned Oliver.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+do not believe so now, knowing that it is impossible, but as a child
+I always did.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who durst possess you with so foolish and profane a falsehood?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Every one, sir.&nbsp; I cannot recollect the time when I did
+not as entirely deem Peregrine a changeling elf as that Robin was my
+own brother.&nbsp; He believes so himself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have never striven to disabuse him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, sir, he would scarce have listened to me had I done
+go; besides, to tell the truth, it has only been of late, since I have
+been older, and have studied more, that I have come to perceive the
+folly of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Major Oakshott groaned, and bade him call Robert without saying wherefore.&nbsp;
+The little fellow came in, somewhat frightened, and when asked the question
+that had been put to his elder, his face lighted up, and he exclaimed,
+&ldquo;Oh, have they brought him back again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whom?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our real brother, sir, who was carried off to fairyland!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who told you so, Robert?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He looked puzzled, and said, &ldquo;Sir, they all know it.&nbsp;
+Molly Owens, that was his foster-mother, saw the fairies bear him off
+on a broomstick up the chimney.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Robert, no lying!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The boy was only restrained from tears by fear of his father, and
+just managed to say, &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis what they all say, and Perry
+knows.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Knows!&rdquo; muttered Major Oakshott in despair, but the
+uncle, drawing Robin towards him, extracted that Perry had been seen
+flying out of the loft window, when he had been locked up&mdash;Robin
+had never seen it himself, but the maids had often done so.&nbsp; Moreover,
+there was proof positive, in the mark on Oliver&rsquo;s head, where
+he had nearly killed himself by tumbling downstairs, being lured by
+the fairies while they stole away the babe.</p>
+<p>The Major could not listen with patience.&nbsp; &ldquo;A boy of that
+age to repeat such blasphemous nonsense!&rdquo; he exclaimed; and Robert,
+restraining with difficulty his sobs of terror, was dismissed to fetch
+the butler.</p>
+<p>The old Ironside who now appeared would not avouch his own disbelief
+in the identity of Master Peregrine, being, as he said, a man who had
+studied his Bible, listened to godly preachers, and seen the world;
+but he had no hesitation in declaring that almost every other soul in
+the household believed in it as firmly as in the Gospel, certainly all
+the women, and probably all the men, nor was there any doubt that the
+young gentleman conducted himself more like a goblin than the son of
+pious Christian parents.&nbsp; In effect both the clergyman and the
+Diplomate could not help suspecting that in other company the worthy
+butler&rsquo;s disavowal of all share in the superstition might have
+been less absolute.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;After this,&rdquo; said Major Oakshott with a sigh, &ldquo;it
+seems useless to carry the inquiry farther.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What says my sister Oakshott?&rdquo; inquired Sir Peregrine.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She!&nbsp; Poor soul, she is too feeble to be fretted,&rdquo;
+said her husband.&nbsp; &ldquo;She has never been the same woman since
+the Fire of London, and it would be vain to vex her with questions.&nbsp;
+She would be of one mind while I spoke to her, and another while her
+women were pouring their tales into her ear.&nbsp; Methinks I now understand
+why she has always seemed to shrink from this unfortunate child, and
+to fear rather than love him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Even so, sir,&rdquo; added the tutor.&nbsp; &ldquo;Much is
+explained that I never before understood.&nbsp; The question is how
+to deal with him under this fresh light.&nbsp; I will, so please your
+honour, assemble the family this very night, and expound to them that
+such superstitions are contrary to the very word of Scripture.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Much good will that do,&rdquo; muttered the knight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should humbly suggest,&rdquo; put in Dr. Woodford, &ldquo;that
+the best hope for the poor lad would be to place him where these foolish
+tales were unknown, and he could start afresh on the same terms with
+other youths.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is no school in accordance with my principles,&rdquo;
+said the Squire gloomily.&nbsp; &ldquo;Godly men who hold the faith
+as I do are inhibited by the powers that be from teaching in schools.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And,&rdquo; said his brother, &ldquo;you hold these principles
+as more important than the causing your son to be bred up a human being
+instead of being pointed at and rendered hopeless as a demon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am bound to do so,&rdquo; said the Major.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; said Dr. Woodford, &ldquo;some scholar might
+be found, either here or in Holland, who might share your opinions,
+and could receive the boy without incurring penalties for opening a
+school without license.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a matter for prayer and consideration,&rdquo; said Major
+Oakshott.&nbsp; &ldquo;Meantime, reverend sir, I thank you most heartily
+for the goodness with which you have treated my untoward son, and likewise
+for having opened my eyes to the root of his freakishness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Doctor understood this as dismissal, and asked for his horse,
+intimating, however, that he would gladly keep the boy till some arrangement
+had been decided upon.&nbsp; Then he rode home to tell his sister-in-law
+that he had done his best, and that he thought it a fortunate conjunction
+that the travelled brother had been present.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI<br />
+A Relapse</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;A tell-tale in their company<br />
+&nbsp; They never could endure,<br />
+And whoso kept not secretly<br />
+&nbsp; Their pranks was punished sure.<br />
+It was a just and Christian deed<br />
+&nbsp; To pinch such black and blue;<br />
+Oh, how the commonwealth doth need<br />
+&nbsp; Such justices as you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>BISHOP CORBETT.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Several days passed, during which there could be no doubt that Peregrine
+Oakshott knew how to behave himself, not merely to grown-up people,
+but to little Anne, who had entirely lost her dread of him, and accepted
+him as a playfellow.&nbsp; He was able to join the family meals, and
+sit in the pleasant garden, shaded by the walls of the old castle, as
+well as by its own apple-trees, and looking out on the little bay in
+front, at full tide as smooth and shining as a lake.</p>
+<p>There, while Anne did her task of spinning or of white seam, Mrs.
+Woodford would tell the children stories, or read to them from the <i>Pilgrim&rsquo;s
+Progress</i>, a wonderful romance to both.&nbsp; Peregrine, still tamed
+by weakness, would lie on the grass at her feet, in a tranquil bliss
+such as he had never known before, and his fairy romances to Anne were
+becoming mitigated, when one day a big coach came along the road from
+Fareham, with two boys riding beside it, escorting Lady Archfield and
+Mistress Lucy.</p>
+<p>The lady was come to study Mrs. Woodford&rsquo;s recipe for preserved
+cherries, the young people, Charles, Lucy, and their cousin Sedley,
+now at home for the summer holidays, to spend an afternoon with Mistress
+Anne.</p>
+<p>Great was Lady Archfield&rsquo;s surprise at finding that Major Oakshott&rsquo;s
+cross-grained slip of a boy was still at Portchester.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you were forced to take him in for very charity when he
+was hurt,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I should have thought you would have
+been rid of him as soon as he could leave his bed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The road to Oakwood is too rough for broken ribs as yet,&rdquo;
+said Mrs. Woodford, &ldquo;nor is the poor boy ready for discipline.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, I fancy that Major Oakshott is a bitter Puritan in his
+own house; but no discipline could be too harsh for such a boy as that,
+according to all that I hear,&rdquo; said her ladyship, &ldquo;nor does
+he look as if much were amiss with him so far as may be judged of features
+so strange and writhen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is nearly well, but not yet strong, and we are keeping
+him here till his father has decided on what is best for him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You even trust him with your little maid!&nbsp; And alone!&nbsp;
+I wonder at you, madam.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, my lady, I have seen no harm come of it.&nbsp; He
+is gentle and kind with Anne, and I think she softens him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Still Mrs. Woodford would gladly not have been bound to her colander
+and preserving-pan in her still-room, where her guest&rsquo;s housewifely
+mind found great scope for inquiry and comment, lasting for nearly two
+hours.</p>
+<p>When at length the operations were over, and numerous little pots
+of jam tied up as specimens for the Archfield family to taste at home,
+the children were not in sight.&nbsp; No doubt, said Mrs. Woodford,
+they would be playing in the castle court, and the visitor accompanied
+her thither in some anxiety about broken walls and steps, but they were
+not in sight, nor did calls bring them.</p>
+<p>The children had gone out together, Anne feeling altogether at ease
+and natural with congenial playmates.&nbsp; Even Sedley&rsquo;s tortures
+were preferable to Peregrine&rsquo;s attentions, since the first were
+only the tyranny of a graceless boy, the other gave her an indescribable
+sense of strangeness from which these ordinary mundane comrades were
+a relief and protection.</p>
+<p>However, Charles and Sedley rushed off to see a young colt in which
+they were interested, and Lucy, in spite of her first shrinking, found
+Peregrine better company than she could have expected, when he assisted
+in swinging her and Anne by turns under the old ash tree.</p>
+<p>When the other two were seen approaching, the swinging girl hastily
+sprang out, only too well aware what Sedley&rsquo;s method of swinging
+would be.&nbsp; Then as the boys came up followed inquiries why Peregrine
+had not joined them, and jests in schoolboy taste ensued as to elf-locks
+in the horses&rsquo; manes, and inquiries when he had last ridden to
+a witch&rsquo;s sabbath.&nbsp; Little Anne, in duty bound, made her
+protest, but this only incited Charles to add his word to the teasing,
+till Lucy joined in the laugh.</p>
+<p>By and by, as they loitered along, they came to the Doctor&rsquo;s
+little boat, and there was a proposal to get in and rock.&nbsp; Lucy
+refused, out of respect for her company attire, and Anne could not leave
+her, so the two young ladies turned away with arms round each other&rsquo;s
+waists, Lucy demonstratively rejoicing to be quit of the troublesome
+boys.</p>
+<p>Before they had gone far an eldritch shout of laughter was responded
+to by a burst of furious dismay and imprecation.&nbsp; The boat with
+the two boys was drifting out to sea, and Peregrine capering wildly
+on the shore, but in another instant he had vanished into the castle.</p>
+<p>Anne had presence of mind enough to rush to the nearest fisherman&rsquo;s
+cottage, and send him out to bring them back, and it was at this juncture
+that the two mothers arrived on the scene.&nbsp; There was little real
+danger.&nbsp; A rope was thrown and caught, and after about half an
+hour of watching they were safely landed, but the tide had ebbed so
+far that they had to take off their shoes and stockings and wade through
+the mud.&nbsp; They were open-mouthed against the imp who had enticed
+them to rock in the boat, then in one second had cut the painter, bounded
+out, and sent them adrift with his mocking &lsquo;Ho! ho! ho!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Sedley Archfield clenched his fists, and gazed round wildly in search
+of the goblin to chastise him soundly, and Charles was ready to rush
+all over the castle in search of him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Two to one!&rdquo; cried Anne, &ldquo;and he so small; you
+would never be so cowardly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As if he were like an honest fellow,&rdquo; said Charley.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;A goblin like that has his odds against a dozen of us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d teach him, if I could but catch him,&rdquo; cried
+Sedley.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told you,&rdquo; said Anne, &ldquo;that he would be good
+if you would let him alone and not plague him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, Anne,&rdquo; said Charles, as he sat putting on his stockings,
+&ldquo;how could I stand being cast off for that hobgoblin, that looks
+as if he had been cut out of a root of yew with a blunt knife, and all
+crooked!&nbsp; I that always was your sweetheart, to see you consorting
+with a mis-shapen squinting Whig of a Nonconformist like that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nonconformist!&nbsp; I&rsquo;ll Nonconform him indeed,&rdquo;
+added Sedley.&nbsp; &ldquo;I wish I had the wringing of his neck.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now is not that hard!&rdquo; said Anne; &ldquo;a poor lad
+who has been very sick, and that every one baits and spurns.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Serve him right,&rdquo; said Sedley; &ldquo;he shall have
+more of the same sauce!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think he has cast his spell on Anne,&rdquo; added Charles,
+&ldquo;or how can she stand up for him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My mamma bade me be kind to him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Kind!&nbsp; I would as lief be kind to a toad!&rdquo; put
+in Lucy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To see you kind to him makes me sick,&rdquo; exclaimed Charles.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You see what comes of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It did not come of my kindness, but of your unkindness,&rdquo;
+reasoned Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told you so,&rdquo; said Charles.&nbsp; &ldquo;You would
+have been best pleased if we had been carried out to sea and drowned!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne burst into tears and disavowed any such intention, and Charles
+was protesting that he would only forgive her on condition of her never
+showing any kindness to Peregrine again, when a sudden shower of sand
+and pebbles descended, one of them hitting Sedley pretty sharply on
+the ear.&nbsp; The boys sprang up with a howl of imprecation and vengeance,
+but no one was to be seen, only &lsquo;Ho! ho! ho!&rsquo; resounded
+from the battlements.&nbsp; Off they rushed headlong, but the nearest
+door was in a square tower a good way off, and when they reached it
+the door defied their efforts of frantic rage, whilst another shower
+descended on them from above, accompanied by the usual shout.&nbsp;
+But while they were dashing off in quest of another entrance they were
+met by a servant sent to summon them to return home.&nbsp; Coach and
+horses were at the door, and Lady Archfield was in haste to get them
+away, declaring that she should not think their lives safe near that
+fiendish monster.&nbsp; Considering that Sedley was nearly twice as
+big as Peregrine, and Charles a strong well-grown lad, this was a tribute
+to his preternatural powers.</p>
+<p>Very unwillingly they went, and if Lady Archfield had not kept a
+strict watch from her coach window, they would certainly have turned
+back to revenge the pranks played on them.&nbsp; The last view of them
+showed Sedley turning round shaking his whip and clenching his teeth
+in defiance.&nbsp; Mrs. Woodford was greatly concerned, especially as
+Peregrine could not be found and did not appear at supper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Had he run away to sea?&rdquo; the usual course of refractory
+lads at Portchester, but for so slight a creature only half recovered
+it did not seem probable.&nbsp; It was more likely that he had gone
+home, and that Mrs. Woodford felt as somewhat a mortifying idea.&nbsp;
+However, on looking into his chamber, as she sought her own, she beheld
+him in bed, with his face turned into the pillow, whether asleep or
+feigning slumber there was no knowing.</p>
+<p>Later, she heard sounds that induced her to go and look at him.&nbsp;
+He was starting, moaning, and babbling in his sleep.&nbsp; But with
+morning all his old nature seemed to have returned.</p>
+<p>There was a hedgehog in Anne&rsquo;s bowl of milk, Mrs. Woodford&rsquo;s
+poultry were cackling hysterically at an unfortunate kitten suspended
+from an apple tree and let down and drawn up among them.&nbsp; The three-legged
+stool of the old waiting-woman &lsquo;toppled down headlong&rsquo; as
+though by the hands of Puck, and even on Anne&rsquo;s arms certain black
+and blue marks of nails were discovered, and when her mother examined
+her on them she only cried and begged not to be made to answer.</p>
+<p>And while Dr. Woodford was dozing in his chair as usual after the
+noonday dinner Mrs. Woodford actually detected a hook suspended from
+a horsehair descending in the direction of his big horn spectacles,
+and quietly moving across to frustrate the attempt, she unearthed Peregrine
+on a chair angling from behind the window curtain.</p>
+<p>She did not speak, but fixed her calm eyes on him with a look of
+sad, grave disappointment as she wound up the line.&nbsp; In a few seconds
+the boy had thrown himself at her feet, rolling as if in pain, and sobbing
+out, &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis all of no use!&nbsp; Let me alone.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nevertheless he obeyed the hushing gesture of her hand, and held
+his breath, as she led him out to the garden-seat, where they had spent
+so many happy quiet hours.&nbsp; Then he flung himself down and repeated
+his exclamation, half piteous, half defiant.&nbsp; &ldquo;Leave me alone!&nbsp;
+Leave me alone!&nbsp; It has me!&nbsp; It is all of no use.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What has you, my poor child?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The evil spirit.&nbsp; You will have it that I&rsquo;m not
+one of&mdash;one of them&mdash;so it must be as my father says, that
+I am possessed&mdash;the evil spirit.&nbsp; I was at peace with you&mdash;so
+happy&mdash;happier than ever I was before&mdash;and now&mdash;those
+boys.&nbsp; It has me again&mdash;I could not help it&mdash;I&rsquo;ve
+even hurt her&mdash;Mistress Anne.&nbsp; Let me alone&mdash;send me
+home&mdash;to be scorned, and shunned, and brow-beaten&mdash;and as
+bad as ever&mdash;then at least she will be safe from me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>All this came out between sobs such that Mrs. Woodford could not
+attempt to speak, but she kept her hand on him, and at last she said,
+when he could hear her: &ldquo;Every one of us has to fight with an
+evil spirit, and when we are not on our guard he is but too apt to take
+advantage of us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The boy rather sullenly repeated that it was of no use to fight against
+his.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed!&nbsp; Nay.&nbsp; Were you ever so much grieved before
+at having let him have the mastery?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;but no one ever was good to me before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; all about you lived under a cruel error, and you helped
+them in it.&nbsp; But if you had not a better nature in you, my poor
+child, you would not be happy here and thankful for what we can do for
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was like some one else here,&rdquo; said Peregrine, picking
+a daisy to pieces, &ldquo;but they stirred it all up.&nbsp; And at home
+I shall be just the same as ever I was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She longed to tell him that there was hope of a change in his life,
+but she durst not till it was more certain, so she said&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was One who came to conquer the evil spirit and the
+evil nature, and to give each one of us the power to get the victory.&nbsp;
+The harder the victory, the more glorious!&rdquo; and her eyes sparkled
+at the thought.</p>
+<p>He caught a moment&rsquo;s glow, then fell back.&nbsp; &ldquo;For
+those that are chosen,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are chosen&mdash;you were chosen by your baptism.&nbsp;
+You have the stirrings of good within you.&nbsp; You can win and beat
+back the evil side of you in Christ&rsquo;s strength, if you will ask
+for it, and go on in His might.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The boy groaned.&nbsp; Mrs. Woodford knew that the great point with
+him would be to teach him to hope and to pray, but the very name of
+prayer had been rendered so distasteful to him that she scarce durst
+press the subject by name, and her heart sank at the thought of sending
+him home again, but she was glad to be interrupted, and said no more.</p>
+<p>At night, however, she heard sounds of moaning and stifled babbling
+that reminded her of his times of delirium, and going into his room
+she found him tossing and groaning so that it was manifestly a kindness
+to wake him; but her gentle touch occasioned a scream of terror, and
+he started aside with open glassy eyes, crying, &ldquo;Oh take me not!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear boy!&nbsp; It is I.&nbsp; Perry, do you not know me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, madam!&rdquo; in infinite relief, &ldquo;it is you.&nbsp;
+I thought&mdash;I thought I was in elfland and that they were paying
+me for the tithe to hell;&rdquo; and he still shuddered all over.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No elf&mdash;no elf, dear boy; a christened boy&mdash;God&rsquo;s
+child, and under His care;&rdquo; and she began the 121st Psalm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, but I am not under His shadow!&nbsp; The Evil One has
+had me again!&nbsp; He will have me.&nbsp; Aren&rsquo;t those his claws?&nbsp;
+He will have me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never, my child, if you will cry to God for help.&nbsp; Say
+this with me, &lsquo;Lord, be Thou my keeper.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He did so, and grew more quiet, and she began to repeat Dr. Ken&rsquo;s
+evening hymn, which had become known in manuscript in Winchester.&nbsp;
+It soothed him, and she thought he was dropping off to sleep, but no
+sooner did she move than he started with &ldquo;There it is again&mdash;the
+black wings&mdash;the claws&mdash;&rdquo; then while awake, &ldquo;Say
+it again!&nbsp; Oh, say it again.&nbsp; Fold me in your prayers&mdash;you
+can pray.&rdquo;&nbsp; She went back to the verse, and he became quiet,
+but her next attempt to leave him caused an entreaty that she would
+remain, nor could she quit him till the dawn, happily very early, was
+dispelling the terrors of the night, and then, when he had himself murmured
+once&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Let no ill dreams disturb my rest,<br />
+No powers of darkness me molest,&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>he fell asleep at last, with a softer look on his pinched face.&nbsp;
+Poor boy, would that verse be his first step to prayer and deliverance
+from his own too real enemy?</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII<br />
+The Envoy</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I then did ask of her, her changeling child.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Midsummer Night&rsquo;s Dream.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford was too good a housewife to allow herself any extra
+rest on account of her vigil, and she had just put her Juneating apple-tart
+into the oven when Anne rushed into the kitchen with the warning that
+there was a grand gentleman getting off his horse at the gateway, and
+speaking to her uncle&mdash;she thought it must be Peregrine&rsquo;s
+uncle.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford was of the same opinion, and asked where Peregrine
+was.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fast asleep in the window-seat of the parlour, mother!&nbsp;
+I did not waken him, for he looked so tired.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was right, my little maiden,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woodford,
+hastily washing her hands, taking off her cooking apron, letting down
+her black gown from its pocket holes, and arranging her veil-like widow&rsquo;s
+coif, after which, in full trim for company, she sallied out to the
+front door, to avert, if possible, the wakening of the boy, whom she
+wished to appear to the best advantage.</p>
+<p>She met in the garden her brother-in-law, and Sir Peregrine Oakshott,
+on being presented to her, made such a bow as had seldom been seen in
+those parts, as he politely said that he was the bearer of his brother&rsquo;s
+thanks for her care of his nephew.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford explained that the boy had had so bad a night that
+it would be well not to break his present sleep, and invited the guest
+to walk in the garden or sit in the Doctor&rsquo;s study or in the shade
+of the castle wall.</p>
+<p>This last was what he preferred, and there they seated themselves,
+with a green slope before them down to the pale gray creek, and the
+hill beyond lying in the summer sunshine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have been long in coming hither,&rdquo; said the knight,
+&ldquo;partly on account of letters on affairs of State, and partly
+likewise because I desired to come alone, thinking that I might better
+understand how it is with the lad without the presence of his father
+or brothers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am very glad you have so done, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then, madam, I entreat of you to speak freely and tell me
+your opinion of him without reserve.&nbsp; You need not fear offence
+by speaking of the mode in which they have treated him at home.&nbsp;
+My poor brother has meant to do his duty, but he has stood so far aloof
+from his sons that he has dealt with them in ignorance, and their mother,
+between sickliness and timidity, is a mere prey to the folly of her
+gossips.&nbsp; So speak plainly, madam, I beg of you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford did speak plainly of the boy&rsquo;s rooted belief
+in his own elfish origin, and how when arguing against it she had found
+the alternative even sadder and more hopeless, how well he comported
+himself as long as he was treated as a human and rational being, but
+how the taunts and jests of the young Archfields had renewed all the
+mischief, to the poor fellow&rsquo;s own remorse and despair.</p>
+<p>Sir Peregrine listened with only a word of comment, or question now
+and then, like a man of the world well used to hearing all before he
+committed himself, and the description was only just ended when the
+clang of the warning dinner-bell sounded and they rose; but as they
+were passing the window of the dining-parlour a shriek of Anne&rsquo;s
+startled them all, and as they sprang forward, Mrs. Woodford first,
+Peregrine&rsquo;s voice was heard, &ldquo;No, no, Anne, don&rsquo;t
+be afraid.&nbsp; It is for me he is come; I knew he would.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Something in a strange language was heard.&nbsp; A black face with
+round eyes and gleaming teeth might be seen bending forward.&nbsp; Anne
+gave another shriek, but was heard crying, &ldquo;No, no!&nbsp; Get
+away, sir.&nbsp; He is our Lord Christ&rsquo;s!&nbsp; He is!&nbsp; You
+can&rsquo;t! you shan&rsquo;t have him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Anne was seen standing over Peregrine, who had dropped shuddering
+and nearly fainting on the floor, while she stood valiantly up warding
+off the advance of him whom she took for the Prince of Darkness, and
+in her excitement not at first aware of those who were come to her aid
+at the window.&nbsp; In one second the negro was saying something which
+his master answered, and sent him off.&nbsp; Mrs. Woodford had called
+out, &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be afraid, dear children.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis Sir
+Peregrine&rsquo;s black servant&rdquo;; and the Doctor, &ldquo;Foolish
+children!&nbsp; What is this nonsense?&rdquo;&nbsp; A moment or two
+more and they were in the room, Anne, all trembling, flying up to her
+mother and hiding her face against her between fright and shame at not
+having thought of the black servant, and the while they lifted up Peregrine,
+who, as he met his kind friend&rsquo;s eyes, said faintly, &ldquo;Is
+he gone?&nbsp; Was it the dream again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was your uncle&rsquo;s blackamoor servant,&rdquo; said
+Mrs. Woodford.&nbsp; &ldquo;You woke up, and no wonder you were startled.&nbsp;
+Come with me, both of you, and make you ready for dinner.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peregrine had rather collapsed than fainted, for he was able to walk
+with her hand on his shoulder, and Sir Peregrine understood her sign
+and did not attempt to accost either of the children, though as the
+Doctor took him to his chamber he expressed his admiration of the little
+maiden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the right woman,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;losing
+herself when there is one to guard.&nbsp; Nay, sir, she needs no excuse.&nbsp;
+Such a spirit may well redeem a child&rsquo;s mistake.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford had reassured the children, so that they were more
+than half ashamed, though scarce willing to reappear when she had made
+Peregrine wash his face and hands, smooth the hair ruffled in his nap,
+freshly tying his little cravat and the ribbons on his shoes and at
+his knees.&nbsp; To make his hair into anything but elf locks, or to
+obliterate the bristly tuft that made him like Riquet, was impossible,
+illness had made him additionally lean and sallow, and his keen eyes,
+under their black contracted brows and dark lashes, showed all the more
+the curious variation in their tints, and with an obliquity that varied
+according to the state of the nerves.&nbsp; There was a satirical mischievous
+cast in the mould of the face, though individually the features were
+not amiss except for their thinness, and in fact the unpleasantness
+of the expression had insensibly been softened during this last month,
+and there was nothing repellent, though much that was quaint, in the
+slight figure, with the indescribably one-sided air, and stature more
+befitting ten than fourteen years.&nbsp; What would the visitor think
+of him?&nbsp; The Doctor called to him, &ldquo;Come, Peregrine, your
+uncle, Sir Peregrine Oakshott, has been good enough to come over to
+see you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peregrine had been well trained enough in that bitter school of home
+to make a correct bow, though his feelings were betrayed by his yellow
+eye going almost out of sight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My namesake&mdash;your father will not let me say my godson,&rdquo;
+said Sir Peregrine smiling.&nbsp; &ldquo;We ought to be good friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The boy looked up.&nbsp; Perhaps he had never been greeted in so
+human a manner before, and there was something confiding in the way
+those bony fingers of his rested a moment in his uncle&rsquo;s clasp.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And this is your little daughter, madam, Peregrine&rsquo;s
+kind playmate?&nbsp; You may well be proud of her valour,&rdquo; said
+the knight, while Anne made her courtesy, which he, in the custom of
+the day, returned with a kiss; and she, who had been mortally ashamed
+of her terror, marvelled at his praise.</p>
+<p>The pair of fowls were by this time on the table, and good manners
+required silence on the part of the children, but while Sir Peregrine
+explained that he had been appointed by his Majesty as Envoy to the
+Elector of Brandenburg, and gave various interesting particulars of
+foreign life, Mrs. Woodford saw that he was keeping a quiet watch over
+his nephew&rsquo;s habits at table, and she was thankful that when unmoved
+by any wayward spirit of mischief they were quite beyond reproach.&nbsp;
+Something of the refinement of his poor mother&rsquo;s tastes must have
+been inherited by Peregrine, for a certain daintiness of taste and habit
+had probably added to his discomforts in the austere, not to say rude
+simplicity imposed upon the children of the family.</p>
+<p>When the meal was over the children were dismissed to the garden,
+but bidden to keep within call, in case Sir Peregrine should wish to
+see his nephew again.&nbsp; The others repaired again to the garden
+seat, with wine and fruit, but the knight begged Mrs. Woodford not to
+leave them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am satisfied,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;The boy shows
+gentle blood and breeding.&nbsp; There was cause enough for fright without
+cowardice, and there is not, what I was led to fear, such uncouthness
+or ungainliness as should hinder me from having him with me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, sir, is that your purpose?&rdquo; cried the lady, almost
+as eagerly as if it had been high preferment for her own child.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had thought thereon,&rdquo; said the envoy.&nbsp; &ldquo;There
+is reason that he should be my charge, and my brother is like to give
+a ready consent, since he is sorely perplexed what to do with this poor
+untoward slip.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He would be less untoward were he happier,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Woodford.&nbsp; &ldquo;Indeed, sir, I do not think you will repent it,
+if&mdash;&rdquo; and she paused.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What would you say, madam?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If only all your honour&rsquo;s household are absolutely ignorant
+of all these tales.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That can well be, madam.&nbsp; I have only one body-servant
+with me, this unlucky blackamoor, who speaks nothing save Dutch.&nbsp;
+I had already thought of leaving my grooms here, and returning to London
+by sea, and this could well be done, and would cut off all channels
+of gossiping.&nbsp; The boy is, the chaplain tells me, quick-witted,
+and a fair scholar for his years, and I can find good schooling for
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When his head is able to bear it,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woodford.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Truly, sir,&rdquo; added the Doctor, &ldquo;you are doing
+a good work, and I trust that the boy will requite you worthily.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell your reverence,&rdquo; said Sir Peregrine, &ldquo;crooked
+stick though they term him, I had ten times rather have the dealing
+with him than with those comely great lubbers his brothers!&nbsp; The
+question now is, shall I tell him what is in store for him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should say,&rdquo; returned Dr. Woodford, &ldquo;that provided
+it is certain that the intention can be carried out, nothing would be
+so good for him as hope.&nbsp; Do you not say so, sister?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed I do,&rdquo; she replied.&nbsp; &ldquo;I believe that
+he would be a very different boy if he were relieved from the misery
+he suffers at home and requites by mischievous pranks.&nbsp; I do not
+say he will or can be a good lad at once, but if your honour can have
+patience with him, I do believe there is that in him which can be turned
+to good.&nbsp; If he only can believe in the better nature and higher
+guidings, and pray, and not give himself up in despair.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+She had tears in her eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My good madam, I can believe it all,&rdquo; said Sir Peregrine.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Short of being supposed an elf, I have gone through the same,
+and it was not my good father&rsquo;s fault that I did not loathe the
+very name of preaching or prayer.&nbsp; But I had a mother who knew
+how to deal with me, whereas this poor child&rsquo;s mother, I am sure,
+believes in her secret heart that he is none of hers, though she has
+enough sense not to dare to avow it.&nbsp; Alas!&nbsp; I cannot give
+the boy the woman&rsquo;s tending by which you have already wrought
+so much,&rdquo; and Mrs. Woodford remembered to have heard that his
+wife had died at Rotterdam, &ldquo;but I can treat him like a human
+being, I hope indeed as a son; and, at any rate, there will be no one
+to remind him of these old wives&rsquo; tales.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can only say that I am heartily rejoiced,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Woodford.</p>
+<p>So Peregrine was summoned, and shambled up, his eyes showing that
+he expected a trying interview, and, moreover, with a certain twinkle
+of mischief or perverseness in their corners.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Soh! my lad, we ought to be better acquainted,&rdquo; said
+the uncle.&nbsp; &ldquo;D&rsquo;ye know what our name means?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Peregrinus</i>, a vagabond,&rdquo; responded the boy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Eh!&nbsp; The translation may be correct, but &rsquo;tis scarce
+the most complimentary.&nbsp; I wonder now if you, like me, were born
+on a Wednesday.&nbsp; &lsquo;Wednesday&rsquo;s child has far to go.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&nbsp; I was born on a Sunday, and if to see goblins and
+oafs&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, I read it, &lsquo;Sunday&rsquo;s child is full of grace.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peregrine&rsquo;s mouth twitched ironically, but his uncle continued,
+&ldquo;Look you, my boy, what say you to fulfilling the augury of your
+name with me.&nbsp; His Majesty has ordered me off again to represent
+the British name to the Elector of Brandenburg, and I have a mind to
+carry you with me.&nbsp; What do you say?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>If any one expected Peregrine to be overjoyed his demeanour was disappointing.&nbsp;
+He shuffled with his feet, and after two or three &ldquo;Ehs?&rdquo;
+from his uncle, he mumbled, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t care,&rdquo; and then
+shrank together, as one prepared for the stripe with the riding-whip
+which such a rude answer merited: but his uncle had, as a diplomate,
+learnt a good deal of patience, and he said, &ldquo;Ha! don&rsquo;t
+care to leave home and brothers.&nbsp; Eh?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peregrine&rsquo;s chin went down, and there was no answer; his hair
+dropped over his heavy brow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See, boy, this is no jest,&rdquo; said his uncle.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+are too big to be told that &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll put you into my pocket
+and carry you off.&rsquo;&nbsp; I am in earnest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peregrine looked up, and with one sudden flash surveyed his uncle.&nbsp;
+His lips trembled, but he did not speak.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is sudden,&rdquo; said the knight to the other two.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;See, boy, I am not about to take you away with me now.&nbsp;
+In a week or ten days&rsquo; time I start for London; and there we will
+fit you out for K&ouml;nigsberg or Berlin, and I trust we shall make
+a man of you, and a good man.&nbsp; Your tutor tells me you have excellent
+parts, and I mean that you shall do me credit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford could not help telling the lad that he ought to thank
+his uncle, whereat he scowled; but Sir Peregrine said, &ldquo;He is
+not ready for that yet.&nbsp; Wait till he feels he has something to
+thank me for.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So Peregrine was dismissed, and his friends exclaimed with some wonder
+and annoyance that the boy who had been willing to be decapitated to
+put an end to his wretchedness, should be so reluctant to accept such
+an offer, but Sir Peregrine only laughed, and said&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The lad has pith in him!&nbsp; I like him better than if he
+came like a spaniel to my foot.&nbsp; But I will say no more till I
+fully have my brother&rsquo;s consent.&nbsp; No one knows what crooks
+there may be in folks&rsquo; minds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He took his leave, and presently Mrs. Woodford had a fresh surprise.&nbsp;
+She found this strange boy lying flat on the grass, sobbing as if his
+heart would break, and when she tried to soothe and comfort him it was
+very hard to get a word from him; but at last, as she asked, &ldquo;And
+does it grieve you so much to leave home?&rdquo; the answer was&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no! not home!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it, then?&nbsp; What are you sorry to leave?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, <i>you</i> don&rsquo;t know! you and Anne&mdash;the only
+ones that ever were good to me&mdash;and drove away&mdash;<i>it</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, my dear boy.&nbsp; Your uncle means to be good to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no.&nbsp; No one ever will be like you and Anne.&nbsp;
+Oh, let me stay with you, or they will have me at last!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was too much shaken, in his still half-recovered state, by the
+events of these last days, to be reasoned with.&nbsp; Mrs. Woodford
+was afraid he would work himself into delirium, and could only soothe
+him into a calmer state.&nbsp; She found from Anne that the children
+had some vague hopes of his being allowed to remain at Portchester,
+and that this was the ground of his disappointment, since he seemed
+to be attaching himself to them as the first who had ever touched his
+heart or opened to him a gleam of better things.</p>
+<p>By the next day, however, he was in a quieter and more reasonable
+state, and Mrs. Woodford was able to have a long talk with him.&nbsp;
+She represented that the difference of opinions made it almost certain
+that his father would never consent to his remaining under her roof,
+and that even if this were possible, Portchester was far too much infected
+with the folly from which he had suffered so much; and his uncle would
+take care that no one he would meet should ever hear of it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s little good in that,&rdquo; said the boy moodily.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m a thing they&rsquo;ll jibe at and bait any way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not see that, if you take pains with yourself.&nbsp;
+Your uncle said you showed blood and breeding, and when you are better
+dressed, and with him, no one will dare to mock his Excellency&rsquo;s
+nephew.&nbsp; Depend upon it, Peregrine, this is the fresh start that
+you need.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you were there&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My boy, you must not ask for what is impossible.&nbsp; You
+must learn to conquer in God&rsquo;s strength, not mine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>All, however, that passed may not here be narrated, and it apparently
+left that wayward spirit unconvinced.&nbsp; Nevertheless, when on the
+second day Major Oakshott himself came over with his brother, and informed
+Peregrine that his uncle was good enough to undertake the charge of
+him, and to see that he was bred up in godly ways in a Protestant land,
+free from prelacy and superstition, the boy seemed reconciled to his
+fate.&nbsp; Major Oakshott spoke more kindly than usual to him, being
+free from fresh irritation at his misdemeanours; but even thus there
+was a contrast with the gentler, more persuasive tones of the diplomatist,
+and no doubt this tended to increase Peregrine&rsquo;s willingness to
+be thus handed over.</p>
+<p>The next question was whether he should go home first, but both the
+uncle and the friends were averse to his remaining there, amid the unavoidable
+gossip and chatter of the household, and it was therefore decided that
+he should only ride over with Dr. Woodford for an hour or two to take
+leave of his mother and brothers.</p>
+<p>This settled, Mrs. Woodford found him much easier to deal with.&nbsp;
+He had really, through his midnight invocation of the fairies, obtained
+an opening into a new world, and he was ready to believe that with no
+one to twit him with being a changeling or worse, he could avoid perpetual
+disgrace and punishment and live at peace.&nbsp; Nor was he unwilling
+to promise Mrs. Woodford to say daily, and especially when tempted,
+one or two brief collects and ejaculations which she selected to teach
+him, as being as unlike as possible to the long extempore exercises
+which had made him hate the very name of prayer.&nbsp; The Doctor gave
+him a Greek Testament, as being least connected with unpleasant recollections.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And,&rdquo; entreated Peregrine humbly, in a low voice to
+Mrs. Woodford on his last Sunday evening, &ldquo;may I not have something
+of yours, to lay hold of, and remember you if&mdash;when&mdash;the evil
+spirit tries to lay hold of me again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She would fain have given him a prayer-book, but she knew that would
+be treason to his father, and with tears in her eyes and something of
+a pang, she gave him a tiny miniature of herself, which had been her
+husband&rsquo;s companion at sea, and hung it round his neck with the
+chain of her own hair that had always held it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will always keep my heart warm,&rdquo; said Peregrine,
+as he hid it under his vest.&nbsp; There was a shade of disappointment
+on Anne&rsquo;s face when he showed it to her, for she had almost deemed
+it her own.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind, Anne,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I am coming back
+a knight like my uncle to marry you, and then it will be yours again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;I&rsquo;m not going to wed you&mdash;I have another
+sweetheart,&rdquo; added Anne in haste, lest he should think she scorned
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that lubberly Charles Archfield!&nbsp; No fear of him.&nbsp;
+He is promised long ago to some little babe of quality in London.&nbsp;
+You may whistle for him.&nbsp; So you&rsquo;d better wait for me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is not true.&nbsp; You only say it to plague me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s as true as Gospel!&nbsp; I heard Sir Philip telling
+one of the big black gowns one day in the Close, when I was sitting
+up in a tree overhead, how they had fixed a marriage between his son
+and his old friend&rsquo;s daughter, who would have ever so many estates.&nbsp;
+So I&rsquo;d give that&rdquo;&mdash;snapping his fingers&mdash;&ldquo;for
+your chances of being my Lady Archfield in the salt mud at Fareham.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall ask Lucy.&nbsp; It is not kind of you, Perry, when
+you are just going away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, come, don&rsquo;t cry, Anne.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I knew Charley ever so long first, and&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes.&nbsp; Maids always like straight, comely, dull fellows,
+I know that.&nbsp; But as you can&rsquo;t have Charles Archfield, I
+mean to have you, Anne&mdash;for I shall look to you as the only one
+as can ever make a good man of me!&nbsp; Ay&mdash;your mother&mdash;I&rsquo;d
+wed her if I could, but as I can&rsquo;t, I mean to have you, Anne Woodford.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t mean to have you!&nbsp; I shall go to Court,
+and marry some noble earl or gentleman!&nbsp; Why do you laugh and make
+that face, Peregrine? you know my father was almost a knight&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nobody is long with you without knowing that!&rdquo; retorted
+Peregrine; &ldquo;but a miss is as good as a mile, and you will find
+the earls and the lords will think so, and be fain to take the crooked
+stick at last!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mistress Anne tossed her head&mdash;and Peregrine returned a grimace.&nbsp;
+Nevertheless they parted with a kiss, and for some time the thought
+of Peregrine haunted the little girl with a strange, fateful feeling,
+between aversion and attraction, which wore off, as a folly of her childhood,
+with her growth in years.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII<br />
+The Return</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I think he bought his doublet in Italy, his round
+hose in France, his bonnet in Germany, and his behaviour everywhere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Merchant of Venice.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It was autumn, but in the year 1687, when again Lucy Archfield and
+Anne Jacobina Woodford were pacing the broad gravel walk along the south
+side of the nave of Winchester Cathedral.&nbsp; Lucy, in spite of her
+brocade skirt and handsome gown of blue velvet tucked up over it, was
+still devoid of any look of distinction, but was a round-faced, blooming,
+cheerful maiden, of that ladylike thoroughly countrified type happily
+frequent in English girlhood throughout all time.</p>
+<p>Anne, or Jacobina, as she tried to be called, towered above her head,
+and had never lost that tincture of courtly grace that early breeding
+had given her, and though her skirt was of gray wool, and the upper
+gown of cherry tabinet, she wore both with an air that made them seem
+more choice and stylish than those of her companion, while the simple
+braids and curls of her brown hair set off an unusually handsome face,
+pale and clear in complexion, with regular features, fine arched eyebrows
+over clear brown eyes, a short chin, and a mouth of perfect outline,
+but capable of looking very resolute.</p>
+<p>Altogether she looked fit for a Court atmosphere, and perhaps she
+was not without hopes of it, for Dr. Woodford had become a royal chaplain
+under Charles II, and was now continued in the same office; and though
+this was a sinecure as regarded the present King, yet Tory and High
+Church views were as much in the ascendant as they could be under a
+Romanist king, and there were hopes of a canonry at Windsor or Westminster,
+or even higher preferment still, if he were not reckoned too staunch
+an Anglican.&nbsp; That Mrs. Woodford&rsquo;s health had been failing
+for many months past would, her sanguine daughter thought, be remedied
+by being nearer the best physicians in London, which had been quitted
+with regret.&nbsp; Meantime Lucy&rsquo;s first experiences of wedding
+festivities were to be heard.&nbsp; For the Archfield family had just
+returned from celebrating the marriage of the heir.&nbsp; Long ago Anne
+Jacobina had learnt to reckon Master Charles&rsquo;s pledges of affection
+among the sports and follies of childhood, and the strange sense of
+disappointment and shame with which she recollected them had perhaps
+added to her natural reserve, and made her feel it due to maidenly dignity
+to listen with zest to the account of the bride, who was to be brought
+to supper at Doctor Woodford&rsquo;s that eve.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She is a pretty little thing,&rdquo; said Lucy, &ldquo;but
+my mother was much concerned to find her so mere a child, and would
+not, if she had seen her, have consented to the marriage for two years
+to come, except for the sake of having her in our own hands.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought she was sixteen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Barely fifteen, my dear, and far younger than we were at that
+age.&nbsp; She cried because her woman said she must leave her old doll
+behind her; and when my brother declared that she should have anything
+she liked, she danced about, and kissed him, and made him kiss its wooden
+face with half the paint rubbed off.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He did?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes!&nbsp; She is like a pretty fresh plaything to him,
+and they go about together just like big Towzer and little Frisk at
+home.&nbsp; He is very much amused with her, and she thinks him the
+finest possession that ever came in her way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, so he is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is true; but somehow it is scarcely like husband and
+wife; and my mother fears that she may be sickly, for she is so small
+and slight that it seems as if you could blow her away, and so white
+that you would think she had no blood, except when a little heat brings
+the purest rose colour to her cheek, and that, my lady says, betokens
+weakliness.&nbsp; You know, of course, that she is an orphan; her father
+died of a wasting consumption, and her mother not long after, when she
+was a yearling babe.&nbsp; It was her grandfather who was my father&rsquo;s
+friend in the old cavalier days, and wrote to propose the contract to
+my brother not long before his death, when she was but five years old.&nbsp;
+The pity was that she was not sent to us at once, for the old lord,
+her grand-uncle, never heeded or cared for her, but left her to servants,
+who petted her, but understood nothing of care of her health or her
+education, so that the only wonder is that she is alive or so sweet
+and winning as she is.&nbsp; She can hardly read without spelling, and
+I had to make copies for her of Alice Fitzhubert, to show her how to
+sign the book.&nbsp; All she knew she learnt from the old steward, and
+only when she liked.&nbsp; My father laughs and is amused, but my lady
+sighs, and hopes her portion is not dearly bought.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is not she to be a great heiress?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not of the bulk of the lands&mdash;they go to heirs male;
+but there is much besides, enough to make Charles a richer man than
+our father.&nbsp; I wonder what you will think of her.&nbsp; My mother
+is longing to talk her over with Mrs Woodford.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And my mother is longing to see my lady.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I fear she is still but poorly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We think she will be much better when we get home,&rdquo;
+said Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am sure she is stronger, for she walked round
+the Close yesterday, and was scarcely tired.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But tell me, Anne, is it true that poor Master Oliver Oakshott
+is dead of smallpox?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite true.&nbsp; Poor young gentleman, he was to have married
+that cousin of his mother&rsquo;s, Mistress Martha Browning, living
+at Emsworth.&nbsp; She came on a visit, and they think she brought the
+infection, for she sickened at once, and though she had it favourably,
+is much disfigured.&nbsp; Master Oliver caught it and died in three
+days, and all the house were down with it.&nbsp; They say poor Mrs.
+Oakshott forgot her ailments and went to and fro among them all.&nbsp;
+My mother would have gone to help in their need if she had been as well
+as she used to be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How is it with the other son?&nbsp; He was a personable youth
+enough.&nbsp; I saw him at the ship launch in the spring, and thought
+both lads would fain have staid for the dance on board but for their
+grim old father.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You saw Robert, but he is not the elder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What?&nbsp; Is that shocking impish urchin whom we used to
+call Riquet with the tuft, older than he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly he is.&nbsp; He writes from time to time to my mother,
+and seems to be doing well with his uncle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot believe he would come to good.&nbsp; Do you remember
+his sending my brother and cousin adrift in the boat?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think that was in great part the fault of your cousin for
+mocking and tormenting him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sedley Archfield was a bad boy!&nbsp; There&rsquo;s no denying
+that.&nbsp; I am afraid he had good reason for running away from college.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you heard of him since?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; he has been serving with the Life-guards in Scotland,
+and mayhap he will come home and see us.&nbsp; My father wishes to see
+whether he is worthy to have a troop procured by money or favour for
+him, and if they are recalled to the camp at November it will be an
+opportunity.&nbsp; But see&mdash;who is coming through the Slype?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My uncle.&nbsp; And who is with him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford advanced, and with him a small slender figure in black.&nbsp;
+As the broad hat with sable plume was doffed with a sweep on approaching
+the ladies, a dark head and peculiar countenance appeared, while the
+Doctor said, &ldquo;Here is an old acquaintance, young ladies, whom
+I met dismounting at the White Hart, and have brought home with me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Peregrine Oakshott!&rdquo; exclaimed Anne, feeling bound
+to offer in welcome a hand, which he kissed after the custom of the
+day, while Lucy dropped a low and formal courtesy, and being already
+close to the gate of the house occupied by her family, took her leave
+till supper-time.</p>
+<p>Even in the few steps before reaching home Anne was able to perceive
+that a being very unlike the imp of seven years ago had returned, though
+still short in stature and very slight, with long dark hair hanging
+straight enough to suggest elf-locks, but his figure was well proportioned,
+and had a finished air of high breeding and training.&nbsp; His riding
+suit was point device, from the ostrich feather in his hat, to the toes
+of his well made boots, and his sword knew its place, as well as did
+those of the gentlemen that Anne remembered at the Duke of York&rsquo;s
+when she was a little child.&nbsp; His thin, marked face was the reverse
+of handsome, but it was keen, shrewd, perhaps satirical, and the remarkable
+eyes were very bright under dark eyebrows and lashes, and the thin lips,
+devoid of hair, showed fine white teeth when parted by a smile of gladness&mdash;at
+the meeting&mdash;though he was concerned to hear that Mrs. Woodford
+had been very ill all the last spring, and had by no means regained
+her former health, and even in the few words that passed it might be
+gathered that Anne was far more hopeful than her uncle.</p>
+<p>She did indeed look greatly changed, though her countenance was sweeter
+than ever, as she rose from her seat by the fire and held out her arms
+to receive the newcomer with a motherly embrace, while the expression
+of joy and affection was such as could never once have seemed likely
+to sit on Peregrine Oakshott&rsquo;s features.&nbsp; They were left
+together, for Anne had the final touches to put to the supper, and Dr.
+Woodford was sent for to speak to one of the Cathedral staff.</p>
+<p>Peregrine explained that he was on his way home, his father having
+recalled him on his brother&rsquo;s death, but he hoped soon to rejoin
+his uncle, whose secretary he now was.&nbsp; They had been for the last
+few months in London, and were thence to be sent on an embassy to the
+young Czar of Muscovy, an expedition to which he looked forward with
+eager curiosity.&nbsp; Mrs. Woodford hoped that all danger of infection
+at Oakwood was at an end.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is none for me, madam,&rdquo; he said, with a curious
+writhed smile.&nbsp; &ldquo;Did you not know that they thought they
+were rid of me when I took the disease at seven years old, and lay in
+the loft over the hen-house with Molly Owens to tend me? and I believe
+it was thought to be fairy work that I came out of it no more unsightly
+than before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are seeking for compliments, Peregrine; you are greatly
+improved.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Crooked sticks can be pruned and trained,&rdquo; he responded,
+with a courteous bow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are a travelled man.&nbsp; Let me see, how many countries
+have you seen?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A year at Berlin and K&ouml;nigsberg&mdash;strange places
+enough, specially the last, two among the scholars and high roofs of
+Leyden, half a year at Versailles and Paris, another year at Turin,
+whence back for another half year to wait on old King Louis, then to
+the Hague, and the last three months at Court.&nbsp; Not much like buying
+and selling cows, or growing wheat on the slopes, or lying out on a
+cold winter&rsquo;s night to shoot a few wild fowl; and I have you to
+thank for it, my first and best friend!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, your uncle is surely your best.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never would he have picked up the poor crooked stick save
+for you, madam.&nbsp; Moreover, you gave me my talisman,&rdquo; and
+he laid his hand on his breast; &ldquo;it is your face that speaks to
+me and calls me back when the elf, or whatever it is, has got the mastery
+of me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Somewhat startled, Mrs. Woodford would have asked what he meant,
+but that intelligence was brought that Mr. Oakshott&rsquo;s man had
+brought his mail, so that he had to repair to his room.&nbsp; Mrs. Woodford
+had kept up some correspondence with him, for which his uncle&rsquo;s
+position as envoy afforded unusual facilities, and she knew that on
+the whole he had been a very different being from what he was at home.&nbsp;
+Once, indeed, his uncle had written to the Doctor to express his full
+satisfaction in the lad, on whom he seemed to look like a son, but from
+some subsequent letters she had an impression that he had got into trouble
+of some sort while at the University of Leyden, and she was afraid that
+she must accept the belief that the wild elfish spirit, as he called
+it, was by no means extinct in him, any more, she said to herself, than
+temptation is in any human creature.&nbsp; The question is, What is
+there to contend therewith?</p>
+<p>The guests were, however, about to assemble.&nbsp; The Doctor, in
+black velvet cap and stately silken cassock, sash, and gown, sailed
+down to receive them, and again greeted Peregrine, who emerged in black
+velvet and satin, delicate muslin cravat and cuffs, dainty silk stockings
+and rosetted shoes, in a style such as made the far taller and handsomer
+Charles Archfield, in spite of gay scarlet coat, embroidered flowery
+vest, rich laced cravat, and thick shining brown curls, look a mere
+big schoolboy, almost bumpkin-like in contrast.&nbsp; However, no one
+did look at anything but the little creature who could just reach to
+hang upon that resplendent bridegroom&rsquo;s arm.&nbsp; She was in
+glistening white brocade, too stiff and cumbrous for so tiny a figure,
+yet together with the diamonds glistening on her head and breast giving
+her the likeness of a fairy queen.&nbsp; The whiteness was almost startling,
+for the neck and arms were like pearl in tint, the hair flowing in full
+curls on her shoulders was like shining flax or pale silk just unwound
+from the cocoon, and the only relief of colour was the deep blue of
+the eyes, the delicate tint of the lips, and the tender rosy flush that
+was called up by her presentation to her hosts by stout old Sir Philip,
+in plum-coloured coat and full-bottomed wig, though she did not blush
+half as much as the husband of nineteen in his new character.&nbsp;
+Indeed, had it not been for her childish prettiness, her giggle would
+have been unpleasing to more than Lady Archfield, who, broad and matronly,
+gave a courtesy and critical glance at Peregrine before subsiding into
+a seat beside Mrs. Woodford.</p>
+<p>Lucy stood among a few other young people from the Close, watching
+for Anne, who came in, trim and bright, though still somewhat reddened
+in face and arms from her last attentions to the supper&mdash;an elaborate
+meal on such occasions, though lighter than the mid-day repast.&nbsp;
+There were standing pies of game, lobster and oyster patties, creams,
+jellies, and other confections, on which Sir Philip and his lady highly
+complimented Anne, who had been engaged on them for at least a couple
+of days, her mother being no longer able to assist except by advice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See, daughter Alice, you will learn one day to build up a
+jelly as well as to eat it,&rdquo; said Sir Philip good-humouredly,
+whereat the small lady pouted a little and said&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bet lets me make shapes of the dough, but I won&rsquo;t stir
+the pans and get to look like a turkey-cock.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, ha! and you have always done what you liked, my little
+madam?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course, sir! and so I shall,&rdquo; she answered, drawing
+up her pretty little head, while Lady Archfield gave hers a boding shake.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Time, and life, and wifehood teach lessons,&rdquo; murmured
+Mrs. Woodford in consolation, and the Doctor changed the subject by
+asking Peregrine whether the ladies abroad were given to housewifery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The German dames make a great ado about their <i>Wirthschaft</i>,
+as they call it,&rdquo; was the reply, &ldquo;but as to the result!&nbsp;
+Pah!&nbsp; I know not how we should have fared had not Hans, my uncle&rsquo;s
+black, been an excellent cook; but it was in Paris that we were exquisitely
+regaled, and our <i>ma&icirc;tre d&rsquo;h&ocirc;tel</i> would discourse
+on <i>rago&ucirc;ts</i> and <i>entremets</i> till one felt as if his
+were the first of the sciences.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So it is to a Frenchman,&rdquo; growled Sir Philip.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;French and Frenchifications are all the rage nowadays, but what
+will your father say to your science, my young spark?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The gesture of head and shoulder that replied had certainly been
+caught at Paris.&nbsp; Mrs. Woodford rushed into the breach, asking
+about the Princess of Orange, whom she had often seen as a child.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A stately and sightly dame is she, madam,&rdquo; Peregrine
+answered, &ldquo;towering high above her little mynheer, who outwardly
+excels her in naught save the length of nose, and has the manners of
+a boor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Prince of Orange is the hope of the country,&rdquo; said
+Sir Philip severely.</p>
+<p>Peregrine&rsquo;s face wore a queer satirical look, which provoked
+Sir Philip into saying, &ldquo;Speak up, sir! what d&rsquo;ye mean?&nbsp;
+We don&rsquo;t understand French grins here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor does he, nor French courtesies either,&rdquo; said Peregrine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So much the better!&rdquo; exclaimed the baronet.</p>
+<p>Here the little clear voice broke in, &ldquo;O Mr. Oakshott, if I
+had but known you were coming, you might have brought me a French doll
+in the latest fashion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should have been most happy, madam,&rdquo; returned Peregrine;
+&ldquo;but unfortunately I am six months from Paris, and besides, his
+honour might object lest a French doll should contaminate the Dutch
+puppets.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But oh, sir, is it true that French dolls have real hair that
+will curl?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be foolish,&rdquo; muttered Charles impatiently;
+and she drew up her head and made an indescribably droll <i>moue</i>
+of disgust at him.</p>
+<p>Supper ended, the party broke up into old and young, the two elder
+gentlemen sadly discussing politics over their tall glasses of wine,
+the matrons talking over the wedding and Lady Archfield&rsquo;s stay
+in London at the parlour fire, and the young folk in a window, waiting
+for the fiddler and a few more of the young people who were to join
+them in the dance.</p>
+<p>The Archfield ladies had kissed the hand of the Queen, and agreed
+with Peregrine in admiration of her beauty and grace, though they did
+not go so far as he did, especially when he declared that her eyes were
+as soft as Mistress Anne&rsquo;s, and nearly of the same exquisite brown,
+which made the damsel blush and experience a revival of the old feeling
+of her childhood, as if he put her under a spell.</p>
+<p>He went on to say that he had had the good fortune to pick up and
+restore to Queen Mary Beatrice a gold and coral rosary which she had
+dropped on her way to St. James&rsquo;s Palace from Whitehall.&nbsp;
+She thanked him graciously, letting him kiss her hand, and asking him
+if he were of the true Church.&nbsp; &ldquo;Imagine my father&rsquo;s
+feelings,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;when she said, &lsquo;Ah! but you
+will be ere long; I give it you as a pledge.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He produced the rosary, handing it first to Anne, who admired the
+beautiful filigree work, but it was almost snatched from her by Mrs.
+Archfield, who wound it twice on her tiny wrist, tried to get it over
+her head, and did everything but ask for it, till her husband, turning
+round, said roughly, &ldquo;Give it back, madam.&nbsp; We want no Popish
+toys here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lucy put in a hasty question whether Master Oakshott had seen much
+sport, and this led to a spirited description of the homely earnest
+of wild boar hunting under the great Elector of Brandenburg, in contrast
+with the splendours of <i>la chasse aux sangliers</i> at Fontainebleau
+with the green and gold uniforms, the fanfares on the curled horns,
+the ladies in their coaches, forced to attend whether ill or well, the
+very boars themselves too well bred not to conform to the sport of the
+great idol of France.&nbsp; And again, he showed the diamond sleeve
+buttons, the trophies of a sort of bazaar held at Marly, where the stalls
+were kept by the Dauphin, Monsieur, the Duke of Maine, Madame de Maintenon,
+and the rest, where the purchases were winnings at Ombre, made not with
+coin but with nominal sums, and other games at cards, and all was given
+away that was not purchased.&nbsp; And again the levees, when the King&rsquo;s
+wig was handed through the curtains on a stick.&nbsp; Peregrine&rsquo;s
+profane mimicry of the stately march of Louis Quatorze, and the cringing
+obeisances of his courtiers, together with their strutting majesty towards
+their own inferiors, convulsed all with merriment; and the bride shrieked
+out, &ldquo;Do it again!&nbsp; Oh, I shall die of laughing!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was very girlish, with a silvery ring, but the elder ladies looked
+round, and the bridegroom muttered &lsquo;Mountebank.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The fiddler arrived at that moment, and the young people paired off,
+the young couple naturally together, and Peregrine, to the surprise
+and perhaps discomfiture of more than one visitor, securing Anne&rsquo;s
+hand.&nbsp; The young lady pupils of Madame knew their steps, and Lucy
+danced correctly, Anne with an easy, stately grace, Charles Archfield
+performed his <i>devoir</i> seriously, his little wife frisked with
+childish glee, evidently quite untaught, but Peregrine&rsquo;s light
+narrow feet sprang, pointed themselves, and bounded with trained agility,
+set off by the tight blackness of his suit.&nbsp; He was like one of
+the grotesque figures shaped in black paper, or as Sir Philip, looking
+in from the dining-parlour, observed, &ldquo;like a light-heeled French
+fop.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As a rule partners retained one another all the evening, but little
+Mrs. Archfield knew no etiquette, and maybe her husband had pushed and
+pulled her into place a little more authoritatively than she quite approved,
+for she shook him off, and turning round to Peregrine exclaimed&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, I will dance with you!&nbsp; You do leap and hop so high
+and trippingly!&nbsp; Never mind her; she is only a parson&rsquo;s niece!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madam!&rdquo; exclaimed Charles, in a tone of surprised displeasure;
+but she only nodded archly at him, and said, &ldquo;I must dance with
+him; he can jump so high.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let her have her way,&rdquo; whispered Lucy, &ldquo;she is
+but a child, and it will be better not to make a pother.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He yielded, though with visible annoyance, asking Anne if she would
+put up with a poor deserted swain, and as he led her off muttering,
+&ldquo;That fellow&rsquo;s friskiness is like to be taken out of him
+at Oakwood.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the small creature had taken possession of her chosen partner,
+who, so far as size went, was far better suited to her than any of the
+other men present.&nbsp; They were dancing something original and unpremeditated,
+with twirls and springs, sweeps and bends, bounds and footings, just
+as the little lady&rsquo;s fancy prompted, perhaps guided in some degree
+by her partner&rsquo;s experience of national dances.&nbsp; White and
+black, they figured about, she with floating sheeny hair and glistening
+robes, he trim and tight and jetty, like fairy and imp!&nbsp; It was
+so droll and pretty that talkers and dancers alike paused to watch them
+in a strange fascination, till at last, quite breathless and pink as
+a moss rosebud, Alice dropped upon a chair near her husband.&nbsp; He
+stood grim, stiff, and vexed, all the more because Peregrine had taken
+her fan and was using it so as to make it wave like butterfly&rsquo;s
+wings, while poor Charles looked, as the Doctor whispered to his father,
+far more inclined to lay it about her ears.</p>
+<p>Sir Philip laughed heartily, for both he and the Doctor had been
+so much entranced and amused as to be far more diverted at the lad&rsquo;s
+discomfiture than scandalised at the bride&rsquo;s escapade, which they
+viewed as child&rsquo;s play.</p>
+<p>Perhaps, however, he was somewhat comforted by her later observation,
+&ldquo;He is as ugly as Old Nick, and looks like always laughing at
+you; but I wish you could dance like him, Mr. Archfield, only then you
+wouldn&rsquo;t be my dear old great big husband, or so beautiful to
+look at.&nbsp; Oh, yes, to be sure, he is nothing but a skipjack such
+as one makes out of a chicken bone!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Anne meanwhile was exclaiming to her mother, &ldquo;Oh, madam!
+how could they do such a thing?&nbsp; How could they make poor Charley
+marry that foolish ill-mannered little creature?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush, daughter, you must drop that childish name,&rdquo; said
+Mrs. Woodford gravely.</p>
+<p>Anne blushed.&nbsp; &ldquo;I forgot, madam, but I am so sorry for
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is no reason for uneasiness, my dear.&nbsp; She is a
+mere child, and under such hands as Lady Archfield she is sure to improve.&nbsp;
+It is far better that she should be so young, as it will be the more
+easy to mould her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope there is any stuff in her to be moulded,&rdquo; sighed
+the maiden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear child,&rdquo; returned her mother, &ldquo;I cannot
+permit you to talk in this manner.&nbsp; Yes, I know Mr. Archfield has
+been as a brother to you, but even his sister ought not to allow herself
+to discuss or dwell on what she deems the shortcomings of his wife.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The mother in her prudence had silenced the girl; but none the less
+did each fall asleep with a sad and foreboding heart.&nbsp; She knew
+her child to be good and well principled, but those early days of notice
+and petting from the young Princesses of the House of York had never
+faded from the childish mind, and although Anne was dutiful, cheerful,
+and outwardly contented, the mother often suspected that over the spinning-wheel
+or embroidery frame she indulged in day dreams of heroism, promotion,
+and grandeur, which might either fade away in a happy life of domestic
+duty or become temptations.</p>
+<p>Before going away next morning Peregrine entreated that Mistress
+Anne might have the Queen&rsquo;s rosary, but her mother decidedly refused.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It ought to be an heirloom in your family,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>He threw up his hands with one of his strange gestures.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX<br />
+On His Travels</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;For Satan finds some mischief still<br />
+For idle hands to do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>ISAAC WATTS.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Peregrine went off in good spirits, promising a visit on his return
+to London, of which he seemed to have no doubt; but no more was heard
+of him for ten days.&nbsp; At the end of that time the Portsmouth carrier
+conveyed the following note to Winchester:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>HONOURED AND REVEREND SIR&mdash;Seven years since your
+arguments and intercession induced my father to consent to what I hoped
+had been the rescue of me, body and soul.&nbsp; I know not whether to
+ask of your goodness to make the same endeavour again.&nbsp; My father
+declares that nothing shall induce him again to let me go abroad with
+my uncle, and persists in declaring that the compact has been broken
+by our visits to Papist lands, nor will aught that I can say persuade
+him that the Muscovite abhors the Pope quite as much as he can.&nbsp;
+He likewise deems that having unfortunately become his heir, I must
+needs remain at home to thin the timber and watch the ploughmen; and
+when I have besought him to let me yield my place to Robert he replies
+that I am playing the part of Esau.&nbsp; I have written to my uncle,
+who has been a true father to me, and would be loth to part from me
+for his own sake as well as mine but I know not whether he will be able
+to prevail; and I entreat of you, reverend sir, to add your persuasions,
+for I well know that it would be my perdition to remain bound where
+I am.</p>
+<p>Commend me to Mrs. Woodford and Mistress Anne.&nbsp; I trust that
+the former is in better health.&mdash;I remain, reverend sir, Your humble
+servant to command, PEREGRINE OAKSHOTT.</p>
+<p>Given at Oakwood House,<br />
+This 10th of October 1687.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This was very bad news, but Dr. Woodford knew not how to interfere;
+moreover, being in course at the Cathedral, he could not absent himself
+long enough for an expedition to Oakwood, through wintry roads in short
+days.&nbsp; He could only write an encouraging letter to the poor lad,
+and likewise one to Mr. Horncastle, who under the Indulgence had a chapel
+of his own.&nbsp; The Doctor had kept up the acquaintance formed by
+Peregrine&rsquo;s accident, and had come to regard him with much esteem,
+and as likely to exercise a wholesome influence upon his patron.&nbsp;
+Nothing more was heard for a week, and then came another visitor to
+the Doctor&rsquo;s door, Sir Peregrine himself, on his way down, at
+considerable inconvenience, to endeavour to prevail with his brother
+to allow him to retain his nephew in his suite.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;my brother had enough of camps
+in his youth to understand that his son will be none the worse squire
+for having gone a little beyond Hampshire bogs, and learnt what the
+world is made of.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot tell,&rdquo; said Dr. Woodford; &ldquo;I have my
+fears that he thinks the less known of the world the better.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That might answer with a heavy clod of a lad such as the poor
+youth who is gone, and such as, for his own sake and my brother&rsquo;s,
+I trust the younger one is, <i>fruges consumere natus</i>; but as for
+this boy, dulness and vacancy are precisely what would be the ruin of
+him.&nbsp; Let my brother keep Master Robert at home, and give him Oakwood;
+I will provide for Perry as I always promised to do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he is wise he will accept the offer,&rdquo; said Dr. Woodford;
+&ldquo;but &rsquo;tis hard to be wise for others.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing harder, sir.&nbsp; I would that I had gone home with
+Perry, but mine audience of his Majesty was fixed for the ensuing week,
+and my brother&rsquo;s summons was peremptory.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I trust your honour will prevail,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woodford
+gently.&nbsp; &ldquo;You have effected a mighty change in the poor boy,
+and I can well believe that he is as a son to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, madam, yes&mdash;as sons go,&rdquo; said the knight
+in a somewhat disappointing tone.</p>
+<p>She looked at him anxiously, and ventured to murmur a hope so very
+like an inquiry, and so full of solicitous hope, that it actually unlocked
+the envoy&rsquo;s reserve, and he said, &ldquo;Ah, madam, you have been
+the best mother that the poor youth has ever had!&nbsp; I will speak
+freely to you, for should I fail in overcoming my brother&rsquo;s prejudices,
+you will be able to do more for him than any one else, and I know you
+will be absolutely secret.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford sighed, with forebodings of not long being able to
+aid any one in this world, but still she listened with earnest interest
+and sympathy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, madam, you implanted in him that which yet may conquer
+his strange nature.&nbsp; Your name is as it were a charm to conjure
+up his better spirit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I never durst hope, that
+he could be tamed and under control all at once, but&mdash;&rdquo; and
+she paused.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has improved&mdash;vastly improved,&rdquo; said the uncle.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Indeed, when first I took him with me, while he was still weak,
+and moreover much overcome by sea-sickness, while all was strange to
+him, and he was relieved by not finding himself treated as an outcast,
+I verily thought him meeker than other urchins, and that the outcry
+against him was unmerited.&nbsp; But no sooner had we got to Berlin,
+and while I was as yet too busy to provide either masters or occupations
+for my young gentleman, than he did indeed make me feel that I had charge
+of a young imp, and that if I did not watch the better, it might be
+a case of war with his Spanish Majesty.&nbsp; For would you believe
+it, his envoy&rsquo;s gardens joined ours, and what must my young master
+do, but sit atop of our wall, making grimaces at the dons and donnas
+as they paced the walks, and pelting them from time to time with walnuts.&nbsp;
+Well, I was mindful of your counsel, and did not flog him, nor let my
+chaplain do so, though I know the good man&rsquo;s fingers itched to
+be at him; but I reasoned with him on the harm he was doing me, and
+would you believe it, the poor lad burst into tears, and implored me
+to give him something to do, to save him from his own spirit.&nbsp;
+I set him to write out and translate a long roll of Latin despatches
+sent up by that pedant Court in Hungary, and I declare to you I had
+no more trouble with him till next he was left idle.&nbsp; I gave him
+tutors, and he studied with fervour, and made progress at which they
+were amazed.&nbsp; He learnt the High Dutch faster than any other of
+my people, and could soon jabber away in it with the best of the Elector&rsquo;s
+folk, and I began to think I had a nephew who would do me no small credit.&nbsp;
+I sent him to perfect his studies at Leyden, but shall I confess it
+to you? it was to find that no master nor discipline could keep him
+out of the riotings and quarrels of the worse sort of students.&nbsp;
+Nay, I found him laid by with a rapier thrust in the side from a duel,
+for no better cause than biting his thumb at a Scots law student in
+chapel, his apology being that to sit through a Dutch sermon drove him
+crazy.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis not that he is not trustworthy.&nbsp; Find employment
+for the restless demon that is in him, and all is well with him; moreover,
+he is full of wit and humour, and beguiles a long journey or tedious
+evening at an inn better than any comrade I ever knew, extracting mirth
+from all around, even the very discomforts, and searching to the quick
+all that is to be seen.&nbsp; But if left to himself, the restless demon
+that preys on him is sure to set him to something incalculable.&nbsp;
+At Turin it set him to scraping acquaintance with a Capuchin friar,
+a dirty rogue whom I would have kept on the opposite side of the street.&nbsp;
+That was his graver mood; but what more must he do, but borrow or steal,
+I know not how, the ghastly robes of the Confraternity of Death&mdash;the
+white garb and peaked cap with two holes for the eyes, wherewith men
+of all degrees disguise themselves while doing the pious work of bearing
+the dead to the grave.&nbsp; None suspected him, for the disguise is
+complete, and a duke may walk unknown beside a water-carrier, bearing
+the corpse of a cobbler.&nbsp; All would have been well, but that at
+the very brink of the grave the boy&rsquo;s fiend&mdash;&rsquo;tis his
+own word&mdash;impelled him to break forth into his wild &ldquo;Ho!
+ho! ho!&rdquo; with an eldritch shriek, and slipping out of his cerements,
+dash off headlong over the wall of the cemetery.&nbsp; He was not followed.&nbsp;
+I believe the poor body belonged to a fellow whose salvation was more
+than doubtful in spite of all the priests could do, and that the bearers
+really took him for the foul fiend.&nbsp; It was not till a week or
+two after that the ring of his voice and laugh caused him to be recognised
+by one of the Duke of Savoy&rsquo;s gentlemen, happily a prudent man,
+loth to cause a tumult against one of my suite, and he told me all privately
+in warning.&nbsp; Ay, and when I spoke to Peregrine, I found him thoroughly
+penitent at having insulted the dead; he had been unhappy ever since,
+and had actually bestowed his last pocket-piece on the widow.&nbsp;
+He made handsome apologies in good Italian, which he had picked up as
+fast as the German, to the gentleman, who promised that it should go
+no farther, and kept his word.&nbsp; It was the solemnity, Peregrine
+assured me, that brought back all the intolerableness of the preachings
+at home, and awoke the same demon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How long ago was this, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;About eighteen months.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And has all been well since?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fairly well.&nbsp; He has had fuller and more responsible
+work to do for me, his turn for languages making him a most valuable
+secretary; and in the French Court, really the most perilous of all
+to a young man&rsquo;s virtue, he behaved himself well.&nbsp; It is
+not debauchery that he has a taste for, but he must be doing something,
+and if wholesome occupations do not stay his appetite, he will be doing
+mischief.&nbsp; He brought on himself a very serious rebuke from the
+Prince of Orange, churlishly and roughly given, I allow, but fully merited,
+for making grimaces at his acquaintance among the young officers at
+a military inspection.&nbsp; Heaven help the lad if he be left with
+his father, whose most lively notion of innocent sport is scratching
+the heads of his hogs!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nothing could be said in answer save earnest wishes that the knight
+might persuade his brother.&nbsp; Mrs. Woodford wished her brother-in-law
+to go with him to add force to his remonstrance; but on the whole it
+was thought better to leave the family to themselves, Dr. Woodford only
+writing to Major Oakshott, as well as to the youth himself.</p>
+<p>The result was anxiously watched for, and in another week, earlier
+in the day than Mrs. Woodford was able to leave her room, Sir Peregrine&rsquo;s
+horses stopped at the door, and as Anne ascertained by a peep from the
+window, he was only accompanied by his servants.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said to the Doctor in his vexation, &ldquo;one
+would really think that by force of eating Southdown mutton my poor
+brother had acquired the brains of one of his own rams!&nbsp; I declare
+&rsquo;tis a piteous sight to see a man resolute on ruining his son
+and breaking his own heart all for conscience sake!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say you so, sir!&nbsp; I had hoped that the sight of what
+you have made of your nephew might have had some effect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All the effect it has produced is to make him more determined
+to take him from me.&nbsp; The Hampshire mind abhors foreign breeding,
+and the old Cromwellian spirit thinks good manners sprung from the world,
+and wit from the Evil One!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can quite believe that Peregrine&rsquo;s courtly airs are
+not welcomed here; I could see what our good neighbour, Sir Philip Archfield,
+thought of them; but whereas no power on earth could make the young
+gentleman a steady-going clownish youth after his father&rsquo;s heart,
+methought he might prefer his present polish to impishness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So I told him, but I might as well have talked to the horse
+block.&nbsp; It is his duty, quotha, to breed his heir up in godly simplicity!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Simplicity is all very well to begin with, but once flown,
+it cannot be restored.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that is what my brother cannot see.&nbsp; Well, my poor
+boy must be left to his fate.&nbsp; There is no help for it, and all
+I can hope is that you, sir, and the ladies, will stand his friend,
+and do what may lie in your power to make him patient and render his
+life less intolerable.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, sir, we will do what we can; I wish that I could hope
+that it would be of much service.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My brother has more respect for your advice than perhaps you
+suppose; and to you, madam, the poor lad looks with earnest gratitude.&nbsp;
+Nay, even his mother reaps the benefit of the respect with which you
+have inspired him.&nbsp; Peregrine treats her with a gentleness and
+attention such as she never knew before from her bear cubs.&nbsp; Poor
+soul!&nbsp; I think she likes it, though it somewhat perplexes her,
+and she thinks it all French manners.&nbsp; There is one more favour,
+your reverence, which I scarce dare lay before you.&nbsp; You have seen
+my black boy Hans?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was with you at Oakwood seven years ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Even so.&nbsp; I bought the poor fellow when a mere child
+from a Dutch skipper who had used him scurvily, and he has grown up
+as faithful as a very spaniel, and mightily useful too, not only as
+body servant, but he can cook as well as any French <i>ma&icirc;tre
+d&rsquo;h&ocirc;tel</i>, froth chocolate, and make the best coffee I
+ever tasted; is as honest as the day, and, I believe, would lay down
+his life for Peregrine or me.&nbsp; I shall be cruelly at a loss without
+him, but a physician I met in London tells me it would be no better
+than murder to take the poor rogue to so cold a country as Muscovy.&nbsp;
+I would leave him to wait on Perry, but they will not hear of it at
+Oakwood.&nbsp; My sister-in-law wellnigh had a fit every time she looked
+at him when I was there before, and I found, moreover, that even when
+I was at hand, the servants jeered at the poor blackamoor, gave him
+his meals apart, and only the refuse of their own, so that he would
+fare but ill if I left him to their mercy.&nbsp; I had thought of offering
+him to Mr. Evelyn of Says Court, who would no doubt use him well, but
+it was Peregrine who suggested that if you of your goodness would receive
+the poor fellow, they could sometimes meet, and that would cheer his
+heart, and he really is far from a useless knave, but is worth two of
+any serving-men I ever saw.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To take an additional man-servant was by no means such a great proposal
+as it would be in most houses at present.&nbsp; Men swarmed in much
+larger proportion than maids in all families of condition, and the Doctor
+was wealthy enough for one&mdash;more or less&mdash;to make little difference,
+but the question was asked as to what wages Hans should receive.</p>
+<p>The knight laughed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Wages, poor lad, what should he
+do with them?&nbsp; He is but a slave, I tell you.&nbsp; Meat, clothes,
+and fire, that is all he needs, and I will so deal with him that he
+will serve you in all faithfulness and obedience.&nbsp; He can speak
+English enough to know what you bid him do, but not enough for chatter
+with the servants.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So the agreement was made, and poor Hans was to be sent down by the
+Portsmouth coach together with Peregrine&rsquo;s luggage.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER X<br />
+The Menagerie</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;The head remains unchanged within,<br />
+&nbsp; Nor altered much the face,<br />
+It still retains its native grin,<br />
+&nbsp; And all its old grimace.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Men with contempt the brute surveyed,<br />
+&nbsp; Nor would a name bestow,<br />
+But women liked the motley beast,<br />
+&nbsp; And called the thing a beau.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Monkies, MERRICK.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The Woodford family did not long remain at Winchester.&nbsp; Anne
+declared the cold to be harming her mother, and became very anxious
+to bring her to the milder sea breezes of Portchester, and though Mrs.
+Woodford had little expectation that any place would make much difference
+to her, she was willing to return to the quiet and repose of her home
+under the castle walls beside the tranquil sea.</p>
+<p>Thus they travelled back, as soon as the Doctor&rsquo;s Residence
+was ended, plodding through the heavy chalk roads as well as the big
+horses could drag the cumbrous coach up and down the hills, only halting
+for much needed rest at Sir Philip Archfield&rsquo;s red house, round
+three sides of a quadrangle, the fourth with a low wall backed by a
+row of poplar trees, looking out on the alternate mud and sluggish waters
+of Fareham creek, but with a beautiful garden behind the house.</p>
+<p>The welcome was hearty.&nbsp; Lady Archfield at once conducted Mrs.
+Woodford to her own bedroom, where she was to rest and be served apart,
+and Anne disrobed her of her wraps, covered her upon the bed, and at
+her hostess&rsquo;s desire was explaining what refreshment would best
+suit her, when there was a shrill voice at the door: &ldquo;I want Mistress
+Anne!&nbsp; I want to show her my clothes and jewels.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Coming, child, she is coming when she has attended to her
+mother,&rdquo; responded the lady.&nbsp; &ldquo;White wine, or red,
+did you say, Anne, and a little ginger?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is she never coming?&rdquo; was again the call; and Lady Archfield
+muttering, &ldquo;Was there ever such an impatient poppet?&rdquo; released
+Anne, who was instantly pounced upon by young Mrs. Archfield.&nbsp;
+Linking her arm into that of her visitor, and thrusting Lucy into the
+background, the little heiress proceeded to her own wainscotted bedroom,
+bare according to modern views, but very luxurious according to those
+of the seventeenth century, and with the toilette apparatus, scanty
+indeed, but of solid silver, and with a lavish amount of perfumery.&nbsp;
+Her &lsquo;own woman&rsquo; was in waiting to display and refold the
+whole wedding wardrobe, brocade, satin, taffetas, cambric, Valenciennes,
+and point d&rsquo;Alen&ccedil;on.&nbsp; Anne had to admire each in detail,
+and then to give full meed to the whole casket of jewels, numerous and
+dazzling as befitted a constellation of heirlooms upon one small head.&nbsp;
+They were beautiful, but it was wearisome to repeat &lsquo;Vastly pretty!&rsquo;
+&lsquo;How exquisite!&rsquo; &lsquo;That becomes you very well,&rsquo;
+almost mechanically, when Lucy was standing about all the time, longing
+to exchange the girlish confidences that were burning to come forth.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Young Madam,&rsquo; as every one called her in those times when
+Christian names were at a discount, seemed to be jealous of attention
+to any one else, and the instant she saw the guest attempt to converse
+with her sister-in-law peremptorily interrupted, almost as if affronted.</p>
+<p>Perhaps if Anne had enjoyed freedom of speech with Lucy she would
+not have learnt as much as did her mother, for the young are often more
+scrupulous as to confidences than their seniors, who view them as still
+children, and freely discuss their affairs among themselves.</p>
+<p>So Lady Archfield poured out her troubles: how her daughter-in-law
+refused employment, and disdained instruction in needlework, housewifery,
+or any domestic art, how she jangled the spinnet, but would not learn
+music, and was unoccupied, fretful, and exacting, a burthen to herself
+and every one else, and treating Lucy as the slave of her whims and
+humours.&nbsp; As to such discipline as mothers-in-law were wont to
+exercise upon young wives, the least restraint or contradiction provoked
+such a tempest of passion as to shake the tiny, delicate frame to a
+degree that alarmed the good old matron for the consequences.&nbsp;
+Her health was a continual difficulty, for her constitution was very
+frail, every imprudence cost her suffering, and yet any check to her
+impulses as to food, exertion, or encountering weather was met by a
+spoilt child&rsquo;s resentment.&nbsp; Moreover, her young husband,
+and even his father, always thought the ladies were hard upon her, and
+would not have her vexed; and as their presence always brightened and
+restrained her, they never understood the full amount of her petulance
+and waywardness, and when they found her out of spirits, or out of temper,
+they charged all on her ailments or on want of consideration from her
+mother and sister-in-law.</p>
+<p>Poor Lady Archfield, it was trying for her that her husband should
+be nearly as blind as his son.&nbsp; The young husband was wonderfully
+tender, indulgent, and patient with the little creature, but it would
+not be easy to say whether the affection were not a good deal like that
+for his dog or his horse, as something absolutely his own, with which
+no one else had a right to interfere.&nbsp; It was a relief to the family
+that she always wanted to be out of doors with him whenever the weather
+permitted, nay, often when it was far from suitable to so fragile a
+being; but if she came home aching and crying ever so much with chill
+or fatigue, even if she had to keep her bed afterwards, she was equally
+determined to rush out as soon as she was up again, and as angry as
+ever at remonstrance.</p>
+<p>Charles was gone to try a horse; and as the remains of the effects
+of her last imprudence had prevented her accompanying him, the arrival
+of the guests had been a welcome diversion to the monotony of the morning.</p>
+<p>He was, however, at home again by the time the dinner-bell summoned
+the younger ladies from the inspection of the trinkets and the gentlemen
+from the live stock, all to sit round the heavy oaken table draped with
+the whitest of napery, spun by Lady Archfield in her maiden days, and
+loaded with substantial joints, succeeded by delicacies manufactured
+by herself and Lucy.</p>
+<p>As to the horse, Charles was fairly satisfied, but &lsquo;that fellow,
+young Oakshott, had been after him, and had the refusal.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you be outbid, Mr. Archfield,&rdquo; exclaimed
+the wife.&nbsp; &ldquo;What is the matter of a few guineas to us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Little fear,&rdquo; replied Charles.&nbsp; &ldquo;The old
+Major is scarcely like to pay down twenty gold caroluses, but if he
+should, the bay is his.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, but why not offer thirty?&rdquo; she cried.</p>
+<p>Charles laughed.&nbsp; &ldquo;That would be a scurvy trick, sweetheart,
+and if Peregrine be a crooked stick, we need not be crooked too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was about to ask,&rdquo; said the Doctor, &ldquo;whether
+you had heard aught of that same young gentleman.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have seen him where I never desire to see him again,&rdquo;
+said Sir Philip, &ldquo;riding as though he would be the death of the
+poor hounds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nick Huntsman swears that he bewitches them,&rdquo; said Charles,
+&ldquo;for they always lose the scent when he is in the field, but I
+believe &rsquo;tis the wry looks of him that throw them all out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I say,&rdquo; cried the inconsistent bride, &ldquo;that
+&rsquo;tis all jealousy that puts the gentlemen beside themselves, because
+none of them can dance, nor make a bow, nor hand a cup of chocolate,
+nor open a gate on horseback like him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What does a man on horseback want with opening gates?&rdquo;
+exclaimed Charles.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s your manners, sir,&rdquo; said young Madam with
+a laugh.&nbsp; &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the poor lady to do while her cavalier
+flies over and leaves her in the lurch?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her husband did not like the general laugh, and muttered, &ldquo;You
+know what I mean well enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, so do I!&nbsp; To fumble at the fastening till your poor
+beast can bear it no longer and swerves aside, and I sit waiting a good
+half hour before you bring down your pride enough to alight and open
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All because you <i>would</i> send Will home for your mask.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You would like to have had my poor little face one blister
+with the glare of sun and sea.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Blisters don&rsquo;t come at this time of the year.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, nor to those who have no complexion to lose,&rdquo; she
+cried, with a triumphant look at the two maidens, who certainly had
+not the lilies nor the roses that she believed herself to have, though,
+in truth, her imprudences had left her paler and less pretty than at
+Winchester.</p>
+<p>If this were the style of the matrimonial conversations, Anne again
+grieved for her old playfellow, and she perceived that Lucy looked uncomfortable;
+but there was no getting a moment&rsquo;s private conversation with
+her before the coach was brought round again for the completion of the
+journey.&nbsp; All that neighbourhood had a very bad reputation as the
+haunt of lawless characters, prone to violence; and though among mere
+smugglers there was little danger of an attack on persons well known
+like the Woodford family, they were often joined by far more desperate
+men from the seaport, so that it was never desirable to be out of doors
+after dark.</p>
+<p>The journey proved to have been too much for Mrs. Woodford&rsquo;s
+strength, and for some days she was so ill that Anne never left the
+house; but she rallied again, and on coming downstairs became very anxious
+that her daughter should not be more confined by attendance than was
+wholesome, and insisted on every opportunity of change or amusement
+being taken.</p>
+<p>One day as Anne was in the garden she was surprised by Peregrine
+dashing up on horseback.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You would not take the Queen&rsquo;s rosary before,&rdquo;
+he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;You must now, to save it.&nbsp; My father has
+smelt it out.&nbsp; He says it is teraphim!&nbsp; Micah&mdash;Rachel,
+what not, are quoted against it.&nbsp; He would have smashed it into
+fragments, but that Martha Browning said it would be a pretty bracelet.&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;d sooner see it smashed than on her red fist.&nbsp; To think
+of her giving in to such vanities!&nbsp; But he said she might have
+it, only to be new strung.&nbsp; When he was gone she said, &lsquo;I
+don&rsquo;t really want the thing, but it was hard you should lose the
+Queen&rsquo;s keepsake.&nbsp; Can you bestow it safely?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+I said I could, and brought it hither.&nbsp; Keep it, Anne, I pray.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne hesitated, and referred it to her mother upstairs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell him,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that we will keep it in
+trust for him as a royal gift.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peregrine was disappointed, but had to be content.</p>
+<p>A Dutch vessel from the East Indies had brought home sundry strange
+animals, which were exhibited at the Jolly Mariner at Portsmouth, and
+thus announced on a bill printed on execrable paper, brought out to
+Portchester by some of the market people:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An Ellefante twice the Bignesse of an Ocks, the Trunke or
+Probosces whereof can pick up a Needle or roote up an Ellum Tree.&nbsp;
+Also the Royale Tyger, the same as has slaine and devoured seven yonge
+Gentoo babes, three men, and two women at the township at Chuttergong,
+nie to Bombay, in the Eastern Indies.&nbsp; Also the sacred Ape, worshipped
+by the heathen of the Indies, the Dancing Serpent which weareth Spectacles,
+and whose Bite is instantly mortal, with other rare Fish, Fowle, Idols
+and the like.&nbsp; All to be seene at the Charge of one Groat per head.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford declared herself to be extremely desirous that her
+daughter should see and bring home an account of all these marvels,
+and though Anne had no great inclination to face the tiger with the
+formidable appetite, she could not refuse to accompany her uncle.</p>
+<p>The Jolly Mariner stood in one of the foulest and narrowest of the
+streets of the unsavoury seaport, and Dr. Woodford sighed, and fumed,
+and wished for a good pipe of tobacco more than once as he hesitated
+to try to force a way for his niece through the throng round the entrance
+to the stable-yard of the Jolly Mariner, apparently too rough to pay
+respect to gown and cassock.&nbsp; Anne clung to his arm, ready to give
+up the struggle, but a voice said, &ldquo;Allow me, sir.&nbsp; Mistress
+Anne, deign to take my arm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was Peregrine Oakshott with his brother Robert, and she could
+hardly tell how in a few seconds she had been squeezed through the crowd,
+and stood in the inn-yard, in a comparatively free space, for a groat
+was a prohibitory charge to the vulgar.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Peregrine!&nbsp; Master Oakshott!&rdquo;&nbsp; They heard
+an exclamation of pleasure, at which Peregrine shrugged his shoulders
+and looked expressively at Anne, before turning to receive the salutations
+of an elderly gentleman and a tall young woman, very plainly but handsomely
+clad in mourning deeper than his own.&nbsp; She was of a tall, gaunt,
+angular figure, and a face that never could have been handsome, and
+now bore evident traces of smallpox in redness and pits.</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford knew the guardian Mr. Browning, and his ward Mistress
+Martha and Mistress Anne Jacobina were presented to one another.&nbsp;
+The former gave a good-humoured smile, as if perfectly unconscious of
+her own want of beauty, and declared she had hoped to meet all the rest
+here, especially Mistress Anne Woodford, of whom she had heard so much.&nbsp;
+There was just a little patronage about the tone which repelled the
+proud spirit that was in Anne, and in spite of the ordinary dread and
+repulsion she felt for Peregrine, she was naughty enough to have the
+feeling of a successful beauty when Peregrine most manifestly turned
+away from the heiress in her silk and velvet to do the honours of the
+exhibition to the parson&rsquo;s niece.</p>
+<p>The elephant was fastened by the leg to a post, which perhaps he
+could have pulled up, had he thought it worth his while, but he was
+well contented to wave his trunk about and extend its clever finger
+to receive contributions of cakes and apples, and he was too well amused
+to resort to any strong measures.&nbsp; The tiger, to Anne&rsquo;s relief,
+proved to be only a stuffed specimen.&nbsp; Peregrine, who had seen
+a good many foreign animals in Holland, where the Dutch captains were
+in the habit of bringing curiosities home for the delectation of their
+families in their <i>Lusthausen</i>, was a very amusing companion, having
+much to tell about bird and beast, while Robert stood staring with open
+mouth.&nbsp; The long-legged secretary and the beautiful doves were,
+however, only stuffed, but Anne was much entertained at second hand
+with the relation of the numerous objects, which on the word of a Leyden
+merchant had been known to disappear in the former bird&rsquo;s capacious
+crop, and with stories of the graceful dancing of the cobra, though
+she was not sorry that the present specimen was only visible in a bottle
+of arrack, where his spectacled hood was scarcely apparent.&nbsp; Presently
+a well known shrill young voice was heard.&nbsp; &ldquo;Yes, yes, I
+know I shall swoon at that terrible tiger!&nbsp; Oh, don&rsquo;t!&nbsp;
+I can&rsquo;t come any farther.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, you would come, madam,&rdquo; said Charles.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes! but&mdash;oh, there&rsquo;s a two-tailed monster!&nbsp;
+I know it is the tiger!&nbsp; It is moving!&nbsp; I shall die if you
+take me any farther.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Plague upon your folly, madam!&nbsp; It is only the elephant,&rdquo;
+said a gruffer, rude voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it is dreadful!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis like a mountain!&nbsp;
+I can&rsquo;t!&nbsp; Oh no, I can&rsquo;t!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, madam, you have brought us thus far, you must come on,
+and not make fools of us all,&rdquo; said Charles&rsquo;s voice.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing to hurt you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne, understanding the distress and perplexity, here turned back
+to the passage into the court, and began persuasively to explain to
+little Mrs. Archfield that the tiger was dead, and only a skin, and
+that the elephant was the mildest of beasts, till she coaxed forward
+that small personage, who had of course never really intended to turn
+back, supported and guarded as she was by her husband, and likewise
+by a tall, glittering figure in big boots and a handsome scarlet uniform
+and white feather who claimed her attention as he strode into the court.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Ha!&nbsp; Mistress Anne and the Doctor on my life.&nbsp; What,
+don&rsquo;t you know me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Master Sedley Archfield!&rdquo; said the Doctor; &ldquo;welcome
+home, sir!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis a meeting of old acquaintance.&nbsp; You
+and this gentleman are both so much altered that it is no wonder if
+you do not recognise one another at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No fear of Mr. Perry Oakshott not being recognised,&rdquo;
+said Sedley Archfield, holding out his hand, but with a certain sneer
+in his rough voice that brought Peregrine&rsquo;s eyebrows together.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Kenspeckle enough, as the fools of Whigs say in Scotland.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you long from Scotland, sir?&rdquo; asked Dr. Woodford,
+by way of preventing personalities.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh ay, sir; these six months and more.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s
+not much more sport to be had since the fools of Cameronians have been
+pretty well got under, and &rsquo;tis no loss to be at Hounslow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And oh, what a fright!&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs. Archfield, catching
+sight of the heiress.&nbsp; &ldquo;Keep her away!&nbsp; She makes me
+ill.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They were glad to divert her attention to feeding the elephant, and
+she was coquetting a little about making up her mind to approach even
+the defunct tiger, while she insisted on having the number of his victims
+counted over to her.&nbsp; Anne asked for Lucy, to whom she wanted to
+show the pigeons, but was answered that, &ldquo;my lady wanted Lucy
+at home over some matter of jellies and blancmanges.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charles shrugged his shoulders a little and Sedley grumbled to Anne.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The little vixen sets her heart on cates that she won&rsquo;t
+lay a finger to make, and poor Lucy is like to be no better than a cook-maid,
+while they won&rsquo;t cross her, for fear of her tantrums.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At that instant piercing screams, shriek upon shriek, rang through
+the court, and turning hastily round, Anne beheld a little monkey perched
+on Mrs. Archfield&rsquo;s head, having apparently leapt thither from
+the pole to which it was chained.</p>
+<p>The keeper was not in sight, being in fact employed over a sale of
+some commodities within.&nbsp; There was a general springing to the
+rescue.&nbsp; Charles tried to take the creature off, Sedley tugged
+at the chain fastened to a belt round its body, but the monkey held
+tight by the curls on the lady&rsquo;s forehead with its hands, and
+crossed its legs round her neck, clasping the hands so that the effect
+of the attempts of her husband and his cousin was only to throttle her,
+so that she could no longer scream and was almost in a fit, when on
+Peregrine holding out a nut and speaking coaxingly in Dutch, the monkey
+unloosed its hold, and with another bound was on his arm.&nbsp; He stood
+caressing and feeding it, talking to it in the same tongue, while it
+made little squeaks and chatterings, evidently delighted, though its
+mournful old man&rsquo;s visage still had the same piteous expression.&nbsp;
+There was something most grotesque and almost weird in the sight of
+Peregrine&rsquo;s queer figure toying with its odd hands which seemed
+to be in black gloves, and the strange language he talked to it added
+to the uncanny effect.&nbsp; Even the Doctor felt it as he stood watching,
+and would have muttered &lsquo;Birds of a feather,&rsquo; but that the
+words were spoken more gruffly and plainly by Sedley Archfield, who
+said something about the Devil and his dam, which the good Doctor did
+not choose to hear, and only said to Peregrine, &ldquo;You know how
+to deal with the jackanapes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have seen some at Leyden, sir.&nbsp; This is a pretty little
+beast.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pretty!&nbsp; There was a recoil in horror, for the creature looked
+to the crowd demoniacal.&nbsp; Something the same was the sensation
+of Charles, who, assisted by Anne and Martha, had been rather carrying
+than leading his wife into the inn parlour, where she immediately had
+a fit of hysterics&mdash;vapours, as they called it&mdash;bringing all
+the women of the inn about her, while Martha and Anne soothed her as
+best they could, and he was reduced to helplessly leaning out at the
+bay window.</p>
+<p>When the sobs and cries subsided, under cold water and essences without
+and strong waters within, and the little lady in Martha&rsquo;s strong
+arms, between the matronly coaxing of the fat hostess and the kind soothings
+of the two young ladies, had been restored to something of equanimity,
+Mistress Martha laid her down and said with the utmost good humour and
+placidity to the young husband, &ldquo;Now I&rsquo;ll go, sir.&nbsp;
+She is better now, but the sight of my face might set her off again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, do not say so, madam.&nbsp; We are infinitely obliged.&nbsp;
+Let her thank you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Martha shook her hand and laughed, turning to leave the room,
+so that he was fain to give her his arm and escort her back to her guardian.</p>
+<p>Then ensued a scream.&nbsp; &ldquo;Where&rsquo;s he going?&nbsp;
+Mr. Archfield, don&rsquo;t leave me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is only taking Mistress Browning back to her guardian,&rdquo;
+said Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Eh? oh, how can he?&nbsp; A hideous fright!&rdquo; she cried.</p>
+<p>To say the truth, she was rather pleased to have had such a dreadful
+adventure, and to have made such a commotion, though she protested that
+she must go home directly, and could never bear the sight of those dreadful
+monsters again, or she should die on the spot.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said she, when the coach was at the door, and
+Anne had restored her dress to its dainty gaiety, &ldquo;I must thank
+Master Peregrine for taking off that horrible jackanapes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Small thanks to him,&rdquo; said Charles crossly.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+wager it was all his doing out of mere spite.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is too good a beau ever to spite <i>me</i>,&rdquo; said
+Mrs. Alice, her head a little on one side.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then to show off what he could do with the beast&mdash;Satan&rsquo;s
+imp, like himself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, Mr. Archfield,&rdquo; pleaded Anne, &ldquo;that was
+impossible; I saw him myself.&nbsp; He was with that sailor-looking
+man measuring the height of the secretary bird.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe you are always looking after him,&rdquo; grumbled
+Charles.&nbsp; &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t guess what all the women see in
+him to be always gazing after him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because he is so charmingly ugly,&rdquo; laughed the young
+wife, tripping out in utter forgetfulness that she was to die if she
+went near the beasts again.&nbsp; She met Peregrine half way across
+the yard with outstretched hands, exclaiming&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O Mr. Oakshott! it was so good in you to take away that nasty
+beast.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am glad, madam, to have been of use,&rdquo; said Peregrine,
+bowing and smiling, a smile that might explain something of his fascination.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The poor brute was only drawn, as all of our kind are.&nbsp;
+He wanted to see so sweet a lady nearer.&nbsp; He is quite harmless.&nbsp;
+Will you stroke him?&nbsp; See, there he sits, gazing after you.&nbsp;
+Will you give him a cake and make friends?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, madam, it cannot be; it is too much,&rdquo; grumbled
+Charles; and though Alice had backed at first, perhaps for the pleasure
+of teasing him, or for that of being the centre of observation, actually,
+with all manner of pretty airs and graces, she let herself be led forward,
+lay a timid hand on the monkey&rsquo;s head, and put a cake in its black
+fingers, while all the time Peregrine held it fast and talked Dutch
+to it; and Charles Archfield hardly contained his rage, though Anne
+endeavoured to argue the impossibility of Peregrine&rsquo;s having incited
+the attack; and Sedley blustered that they ought to interfere and make
+the fellow know the reason why.&nbsp; However, Charles had sense enough
+to know that though he might exhale his vexation in grumbling, he had
+no valid cause for quarrelling with young Oakshott, so he contented
+himself with black looks and grudging thanks, as he was obliged to let
+Peregrine hand his wife into her carriage amid her nods and becks and
+wreathed smiles.</p>
+<p>They would have taken Dr. Woodford and his niece home in the coach,
+but Anne had an errand in the town, and preferred to return by boat.&nbsp;
+She wanted some oranges and Turkey figs to allay her mother&rsquo;s
+constant thirst, and Peregrine begged permission to accompany them,
+saying that he knew where to find the best and cheapest.&nbsp; Accordingly
+he took them to a tiny cellar, in an alley by the boat camber, where
+the Portugal oranges certainly looked riper and were cheaper than any
+that Anne had found before; but there seemed to be an odd sort of understanding
+between Peregrine and the withered old weather-beaten sailor who sold
+them, such as rather puzzled the Doctor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope these are not contraband,&rdquo; he said to Peregrine,
+when the oranges had been packed in the basket of the servant who followed
+them.</p>
+<p>Peregrine shrugged his shoulders.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Living is hard, sir.&nbsp; Ask no questions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Doctor looked tempted to turn back with the fruit, but such doubts
+were viewed as ultra scruples, and would hardly have been entertained
+even by a magistrate such as Sir Philip Archfield.</p>
+<p>It was not a time for questions, and Peregrine remained with them
+till they embarked at the point, asking to be commended to Mrs. Woodford,
+and hoping soon to come and see both her and poor Hans, he left them.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI<br />
+Proposals</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Hear me, ye venerable core,<br />
+&nbsp; As counsel for poor mortals,<br />
+That frequent pass douce Wisdom&rsquo;s door<br />
+&nbsp; For glaikit Folly&rsquo;s portals;<br />
+I for their thoughtless, careless sakes<br />
+&nbsp; Would here propose defences,<br />
+Their doucie tricks, their black mistakes,<br />
+&nbsp; Their failings and mischances.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>BURNS.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>For seven years Anne Woodford had kept Lucy Archfield&rsquo;s birthday
+with her, and there was no refusing now, though there was more and more
+unwillingness to leave Mrs. Woodford, whose declining state became so
+increasingly apparent that even the loving daughter could no longer
+be blind to it.</p>
+<p>The coach was sent over to fetch Mistress Anne to Fareham, and the
+invalid was left, comfortably installed in her easy-chair by the parlour
+fire, with a little table by her side, holding a hand-bell, a divided
+orange, a glass of toast and water, and the Bible and Prayer-book, wherein
+lay her chief studies, together with a little needlework, which still
+amused her feeble hands.&nbsp; The Doctor, divided between his parish,
+his study, and his garden, had promised to look in from time to time.</p>
+<p>Presently, however, the door was gently tapped, and on her call &ldquo;Come
+in,&rdquo; Hans, all one grin, admitted Peregrine Oakshott, bowing low
+in his foreign, courteous manner, and entreating her to excuse his intrusion,
+&ldquo;For truly, madam, in your goodness is my only hope.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then he knelt on one knee and kissed the hand she held out to him,
+while desiring him to speak freely to her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, madam, I fear I shall startle you, when I lay before
+you the only chance that can aid me to overcome the demon that is in
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My poor&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Call me your boy, as when I was here seven years ago.&nbsp;
+Let me sit at your feet as then and listen to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed I will, my dear boy,&rdquo; and she laid her hand on
+his dark head.&nbsp; &ldquo;Tell me all that is in your heart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, dear lady, that is not soon done!&nbsp; You and Mistress
+Anne, as you well know, first awoke me from my firm belief that I was
+none other than an elf, and yet there have since been times when I have
+doubted whether it were not indeed the truth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, Peregrine, at years of discretion you should have outgrown
+old wives&rsquo; tales.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Better be an elf at once&mdash;a soulless creature of the
+elements&mdash;than the sport of an evil spirit doomed to perdition,&rdquo;
+he bitterly exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush, hush!&nbsp; You know not what you are saying!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it too well, madam!&nbsp; There are times when I long
+and wish after goodness&mdash;nay, when Heaven seems open to me&mdash;and
+I resolve and strive after a perfect life; but again comes the wild,
+passionate dragging, as it were, into all that at other moments I most
+loathe and abhor, and I become no more my own master.&nbsp; Ah!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was misery in his voice, and he clutched the long hair on each
+side of his face with his hands.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;St. Paul felt the same,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woodford gently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Ay, ay! how many times have I not groaned that forth!&nbsp; And so,
+if that Father at Turin were right, I am but as Paul was when he was
+Saul.&nbsp; Madam, is it not possible that I was never truly baptized?&rdquo;
+he cried eagerly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Impossible, Peregrine.&nbsp; Was not Mr. Horncastle chaplain
+when you were born?&nbsp; Yes; and I have heard my brother say that
+both he and your father held the same views as the Church upon baptism.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So I thought; but Father Geronimo says that at the best it
+was but heretical baptism, and belike hastily and ineffectually performed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Put that aside, Peregrine.&nbsp; It is only a temptation and
+allurement.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is an allurement you know not how strong,&rdquo; said the
+poor youth.&nbsp; &ldquo;Could I only bring myself to believe all that
+Father Geronimo does, and fall down before his Madonnas and saints,
+then could I hope for a new nature, and scourge away the old&rdquo;&mdash;he
+set his teeth as he spoke&mdash;&ldquo;till naught remains of the elf
+or demon, be it what it will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Peregrine, scourging will not do it, but grace will, and
+that grace is indeed yours, as is proved by these higher aspirations.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you, madam, that if I live on as I am doing now, grace
+will be utterly stifled, if it ever abode in me at all.&nbsp; Every
+hour that I live, pent in by intolerable forms and immeasurable dulness,
+the maddening temper gains on me!&nbsp; Nay, I have had to rush out
+at night and swear a dozen round oaths before I could compose myself
+to sit down to the endless supper.&nbsp; Ah, I shock you, madam! but
+that&rsquo;s not the worst I am driven to do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor the way to bring the better spirit, my poor youth.&nbsp;
+Oh, that you would pray instead of swearing!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot pray at Oakwood.&nbsp; My father and Mr. Horncastle
+drive away all the prayers that ever were in me, and I mean nothing,
+even though I keep my word to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am glad you do that.&nbsp; While I know you are doing so,
+I shall still believe the better angel will triumph.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can aught triumph but hatred and disgust where I am pinned
+down?&nbsp; Listen, madam, and hear if good spirits have any chance.&nbsp;
+We break our fast, ere the sun is up, on chunks of yesterday&rsquo;s
+half-dressed beef and mutton.&nbsp; If I am seen seeking for a morsel
+not half raw, I am rated for dainty French tastes; and the same with
+the sour smallest of beer.&nbsp; I know now what always made me ill-tempered
+as a child, and I avoid it, but at the expense of sneers on my French
+breeding, even though my drink be fair water; for wine, look you, is
+a sinful expense, save for after dinner, and frothed chocolate for a
+man is an invention of Satan.&nbsp; The meal is sauced either with blame
+of me, messages from the farm-folk, or Bob&rsquo;s exploits in the chase.&nbsp;
+Then my father goes his rounds on the farm, and would fain have me with
+him to stand knee-deep in mire watching the plough, or feeling each
+greasy and odorous old sheep in turn to see if it be ready for the knife,
+or gloating over the bullocks or swine, or exchanging auguries with
+Thomas Vokes on this or that crop.&nbsp; Faugh!&nbsp; And I am told
+I shall never be good for a country gentleman if I contemn such matters!&nbsp;
+I say I have no mind to be a country gentleman, whereby I am told of
+Esau till I am sick of his very name.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But surely you have not always to follow on this round?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no!&nbsp; I may go out birding with Bob, who is about as
+lively as an old jackass, or meet the country boobies for a hunt, and
+be pointed at as the Frenchman, and left to ride alone; or there&rsquo;s
+mine own chamber, when the maids do not see fit to turn me out with
+their pails and besoms, as they do at least twice a week&mdash;I sit
+there in my cloak and furs (by the way, I am chidden for an effeminate
+fop if ever I am seen in them).&nbsp; I would give myself to books,
+as my uncle counselled, but what think you?&nbsp; By ill hap Bob, coming
+in to ask some question, found me studying the <i>Divina Commedia</i>
+of Dante Alighieri, and hit upon one of the engravings representing
+the torments of purgatory.&nbsp; What must he do but report it, and
+immediately a hue and cry arises that I am being corrupted with Popish
+books.&nbsp; In vain do I tell them that their admirable John Milton,
+the only poet save Sternhold and Hopkins that my father deems not absolute
+pagan, knew, loved, and borrowed from Dante.&nbsp; All my books are
+turned over as ruthlessly as ever Don Quixote&rsquo;s by the curate
+and the barber, and whatever Mr. Horncastle&rsquo;s erudition cannot
+vouch for is summarily handed over to the kitchen wench to light the
+fires.&nbsp; The best of it is that they have left me my classics, as
+though old Terence and Lucan were lesser heathens than the great Florentine.&nbsp;
+However, I have bribed the young maid, and rescued my Dante and Boiardo
+with small damage, but I dare not read them save with door locked.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford could scarcely shake her head at the disobedience,
+and she asked if there were really no other varieties.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Such as fencing with that lubber Robert, and trying to bend
+his stiff limbs to the noble art of <i>l&rsquo;escrime</i>.&nbsp; But
+that is after dinner work.&nbsp; There is the mountain of half-raw flesh
+to be consumed first, and then my father, with Mr. Horncastle and Bob
+discuss on what they call the news&mdash;happy if a poor rogue has been
+caught by Tom Constable stealing faggots.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis argument
+for a week&mdash;almost equal to the price of a fat mutton at Portsmouth.&nbsp;
+My father and the minister nod in due time over their ale-cup, and Bob
+and I go our ways till dark, or till the house bell rings for prayers
+and exposition.&nbsp; Well, dear good lady, I will not grieve you by
+telling you how often they make me wish to be again the imp devoid of
+every shred of self-respect, and too much inured to flogging to heed
+what my antics might bring on me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am glad you have that shred of self respect; I hope indeed
+it is some higher respect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I can never believe that Heaven meant to be served by
+mortal dullness.&nbsp; Seven years have only made old Horncastle blow
+his horn to the same note, only more drearily.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can see indeed that it is a great trial to one used to the
+life of foreign Courts and to interest in great affairs like you, my
+poor Peregrine; but what can I say but to entreat you to be patient,
+try to find interest, and endeavour to win your father&rsquo;s confidence
+so that he may accord you more liberty?&nbsp; Did I not hear that your
+attention made your mother&rsquo;s life happier?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peregrine laughed.&nbsp; &ldquo;My mother!&nbsp; She has never seen
+aught but boorishness all her life, and any departure therefrom seems
+to her unnatural.&nbsp; I believe she is as much afraid of my courtesy
+as ever she was of my mischief, and that in her secret heart she still
+believes me a changeling.&nbsp; No, Madam Woodford, there is but one
+way to save me from the frenzy that comes over me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your father has already been entreated to let you join your
+uncle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it&mdash;I know it; but if it were impossible before,
+that discovery of Dante has made it <i>impossibilissimo</i>, as the
+Italian would say, to deal with him now.&nbsp; There is a better way.&nbsp;
+Give me the good angel who has always counteracted the evil one.&nbsp;
+Give me Mistress Anne!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Anne, my Anne!&rdquo; exclaimed Mrs. Woodford in dismay.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;O Peregrine, it cannot be!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I knew that would be your first word,&rdquo; said Peregrine,
+&ldquo;but verily, madam, I would not ask it but that I know that I
+should be another man with her by my side, and that she would have nothing
+to fear from the evil that dies at her approach.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Peregrine! you think so now; but no man can be sure of
+himself with any mere human care.&nbsp; Besides, my child is not of
+degree to match with you.&nbsp; Your father would justly be angered
+if we took advantage of your attachment to us to encourage you in an
+inclination he could never approve.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you, madam&mdash;yes, I must tell you all&mdash;my
+madness and my ruin will be completed if I am left to my father&rsquo;s
+will.&nbsp; I know what is hanging over me.&nbsp; He is only waiting
+till I am of age&mdash;at Midsummer, and the year of mourning is over
+for poor Oliver&mdash;I am sure no one mourns for him more heartily
+than I&mdash;to bind me to Martha Browning.&nbsp; If she would only
+bring the plague, or something worse than smallpox, to put an end to
+it at once!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But that would make any such scheme all the more impossible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Listen, madam; do but hear me.&nbsp; Even as children the
+very sight of Martha Browning&rsquo;s solemn face&rdquo;&mdash;Peregrine
+drew his countenance down into a portentous length&mdash;&ldquo;her
+horror at the slightest word or sport, her stiff broomstick carriage,
+all impelled me to the most impish tricks.&nbsp; And now&mdash;letting
+alone that pock-marks have seamed her grim face till she is as ugly
+as Alecto&mdash;she is a Precisian of the Precisians.&nbsp; I declare
+our household is in her eyes sinfully free!&nbsp; If she can hammer
+out a text of Scripture, and write her name in characters as big and
+gawky as herself, &rsquo;tis as far as her education has carried her,
+save in pickling, preserving, stitchery, and clear starching, the only
+arts not sinful in her eyes.&nbsp; If I am to have a broomstick, I had
+rather ride off on one at once to the Witches&rsquo; Sabbath on the
+Wartburg than be tied to one for life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should think she would scarce accept you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no such hope.&nbsp; She has been bred up to
+regard one of us as her lot, and she would accept me without a murmur
+if I were Beelzebub himself, horns and tail and all!&nbsp; Why, she
+ogles me with her gooseberry eyes already, and treats me as a chattel
+of her own.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush, hush, Peregrine!&nbsp; I cannot have you talk thus.&nbsp;
+If your father had such designs, it would be unworthy of us to favour
+you in crossing them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, madam, he hath never expressed them as yet.&nbsp; Only
+my mother and brother both refer to his purpose, and if I could show
+myself contracted to a young lady of good birth and education, he cannot
+gainsay; it might yet save me from what I will not and cannot endure.&nbsp;
+Not that such is by any means my chief and only motive.&nbsp; I have
+loved Mistress Anne with all my heart ever since she shone upon me like
+a being from a better world when I lay sick here.&nbsp; She has the
+same power of hushing the wild goblin within me as you have, madam.&nbsp;
+I am another man with her, as I am with you.&nbsp; It is my only hope!&nbsp;
+Give me that hope, and I shall be able to endure patiently.&mdash;Ah!
+what have I done?&nbsp; Have I said too much?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He had talked longer and more eagerly than would have been good for
+the invalid even if the topic had been less agitating, and the emotion
+caused by this unexpected complication, consternation at the difficulties
+she foresaw, and the present difficulty of framing a reply, were altogether
+too much for Mrs. Woodford.&nbsp; She turned deadly white, and gasped
+for breath, so that Peregrine, in terror, dashed off in search of the
+maids, exclaiming that their mistress was in a swoon.</p>
+<p>The Doctor came out of his study much distressed, and in Anne&rsquo;s
+absence the household was almost helpless in giving the succours in
+which she had always been the foremost.&nbsp; Peregrine lingered about
+in remorse and despair, offering to fetch her or to go for the doctor,
+and finally took the latter course, thereto impelled by the angry words
+of the old cook, an enemy of his in former days.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No better? no, sir, nor &rsquo;tis not your fault if ever
+she be.&nbsp; You&rsquo;ve been and frought her nigh to death with your
+terrifying ways.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peregrine was Hampshire man enough to know that to terrify only meant
+to tease, but he was in no mood to justify himself to old Patience,
+so he galloped off to Portsmouth, and only returned with the doctor
+to hear that Madam Woodford was in bed, and her daughter with her.&nbsp;
+She was somewhat better, but still very ill, and it was plain that this
+was no moment for pressing his suit even had it not been time for him
+to return home.&nbsp; Going to fetch the doctor might be accepted as
+a valid reason for missing the evening exhortation and prayer, but there
+were mistrustful looks that galled him.</p>
+<p>Anne&rsquo;s return was more beneficial to Mrs. Woodford than the
+doctor&rsquo;s visit, and the girl was still too ignorant of all that
+her mother&rsquo;s attacks of spasms and subsequent weakness implied
+to be as much alarmed as to depress her hopes.&nbsp; Yet Mrs. Woodford,
+lying awake in the night, detected that her daughter was restless and
+unhappy, and asked what ailed her, and how the visit had gone off.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do not wish me to speak of such things, madam,&rdquo;
+was the answer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell me all that is in your heart, my child.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It all came out with the vehemence of a reserved nature when the
+flood is loosed.&nbsp; &lsquo;Young Madam&rsquo; had been more than
+usually peevish and exacting, jealous perhaps at Lucy&rsquo;s being
+the heroine of the day, and fretful over a cold which confined her to
+the house, how she worried and harassed all around her with her whims,
+megrims and complaints could only too well be imagined, and how the
+entire pleasure of the day was destroyed.&nbsp; Lucy was never allowed
+a minute&rsquo;s conversation with her friend without being interrupted
+by a whine and complaints of unkindness and neglect.</p>
+<p>Lady Archfield&rsquo;s ill-usage, as the young wife was pleased to
+call every kind of restriction, was the favourite theme next to the
+daughter-in law&rsquo;s own finery, her ailments, and her notions of
+the treatment befitting her.</p>
+<p>And young Mr. Archfield himself, while handing his old friend out
+to the carriage that had fetched her, could not help confiding to her
+that he was nearly beside himself.&nbsp; His mother meant to be kind,
+but expected too much from one so brought up, and his wife&mdash;what
+could be done for her?&nbsp; She made herself miserable here, and every
+one else likewise.&nbsp; Yet even if his father would consent, she was
+utterly unfit to be mistress of a house of her own; and poor Charles
+could only utter imprecations on the guardians who could have had no
+idea how a young woman ought to be brought up.&nbsp; It was worse than
+an ill-trained hound.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford heard what she extracted from her daughter with grief
+and alarm, and not only for her friends.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, my dear child,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you must prevent
+such confidences.&nbsp; They are very dangerous things respecting married
+people.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was all in a few moments, mamma, and I could not stop him.&nbsp;
+He is so unhappy;&rdquo; and Anne&rsquo;s voice revealed tears.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The more reason why you should avoid hearing what he will
+soon be very sorry you have heard.&nbsp; Were he not a mere lad himself,
+it would be as inexcusable as it is imprudent thus to speak of the troubles
+and annoyances that often beset the first year of wedded life.&nbsp;
+I am sorry for the poor youth, who means no harm nor disloyalty, and
+is only treating you as his old companion and playmate; but he has no
+right thus to talk of his wife, above all to a young maiden too inexperienced
+to counsel him, and if he should attempt to do so again, promise me,
+my daughter, that you will silence him&mdash;if by no other means, by
+telling him so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I promise!&rdquo; said Anne, choking back her tears and lifting
+her head.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am sure I never want to go to Fareham again
+while that Lieutenant Sedley Archfield is there.&nbsp; If those be army
+manners, they are what I cannot endure.&nbsp; He is altogether mean
+and hateful, above all when he scoffs at Master Oakshott.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am afraid a great many do so, child, and that he often gives
+some occasion,&rdquo; put in Mrs. Woodford, a little uneasy that this
+should be the offence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is better than Sedley Archfield, be he what he will, madam,&rdquo;
+said the girl.&nbsp; &ldquo;He never pays those compliments, those insolent
+disgusting compliments, such as he&mdash;that Sedley, I mean&mdash;when
+he found me alone in the hall, and I had to keep him at bay from trying
+to kiss me, only Mr. Archfield&mdash;Charley&mdash;came down the stairs
+before he was aware, and called out, &lsquo;I will thank you to behave
+yourself to a lady in my father&rsquo;s house.&rsquo;&nbsp; And then
+he, Sedley, sneered &lsquo;The Parson&rsquo;s niece!&rsquo; with such
+a laugh, mother, I shall never get it out of my ears.&nbsp; As if I
+were not as well born as he!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is not quite the way to take it, my child.&nbsp; I had
+rather you stood on your maidenly dignity and discretion than on your
+birth.&nbsp; I trust he will soon be away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I fear he will not, mamma, for I heard say the troop are coming
+down to be under the Duke of Berwick at Portsmouth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then, dear daughter, it is the less mishap that you should
+be thus closely confined by loving attendance on me.&nbsp; Now, goodnight.&nbsp;
+Compose yourself to sleep, and think no more of these troubles.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nevertheless mother and daughter lay long awake, side by side, that
+night; the daughter in all the flutter of nerves induced by offended
+yet flattered feeling&mdash;hating the compliment, yet feeling that
+it was a compliment to the features that she was beginning to value.&nbsp;
+She was substantially a good, well-principled maiden, modest and discreet,
+with much dignified reserve, yet it was impossible that she should not
+have seen heads turned to look at her in Portsmouth, and know that she
+was admired above her contemporaries, so that even if it brought her
+inconvenience it was agreeable.&nbsp; Besides, her heart was beating
+with pity for the Archfields.&nbsp; The elder ones might have only themselves
+to blame, but it was very hard for poor Charles to have been blindly
+coupled to a being who did not know how to value him, still harder that
+there should be blame for a confidence where neither meant any harm&mdash;blame
+that made her blush on her pillow with indignant shame.</p>
+<p>Perhaps Mrs. Woodford divined these thoughts, for she too meditated
+deeply on the perils of her fair young daughter, and in the morning
+could not leave her room.&nbsp; In the course of the day she heard that
+Master Peregrine Oakshott had been to inquire for her, and was not surprised
+when her brother-in-law sought an interview with her.&nbsp; The gulf
+between the hierarchy and squirearchy was sufficient for a marriage
+to be thought a <i>mesalliance</i>, and it was with a smile at the folly
+as well as with a certain displeased pity that Dr. Woodford mentioned
+the proposal so vehemently pressed upon him by Peregrine Oakshott for
+his niece&rsquo;s hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor boy!&rdquo; said Mrs. Woodford, &ldquo;it is a great
+misfortune.&nbsp; You forbade him of course to speak of such a thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told him that I could not imagine how he could think us
+capable of entertaining any such proposal without his father&rsquo;s
+consent.&nbsp; He seems to have hoped that to pledge himself to us might
+extort sanction from his father, not seeing that it would be a highly
+improper measure, and would only incense the Major.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All the more that the Major wishes to pass on Mistress Martha
+Browning to him, poor fellow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He did not tell me so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford related what he had said to her, and the Doctor could
+not but observe: &ldquo;The poor Major! his whole treatment of that
+unfortunate youth is as if he were resolved to drive him to distraction.&nbsp;
+But even if the Major were ever so willing, I doubt whether Master Peregrine
+be the husband you would choose for our little maid.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Assuredly not, poor fellow! though if she loved him as he
+loves her&mdash;which happily she does not&mdash;I should scarce dare
+to stand in the way, lest she should be the appointed instrument for
+his good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He assured me that he had never directly addressed her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, and I trust he never will.&nbsp; Not that she is ever
+like to love him, although she does not shrink from him quite as much
+as others do.&nbsp; Yet there is a strain of ambition in my child&rsquo;s
+nature that might make her seek the elevation.&nbsp; But, my good brother,
+for this and other reasons we must find another home for my poor child
+when I am gone.&nbsp; Nay, brother, do not look at me thus; you know
+as well as I do that I can scarcely look to see the spring come in,
+and I would fain take this opportunity of speaking to you concerning
+my dear daughter.&nbsp; No one can be a kinder father to her than you,
+and I would most gladly leave her to cheer and tend you, but as things
+stand around us she can scarce remain here without a mother&rsquo;s
+watchfulness.&nbsp; She is guarded now by her strict attendance on my
+infirmity, but when I am gone how will it be?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She is as good and discreet a maiden as parent could wish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good and discreet as far as her knowledge and experience go,
+but that is not enough.&nbsp; On the one hand, there is a certain wild
+temper about that young Master Oakshott such as makes me never know
+what he might attempt if, as he says, his father should drive him to
+desperation, and this is a lonely place, with the sea close at hand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lady Archfield would gladly take charge of her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford here related what Anne had said of Sedley&rsquo;s insolence,
+but this the Doctor thought little of, not quite believing in the regiment
+coming into the neighbourhood, and Mrs. Woodford most unwillingly was
+forced to mention her further unwillingness that her daughter should
+be made a party to the troubles caused by the silly young wife of her
+old playfellow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What more?&rdquo; said the Doctor, holding up his hands.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I never thought a discreet young maid could be such a care, but
+I suppose that is the price we pay for her good looks.&nbsp; Three of
+them, eh?&nbsp; What is it that you propose?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should like to place her in the household of some godly
+and kindly lady, who would watch over her and probably provide for her
+marriage.&nbsp; That, as you know, was my own course, and I was very
+happy in Lady Sandwich&rsquo;s family, till I made the acquaintance
+of your dear and honoured brother, and my greater happiness began.&nbsp;
+The first day that I am able I will write to some of my earlier friends,
+such as Mrs. Evelyn and Mrs. Pepys, and again there is Mistress Eleanor
+Wall, who, I hear, is married to Sir Theophilus Oglethorpe, and who
+might accept my daughter for my sake.&nbsp; She is a warm, loving, open-hearted
+creature of Irish blood, and would certainly be kind to her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was no indignity in such a plan.&nbsp; Most ladies of rank
+or quality entertained one or more young women of the clerical or professional
+classes as companions, governesses, or ladies&rsquo; maids, as the case
+might be.&nbsp; They were not classed with the servants, but had their
+share of the society and amusements of the house, and a fair chance
+of marriage in their own degree, though the comfort of their situation
+varied a good deal according to the amiability of their mistress, from
+that of a confidential friend to a white slave and <i>souffre douleur.</i></p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford had no cause to object except his own loss of his niece&rsquo;s
+society and return to bachelor life, after the eight years of companionship
+which he had enjoyed; but such complications as were induced by the
+presence of an attractive young girl were, as he allowed, beyond him,
+and he acquiesced with a sigh in the judgment of the mother, whom he
+had always esteemed so highly.</p>
+<p>The letters were written, and in due time received kind replies.&nbsp;
+Mrs. Evelyn proposed that the young gentlewoman should come and stay
+with her till some situation should offer itself, and Lady Oglethorpe,
+a warm-hearted Irishwoman, deeply attached to the Queen, declared her
+intention of speaking to the King or the Princess Anne on the first
+opportunity of the daughter of the brave Captain Woodford.&nbsp; There
+might very possibly be a nursery appointment to be had either at the
+Cockpit or at Whitehall in the course of the year.</p>
+<p>This was much more than Mrs. Woodford had desired.&nbsp; She had
+far rather have placed her daughter immediately under some kind matronly
+lady in a private household; but she knew that her good friend was always
+eager to promise to the utmost of her possible power.&nbsp; She did
+not talk much of this to her daughter, only telling her that the kind
+ladies had promised to befriend her, and find a situation for her; and
+Anne was too much shocked to find her mother actually making such arrangements
+to enter upon any inquiries.&nbsp; The perception that her mother was
+looking forward to passing away so soon entirely overset her; she would
+not think about it, would not admit the bare idea of the loss.&nbsp;
+Only there lurked at the bottom of her heart the feeling that when the
+crash had come, and desolation had over taken her, it would be more
+dreary at Portchester than anywhere else; and there might be infinite
+possibilities beyond for the King&rsquo;s godchild, almost a knight&rsquo;s
+daughter.</p>
+<p>The next time that Mrs. Woodford heard that Major Oakshott was at
+the door inquiring for her health, she begged as a favour that he would
+come and see her.</p>
+<p>The good gentleman came upstairs treading gently in his heavy boots,
+as one accustomed to an invalid chamber.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sorry to see you thus, madam,&rdquo; he said, as she
+held out her wasted hand and thanked him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Did you desire
+spiritual consolations?&nbsp; There are times when our needs pass far
+beyond prescribed forms and ordinances.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am thankful for the prayers of good men,&rdquo; said Mrs.
+Woodford; &ldquo;but for truth&rsquo;s sake I must tell you that this
+was not foremost in my mind when I begged for this favour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was evidently disappointed, for he was producing from his pocket
+the little stout black-bound Bible, which, by a dent in one of the lids,
+bore witness of having been with him in his campaigns; and perhaps half-diplomatically,
+as well as with a yearning for oneness of spirit, she gratified him
+by requesting him to read and pray.</p>
+<p>With all his rigidity he was too truly pious a man for his ministrations
+to contain anything in which, Churchwoman as she was, she could not
+join with all her heart, and feel comforting; but ere he was about to
+rise from his knees she said, &ldquo;One prayer for your son, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A few fervent words were spoken on behalf of the wandering sheep,
+while tears glistened in the old man&rsquo;s eyes, and fell fast from
+those of the lady, and then he said, &ldquo;Ah, madam! have I not wrestled
+in prayer for my poor boy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sure you have, sir.&nbsp; I know you have a deep fatherly
+love for him, and therefore I sent to speak to you as a dying woman.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I will gladly hear you, for you have always been good
+to him, and, as I confess, have done him more good&mdash;if good can
+be called the apparent improvement in one unregenerate&mdash;than any
+other.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Except his uncle,&rdquo; said Mrs. Woodford.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+fear it is vain to say that I think the best hope of his becoming a
+good and valuable man, a comfort and not a sorrow to yourself, would
+be to let him even now rejoin Sir Peregrine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That cannot be, madam.&nbsp; My brother has not kept to the
+understanding on which I entrusted the lad to him, but has carried him
+into worldly and debauched company, such as has made the sober and godly
+habits of his home distasteful to him, and has further taken him into
+Popish lands, where he has become infected with their abominations to
+a greater extent than I can yet fathom.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mrs. Woodford sighed and felt hopeless.&nbsp; &ldquo;I see your view
+of the matter, sir.&nbsp; Yet may I suggest that it is hard for a young
+man to find wholesome occupation such as may guard him from temptation
+on an estate where the master is active and sufficient like yourself?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Protection from temptation must come from within, madam,&rdquo;
+replied the Major; &ldquo;but I so far agree with you that in due time,
+when he has attained his twenty-first year, I trust he will be wedded
+to his cousin, a virtuous and pious young maiden, and will have the
+management of her property, which is larger than my own.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if&mdash;if&mdash;sir, the marriage were distasteful to
+him, could it be for the happiness and welfare of either?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The boy has been complaining to you?&nbsp; Nay, madam, I blame
+you not.&nbsp; You have ever been the boy&rsquo;s best friend according
+to knowledge; but he ought to know that his honour and mine are engaged.&nbsp;
+It is true that Mistress Martha is not a Court beauty, such as his eyes
+have unhappily learnt to admire, but I am acting verily for his true
+good.&nbsp; &lsquo;Favour is deceitful, and beauty is vain.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Most true, sir; but let me say one more word.&nbsp; I fear,
+I greatly fear, that all young spirits brook not compulsion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That means, they will not bow their stiff necks to the yoke.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, sir! but on the other hand, &lsquo;Fathers, provoke not
+your children to wrath.&rsquo;&nbsp; Forgive me, sir; I spoke but out
+of true affection to your son, and the fear that what may seem to him
+severity may not drive him to some extremity that might grieve you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No forgiveness is needed, madam.&nbsp; I thank you for your
+interest in him, and for your plain speaking according to your lights.&nbsp;
+I can but act according to those vouchsafed unto me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And we both agree in praying for his true good,&rdquo; said
+Mrs. Woodford.</p>
+<p>And with a mutual blessing they parted, Mrs. Woodford deeply sorry
+for both father and son, for whom she had done what she could.</p>
+<p>It was her last interview with any one outside the house.&nbsp; Another
+attack of spasms brought the end, during the east winds of March, so
+suddenly as to leave no time for farewells or last words.&nbsp; When
+she was laid to rest in the little churchyard within the castle walls,
+no one showed such overwhelming tokens of grief as Peregrine Oakshott,
+who lingered about the grave after the Doctor had taken his niece home,
+and was found lying upon it late in the evening, exhausted with weeping.</p>
+<p>Yet Sedley Archfield, whose regiment had, after all, been sent to
+Portsmouth, reported that he had spent the very next afternoon at a
+cock-fight, ending in a carouse with various naval and military officers
+at a tavern, not drinking, but contributing to the mirth by foreign
+songs, tricks, and jests.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII<br />
+The One Hope</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;There&rsquo;s some fearful tie<br />
+Between me and that spirit world, which God<br />
+Brands with His terrors on my troubled mind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>KINGSLEY.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The final blow had fallen upon Anne Woodford so suddenly that for
+the first few days she moved about as one in a dream.&nbsp; Lady Archfield
+came to her on the first day, and showed her motherly kindness, and
+Lucy was with her as much as was possible under the exactions of young
+Madam, who was just sufficiently unwell to resent attention being paid
+to any other living creature.&nbsp; She further developed a jealousy
+of Lucy&rsquo;s affection for any other friend such as led to a squabble
+between her and her husband, and made her mother-in-law unwillingly
+acquiesce in the expediency of Anne&rsquo;s being farther off.</p>
+<p>And indeed Anne herself felt so utterly forlorn and desolate that
+an impatience of the place came over her.&nbsp; She was indeed fond
+of her uncle, but he was much absorbed in his studies, his parish, and
+in anxious correspondence on the state of the Church, and was scarcely
+a companion to her, and without her mother to engross her love and attention,
+and cut off from the Archfields as she now was, there was little to
+counterbalance the restless feeling that London and the precincts of
+the Court were her natural element.&nbsp; So she wrote her letters according
+to her mother&rsquo;s desire, and waited anxiously for the replies,
+feeling as if anything would be preferable to her present unhappiness
+and solitude.</p>
+<p>The answers came in due time.&nbsp; Mrs. Evelyn promised to try to
+find a virtuous and godly lady who would be willing to receive Mistress
+Anne Woodford into her family, and Lady Oglethorpe wrote with vaguer
+promises of high preferment, which excited Anne&rsquo;s imagination
+during those lonely hours that she had to spend while her strict mourning,
+after the custom of the time, secluded her from all visitors.</p>
+<p>Meantime, in that anxious spring of 1688, when the Church of England
+was looking to her defences, the Doctor could not be much at home, and
+when he had time to listen to private affairs, he heard reports which
+did not please him of Peregrine Oakshott.&nbsp; That the young men in
+the county all abhorred his fine foreign airs was no serious evil, though
+it might be suspected that his sharp ironical tongue had quite as much
+to do with their dislike as his greater refinement of manner.</p>
+<p>His father was reported to be very seriously displeased with him,
+for he openly expressed contempt of the precise ways of the household,
+and absented himself in a manner that could scarcely be attributed to
+aught but the licentious indulgences of the time; and as he seldom mingled
+in the amusements of the young country gentlemen, it was only too probable
+that he found a lower grade of companions in Portsmouth.&nbsp; Moreover
+his talk, random though it might be, offended all the Whig opinions
+of his father.&nbsp; He talked with the dogmatism of the traveller of
+the glories of Louis XIV, and broadly avowed his views that the grandeur
+of the nation was best established under a king who asked no questions
+of people or Parliament, &lsquo;that senseless set of chattering pies,&rsquo;
+as he was reported to have called the House of Commons.</p>
+<p>He sang the praises of the gracious and graceful Queen Mary Beatrice,
+and derided &lsquo;the dried-up Orange stick,&rsquo; as he called the
+hope of the Protestants; nor did he scruple to pronounce Popery the
+faith of chivalrous gentlemen, far preferable to the whining of sullen
+Whiggery.&nbsp; No one could tell how far all this was genuine opinion,
+or simply delight in contradiction, especially of his father, who was
+in a constant state of irritation at the son whom he could so little
+manage.</p>
+<p>And in the height of the wrath of the whole of the magistracy at
+the expulsion of their lord-lieutenant, the Earl of Gainsborough, and
+the substitution of the young Duke of Berwick, what must Peregrine do
+but argue in high praise of that youth, whom he had several times seen
+and admired.&nbsp; And when not a gentleman in the neighbourhood chose
+to greet the intruder when he arrived as governor of Portsmouth, Peregrine
+actually rode in to see him, and dined with him.&nbsp; Words cannot
+express the Major&rsquo;s anger and shame at such consorting with a
+person, whom alike, on account of parentage, religion, and education,
+he regarded as a son of perdition.&nbsp; Yet Peregrine would only coolly
+reply that he knew many a Protestant who would hardly compare favourably
+with young Berwick.</p>
+<p>It was an anxious period that spring of 1688.&nbsp; The order to
+read the King&rsquo;s Declaration of Indulgence from the pulpit had
+come as a thunder-clap upon the clergy.&nbsp; The English Church had
+only known rest for twenty-eight years, and now, by this unconstitutional
+assumption of prerogative, she seemed about to be given up to be the
+prey of Romanists on the one hand and Nonconformists on the other; though
+for the present the latter were so persuaded that the Indulgence was
+merely a disguised advance of Rome that they were not at all grateful,
+expecting, as Mr. Horncastle observed, only to be the last devoured,
+and he was as much determined as was Dr. Woodford not to announce it
+from his pulpit, whatever might be the consequence; the latter thus
+resigning all hopes of promotion.</p>
+<p>News letters, public and private, were eagerly scanned.&nbsp; Though
+the diocesan, Bishop Mew, took no active part in the petition called
+a libel, being an extremely aged man, the imprisonment of Ken, so deeply
+endeared to Hampshire hearts when Canon of Winchester and Rector of
+Brighstone, and with the Bloody Assize and the execution of Alice Lisle
+fresh in men&rsquo;s memories, there could not but be extreme anxiety.</p>
+<p>In the midst arrived the tidings that a son had been born to the
+king&mdash;a son instantly baptized by a Roman Catholic priest, and
+no doubt destined by James to rivet the fetters of Rome upon the kingdom,
+destroying at once the hope of his elder sister&rsquo;s accession.&nbsp;
+Loyal Churchmen like the Archfields still hoped, recollecting how many
+infants had been born in the royal family only to die; but at Oakwood
+the Major and his chaplain shook their heads, and spoke of warming pans,
+to the vehement displeasure of Peregrine, who was sure to respond that
+the Queen was an angel, and that the Whigs credited every one with their
+own sly tricks.</p>
+<p>The Major groaned, and things seemed to have reached a pass very
+like open enmity between father and son, though Peregrine still lived
+at home, and reports were rife that the year of mourning for his brother
+being expired, he was, as soon as he came of age, to be married to Mistress
+Martha Browning, and have an establishment of his own at Emsworth.</p>
+<p>Under these circumstances, it was with much satisfaction that Dr.
+Woodford said to his niece: &ldquo;Child, here is an excellent offer
+for you.&nbsp; Lady Russell, who you know has returned to live at Stratton,
+has heard you mentioned by Lady Mildmay.&nbsp; She has just married
+her eldest daughter, and needs a companion to the other, and has been
+told of you as able to speak French and Italian, and otherwise well
+trained.&nbsp; What! do you not relish the proposal?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, sir, would not my entering such a house do you harm at
+Court, and lessen your chance of preferment?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Think not of <i>that</i>, my child.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Besides,&rdquo; added Anne, &ldquo;since Lady Oglethorpe has
+written, it would not be fitting to engage myself elsewhere before hearing
+from her again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You think so, Anne.&nbsp; Lady Russell&rsquo;s would be a
+far safer, better home for you than the Court.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne knew it, but the thought of that widowed home depressed her.&nbsp;
+It might, she thought, be as dull as Oakwood, and there would be infinite
+chances of preferment at Court.&nbsp; What she said, however, was: &ldquo;It
+was by my mother&rsquo;s wish that I applied to Lady Oglethorpe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is true, child.&nbsp; Yet I cannot but believe that if
+she had known of Lady Russell&rsquo;s offer, she would gladly and thankfully
+have accepted it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So said the secret voice within the girl herself, but she did not
+yet yield to it.&nbsp; &ldquo;Perhaps she would, sir,&rdquo; she answered,
+&ldquo;if the other proposal were not made.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis a Whig
+household though.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A Whig household is a safer one than a Popish one,&rdquo;
+answered the Doctor.&nbsp; &ldquo;Lady Russell is, by all they tell
+me, a very saint upon earth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Shall it be owned?&nbsp; Anne thought of Oakwood, and was not attracted
+towards a saint upon earth.&nbsp; &ldquo;How soon was the answer to
+be given?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe she would wish you to meet her at Winchester next
+week, when, if you pleased her, you might return with her to Stratton.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Doctor hoped that Lady Oglethorpe&rsquo;s application might fail,
+but before the week was over she forwarded the definite appointment
+of Mistress Anne Jacobina Woodford as one of the rockers of his Royal
+Highness the Prince of Wales, his Majesty having been graciously pleased
+to remember her father&rsquo;s services and his own sponsorship.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If your friends consider the office somewhat beneath you,&rdquo;
+wrote Lady Oglethorpe, &ldquo;it is still open to you to decline it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no; I would certainly not decline it!&rdquo; cried Anne.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I could not possibly do so; could I, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lady Oglethorpe says you might,&rdquo; returned the Doctor;
+&ldquo;and for my part, niece, I should prefer the office of a <i>gouvernante</i>
+to that of a rocker.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, but it is to a Prince!&rdquo; said Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;It
+is the way to something further.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what may that something further be?&nbsp; That is the
+question,&rdquo; said her uncle.&nbsp; &ldquo;I will not control you,
+my child, for the application to this Court lady was by the wish of
+your good mother, who knew her well, but I own that I should be far
+more at rest on your account if you were in a place of less temptation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Court is very different from what it was in the last King&rsquo;s
+time,&rdquo; pleaded Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In some degree it may be; but on the other hand, the influence
+which may have purified it is of the religion that I fear may be a seduction.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no, never, uncle; nothing could make me a Papist.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do not be over confident, Anne.&nbsp; Those who run into temptation
+are apt to be left to themselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, sir, I cannot think that the course my mother shaped
+for me can be a running into temptation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Anne, as I say, I cannot withstand you, since it was
+your mother who requested Lady Oglethorpe&rsquo;s patronage for you,
+though I tell you sincerely that I believe that had the two courses
+been set before her she would have chosen the safer and more private
+one.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay but, dear sir,&rdquo; still pleaded the maiden, &ldquo;what
+would become of your chances of preferment if it were known that you
+had placed me with Lord Russell&rsquo;s widow in preference to the Queen?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let not that weigh with you one moment, child.&nbsp; I believe
+that no staunch friend of our Protestant Church will be preferred by
+his Majesty; nay, while the Archbishop and my saintly friend of Bath
+and Wells are persecuted, I should be ashamed to think of promotion.&nbsp;
+Spurn the thought from you, child.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, &rsquo;twas only love for you, dear uncle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it, child.&nbsp; I am not displeased, only think it
+over, and pray over it, since the post will not go out until to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne did think, but not quite as her uncle intended.&nbsp; The remembrance
+of the good-natured young Princesses, the large stately rooms, the brilliant
+dresses, the radiance of wax lights, had floated before her eyes ever
+since her removal from Chelsea to the quieter regions of Winchester,
+and she had longed to get back to them.&nbsp; She really loved her uncle,
+and whatever he might say, she longed to push his advancement, and thought
+his unselfish abnegation the greater reason for working for him; and
+in spite of knowing well that it was only a dull back-stair appointment,
+she could look to the notice of Princess Anne, when once within her
+reach, and further, with the confidence of youth, believed that she
+had that within her which would make her way upwards, and enable her
+to confer promotion, honour, and dignity, on all her friends.&nbsp;
+Her uncle should be a Bishop, Charles a Peer (fancy his wife being under
+obligations to the parson&rsquo;s niece!), Lucy should have a perfect
+husband, and an appointment should be found for poor Peregrine which
+his father could not gainsay.&nbsp; It was her bounden duty not to throw
+away such advantages; besides loyalty to her Royal godfather could not
+permit his offer to be rejected, and her mother, when writing to Lady
+Oglethorpe, must surely have had some such expectation.&nbsp; Nor should
+she be entirely cut off from her uncle, who was a Royal chaplain; and
+this was some consolation to the good Doctor when he found her purpose
+fixed, and made arrangements for her to travel up to town in company
+with Lady Worsley of Gatcombe, whom she was to meet at Southampton on
+the 1st of July.</p>
+<p>Meantime the Doctor did his best to arm his niece against the allurements
+to Romanism that he feared would be held out.&nbsp; Lady Oglethorpe
+and other friends had assured him of the matronly care of Lady Powys
+and Lady Strickland to guard their department from all evil; but he
+did fear these religious influences and Anne, resolute to resist all,
+perhaps not afraid of the conflict, was willing to arm herself for defence,
+and listened readily.&nbsp; She was no less anxious to provide for her
+uncle&rsquo;s comfort in his absence, and many small matters of housewifery
+that had stood over for some time were now to be purchased, as well
+as a few needments for her own outfit, although much was left for the
+counsel of her patroness in the matter of garments.</p>
+<p>Accordingly her uncle rode in with her to Portsmouth on a shopping
+expedition, and as the streets of the seaport were scarcely safe for
+a young woman without an escort, he carried a little book in his pocket
+wherewith he beguiled the time that she spent in the selection of his
+frying-pans, fire-irons, and the like, and her own gloves and kerchiefs.&nbsp;
+They dined at the &lsquo;ordinary&rsquo; at the inn, and there Dr. Woodford
+met his great friends Mr. Stanbury of Botley, and Mr. Worsley of Gatcombe,
+in the Isle of Wight, who both, like him, were opposed to the reading
+of the Declaration of Indulgence, as unconstitutional, and deeply anxious
+as to the fate of the greatly beloved Bishop of Bath and Wells.&nbsp;
+It was inevitable that they should fall into deep and earnest council
+together, and when dinner was over they agreed to adjourn to the house
+of a friend learned in ecclesiastical law to hunt up the rights of the
+case, leaving Anne to await them in a private room at the Spotted Dog,
+shown to her by the landlady.</p>
+<p>Anne well knew what such a meeting betided, and with a certain prevision,
+had armed herself with some knotting, wherewith she sat down in a bay
+window overlooking the street, whence she could see market-women going
+home with empty baskets, pigs being reluctantly driven down to provision
+ships in the harbour, barrels of biscuit, salt meat, or beer, being
+rolled down for the same purpose, sailors in loose knee-breeches, and
+soldiers in tall peaked caps and cross-belts, and officers of each service
+moving in different directions.&nbsp; She sat there day-dreaming, feeling
+secure in her loneliness, and presently saw a slight figure, daintily
+clad in gray and black, who catching her eye made an eager gesture,
+doffing his plumed hat and bowing low to her.&nbsp; She returned his
+salute, and thought he passed on, but in another minute she was startled
+to find him at her side, exclaiming: &ldquo;This is the occasion I have
+longed and sought for, Mistress Anne; I bless and thank the fates.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am glad to see you once more before I depart,&rdquo; said
+Anne, holding out her hand as frankly as she could to the old playfellow
+whom she always thought ill-treated, but whom she could never meet without
+a certain shudder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then it is true?&rdquo; he exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; I am to go up with Lady Worsley from Southampton next
+week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;but must that be?&rdquo; and she
+felt his strange power, so that she drew into herself and said haughtily&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear mother wished me to be with her friends, nor can the
+King&rsquo;s appointment be neglected, though of course I am extremely
+grieved to go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you are dazzled with all these gewgaws of Court life,
+no doubt?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall not be much in the way of gewgaws just yet,&rdquo;
+said Anne drily.&nbsp; &ldquo;It will be dull enough in some back room
+of Whitehall or St. James&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say you so.&nbsp; You will wish yourself back&mdash;you, the
+lady of my heart&mdash;mine own good angel!&nbsp; Hear me.&nbsp; Say
+but the word, and your home will be mine, to say nothing of your own
+most devoted servant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush, hush, sir!&nbsp; I cannot hear this,&rdquo; said Anne,
+anxiously glancing down the street in hopes of seeing her uncle approaching.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, but listen!&nbsp; This is my only hope&mdash;my only
+chance&mdash;I must speak&mdash;you doom me to you know not what if
+you will not hear me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, sir, I neither will nor ought!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ought!&nbsp; Ought!&nbsp; Ought you not to save a fellow-creature
+from distraction and destruction?&nbsp; One who has loved and looked
+to you ever since you and that saint your mother lifted me out of the
+misery of my childhood.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then as she looked softened he went on: &ldquo;You, you are my one
+hope.&nbsp; No one else can lift me out of the reach of the demon that
+has beset me even since I was born.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is profane,&rdquo; she said, the more severe for the
+growing attraction of repulsion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do I care?&nbsp; It is true!&nbsp; What was I till you
+and your mother took pity on the wild imp?&nbsp; My old nurse said a
+change would come to me every seven years.&nbsp; That blessed change
+came just seven years ago.&nbsp; Give me what will make a more blessed&mdash;a
+more saving change&mdash;or there will be one as much for the worse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;I could not.&nbsp; No! you must see for yourself
+that I could not&mdash;even if I would,&rdquo; she faltered, really
+pitying now, and unwilling to give more pain than she could help.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Could not?&nbsp; It should be possible.&nbsp; I know how to
+bring it about.&nbsp; Give me but your promise, and I will make you
+mine&mdash;ay, and I will make myself as worthy of you as man can be
+of saint-like maid.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No&mdash;no!&nbsp; This is very wrong&mdash;you are pledged
+already&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No such thing&mdash;believe no such tale.&nbsp; My promise
+has never been given to that grim hag of my father&rsquo;s choice&mdash;no,
+nor should be forced from me by the rack.&nbsp; Look you here.&nbsp;
+Let me take this hand, call in the woman of the house, give me your
+word, and my father will own his power to bind me to Martha is at an
+end.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no!&nbsp; It would be a sin&mdash;never.&nbsp; Besides&mdash;&rdquo;
+said Anne, holding her hands tightly clasped behind her in alarm, lest
+against her will she should let them be seized, and trying to find words
+to tell him how little she felt disposed to trust her heart and herself
+to one whom she might indeed pity, but with a sort of shrinking as from
+something not quite human.&nbsp; Perhaps he dreaded her &lsquo;besides&rsquo;&mdash;for
+he cut her short.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would save ten thousand greater sins.&nbsp; See, here are
+two ways before us.&nbsp; Either give me your word, your precious word,
+go silent to London, leave me to struggle it out with my father and
+your uncle and follow you.&nbsp; Hope and trust will be enough to bear
+me through the battle without, and within deafen the demon of my nature,
+and render me patient of my intolerable life till I have conquered and
+can bring you home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her tongue faltered as she tried to say such a secret unsanctioned
+engagement would be treachery, but he cut off the words.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have not heard me out.&nbsp; There is another way.&nbsp;
+I know those who will aid me.&nbsp; We can meet in early dawn, be wedded
+in one of these churches in all secrecy and haste, and I would carry
+you at once to my uncle, who, as you well know, would welcome you as
+a daughter.&nbsp; Or, better still, we would to those fair lands I have
+scarce seen, but where I could make my way with sword or pen with you
+to inspire me.&nbsp; I have the means.&nbsp; My uncle left this with
+me.&nbsp; Speak!&nbsp; It is death or life to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This last proposal was thoroughly alarming, and Anne retreated, drawing
+herself to her full height, and speaking with the dignity that concealed
+considerable terror.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, indeed, sir.&nbsp; You ought to know better than to utter
+such proposals.&nbsp; One who can make such schemes can certainly obtain
+no respect nor regard from the lady he addresses.&nbsp; Let me pass&rdquo;&mdash;for
+she was penned up in the bay window&mdash;&ldquo;I shall seek the landlady
+till my uncle returns.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, Mistress Anne, do not fear me.&nbsp; Do not drive me
+to utter despair.&nbsp; Oh, pardon me!&nbsp; Nothing but utter desperation
+could drive me to have thus spoken; but how can I help using every effort
+to win her whose very look and presence is bliss!&nbsp; Nothing else
+soothes and calms me; nothing else so silences the demon and wakens
+the better part of my nature.&nbsp; Have you no pity upon a miserable
+wretch, who will be dragged down to his doom without your helping hand?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He flung himself on his knee before her, and tried to grasp her hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, I am sorry for you, Master Oakshott,&rdquo; said Anne,
+compassionate, but still retreating as far as the window would let her;
+&ldquo;but you are mistaken.&nbsp; If this power be in me, which I cannot
+quite believe&mdash;yes, I see what you want to say, but if I did what
+I know to be wrong, I should lose it at once; God&rsquo;s grace can
+save you without me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will not ask you to do what you call wrong; no, nor to transgress
+any of the ties you respect, you, whose home is so unlike mine; only
+tell me that I may have hope, that if I deserve you, I may win you;
+that you could grant me&mdash;wretched me&mdash;a share of your affection.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was hardest of all; mingled pity and repugnance, truth and compassion
+strove within the maiden as well as the strange influence of those extraordinary
+eyes.&nbsp; She was almost as much afraid of herself as of her suitor.&nbsp;
+At last she managed to say, &ldquo;I am very sorry for you; I grieve
+from my heart for your troubles; I should be very glad to hear of your
+welfare and anything good of you, but&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, but&mdash;I see&mdash;it is mere frenzy in me to think
+the blighted elf can aspire to be aught but loathsome to any lady&mdash;only,
+at least, tell me you love no one else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, certainly not,&rdquo; she said, as if his eyes drew it
+forcibly from her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you cannot hinder me from making you my guiding star&mdash;hoping
+that if yet I can&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s my uncle!&rdquo; exclaimed Anne, in a tone of
+infinite relief.&nbsp; &ldquo;Stand up, Mr. Oakshott, compose yourself.&nbsp;
+Of course I cannot hinder your thinking about me, if it will do you
+any good, but there are better things to think about which would conquer
+evil and make you happy more effectually.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He snatched her hand and kissed it, nor did she withhold it, since
+she really pitied him, and knew that her uncle was near, and all would
+soon be over.</p>
+<p>Peregrine dashed away by another door as Dr. Woodford&rsquo;s foot
+was on the stairs.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have ordered the horses,&rdquo; he
+began.&nbsp; &ldquo;They told me young Oakshott was here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was, but he is gone;&rdquo; and she could not quite conceal
+her agitation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Crimson cheeks, my young mistress?&nbsp; Ah, the foolish fellow!&nbsp;
+You do not care for him, I trust?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, indeed, poor fellow.&nbsp; What, did you know, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Know.&nbsp; Yes, truly&mdash;and your mother likewise, Anne.&nbsp;
+It was one cause of her wishing to send you to safer keeping than mine
+seems to be.&nbsp; My young spark made his proposals to us both, though
+we would not disturb your mind therewith, not knowing how he would have
+dealt with his father, nor viewing him, for all he is heir to Oakwood,
+as a desirable match in himself.&nbsp; I am glad to see you have sense
+and discretion to be of the same mind, my maid.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot but grieve for his sad condition, sir,&rdquo; replied
+Anne, &ldquo;but as for anything more&mdash;it would make me shudder
+to think of it&mdash;he is still too like Robin Goodfellow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s my good girl,&rdquo; said her uncle.&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+do you know, child, there are the best hopes for the Bishops.&nbsp;
+There&rsquo;s a gentleman come down but now from London, who says &rsquo;twas
+like a triumph as the Bishops sat in their barge on the way to the Tower;
+crowds swarming along the banks, begging for their blessing, and they
+waving it with tears in their eyes.&nbsp; The King will be a mere madman
+if he dares to touch a hair of their heads.&nbsp; Well, when I was a
+lad, Bishops were sent to the Tower by the people; I little thought
+to live to see them sent thither by the King.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>All the way home Dr. Woodford talked of the trial, beginning perhaps
+to regret that his niece must go to the very focus of Roman influence
+in England, where there seemed to be little scruple as to the mode of
+conversion.&nbsp; Would it be possible to alter her destination? was
+his thought, when he rose the next day, but loyalty stood in the way,
+and that very afternoon another event happened which made it evident
+that the poor girl must leave Portchester as soon as possible.</p>
+<p>She had gone out with him to take leave of some old cottagers in
+the village, and he finding himself detained to minister to a case of
+unexpected illness, allowed her to go home alone for about a quarter
+of a mile along the white sunny road at the foot of Portsdown, with
+the castle full in view at one end, and the cottage where he was at
+the other.&nbsp; Many a time previously had she trodden it alone, but
+she had not reckoned on two officers coming swaggering from a cross
+road down the hill, one of them Sedley Archfield, who immediately called
+out, &ldquo;Ha, ha! my pretty maid, no wench goes by without paying
+toll;&rdquo; and they spread their arms across the road so as to arrest
+her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Anne, drawing herself up with dignity, &ldquo;you
+mistake&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not a whit, my dear; no exemption here;&rdquo; and there was
+a horse laugh, and an endeavour to seize her, as she stepped back, feeling
+that in quietness lay her best chance of repelling them, adding&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My uncle is close by.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The more cause for haste;&rdquo; and they began to close upon
+her.&nbsp; But at that moment Peregrine Oakshott, leaping from his horse,
+was among them, with the cry&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dastards! insulting a lady.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lady, forsooth! the parson&rsquo;s niece.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In a few seconds&mdash;very long seconds to her&mdash;her flying
+feet had brought her back to the cottage, where she burst in with&mdash;&ldquo;Pardon,
+pardon, sir; come quick; there are swords drawn; there will be bloodshed
+if you do not come.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He obeyed the summons without further query, for when all men wore
+swords the neighbourhood of a garrison were only too liable to such
+encounters outside.&nbsp; There was no need for her to gasp out more;
+from the very cottage door he could see the need of haste, for the swords
+were actually flashing, and the two young men in position to fight.&nbsp;
+Anne shook her head, unable to do more than sign her thanks to the good
+woman of the cottage, who offered her a seat.&nbsp; She leant against
+the door, and watched as her uncle, sending his voice before him, called
+on them to desist.</p>
+<p>There was a start, then each drew back and held down his weapon,
+but with a menacing gesture on one side, a shrug of the shoulders on
+the other, which impelled the Doctor to use double speed in the fear
+that the parting might be with a challenge reserved.</p>
+<p>He was in time to stand warning, and arguing that if he pardoned
+the slighting words and condoned the insult to his niece, no one had
+a right to exact vengeance; and in truth, whatever were his arguments,
+he so dealt with the two young men as to force them into shaking hands
+before they separated, though with a contemptuous look on either side&mdash;a
+scowl from Sedley, a sneer from Peregrine, boding ill for the future,
+and making him sigh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! sister, sister, you judged aright.&nbsp; Would that I
+could have sent the maid sooner away rather than that all this ill blood
+should have been bred.&nbsp; Yet I may only be sending her to greater
+temptation and danger.&nbsp; But she is a good maiden; God bless her
+and keep her here and there, now and for evermore, as I trust He keepeth
+our good Dr. Ken in this sore strait.&nbsp; The trial may even now be
+over.&nbsp; Ah, my child, here you are!&nbsp; Frightened were you by
+that rude fellow?&nbsp; Nay, I believe you were almost equally terrified
+by him who came to the rescue.&nbsp; You will soon be out of their reach,
+my dear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, that is one great comfort in going,&rdquo; sighed Anne.&nbsp;
+One comfort&mdash;yes&mdash;though she would not have stayed had the
+choice been given her now.&nbsp; And shall the thought be told that
+flashed over her and coloured her cheeks with a sort of shame yet of
+pleasure, &ldquo;I surely must have power over men!&nbsp; I know mother
+would say it is a terrible danger one way, and a great gift another.&nbsp;
+I will not misuse it; but what will it bring me?&nbsp; Or am I only
+a rustic beauty after all, who will be nobody elsewhere?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Still heartily she wished that her rescuer had been any one else
+in the wide world.&nbsp; It was almost uncanny that he should have sprung
+out of the earth at such a moment.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII<br />
+The Bonfire</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;From Eddystone to Berwick bounds,<br />
+&nbsp; From Lynn to Milford Bay,<br />
+That time of slumber was as<br />
+&nbsp; Bright and busy as the day;<br />
+For swift to east and swift to west<br />
+&nbsp; The fiery herald sped,<br />
+High on St. Michael&rsquo;s Mount it shone:<br />
+&nbsp; It shone on Beachy Head.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>MACAULAY.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Doctor Woodford and his niece had not long reached their own door
+when the clatter of a horse&rsquo;s hoofs was heard, and Charles Archfield
+was seen, waving his hat and shouting &lsquo;Hurrah!&rsquo; before he
+came near enough to speak,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good news, I see!&rdquo; said the Doctor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good news indeed!&nbsp; Not guilty!&nbsp; Express rode from
+Westminster Hall with the news at ten o&rsquo;clock this morning.&nbsp;
+All acquitted.&nbsp; Expresses could hardly get away for the hurrahing
+of the people.&nbsp; Hurrah! hurrah! hurrah!&rdquo; cried the young
+man, throwing up his hat, while Doctor Woodford, taking off his own,
+gave graver, deeper thanks that justice was yet in England, that these
+noble and honoured confessors were safe, and that the King had been
+saved from further injustice and violence to the Church.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are to have a bonfire on Portsdown hill,&rdquo; added Charles.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;They will be all round the country, in the Island, and everywhere.&nbsp;
+My father is rid one way to spread the tidings, and give orders.&nbsp;
+I&rsquo;m going on into Portsmouth, to see after tar barrels.&nbsp;
+You&rsquo;ll be there, sir, and you, Anne?&rdquo;&nbsp; There was a
+moment&rsquo;s hesitation after the day&rsquo;s encounters, but he added,
+&ldquo;My mother is going, and my little Madam, and Lucy.&nbsp; They
+will call for you in the coach if you will be at Ryder&rsquo;s cottage
+at nine o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; It will not be dark enough to light up
+till ten, so there will be time to get a noble pile ready.&nbsp; Come,
+Anne, &rsquo;tis Lucy&rsquo;s last chance of seeing you&mdash;so strange
+as you have made yourself of late.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This plea decided Anne, who had been on the point of declaring that
+she should have an excellent view from the top of the keep.&nbsp; However,
+not only did she long to see Lucy again, but the enthusiasm was contagious,
+and there was an attraction in the centre of popular rejoicing that
+drew both her and her uncle, nor could there be a doubt of her being
+sufficiently protected when among the Archfield ladies.&nbsp; So the
+arrangement was accepted, and then there was the cry&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hark! the Havant bells!&nbsp; Ay! and the Cosham!&nbsp; Portsmouth
+is pealing out.&nbsp; That&rsquo;s Alverstoke.&nbsp; They know it there.&nbsp;
+A salute!&nbsp; Another.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Scarce loyal from the King&rsquo;s ships,&rdquo; said the
+Doctor, smiling.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, &rsquo;tis only loyalty to rejoice that the King can&rsquo;t
+make a fool of himself.&nbsp; So my father says,&rdquo; rejoined Charles.</p>
+<p>And that seemed to be the mood of all England.&nbsp; When Anne and
+her uncle set forth in the summer sunset light the great hill above
+them was dark with the multitudes thronging around the huge pyre rising
+in the midst.&nbsp; They rested for some minutes at the cottage indicated
+before the arrival of Sir Philip, who rode up accompanying the coach
+in which his three ladies were seated, and which was quite large enough
+to receive Dr. Woodford and Mistress Anne.&nbsp; Charles was in the
+throng, in the midst of most of the younger gentlemen of the neighbourhood,
+and a good many of the naval and military officers, directing the arrangement
+of the pile.</p>
+<p>What a scene it was, as seen even from the windows of the coach where
+the ladies remained, for the multitude of sailors, soldiers, town and
+village people, though all unanimous, were far too tumultuous for them
+to venture beyond their open door, especially as little Mrs. Archfield
+was very far from well, and nothing but her eagerness for amusement
+could have brought her hither, and of course she could not be left.&nbsp;
+Probably she knew as little of the real bearings of the case or the
+cause of rejoicing as did the boys who pervaded everything with their
+squibs, and were only restrained from firing them in the faces of the
+horses by wholesome fear of the big whips of the coachman and outriders
+who stood at the horses&rsquo; heads.</p>
+<p>It was hardly yet dark when the match was put to the shavings, and
+to the sound of the loud &lsquo;Hurrahs!&rsquo; and cries of &lsquo;Long
+live the Bishops!&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Down with the Pope!&rsquo; the
+flame kindled, crackled, and leapt up, while a responsive fire was seen
+on St. Catherine&rsquo;s Down in the Isle of Wight, and northward, eastward,
+westward, on every available point, each new light greeted by fresh
+acclamations, as it shone out against the summer night sky, while the
+ships in the harbour showed their lights, reflected in the sea, as the
+sky grew darker.&nbsp; Then came a procession of sailors and other rough
+folk, bearing between poles a chair with a stuffed figure with a kind
+of tiara, followed by others with scarlet hats and capes, and with reiterated
+shouts of &lsquo;Down with the Pope!&rsquo; these were hurled into the
+fire with deafening hurrahs, their more gorgeous trappings being cleverly
+twitched off at the last moment, as part of the properties for the 5th
+of November.</p>
+<p>Little Mrs. Archfield clapped her hands and screamed with delight
+as each fresh blaze shot up, and chattered with all her might, sometimes
+about some lace and perfumes which she wanted Anne to procure for her
+in London at the sign of the Flower Pot, sometimes grumbling at her
+husband having gone off to the midst of the party closest to the fire,
+&ldquo;Just like Mr. Archfield, always leaving her to herself,&rdquo;
+but generally very well amused, especially when a group of gentlemen,
+officers, and county neighbours gathered round the open door talking
+to the ladies within.</p>
+<p>Peregrine was there with his hands in his pockets, and a queer ironical
+smile writhing his features.&nbsp; He was asked if his father and brother
+were present.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not my father,&rdquo; he replied.&nbsp; &ldquo;He has a logical
+mind.&nbsp; Martha is up here with her guardian, and I am keeping out
+of her way, and my brother is full in the thick of the fray.&nbsp; A
+bonfire is a bonfire to most folks, were it to roast their grandsire!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, fie, Mr. Oakshott, how you do talk!&rdquo; laughed Mrs.
+Archfield.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, but you rejoice in the escape of the good Bishops,&rdquo;
+put in Lucy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For what?&rdquo; asked Peregrine.&nbsp; &ldquo;For refusing
+to say live and let live?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not against letting <i>live</i>, but against saying so unconstitutionally,
+my young friend,&rdquo; said Dr. Woodford, &ldquo;or tyrannising over
+our consciences.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Generally Peregrine was more respectful to Dr. Woodford than to any
+one else; but there seemed to be a reckless bitterness about him on
+that night, and he said, &ldquo;I marvel with what face those same Eight
+Reverend Seigniors will preach against the French King.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; thrust in Sedley Archfield, &ldquo;I am not to
+hear opprobrious epithets applied to the Bishops.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was the opprobrium?&rdquo; lazily demanded Peregrine,
+and in spite of his unpopularity, the laugh was with him.&nbsp; Sedley
+grew more angry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You likened them to the French King&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The most splendid monarch in Europe,&rdquo; said Peregrine
+coolly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A Frenchman!&rdquo; quoth one of the young squires with withering
+contempt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has that ill fortune, sir,&rdquo; said Peregrine.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Mayhap he would be sensible of the disadvantage, if he evened
+himself with some of my reasonable countrymen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you mean that for an insult, sir?&rdquo; exclaimed Sedley
+Archfield, striding forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As you please,&rdquo; said Peregrine.&nbsp; &ldquo;To me it
+had the sound of compliment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh la! they&rsquo;ll fight,&rdquo; cried Mrs. Archfield.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let them!&nbsp; Where&rsquo;s the Doctor?&nbsp; Where&rsquo;s
+Sir Philip?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush, my dear,&rdquo; said Lady Archfield; &ldquo;these gentlemen
+would not fall out close to us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford was out of sight, having been drawn into controversy
+with a fellow-clergyman on the limits of toleration.&nbsp; Anne looked
+anxiously for him, but with provoking coolness Peregrine presently said,
+&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no crowd near, and if you will step out, the fires
+on the farther hills are to be seen well from the knoll hard by.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He spoke chiefly to Anne, but even if she had not a kind of shrinking
+from trusting herself with him in this strange wild scene, she would
+have been prevented by Mrs. Archfield&rsquo;s eager cry&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I&rsquo;ll come, let me come!&nbsp; I&rsquo;m so weary
+of sitting here.&nbsp; Thank you, Master Oakshott.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lady Archfield&rsquo;s remonstrance was lost as Peregrine helped
+the little lady out, and there was nothing for it but to follow her,
+as close as might be, as she hung on her cavalier&rsquo;s arm chattering,
+and now and then giving little screams of delight or alarm.&nbsp; Lady
+Archfield and her daughter each was instantly squired, but Mistress
+Woodford, a nobody, was left to keep as near them as she could, and
+gaze at the sparks of light of the beacons in the distance, thinking
+how changed the morrow would be to her.</p>
+<p>Presently a figure approached, and Charles Archfield&rsquo;s voice
+said, &ldquo;Is that you, Anne?&nbsp; Did I hear my wife&rsquo;s voice?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, she is there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And with that imp of evil!&nbsp; I would his own folk had
+him!&rdquo; muttered Charles, dashing forward with &ldquo;How now, madam?
+you were not to leave the coach!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She laughed exultingly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ha, sir! see what comes of leaving
+me to better cavaliers, while you run after your fire!&nbsp; I should
+have seen nothing but for Master Oakshott.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come with me now,&rdquo; said Charles; &ldquo;you ought not
+to be standing here in the dew.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha, ha! what a jealous master,&rdquo; she said; but she put
+her arm into his, saying with a courtesy, &ldquo;Thank you, Master Oakshott,
+lords must be obeyed.&nbsp; I should have been still buried in the old
+coach but for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peregrine fell back to Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;That blaze is at St. Helen&rsquo;s,&rdquo;
+he began.&nbsp; &ldquo;That&mdash;what! will you not wait a moment?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no!&nbsp; They will want to be going home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And have you forgotten that it is only just over Midsummer?&nbsp;
+This is the week of my third seventh&mdash;the moment for change.&nbsp;
+O Anne! make it a change for the better.&nbsp; Say the word, and the
+die will be cast.&nbsp; All is ready!&nbsp; Come!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He tried to take her hand, but the vehemence of his words, spoken
+under his breath, terrified her, and with a hasty &ldquo;No, no! you
+know not what you talk of,&rdquo; she hastened after her friends, and
+was glad to find herself in the safe haven of the interior of the coach.</p>
+<p>Ere long they drove down the hill, and at the place of parting were
+set down, the last words in Anne&rsquo;s ears being Mrs. Archfield&rsquo;s
+injunctions not to forget the orange flower-water at the sign of the
+Flower Pot, drowning Lucy&rsquo;s tearful farewells.</p>
+<p>As they walked away in the moonlight a figure was seen in the distance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is that Peregrine Oakshott?&rdquo; asked the Doctor.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;That young man is in a desperate mood, ready to put a quarrel
+on any one.&nbsp; I hope no harm will come of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV<br />
+Gathering Mouse-Ear</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I heard the groans, I marked the tears,<br />
+&nbsp; I saw the wound his bosom bore.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>SCOTT.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>After such an evening it was not easy to fall asleep, and Anne tossed
+about, heated, restless, and uneasy, feeling that to remain at home
+was impossible, yet less satisfied about her future prospects, and doubtful
+whether she had not done herself harm by attending last night&rsquo;s
+rejoicings, and hoping that nothing would happen to reveal her presence
+there.</p>
+<p>She was glad that the night was not longer, and resolved to take
+advantage of the early morning to fulfil a commission of Lady Oglethorpe,
+whose elder children, Lewis and Theophilus, had the whooping-cough.&nbsp;
+Mouse-ear, namely, the little sulphur-coloured hawk-weed, was, and still
+is, accounted a specific, and Anne had been requested to bring a supply&mdash;a
+thing easily done, since it grew plentifully in the court of the castle.</p>
+<p>She dressed herself in haste, made some of her preparations for the
+journey, and let herself out of the house, going first for one last
+look at her mother&rsquo;s green grave in the dewy churchyard, and gathering
+from it a daisy, which she put into her bosom, then in the fair morning
+freshness, and exhilaration of the rising sun, crossing the wide tilt-yard,
+among haycocks waiting to be tossed, and arriving at the court within,
+filling her basket between the churchyard and the gateway tower and
+keep, when standing up for a moment she was extremely startled to see
+Peregrine Oakshott&rsquo;s unmistakable figure entering at the postern
+of the court.</p>
+<p>With vague fears of his intentions, and instinctive terror of meeting
+him alone, heightened by that dread of his power, she flew in at the
+great bailey tower door, hoping that he had not seen her, but tolerably
+secure that even if he had, and should pursue her, she was sufficiently
+superior in knowledge of the stairs and passages to baffle him, and
+make her way along the battlements to the tower at the corner of the
+court nearest the parsonage, where there was a turret stair by which
+she could escape.</p>
+<p>Up the broken stairs she went, shutting behind her every available
+door in the chambers and passages, but not as quickly as she wished,
+since attention to her feet was needful in the ruinous state of steps
+and walls.&nbsp; Through those massive walls she could hear nothing
+distinctly, but she fancied voices and a cry, making her seek more intricate
+windings, nor did she dare to look out till she had gained a thick screen
+of bushy ivy at the corner of the turret, where a little door opened
+on the broad summit of the battlemented wall.</p>
+<p>Then, what horror was it that she beheld?&nbsp; Or was it a dream?&nbsp;
+She even passed her hands over her face and looked again.&nbsp; Peregrine
+and Charles, yes, it was Charles Archfield, were fighting with swords
+in the court beneath.&nbsp; She gave a shriek, in a wild hope of parting
+them, but at that instant she saw Peregrine fall, and with the impulse
+of rushing to aid she hurried down, impeded however by stumbles, and
+by the doors, she herself had shut, and when she emerged, she saw only
+Charles, standing like one dazed and white as death.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O Mr Archfield! where is he?&nbsp; What have you done?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The young man pointed to the opening of the vault.&nbsp; Then, speaking
+with an effort, &ldquo;He was quite dead; my sword went through him.&nbsp;
+He forced it on me&mdash;he was pursuing you.&nbsp; I withstood him&mdash;and&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He gasped heavily as the words came one by one.&nbsp; She trembled
+exceedingly, and would have looked into the vault, with, &ldquo;Are
+you quite sure?&rdquo; but he grasped her hand and withheld her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only too sure!&nbsp; Yes, I have done it!&nbsp; It could not
+be helped.&nbsp; I would give myself up at once, but, Anne, there is
+my wife.&nbsp; They tell me any shock would kill her as she is now.&nbsp;
+I should be double murderer.&nbsp; Will you keep the secret, Anne, always
+my friend?&nbsp; And &rsquo;twas for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, indeed, I will not betray you.&nbsp; I go away in
+two hours,&rdquo; said Anne; and he caught her hand.&nbsp; &ldquo;But
+oh!&rdquo; and she pointed to the blood on the grass, then with sudden
+thought, &ldquo;Heap the hay over it,&rdquo; running to fill her arms
+with the lately-cut grass.</p>
+<p>He mechanically did the same, and then they stood for a moment, awe-stricken.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;God forgive me!&rdquo; said the poor young man.&nbsp; &ldquo;How
+to hide it I hardly know, but for <i>her</i> sake, ah&mdash;&rsquo;twas
+that brought me here.&nbsp; She could not rest last night till I had
+promised to be here early enough in the morning to give you a piece
+of sarcenet to be matched in London.&nbsp; Where is it?&nbsp; Ah!&nbsp;
+I forget.&nbsp; It seems to be ages ago that she was insisting that
+I should ride over so as to be in time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lucy must write,&rdquo; said Anne, &ldquo;O Charley! wipe
+that dreadful sword, look like yourself.&nbsp; I am going in a couple
+of hours.&nbsp; There is no fear of me! but oh! that you should have
+done such a thing! and through me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush! hush! don&rsquo;t talk.&nbsp; I must be gone ere folks
+are about.&nbsp; My horse is outside.&rdquo;&nbsp; He wrung her hand
+and kissed it, forgetting to give her the pattern, and Anne, still stunned,
+walked back to the parsonage, her one thought how to control herself
+so as to guard Charles&rsquo;s secret.</p>
+<p>It must be remembered that in the generation succeeding that which
+had fought a long civil war, and when duels were common assertions of
+honour and self-respect among young gentlemen, homicide was not so exceptional
+and heinous an offence in ordinary eyes as when a higher value has come
+to be set on life, and acts of violence are far less frequent.</p>
+<p>Charles had drawn his sword in fair fight, and in her own defence,
+and thus it was natural that Anne Woodford should think of his deed,
+certainly with a shudder, but with more of pity than of horror, and
+with gratitude that made her feel bound to do her utmost to guard him
+from the consequences; also there was a sense of relief, and perhaps
+a feeling as if the victim were scarcely a human creature like others.&nbsp;
+It never occurred to her till some time after to recollect it would
+have had an unpleasant sound that she had been the occasion of such
+an &lsquo;unseemly brawl&rsquo; between two young men, one of them a
+married man.&nbsp; When the thought occurred to her it made the blood
+rash hotly to her cheeks.</p>
+<p>It was well for her that the pain of leaving home and the bustle
+of preparation concealed that she had suffered a great shock, and accounted
+for her not being able to taste any breakfast beyond a draught of milk.&nbsp;
+Her ears were intent all the time to perceive any token whether the
+haymakers had come into the court and had discovered any trace of the
+ghastly thing in the vault, and she hardly heard the kind words of her
+uncle or the coaxings of his old housekeeper.&nbsp; She dreaded especially
+the sight of Hans, so fondly attached to his master&rsquo;s nephew,
+and it was with a sense of infinite relief&mdash;instead of the tender
+grief otherwise natural&mdash;that she was seated in the boat for Portsmouth,
+and her uncle believing her to be crying, left her undisturbed till
+she had composed herself to wear the front that she knew was needful,
+however her heart might throb beneath it, and as their boat threaded
+its way through the ships, even then numerous, she looked wistfully
+up at the tall tower of the castle, with earnest prayers for the living,
+and a longing she durst not utter, to ask her uncle whether it were
+right to pray for the poor strange, struggling soul, always so cruelly
+misunderstood, and now so summarily dismissed from the world of trial.</p>
+<p>Yet presently there was a revulsion of feeling as she was roused
+from her meditations by the coxswain&rsquo;s answer to her uncle, who
+had asked what was a smart, swift little smack, which after receiving
+something from a boat, began stretching her wings and making all sail
+for the Isle of Wight.</p>
+<p>The men looked significant and hesitated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smugglers, eh?&nbsp; Traders in French brandy?&rdquo; asked
+the Doctor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, your reverence, so they says.&nbsp; They be a rough
+lot out there by at the back of the Island.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There would be small harm in letting a poor man get a drink
+of spirits cheap to warm his heart,&rdquo; said one of the other men;
+&ldquo;but they say as how &rsquo;tis a very nest of &rsquo;em out there,
+and that&rsquo;s how no one can ever pitch on the highwaymen, such as
+robbed Farmer Vine t&rsquo;other day a coming home from market.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They do say,&rdquo; added the other, &ldquo;that there&rsquo;s
+them as ought to know better that is thick with them.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s
+that young master up at Oakwood&mdash;that crooked slip as they used
+to say was a changeling&mdash;gets out o&rsquo; window o&rsquo; nights
+and sails with them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has nought to do with the robberies, they say,&rdquo; added
+the coxswain; &ldquo;but I could tell of many a young spark who has
+gone out with the fair traders for the sport&rsquo;s sake, and because
+gentle folk don&rsquo;t know what to do with their time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And they do say the young chap is kept uncommon tight at home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here the sight of a vessel of war coming in changed the topic, but
+it had given Anne something more to think of.&nbsp; Peregrine had spoken
+of means arranged for making her his own.&nbsp; Could that smuggling
+yacht have anything to do with them?&nbsp; He could hardly have reckoned
+on meeting her alone in the morning, but he might have attempted to
+find her thus&mdash;or failing that, he might have run down the boat.&nbsp;
+If so, she had a great deliverance to be thankful for, and Charles&rsquo;s
+timely appearance had been a great blessing.&nbsp; But Peregrine! poor
+Peregrine! it became doubly terrible that he should have perished on
+the eve of such a deed.&nbsp; It was cruel to entertain such thoughts
+of the dead, yet it was equally impossible not to feel comfort in being
+rid for ever of one who had certainly justified the vague alarm which
+he had always excited in her.&nbsp; She could not grieve for him now
+that the first shock was over, but she must suppress all tokens of her
+extreme anxiety on account of Charles Archfield.</p>
+<p>Thus she was landed at Portsmouth, and walked up the street to the
+Spotted Dog, where Lady Worsley was taking an early noonchine before
+starting for London, having crossed from the little fishing village
+of Ryde.&nbsp; Here Anne parted with her uncle, who promised an early
+letter, though she could hardly restrain a shudder at the thought of
+the tidings that it might contain.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV<br />
+News From Fareham</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;My soul its secret hath, my life too hath its
+mystery.<br />
+Hopeless the evil is, I have not told its history.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>JEAN INGELOW.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Lady Worsley was a handsome, commanding old dame, who soon made her
+charge feel the social gulf between a county magnate and a clergyman&rsquo;s
+niece.&nbsp; She decidedly thought that Mistress Anne Jacobina held
+her head too high for her position, and was, moreover, conceited of
+an unfortunate amount of good looks.</p>
+<p>Therefore the good lady did her best to repress these dangerous tendencies
+by making the girl sit on the back seat with two maids, and uttering
+long lectures on humility, modesty, and discretion which made the blood
+of the sea-captain&rsquo;s daughter boil with indignation.</p>
+<p>Yet she always carried with her the dread of being pursued and called
+upon to accuse Charles Archfield of Peregrine&rsquo;s death.&nbsp; It
+was a perpetual cloud, dispersed, indeed, for a time by the events of
+the day, but returning at night, when not only was the combat acted
+over again, but when she fell asleep it was only to be pursued by Peregrine
+through endless vaulted dens of darkness, or, what was far worse, to
+be trying to hide a stream of blood that could never be stanched.</p>
+<p>It was no wonder that she looked pale in the morning, and felt so
+tired and dejected as to make her sensible that she was cast loose from
+home and friends when no one troubled her with remarks or inquiries
+such as she could hardly have answered.&nbsp; However, when, on the
+evening of the second day&rsquo;s journey, Anne was set down at Sir
+Theophilus Oglethorpe&rsquo;s house at Westminster, she met with a very
+different reception.</p>
+<p>Lady Oglethorpe, a handsome, warm-hearted Irish woman, met her at
+once in the hall with outstretched hands, and a kiss on each cheek.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come in, my dear, my poor orphan, the daughter of one who
+was very dear to me!&nbsp; Ah, how you have grown!&nbsp; I could never
+have thought this was the little Anne I recollect.&nbsp; You shall come
+up to your chamber at once, and rest you, and make ready for supper,
+by the time Sir Theophilus comes in from attending the King.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne found herself installed in a fresh-smelling wainscotted room,
+where a glass of wine and some cake was ready for her, and where she
+made herself ready, feeling exhilarated in spirits as she performed
+her toilette, putting on her black evening dress, and refreshing the
+curls of her brown hair.&nbsp; It was a simple dress of deep mourning,
+but it became her well, and the two or three gentlemen who had come
+in to supper with Sir Theophilus evidently admired her greatly, and
+complimented her on having a situation at Court, which was all that
+Lady Oglethorpe mentioned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Child,&rdquo; she said afterwards, when they were in private,
+&ldquo;if I had known what you looked like I would have sought a different
+position for you.&nbsp; But, there, to get one&rsquo;s foot&mdash;were
+it but the toe of one&rsquo;s shoe&mdash;in at Court is the great point
+after all, the rest must come after.&nbsp; I warrant me you are well
+educated too.&nbsp; Can you speak French?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh yes, madam, and Italian, and dance and play on the spinnet.&nbsp;
+I was with two French ladies at Winchester every winter who taught such
+things.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, well, mayhap we may get you promoted to a sub-governess&rsquo;s
+place&mdash;though your religion is against you.&nbsp; You are not a
+Catholic&mdash;eh?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, your ladyship.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the only road to favour nowadays, though for
+the name of the thing they may have a Protestant or two.&nbsp; You are
+the King&rsquo;s godchild too, so he will expect it the more from you.&nbsp;
+However, we may find a better path.&nbsp; You have not left your heart
+in the country, eh?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne blushed and denied it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will be mewed up close enough in the nursery,&rdquo; ran
+on Lady Oglethorpe.&nbsp; &ldquo;Lady Powys keeps close discipline there,
+and I expect she will be disconcerted to see how fine a fish I have
+brought to her net; but we will see&mdash;we will see how matters go.&nbsp;
+But, my dear, have you no coloured clothes?&nbsp; There is no appearing
+in the Royal household in private mourning.&nbsp; It might daunt the
+Prince&rsquo;s spirits in his cradle!&rdquo; and she laughed, though
+Anne felt much annoyed at thus disregarding her mother, as well as at
+the heavy expense.&nbsp; However, there was no help for it; the gowns
+and laces hidden in the bottom of her mails were disinterred, and the
+former were for the most part condemned, so that she had to submit to
+a fresh outfit, in which Lady Oglethorpe heartily interested herself,
+but which drained the purse that the Canon had amply supplied.</p>
+<p>These arrangements were not complete when the first letter from home
+arrived, and was opened with a beating heart, and furtive glances as
+of one who feared to see the contents, but they were by no means what
+she expected.</p>
+<blockquote><p>I hope you have arrived safely in London, and that you
+are not displeased with your first taste of life in a Court.&nbsp; Neither
+town nor country is exempt from sorrow and death.&nbsp; I was summoned
+only on the second day after your departure to share in the sorrows
+at Archfield, where the poor young wife died early on Friday morning,
+leaving a living infant, a son, who, I hope, may prove a blessing to
+them, if he is spared, which can scarcely be expected.&nbsp; The poor
+young man, and indeed all the family, are in the utmost distress, and
+truly there were circumstances that render the event more than usually
+deplorable, and for which he blames himself exceedingly, even to despair.&nbsp;
+It appears that the poor young gentlewoman wished to add some trifle
+to the numerous commissions with which she was entrusting you on the
+night of the bonfire, and that she could not be pacified except by her
+husband undertaking to ride over to give the patterns and the orders
+to you before your setting forth.&nbsp; You said nothing of having seen
+him&mdash;nor do I see how it was possible that you could have done
+so, seeing that you only left your chamber just before the breakfast
+that you never tasted, my poor child.&nbsp; He never returned till long
+after noon, and what with fretting after him, and disappointment, that
+happened which Lady Archfield had always apprehended, and the poor fragile
+young creature worked herself into a state which ended before midnight
+in the birth of a puny babe, and her own death shortly after.&nbsp;
+She wanted two months of completing her sixteenth year, and was of so
+frail a constitution that Dr. Brown had never much hope of her surviving
+the birth of her child.&nbsp; It was a cruel thing to marry her thus
+early, ungrown in body or mind, but she had no one to care for her before
+she was brought hither.&nbsp; The blame, as I tell Sir Philip, and would
+fain persuade poor Charles, is really with those who bred her up so
+uncontrolled as to be the victim of her humours; but the unhappy youth
+will listen to no consolation.&nbsp; He calls himself a murderer, shuts
+himself up, and for the most part will see and speak to no one, but
+if forced by his father&rsquo;s command to unlock his chamber door,
+returns at once to sit with his head hidden in his arms crossed upon
+the table, and if father, mother, or sister strive to rouse him and
+obtain answer from him, he will only murmur forth, &ldquo;I should only
+make it worse if I did.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is piteous to see a youth so
+utterly overcome, and truly I think his condition is a greater distress
+to our good friends than the loss of the poor young wife.&nbsp; They
+asked him what name he would have given to his child, but all the answer
+they could get was, &ldquo;As you will, only not mine;&rdquo; and in
+the enforced absence of my brother of Fareham I baptized him Philip.&nbsp;
+The funeral will take place to-morrow, and Sir Philip proposes immediately
+after to take his son to Oxford, and there endeavour to find a tutor
+of mature age and of prudence, with whom he may either study at New
+College or be sent on the grand tour.&nbsp; It is the only notion that
+the poor lad has seemed willing to entertain, as if to get away from
+his misery, and I cannot but think it well for him.&nbsp; He is not
+yet twenty, and may, as it were, begin life again the wiser and the
+better man for his present extreme sorrow.&nbsp; Lady Archfield is greatly
+wrapped up in the care of the babe, who, I fear, is in danger of being
+killed by overcare, if by nothing else, though truly all is in the hands
+of God.&nbsp; I have scarce quitted the afflicted family since I was
+summoned to them on Friday, since Sir Philip has no one else on whom
+to depend for comfort or counsel; and if I can obtain the services of
+Mr. Ellis from Portsmouth for a few Sundays, I shall ride with him to
+Oxford to assist in the choice of a tutor to go abroad with Mr. Archfield.</p>
+<p>One interruption however I had, namely, from Major Oakshott, who
+came in great perturbation to ask what was the last I had seen of his
+son Peregrine.&nbsp; It appears that the unfortunate young man never
+returned home after the bonfire on Portsdown Hill, where his brother
+Robert lost sight of him, and after waiting as long as he durst, returned
+home alone.&nbsp; It has become known that after parting with us high
+words passed between him and Lieutenant Sedley Archfield, insomuch that
+after the unhappy fashion of these times, blood was demanded, and early
+in the morning Sedley sent the friend who was to act as second to bear
+the challenge to young Oakshott.&nbsp; You can conceive the reception
+that he was likely to receive at Oakwood; but it was then discovered
+that Peregrine had not been in his bed all night, nor had any one seen
+or heard of him.&nbsp; Sedley boasts loudly that the youngster has fled
+the country for fear of him, and truly things have that appearance,
+although to my mind Peregrine was far from wanting in spirit or courage.&nbsp;
+But, as he had not received the cartel, he might not have deemed his
+honour engaged to await it, and I incline to the belief that he is on
+his way to his uncle in Muscovy, driven thereto by his dread of the
+marriage with the gentlewoman whom he holds in so much aversion.&nbsp;
+I have striven to console his father by the assurance that such tidings
+of him will surely arrive in due time, but the Major is bitterly grieved,
+and is galled by the accusation of cowardice.&nbsp; &ldquo;He could
+not even be true to his own maxims of worldly honour,&rdquo; says the
+poor gentleman.&nbsp; &ldquo;So true it is that only by grace we stand
+fast.&rdquo;&nbsp; The which is true enough, but the poor gentleman
+unwittingly did his best to make grace unacceptable in his son&rsquo;s
+eyes.&nbsp; I trust soon to hear again of you, my dear child.&nbsp;
+I rejoice that Lady Oglethorpe is so good to you, and I hope that in
+the palace you will guard first your faith and then your discretion.&nbsp;
+And so praying always for your welfare, alike spiritual and temporal.&mdash;Your
+loving uncle, JNO.&nbsp; WOODFORD.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Truly it was well that Anne had secluded herself to read this letter.</p>
+<p>So the actual cause for which poor Charles Archfield had entreated
+silence was at an end.&nbsp; The very evil he had apprehended had come
+to pass, and she could well understand how, on his return in a horror-stricken,
+distracted state of mind, the childish petulance of his wife had worried
+him into loss of temper, so that he hardly knew what he said.&nbsp;
+And what must not his agony of remorse be?&nbsp; She could scarcely
+imagine how he had avoided confessing all as a mere relief to his mind,
+but then she reflected that when he called himself a murderer the words
+were taken in another sense, and no questions asked, nor would he be
+willing to add such grief and shame to his parents&rsquo; present burthen,
+especially as no suspicion existed.</p>
+<p>That Peregrine&rsquo;s fate had not been discovered greatly relieved
+her.&nbsp; She believed the vault to go down to a considerable depth
+after a first platform of stone near the opening, and it was generally
+avoided as the haunt of hobgoblins, fairies, or evil beings, so that
+no one was likely to be in its immediate neighbourhood after the hay
+was carried, so that there might have been nothing to attract any one
+to the near neighbourhood and thus lead to the discovery.&nbsp; If not
+made by this time, Charles would be far away, and there was nothing
+to connect him with the deed.&nbsp; No one save herself had even known
+of his having been near the castle that morning.&nbsp; How strange that
+the only persons aware of that terrible secret should be so far separated
+from one another that they could exchange no confidences; and each was
+compelled to absolute silence.&nbsp; For as long as no one else was
+suspected, Anne felt her part must be not to betray Charles, though
+the bare possibility of the accusation of another was agony to her.</p>
+<p>She wrote her condolences in due form to Fareham, and in due time
+was answered by Lucy Archfield.&nbsp; The letter was full of details
+about the infant, who seemed to absorb her and her mother, and to be
+as likely to live as any child of those days ever was&mdash;and it was
+in his favour that his grandmother and her old nurse had better notions
+of management than most of her contemporaries.&nbsp; In spite of all
+that Lucy said of her brother&rsquo;s overwhelming grief, and the melancholy
+of thus parting with him, there was a strain of cheerfulness throughout
+the letter, betraying that the poor young wife of less than a year was
+no very great loss to the peace and comfort of the family.&nbsp; The
+letter ended with&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>There is a report that Sir Peregrine Oakshott is dead
+in Muscovy.&nbsp; Nothing has been heard of that unfortunate young man
+at Oakwood.&nbsp; If he be gone in quest of his uncle, I wonder what
+will become of him?&nbsp; However, nurse will have it that this being
+the third seventh year of his life, the fairies have carried off their
+changeling&mdash;you remember how she told us the story of his being
+changed as an infant, when we were children at Winchester; she believes
+it as much as ever, and never let little Philip out of her sight before
+he was baptized.&nbsp; I ask her, if the changeling be gone, where is
+the true Peregrine? but she only wags her head in answer.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>A day or two later Anne heard from her uncle from Oxford.&nbsp; He
+was extremely grieved at the condition of his beloved <i>alma mater</i>,
+with a Roman Catholic Master reigning at University College, a doctor
+from the Sorbonne and Fellows to match, inflicted by military force
+on Magdalen, whose lawful children had been ejected with a violence
+beyond anything that the colleges had suffered even in the time of the
+Rebellion.&nbsp; If things went on as they were, he pronounced Oxford
+would be no better than a Popish seminary: and he had the more readily
+induced his old friend to consent to Charles&rsquo;s desire not to remain
+there as a student, but to go abroad with Mr. Fellowes, one of the expelled
+fellows of Magdalen, a clergyman of mature age, but a man of the world,
+who had already acted as a travelling tutor.&nbsp; Considering that
+the young widower was not yet twenty, and that all his wife&rsquo;s
+wealth would be in his hands, also that his cousin Sedley formed a dangerous
+link with the questionable diversions of the garrison at Portsmouth,
+both father and friend felt that it was well that he should be out of
+reach, and have other occupations for the present.</p>
+<p>Change of scene had, Dr. Woodford said, brightened the poor youth,
+and he was showing more interest in passing events, but probably he
+would never again be the light-hearted boy they used to know.</p>
+<p>Anne could well believe it.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI<br />
+A Royal Nursery</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;The duty that I owe unto your Majesty<br />
+I seal upon the lips of this sweet babe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>King Richard III.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It was not till the Queen had moved from St. James&rsquo;s, where
+her son had been born, to take up her abode at Whitehall, that Lady
+Oglethorpe was considered to be disinfected from her children&rsquo;s
+whooping-cough, and could conduct Mistress Anne Jacobina Woodford to
+her new situation.</p>
+<p>Anne remembered the place from times past, as she followed the lady
+up the broad stairs to the state rooms, where the child was daily carried
+for inspection by the nation to whom, it was assumed, he was so welcome,
+but who, on the contrary, regarded him with the utmost dislike and suspicion.</p>
+<p>Whitehall was, in those days, free to all the world, and though sentries
+in the Life-guards&rsquo; uniform with huge grenadier caps were posted
+here and there, every one walked up and down.&nbsp; Members of Parliament
+and fine gentlemen in embroidered coats and flowing wigs came to exchange
+news; country cousins came to stare and wonder, some to admire, some
+to whisper their disbelief in the Prince&rsquo;s identity; clergy in
+gown, cassock, and bands came to win what they could in a losing cause;
+and one or two other clergy, who were looked at askance, whose dress
+had a foreign air, and whose tonsure could be detected as they threaded
+their way with quick, gliding steps to the King&rsquo;s closet.</p>
+<p>Lady Oglethorpe, as one to the manner born, made her way through
+the midst of this throng in the magnificent gallery, and Anne followed
+her closely, conscious of words of admiration and inquiries who she
+was.&nbsp; Into the Prince&rsquo;s presence chamber, in fact his day-nursery,
+they came, and a sweet and gentle-looking lady met them, and embraced
+Lady Oglethorpe, who made known Mistress Woodford to Lady Strickland,
+of Sizergh, the second governess, as the fourth rocker who had been
+appointed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are welcome, Miss Woodford,&rdquo; said the lady, looking
+at Anne&rsquo;s high, handsome head and well-bred action in courtesying,
+with a shade of surprise.&nbsp; &ldquo;You are young, but I trust you
+are discreet.&nbsp; There is much need thereof.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Following to a kind of alcove, raised by a step or two, Anne found
+herself before a half-circle of ladies and gentlemen round a chair of
+state, in front of which stood a nurse, with an infant in her arms,
+holding him to be caressed and inspected by the lady on the throne.&nbsp;
+Her beautiful soft dark eyes and hair, and an ivory complexion, with
+her dignified and graceful bearing, her long, slender throat and exquisite
+figure, were not so much concealed as enhanced by the simple mob cap
+and &lsquo;night-gown,&rsquo; as it was then the fashion to call a morning
+wrapper, which she wore, and Anne&rsquo;s first impression was that
+no wonder Peregrine raved about her.&nbsp; Poor Peregrine! that very
+thought came like a stab, as, after courtesying low, she stood at the
+end of the long room&mdash;silent, and observing.</p>
+<p>A few gentlemen waited by the opposite door, but not coming far into
+the apartment, and Lady Oglethorpe was announced by one of them.&nbsp;
+The space was so great that Anne could not hear the words, and she only
+saw the gracious smile and greeting as Lady Oglethorpe knelt and kissed
+the Queen&rsquo;s hand.&nbsp; After a long conversation between the
+mothers, during which Lady Oglethorpe was accommodated with a cushion,
+Anne was beckoned forward, and was named to the Queen, who honoured
+her with an inclination of the head and a few low murmured words.</p>
+<p>Then there was an announcement of &lsquo;His Majesty,&rsquo; and
+Anne, following the general example of standing back with low obeisances,
+beheld the tall active figure and dark heavy countenance of her Royal
+godfather, under his great black, heavily-curled wig.&nbsp; He returned
+Lady Oglethorpe&rsquo;s greeting, and his face lighted up with a pleasant
+smile that greatly changed the expression as he took his child into
+his arms for a few moments; but the little one began to cry, whereupon
+he was carried off, and the King began to consult Lady Oglethorpe upon
+the water-gruel on which the poor little Prince was being reared, and
+of which she emphatically disapproved.</p>
+<p>Before he left the room, however, Lady Oglethorpe took care to present
+to him his god-daughter, Mistress Anne Jacobina Woodford, and very low
+was the girl&rsquo;s obeisance before him, but with far more fright
+and shyness than before the sweet-faced Queen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh ay!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I remember honest Will Woodford.&nbsp;
+He did good service at Southwold.&nbsp; I wish he had left a son like
+him.&nbsp; Have you a brother, young mistress?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, please your Majesty, I am an only child.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;More&rsquo;s the pity,&rdquo; he said kindly, and with a smile
+brightening his heavy features.&nbsp; &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis too good a breed
+to die out.&nbsp; You are Catholic?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am bred in the English Church, so please your Majesty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His Majesty was evidently less pleased than before, but he only said,
+&ldquo;Ha! and my godchild!&nbsp; We must amend that,&rdquo; and waved
+her aside.</p>
+<p>The royal interview over, the newcomer was presented to the State
+Governess, the Countess of Powys, a fair and gracious matron, who was,
+however, almost as far removed from her as the Queen.&nbsp; Then she
+was called on to take a solemn oath before the Master of the Household,
+of dutiful loyalty to the Prince.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Labadie was head nurse as well as being wife to the King&rsquo;s
+French valet.&nbsp; She was a kindly, portly Englishwoman, who seemed
+wrapped up in her charge, and she greeted her new subordinate in a friendly
+way, which, however, seemed strange in one who at home would have been
+of an inferior degree, expressed hopes of her steadiness and discretion,
+and called to Miss Dunord to show Miss Woodford her chamber.&nbsp; The
+abbreviation Miss sounded familiar and unsuitable, but it had just come
+into use for younger spinsters, though officially they were still termed
+Mistress.</p>
+<p>Mistress or Miss Dunord was sallow and gray-eyed, somewhat older
+than Anne, and looking thoroughly French, though her English was perfect.&nbsp;
+She was entirely dressed in blue and white, and had a rosary and cross
+at her girdle.&nbsp; &ldquo;This way,&rdquo; she said, tripping up a
+steep wooden stair.&nbsp; &ldquo;We sleep above.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis a
+huge, awkward place.&nbsp; Her Majesty calls it the biggest and most
+uncomfortable palace she ever was in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Opening a heavy door, she showed a room of considerable size, hung
+with faded frayed tapestry, and containing two huge bedsteads, with
+four heavy posts, and canopies of wood, as near boxes as could well
+be.&nbsp; Privacy was a luxury not ordinarily coveted, and the arrangement
+did not surprise Anne, though she could have wished that on that summer
+day curtains and tapestry had been less fusty.&nbsp; Two young women
+were busy over a dress spread on one of the beds, and with French ease
+and grace the guide said, &ldquo;Here is our new colleague, Miss Jacobina
+Woodford.&nbsp; Let me present Miss Hester Bridgeman and Miss Jane Humphreys.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miss Woodford is welcome,&rdquo; said Miss Bridgeman, a keen,
+brown, lively, somewhat anxious-looking person, courtesying and holding
+out her hand, and her example was followed by Jane Humphreys, a stout,
+rosy, commonplace girl.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&nbsp; I am glad,&rdquo; this last cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now
+I shall have a bedfellow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This Anne was the less sorry for, as she saw that the bed of the
+other two was furnished with a holy water stoup and a little shrine
+with a waxen Madonna.&nbsp; There was only one looking-glass among the
+four, and not much apparatus either for washing or the toilet, but Miss
+Bridgeman believed that they would soon go to Richmond, where things
+would be more comfortable.&nbsp; Then she turned to consult Miss Dunord
+on her endeavour to improve the trimmings of a dress of Miss Humphreys.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I know you are always in Our Lady&rsquo;s colours, Pauline,
+but you have a pretty taste, and can convince Jane that rose colour
+and scarlet cannot go together.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My father chose the ribbons,&rdquo; said Jane, as if that
+were unanswerable.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;City taste,&rdquo; said Miss Bridgeman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are pretty, very pretty with anything else,&rdquo; observed
+Pauline, with more tact.&nbsp; &ldquo;See, now, with your white embroidered
+petticoat and the gray train they are ravishing&mdash;and the scarlet
+coat will enliven the black.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was further a little murmur about what a Mr. Hopkins admired,
+but it was lost in the arrival of Miss Woodford&rsquo;s mails.</p>
+<p>They clustered round, as eager as a set of schoolgirls, over Anne&rsquo;s
+dresses.&nbsp; Happily even the extreme of fashion had not then become
+ungraceful.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Her Majesty will not have the loose drapery that folks used
+to wear,&rdquo; said Hester Bridgeman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Pauline; &ldquo;it was all very well for those
+who could dispose it with an artless negligence, but for some I could
+name, it was as though they had tumbled it on with a hay-fork and had
+their hair tousled by being tickled in the hay.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now we have the tight bodice with plenty of muslin and lace,
+the gown open below to show the petticoat,&rdquo; said Hester; &ldquo;and
+to my mind it is more decorous.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Decorum was not the vogue then,&rdquo; laughed Pauline, &ldquo;perhaps
+it will be now.&nbsp; Oh, what lovely lace! real Flanders, on my word!&nbsp;
+Where did you get it, Miss Woodford?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was my mother&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And this?&nbsp; Why, &rsquo;tis old French point, you should
+hang it to your sleeves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My Lady Archfield gave it to me in case I should need it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&nbsp; I see you have good friends and are a person of
+some condition,&rdquo; put in Hester Bridgeman.&nbsp; &ldquo;I shall
+be happy to consort with you.&nbsp; Let us&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne courtesied, and at the moment a bell was heard, Pauline at once
+crossed herself and fell on her knees before the small shrine with a
+figure of the Blessed Virgin, and Hester, breaking off her words, followed
+her example; but Jane Humphreys stood twisting the corner of her apron.</p>
+<p>In a very short time, almost before Anne had recovered from her bewilderment,
+the other two were up and chattering again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are not a Catholic?&rdquo; demanded Miss Bridgeman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was bred in the Church,&rdquo; said Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you the King&rsquo;s godchild!&rdquo; exclaimed Pauline.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But we shall soon amend that and make a convert of you like Miss
+Bridgeman there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne shook her head, but was glad to ask, &ldquo;And what means the
+bell that is ringing now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is the supper bell.&nbsp; It rings just after the Angelus,&rdquo;
+said Hester.&nbsp; &ldquo;No, it is not ours.&nbsp; The great folks,
+Lady Powys, Lady Strickland, and the rest sup first.&nbsp; We have the
+dishes after them, with Nurses Labadie and Royer and the rest&mdash;no
+bad ones either.&nbsp; They are allowed five dishes and two bottles
+of wine apiece, and they always leave plenty for us, and it is served
+hot too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The preparations for going down to the second table now absorbed
+the party.</p>
+<p>As Hester said, the fare at this second table was not to be despised.&nbsp;
+It was a formal meal shared with the two nurses and the two pages of
+the backstairs.&nbsp; Not the lads usually associated with the term,
+but men of mature age, and of gentle, though not noble, birth and breeding;
+and there were likewise the attendants of the King and Queen of the
+same grade, such as Mr. Labadie, the King&rsquo;s valet, some English,
+but besides these, Dusian, the Queen&rsquo;s French page, and Signer
+and Signora Turini, who had come with her from Modena, P&egrave;re Giverlai,
+her confessor, and another priest.&nbsp; P&egrave;re Giverlai said grace,
+and the conversation went on briskly between the elders, the younger
+ones being supposed to hold their peace.</p>
+<p>Their dishes went in reversion to the inferior class of servants,
+laundress, sempstress, chambermaids, and the like, who had much more
+liberty than their betters, and not such a lack of occupation as Anne
+soon perceived that she should suffer from.</p>
+<p>There was, however, a great muster of all the Prince&rsquo;s establishment,
+who stood round, as many as could, with little garments in their hands,
+while he was solemnly undressed and laid in his richly inlaid and carved
+cradle&mdash;over which P&egrave;re Giverlai pronounced a Latin benediction.</p>
+<p>The nursery establishment was then released, except one of the nurses,
+who was to sleep or wake on a couch by his side, and one of the rockers.&nbsp;
+These damsels had, two at a time, to divide the night between them,
+one being always at hand to keep the food warm, touch the rocker at
+need with her foot, or call up the nurse on duty if the child awoke,
+but not presume herself to handle his little Royal Highness.</p>
+<p>It was the night when Mistresses Dunord and Bridgeman were due, and
+Anne followed Jane Humphreys to her room, asking a little about the
+duties of the morrow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We must be dressed before seven,&rdquo; said the girl.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;One of us will be left on duty while the others go to Mass.&nbsp;
+I am glad you are a Protestant, Miss Woodford, for the Catholics put
+everything on me that they can.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We must do our best to help and strengthen each other,&rdquo;
+said Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is very hard,&rdquo; said Jane; &ldquo;and the priests
+are always at me!&nbsp; I would change as Hester Bridgeman has done,
+but that I know it would break my grand-dame&rsquo;s heart.&nbsp; My
+father might not care so much, if I got advancement, but I believe it
+would kill my grandmother.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Advancement! oh, but faith comes first,&rdquo; exclaimed Anne,
+recalling the warning.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hester says one religion is as good as another to get to Heaven
+by,&rdquo; murmured Jane.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not if we deny our own for the world&rsquo;s sake,&rdquo;
+said Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is the chapel here a Popish one?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; the Queen has an Oratory, but the Popish chapel is at
+St. James&rsquo;s&mdash;across the Park.&nbsp; The Protestant one is
+here at Whitehall, and there are daily prayers at nine o&rsquo;clock,
+and on Sunday music with three fiddlers, and my grandmother says it
+might almost as well be Popish at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did your grandmother bring you up?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&nbsp; My mother died when I was seven years old, and
+my grandmother bred us all up.&nbsp; You should hear her talk of the
+good old times before the Kings came back and there were no Bishops
+and no book prayers&mdash;but my father says we must swim with the stream,
+or he would not have got any custom at his coffee-house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is that his calling?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay!&nbsp; No one has a better set of guests than in the Golden
+Lamb.&nbsp; The place is full.&nbsp; The great Dr. Hammond sees his
+patients there, and it is all one buzz of the wits.&nbsp; It was because
+of that that my Lord Sunderland made interest, and got me here.&nbsp;
+How did you come?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne briefly explained, and Jane broke out&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you will be my friend, and we will tell each other all
+our secrets.&nbsp; You are a Protestant too.&nbsp; You will be mine,
+and not Bridgeman&rsquo;s or Dunord&rsquo;s&mdash;I hate them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In point of fact Anne did not feel much attracted by the proffer
+of friendship, and she certainly did not intend to tell Jane Humphreys
+all her secrets, nor to vow enmity to the other colleagues, but she
+gravely answered that she trusted they would be friends and help to
+maintain one another&rsquo;s faith.&nbsp; She was relieved that Miss
+Bridgeman here came in to take her first turn of rest till she was to
+be called up at one o&rsquo;clock.</p>
+<p>As Jane Humphreys had predicted, Mrs. Royer and Anne alone were left
+in charge of the nursling while every one went to morning Mass.&nbsp;
+Then followed breakfast and the levee of his Royal Highness, lasting
+as on the previous day till dinner-time; and the afternoon was as before,
+except that the day was fine enough for the child to be carried out
+with all his attendants behind him to take the air in the private gardens.</p>
+<p>If this was to be the whole course of life at the palace, Anne began
+to feel that she had made a great mistake.&nbsp; She was by no means
+attracted by her companions, though Miss Bridgeman decided that she
+must know persons of condition, and made overtures of friendship, to
+be sealed by calling one another Oriana and Portia.&nbsp; She did not
+approve of such common names as Princess Anne and Lady Churchill used&mdash;Mrs.
+Morley and Mrs. Freeman!&nbsp; They must have something better than
+what was used by the Cockpit folks, and she was sure that her dear Portia
+would soon be of the only true faith.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII<br />
+Machinations</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Baby born to woe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>F. T. PALGRAVE.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>When Anne Woodford began to wake from the constant thought of the
+grief and horror she had left at Portchester, and to feel more alive
+to her surroundings and less as if they were a kind of dream, in which
+she only mechanically took her part, one thing impressed itself on her
+gradually, and that was disappointment.&nbsp; If the previous shock
+had not blunted all her hopes and aspirations, perhaps she would have
+felt it sooner and more keenly; but she could not help realising that
+she had put herself into an inferior position whence there did not seem
+to be the promotion she had once anticipated.&nbsp; Her companion rockers
+were of an inferior grade to herself.&nbsp; Jane Humphreys was a harmless
+but silly girl, not much wiser, though less spoilt, than poor little
+Madam, and full of Cockney vulgarities.&nbsp; Education was unfashionable
+just then, and though Hester Bridgeman was bettor born and bred, being
+the daughter of an attorney in the city, she was not much better instructed,
+and had no pursuits except that of her own advantage.&nbsp; Pauline
+Dunord was by far the best of the three, but she seemed to live a life
+apart, taking very little interest in her companions or anything around
+her except her devotions and the bringing them over to her Church.&nbsp;
+The nursery was quite a separate establishment; there was no mingling
+with the guests of royalty, who were only seen in excited peeps from
+the window, or when solemnly introduced to the presence chamber to pay
+their respects to the Prince.&nbsp; As to books, the only secular one
+that Anne saw while at Whitehall was an odd volume of <i>Parthenissa</i>.&nbsp;
+The late King&rsquo;s summary of the Roman controversy was to be had
+in plenty, and nothing was more evident than that the only road to favour
+or promotion was in being thereby convinced.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t throw it down as if it were a hot chestnut,&rdquo;
+said her Oriana.&nbsp; &ldquo;That&rsquo;s what they all do at first,
+but they come to it at last.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne made no answer, but a pang smote her as she thought of her uncle&rsquo;s
+warnings.&nbsp; Yet surely she might hope for other modes of prospering,
+she who was certainly by far the best looking and best educated of all
+the four, not that this served her much in her present company, and
+those of higher rank did not notice her at all.&nbsp; Princess Anne
+would surely recollect her, and then she might be safe in a Protestant
+household, where her uncle would be happy about her.</p>
+<p>The Princess had been at Bath when first she arrived, but at the
+end of a week preparations were made at the Cockpit, a sort of appendage
+to Whitehall, where the Prince and Princess of Denmark lived, and in
+due time there was a visit to the nursery.&nbsp; Standing in full ceremony
+behind Lady Powys, Anne saw the plump face and form she recollected
+in the florid bloom of a young matron, not without a certain royal dignity
+in the pose of the head, though in grace and beauty far surpassed by
+the tall, elegant figure and face of Lady Churchill, whose bright blue
+eyes seemed to be taking in everything everywhere.&nbsp; Anne&rsquo;s
+heart began to beat high at the sight of a once familiar face, and with
+hopes of a really kind word from one who as an elder girl had made much
+of the pretty little plaything.&nbsp; The Princess Anne&rsquo;s countenance
+was, however, less good-natured than usual; her mouth was made up to
+a sullen expression, and when her brother was shown to her she did not
+hold out her arms to him nor vouchsafe a kiss.</p>
+<p>The Queen looked at her wistfully, asking&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is he not like the King?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Humph!&rdquo; returned Princess Anne, &ldquo;I see no likeness
+to any living soul of our family.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, but see his little nails,&rdquo; said the Queen, spreading
+the tiny hand over her finger.&nbsp; &ldquo;See how like your father&rsquo;s
+they are framed!&nbsp; My treasure, you can clasp me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My brother, Edgar!&nbsp; He was the beauty,&rdquo; said the
+Princess.&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>He</i> was exactly like my father; but there&rsquo;s
+no judging of anything so puny as this!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was very suffering last week, the poor little angel,&rdquo;
+said the mother sadly; &ldquo;but they say this water-gruel is very
+nourishing, and not so heavy as milk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It does not look as if it agreed with him,&rdquo; said the
+Princess.&nbsp; &ldquo;Poor little mammet!&nbsp; Did I hear that you
+had the little Woodford here?&nbsp; Is that you, girl?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne courtesied herself forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, I remember you.&nbsp; I never forget a face, and you have
+grown up fair enough.&nbsp; Where&rsquo;s your mother?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I lost her last February, so please your Royal Highness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&nbsp; She was a good woman.&nbsp; Why did she not send
+you to me?&nbsp; Well, well!&nbsp; Come to my toilette to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So Princess Anne swept away in her rich blue brocade.&nbsp; Her behest
+was obeyed, of course, though it was evidently displeasing to the nursery
+authorities, and Lady Strickland gave a warning to be discreet and to
+avoid gossip with the Cockpit folks.</p>
+<p>Anne could not but be excited.&nbsp; Perhaps the Princess would ask
+for her, and take her into the number of her own attendants, where she
+would no longer be in a Romish household, and would certainly be in
+a higher position.&nbsp; Why, she remembered that very Lady Churchill
+as Sarah Jennings in no better a position than she could justly aspire
+to.&nbsp; Her coming to Court would thus be truly justified.</p>
+<p>The Princess sat in a silken wrapper, called a night-gown, in her
+chamber, which had a richly-curtained bed in the alcove, and a toilet-table
+with a splendid Venetian mirror, and a good deal of silver sparkling
+on it, while a strange mixture of perfumes came from the various boxes
+and bottles.&nbsp; Ladies and tirewomen stood in attendance; a little
+black boy in a turban and gold-embroidered dress held a salver with
+her chocolate cup; a cockatoo soliloquised in low whispers in the window;
+a monkey was chained to a pole at a safe distance from him; a French
+friseur was manipulating the Princess&rsquo;s profuse brown hair with
+his tongs; and a needy-looking, pale thin man, in a semi-clerical suit,
+was half-reading, half-declaiming a poem, in which &lsquo;Fair Anna&rsquo;
+seemed mixed up with Juno, Ceres, and other classical folk, but to which
+she was evidently paying very little attention.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! there you are, little one.&nbsp; Thank you, Master&mdash;what&rsquo;s
+name; that is enough.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis a fine poem, but I never can
+remember which is which of all your gods and goddesses.&nbsp; Oh yes,
+I accept the dedication.&nbsp; Give him a couple of guineas, Ellis;
+it will serve him for board and lodging for a fortnight, poor wretch!&rdquo;
+Then, after giving a smooth, well-shaped white hand to be kissed, and
+inviting her visitor to a cushion at her feet, she began a long series
+of questions, kindly ones at first, though of the minute gossiping kind,
+and extending to the Archfields, for poor young Madam had been of the
+rank about which royalty knew everything in those days.&nbsp; The inquiries
+were extremely minute, and the comments what from any one else, Anne
+would have thought vulgar, especially in the presence of the hairdresser,
+but her namesake observed her blush and hesitation, and said, &ldquo;Oh,
+never mind a creature like that.&nbsp; He is French, besides, and does
+not understand a word we say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne, looking over the Princess&rsquo;s head, feared that she saw
+a twinkle in the man&rsquo;s eye, and could only look down and try to
+ignore him through the catechism that ensued, on when she came to Whitehall,
+on the Prince of Wales&rsquo;s health, the management of him, and all
+the circumstances connected with his birth.</p>
+<p>Very glad was Anne that she knew nothing, and had not picked up any
+information as to what had happened before she came to the palace.&nbsp;
+As to the present, Lady Strickland&rsquo;s warning and her own sense
+of honour kept her reticent to a degree that evidently vexed the Princess,
+for she dropped her caressing manner, and sent her away with a not very
+kind, &ldquo;You may go now; you will be turning Papist next, and what
+would your poor mother say?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And as Anne departed in backward fashion she heard Lady Churchill
+say, &ldquo;You will make nothing of her.&nbsp; She is sharper than
+she affects, and a proud minx!&nbsp; I see it in her carriage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The visit had only dashed a few hopes and done her harm with her
+immediate surroundings, who always disliked and distrusted intercourse
+with the other establishment.</p>
+<p>However, in another day the nursery was moved to Richmond.&nbsp;
+This was a welcome move to Anne, who had spent her early childhood near
+enough to be sometimes taken thither, and to know the Park well, so
+that there was a home feeling in the sight of the outline of the trees
+and the scenery of the neighbourhood.&nbsp; The Queen intended going
+to Bath, so that the establishment was only that of the Prince, and
+the life was much quieter on the whole; but there was no gratifying
+any yearning for country walks, for it was not safe nor perhaps decorous
+for one young woman to be out alone in a park open to the public and
+haunted by soldiers from Hounslow&mdash;nor could either of her fellow-rockers
+understand her preference for a secluded path through the woods.&nbsp;
+Miss Dunord never went out at all, except on duty, when the Prince was
+carried along the walks in the garden, and the other two infinitely
+preferred the open spaces, where tables were set under the horse-chestnut
+trees for parties who boated down from London to eat curds and whey,
+sometimes bringing a fiddler so as to dance under the trees.</p>
+<p>Jane Humphreys especially was always looking out for acquaintances,
+and once, with a cry of joy, a stout, homely-looking young woman started
+up, exclaiming, &ldquo;Sister Jane!&rdquo; and flew into her arms.&nbsp;
+Upon which Miss Woodford was introduced to &lsquo;My sister Coles&rsquo;
+and her husband, and had to sit down under a tree and share the festivities,
+while there was an overflow of inquiries and intelligence, domestic
+and otherwise.&nbsp; Certainly these were persons whom she would not
+have treated as equals at home.</p>
+<p>Besides, it was all very well to hear of the good old grandmother&rsquo;s
+rheumatics, and of little Tommy&rsquo;s teething, and even to see Jane
+hang her head and be teased about remembering Mr. Hopkins; nor was it
+wonderful to hear lamentations over the extreme dulness of the life
+where one never saw a creature to speak to who was not as old as the
+hills; but when it came to inquiries as minute as the Princess&rsquo;s
+about the Prince of Wales, Anne thought the full details lavishly poured
+out scarcely consistent with loyalty to their oaths of service and Lady
+Strickland&rsquo;s warning, and she told Jane so.</p>
+<p>She was answered, &ldquo;Oh la! what harm can it do?&nbsp; You are
+such a proud peat!&nbsp; Grand-dame and sister like to know all about
+His Royal Highness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was true; but Anne was far more uncomfortable two or three days
+later.&nbsp; The Prince was ailing, so much so that Lady Powys had sent
+an express for the Queen, who had not yet started for Bath, when Anne
+and Jane, being relieved from duty by the other pair, went out for a
+stroll.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh la!&rdquo; presently exclaimed Jane, &ldquo;if that is
+not Colonel Sands, the Princess&rsquo;s equerry.&nbsp; I do declare
+he is coming to speak to us, though he is one of the Cockpit folks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was a very fine gentleman indeed, all scarlet and gold, and no
+wonder Jane was flattered and startled, so that she jerked her fan violently
+up and down as he accosted her with a wave of his cocked hat, saying
+that he was rejoiced to meet these two fair ladies, having been sent
+by the Princess of Denmark to inquire for the health of the Prince.&nbsp;
+She was very anxious to know more than could be learnt by formal inquiry,
+he said, and he was happy to have met the young gentlewomen who could
+gratify him.</p>
+<p>The term &lsquo;gentlewoman&rsquo; highly flattered Miss Humphreys,
+who blushed and bridled, and exclaimed, &ldquo;Oh la, sir!&rdquo; but
+Anne thought it needful to say gravely&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are in trust, sir, and have no right to speak of what passes
+within the royal household.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madam, I admire your discretion, but to the&mdash;(a-hem)&mdash;sister
+of the&mdash;(a-hem)&mdash;Prince of Wales it is surely uncalled for.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miss Woodford is so precise,&rdquo; said Jane Humphreys, with
+a giggle; &ldquo;I do not know what harm can come of saying that His
+Royal Highness peaks and pines just as he did before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is none the better for country air then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no? except that he cries louder.&nbsp; Such a time as we
+had last night!&nbsp; Mrs. Royer never slept a wink all the time I was
+there, but walked about with him all night.&nbsp; You had the best of
+it, Miss Woodford.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He slept while I was there,&rdquo; said Anne briefly, not
+thinking it needful to state that the tired nurse had handed the child
+over to her, and that he had fallen asleep in her arms.&nbsp; She tried
+to put an end to the conversation by going indoors, but she was vexed
+to find that, instead of following her closely, Miss Humphreys was still
+lingering with the equerry.</p>
+<p>Anne found the household in commotion.&nbsp; Pauline met her, weeping
+bitterly, and saying the Prince had had a fit, and all hope was over,
+and in the rockers&rsquo; room, she found Hester Bridgeman exclaiming
+that her occupation was gone.&nbsp; Water-gruel, she had no doubt, had
+been the death of the Prince.&nbsp; The Queen was come, and wellnigh
+distracted.&nbsp; She had sent out in quest of a wet-nurse, but it was
+too late; he was going the way of all Her Majesty&rsquo;s children.</p>
+<p>Going down again together the two girls presently had to stand aside
+as the poor Queen, seeing and hearing nothing, came towards her own
+room with her handkerchief over her face.&nbsp; They pressed each other&rsquo;s
+hands awe-stricken, and went on to the nursery.&nbsp; There Mrs. Labadie
+was kneeling over the cradle, her hood hanging over her face, crying
+bitterly over the poor little child, who had a blue look about his face,
+and seemed at the last gasp, his features contorted by a convulsion.</p>
+<p>At that moment Jane Humphreys was seen gently opening the door and
+letting in Colonel Sands, who moved as quietly as possible, to give
+a furtive look at the dying child.&nbsp; His researches were cut short,
+however.&nbsp; Lady Strickland, usually the gentlest of women, darted
+out and demanded what he was doing in her nursery.</p>
+<p>He attempted to stammer some excuse about Princess Anne, but Lady
+Strickland only answered by standing pointing to the door and he was
+forced to retreat in a very undignified fashion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who brought him?&rdquo; she demanded, when the door was shut.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Those Cockpit folk are not to come prying here, hap what may!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Miss Humphreys had sped away for fear of questions being asked, and
+attention was diverted by Mrs. Royer arriving with a stout, healthy-looking
+young woman in a thick home-spun cloth petticoat, no stockings, and
+old shoes, but with a clean white cap on her head&mdash;a tilemaker&rsquo;s
+wife who had been captured in the village.</p>
+<p>No sooner was the suffering, half-starved child delivered over to
+her than he became serene and contented.&nbsp; The water-gruel regime
+was over, and he began to thrive from that time.&nbsp; Even when later
+in the afternoon the King himself brought in Colonel Sands, whom in
+the joy of his heart he had asked to dine with him, the babe lay tranquilly
+on the cradle, waving his little hands and looking happy.</p>
+<p>The intrusion seemed to have been forgotten, but that afternoon Anne,
+who had been sent on a message to one of the Queen&rsquo;s ladies, more
+than suspected that she saw Jane in a deep recess of a window in confabulation
+with the Colonel.&nbsp; And when they were alone at bed-time the girl
+said&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it not droll?&nbsp; The Colonel cannot believe that &rsquo;tis
+the same child.&nbsp; He has been joking and teasing me to declare that
+we have a dead Prince hidden somewhere, and that the King showed him
+the brick-bat woman&rsquo;s child.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can you prattle in that mischievous way&mdash;after what
+Lady Strickland said, too?&nbsp; You do not know what harm you may do!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh lack, it was all a jest!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not so sure that it was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you will not tell of me, dear friend, you will not.&nbsp;
+I never saw Lady Strickland like that; I did not know she could be in
+such a rage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No wonder, when a fellow like that came peeping and prying
+like a raven to see whether the poor babe was still breathing,&rdquo;
+cried Anne indignantly.&nbsp; &ldquo;How could you bring him in?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fellow indeed!&nbsp; Why he is a colonel in the Life-guards,
+and the Princess&rsquo;s equerry; and who has a right to know about
+the child if not his own sister&mdash;or half-sister?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She is not a very loving sister,&rdquo; replied Anne.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;You know well, Jane, how many would not be sorry to make out
+that it is as that man would fain have you say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, I told him it was no such thing, and laughed the very
+notion to scorn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It were better not to talk with him at all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you will not speak of it.&nbsp; If I were turned away
+my father would beat me.&nbsp; Nay, I know not what he might not do
+to me.&nbsp; You will not tell, dear darling Portia, and I will love
+you for ever.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have no call to tell,&rdquo; said Anne coldly, but she was
+disgusted and weary, and moreover not at all sure that she, as the other
+Protestant rocker, and having been in the Park on that same day, was
+not credited with some of the mischievous gossip that had passed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There, Portia, that is what you get by walking with that stupid
+Humphreys,&rdquo; said Oriana.&nbsp; &ldquo;She knows no better than
+to blab to any one who will be at the trouble to seem sweet upon her,
+though she may get nothing by it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would it be better if she did?&rdquo; asked Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh well, we must all look out for ourselves, and I am sure
+there is no knowing what may come next.&nbsp; But I hear we are to move
+to Windsor as soon as the child is strong enough, so as to be farther
+out of reach of the Cockpit tongues.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This proved to be true, but the Prince and his suite were not lodged
+in the Castle itself, a house in the cloisters being thought more suitable,
+and here the Queen visited her child daily, for since that last alarm
+she could not bear to be long absent from him.&nbsp; Such emissaries
+as Colonel Sands did not again appear, but after that precedent Lady
+Strickland had become much more unwilling to allow any of those under
+her authority to go out into any public place, and the rockers seldom
+got any exercise except as swelling the Prince&rsquo;s train when he
+was carried out to take the air.</p>
+<p>Anne looked with longing eyes at the Park, but a ramble there was
+a forbidden pleasure.&nbsp; She could not always even obtain leave to
+attend St. George&rsquo;s Chapel; the wish was treated as a sort of
+weakness, or folly, and she was always the person selected to stay at
+home when any religious ceremony called away the rest of the establishment.</p>
+<p>As the King&rsquo;s god-daughter it was impressed on her that she
+ought to conform to his Church, and one of the many priests about the
+Court was appointed to instruct her.&nbsp; In the dearth of all intellectual
+intercourse, and the absolute deficiency of books, she could not but
+become deeply interested in the arguments.&nbsp; Her uncle had forearmed
+her with instruction, and she wrote to him on any difficulty which arose,
+and this became the chief occupation of her mind, distracting her thoughts
+from the one great cloud that hung over her memory.&nbsp; Indeed one
+of the foremost bulwarks her feelings erected to fortify her conscience
+against the temptations around, was the knowledge that she would have,
+though of course under seal of confession, to relate that terrible story
+to a priest.</p>
+<p>Hester Bridgeman could not imagine how her Portia could endure to
+hear the old English Prayer-book droned out.&nbsp; For her part, she
+liked one thing or the other, either a rousing Nonconformist sermon
+in a meeting-house or a splendid Mass.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, after all,&rdquo; as Anne overheard her observing to
+Miss Dunord, &ldquo;it may be all the better for us.&nbsp; What with
+her breeding and her foreign tongues, she would be sure to be set over
+our heads as under-governess, or the like, if she were not such an obstinate
+heretic, and keeping that stupid Humphreys so.&nbsp; We could have converted
+her long ago, if it were not for that Woodford and for her City grand-dame!&nbsp;
+Portia is the King&rsquo;s godchild, too, so it is just as well that
+she does not see what is for her own advantage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not care for promotion.&nbsp; I only want to save my
+own soul and hers,&rdquo; said Pauline.&nbsp; &ldquo;I wish she would
+come over to the true Church, for I could love her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And certainly Pauline Dunord&rsquo;s gentle devotional example, and
+her perfect rest and peace in the practice of her religion, were strong
+influences with Anne.&nbsp; She was waiting till circumstances should
+make it possible to her to enter a convent, and in the meantime she
+lived a strictly devout life, abstracted as far as duty and kindness
+permitted from the little cabals and gossipry around.</p>
+<p>Anne could not help feeling that the girl was as nearly a saint as
+any one she had ever seen&mdash;far beyond herself in goodness.&nbsp;
+Moreover, the Queen inspired strong affection.&nbsp; Mary Beatrice was
+not only a very beautiful person, full of the grace and dignity of the
+House of Este, but she was deeply religious, good and gentle, kindly
+and gracious to all who approached her, and devoted to her husband and
+child.&nbsp; A word or look from her was always a delight, and Anne,
+by her knowledge of Italian, was able sometimes to obtain a smiling
+word or remark.</p>
+<p>The little Prince, after those first miserable weeks of his life,
+had begun to thrive, and by and by manifested a decided preference not
+only for his beautiful mother, but for the fresh face, bright smile,
+and shining brown eyes of Miss Woodford.&nbsp; She could almost always,
+with nods and becks, avert a passion of roaring, which sometimes went
+beyond the powers of even his foster-mother, the tiler&rsquo;s wife.&nbsp;
+The Queen watched with delight when he laughed and flourished his arms
+in response, and the King was summoned to see the performance, which
+he requited by taking out a fat gold watch set with pearls, and presenting
+it to Anne, as his grave gloomy face lighted up with a smile.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you yet one of us?&rdquo; he asked, as she received his
+gift on her knee.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir, I cannot&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That must be amended.&nbsp; You have read his late Majesty&rsquo;s
+paper?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And seen Father Giverlai?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, please your Majesty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And still you are not convinced.&nbsp; That must not be.&nbsp;
+I would gladly consider and promote you, but I can only have true Catholics
+around my son.&nbsp; I shall desire Father Crump to see you.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII<br />
+Hallowmas Eve</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;This more strange<br />
+Than such a murder is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Macbeth.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Bambino mio</i>, <i>bambino mio</i>,&rdquo; wailed Mary
+Beatrice, as she pressed her child to her bosom, and murmured to him
+in her native tongue.&nbsp; &ldquo;And did they say he was not his mother&rsquo;s
+son, his poor mother, whose dearest treasure he is!&nbsp; <i>Oim&egrave;</i>,
+<i>crudeli</i>, <i>crudelissimi</i>!&nbsp; Even his sisters hate him
+and will not own him, the little jewel of his mother&rsquo;s heart!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne, waiting in the window, was grieved to have overheard the words
+which the poor Queen had poured out, evidently thinking no one near
+could understand her.</p>
+<p>That evening there were orders to prepare for a journey to Whitehall
+the next morning.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And,&rdquo; said Hester Bridgeman, &ldquo;I can tell you why,
+in all confidence, but I have it from a sure hand.&nbsp; The Prince
+of Orange is collecting a fleet and army to come and inquire into certain
+matters, especially into the birth of a certain young gentleman we wot
+of.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can he have the insolence?&rdquo; cried Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis no great wonder, considering the vipers in the
+Cockpit,&rdquo; said Hester.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what will they do to us?&rdquo; asked Jane Humphreys in
+terror.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing to you, my dear, nor to Portia; you are good Protestants,&rdquo;
+said Hester with a sneer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Royer told me it was for the christening,&rdquo; said
+Jane, &ldquo;and then we shall all have new suits.&nbsp; I am glad we
+are going back to town.&nbsp; It cannot be so mortal dull as &rsquo;tis
+here, with all the leaves falling&mdash;enough to give one the vapours.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There were auguries on either hand in the palace that if the Prince
+came it would be only another Monmouth affair, and this made Anne shrink,
+for she had partaken of the grief and indignation of Winchester at the
+cruel execution of Lady Lisle, and had heard rumours enough of the progress
+of the Assize to make her start in horror when called to watch the red-faced
+Lord Chancellor Jeffreys getting out of his coach.</p>
+<p>It really seemed for the time as if the royal household were confident
+in this impression, though as soon as they were again settled in Whitehall
+there was a very close examination of the witnesses of the Prince&rsquo;s
+birth, and a report printed of their evidence, enough it might be thought
+to satisfy any one; but Jane Humphreys, who went to spend a day at the
+Golden Lamb, her father&rsquo;s warehouse, reported that people only
+laughed at it.</p>
+<p>Anne&rsquo;s spirit burned at the injustice, and warmed the more
+towards the Queen and little Prince, whose pretty responses to her caresses
+could not but win her love.&nbsp; Moreover, Pauline&rsquo;s example
+continued to attract her, and Father Crump was a better controversialist,
+or perhaps a better judge of character, than P&egrave;re Giverlai, and
+took her on sides where she was more vulnerable, so as to make her begin
+to feel unsettled, and wonder whether she were not making a vain sacrifice,
+and holding out after all against the better way.</p>
+<p>The sense of the possible gain, and disgust at the shallow conversions
+of some around her, helped to keep her back.&nbsp; She could not help
+observing that while Pauline persuaded, Hester had ceased to persuade,
+and seemed rather willing to hinder her.&nbsp; Just before the State
+christening or rather admission into the Church, Lady Powys, in the
+name of the King and Queen, offered her the post of sub-governess, which
+really would mean for the present chief playfellow to the little Prince,
+and would place her on an entirely different platform of society from
+the comparatively menial one she occupied, but of course on the condition
+of conformity to Rome.</p>
+<p>To be above the familiarity of Jane and Hester was no small temptation,
+but still she hesitated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madam, I thank you, I thank their Majesties,&rdquo; she said,
+&ldquo;but I cannot do it thus.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see what you mean, Miss Woodford,&rdquo; said Lady Powys,
+who was a truly noble woman.&nbsp; &ldquo;Your motives must be above
+suspicion even to yourself.&nbsp; I respect you, and would not have
+made you the offer except by express command, but I still trust that
+when your disinterestedness is above suspicion you will still join us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was sore mortification when Hester Bridgeman was preferred to
+the office, for which she was far less fitted, being no favourite with
+the babe, and being essentially vulgar in tastes and habits, and knowing
+no language save her own, and that ungrammatically and with an accent
+which no one could wish the Prince to acquire.&nbsp; Yet there she was,
+promoted to the higher grade of the establishment and at the christening,
+standing in the front ranks, while Miss Woodford was left far in the
+rear among the servants.</p>
+<p>A report of the Dutch fleet having been destroyed by a storm had
+restored the spirits of the Court; and in the nursery very little was
+known of the feelings of the kingdom at large.&nbsp; Dr. Woodford did
+not venture on writing freely to his niece, lest he should compromise
+her, and she only vaguely detected that he was uneasy.</p>
+<p>So came All Saints&rsquo; Day Eve, when there was to be a special
+service late in the evening at the Romanised Chapel Royal at St. James&rsquo;s,
+with a sermon by a distinguished Dominican, to which all the elder and
+graver members of the household were eager to go.&nbsp; And there was
+another very different attraction at the Cockpit, where good-natured
+Princess Anne had given permission for a supper, to be followed by burning
+of nuts and all the divinations proper to Hallowmas Eve, to which were
+invited all the subordinates of the Whitehall establishment who could
+be spared.</p>
+<p>Pauline Dunord was as eager for the sermon as Jane Humphreys was
+for the supper, and Hester Bridgeman was in an odd mood of uncertainty,
+evidently longing after the sports, but not daring to show that she
+did so, and trying to show great desire to hear the holy man preach,
+together with a polite profession of self-denial in giving up her place
+in case there should not be room for all.&nbsp; However, as it appeared
+that even the two chief nurses meant to combine sermon and the latter
+end of the supper, she was at ease.&nbsp; The foster-mother and one
+of the Protestant rockers were supposed to be enough to watch over the
+Prince, but the former, who had been much petted and spoilt since she
+had been at the palace, and was a young creature, untrained and wilful,
+cried so much at the idea of missing the merrymaking, that as it was
+reckoned important to keep her in good humour and good spirits, Mrs.
+Labadie decided on winking at her absence from the nursery, since Miss
+Woodford was quite competent to the charge for the short time that both
+the church-goers and the supper-goers would all be absent together.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But are you not afraid to stay alone?&rdquo; asked Mrs. Labadie,
+with a little compunction.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is there to be afraid of?&rdquo; asked Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;There
+are the sentinels at the foot of the stairs, and what should reach us
+here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would not be alone here,&rdquo; said more than one voice.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Nor I!&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Nor I!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And on this night of all others!&rdquo; said Hester.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But why?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They say he walks!&rdquo; whispered Jane in a voice of awe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who walks?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The old King?&rdquo; asked Hester.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; the last King,&rdquo; said Jane.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no: it was Oliver Cromwell&mdash;old Noll himself!&rdquo;
+put in another voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you, no such thing,&rdquo; said Jane.&nbsp; &ldquo;It
+was the last King.&nbsp; I heard it from them that saw it, at least
+the lady&rsquo;s cousin.&nbsp; &rsquo;Twas in the long gallery, in a
+suit of plain black velvet, with white muslin ruffles and cravat quilled
+very neat.&nbsp; Why do you laugh, Miss Woodford?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was too much for Anne, who managed to say, &ldquo;Who was his
+laundress?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you I heard it from them that told no lies.&nbsp; The
+gentleman could swear to it.&nbsp; He took a candle to him, and there
+was nought but the wainscot behind.&nbsp; Think of that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And that we should be living here!&rdquo; said another voice.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I never venture about the big draughty place alone at night,&rdquo;
+said the laundress.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No! nor I would not for twenty princes,&rdquo; added the sempstress.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, I have heard steps,&rdquo; said Mrs. Royer, &ldquo;and
+wailing&mdash;wailing.&nbsp; No wonder after all that has happened here.&nbsp;
+Oh yes, steps as of the guard being turned out!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is like our Squire&rsquo;s manor-house, where&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Every one contributed a story, and only the announcement of Her Majesty&rsquo;s
+approach put an end to these reminiscences.</p>
+<p>Anne held to her purpose.&nbsp; She had looked forward to this time
+of solitude, for she wanted leisure to consider the situation, and fairly
+to revolve the pleas by which Father Crump had shaken her, more in feeling
+than in her reason, and made her question whether her allegiance to
+her mother and uncle, and her disgust at interested conversions, were
+not making her turn aside from what might be the only true Church, the
+Mother of Saints, and therewith perversely give up earthly advancement.&nbsp;
+But, oh! how to write to her uncle.</p>
+<p>The very intention made her imagination and memory too powerful for
+the consideration of controversy.&nbsp; She went back first to a merry
+Hallowmas Eve long ago, among the Archfield party and other Winchester
+friends, and how the nuts had bounced in a manner which made the young
+ones shout in ecstasy of glee, but seemed to displease some of the elders,
+and had afterwards been the occasion of her being told that it was all
+folly, and therewith informed of Charles Archfield&rsquo;s contract
+to poor little Alice Fitzhubert.&nbsp; Then came other scenes.&nbsp;
+All the various ghostly tales she had heard, and as she sat with her
+knitting in the shaded room with no sound but the soft breathing of
+her little charge in his cradle, no light save from a shaded lamp and
+the fire on the hearth, strange thoughts and dreams floated over her;
+she started at mysterious cracks in the wainscotting from time to time,
+and beheld in the dark corners of the great room forms that seemed grotesque
+and phantom-like till she went up to them and resolved them into familiar
+bits of furniture or gowns and caps of Mrs. Labadie.&nbsp; She repeated
+half aloud numerous Psalms and bits of poetry, but in the midst would
+come some disturbing noise, a step or a shout from the street, though
+the chamber being at the back of the house looking into the Park few
+of such sounds penetrated thither.&nbsp; She began to think of King
+Charles&rsquo;s last walk from St. James&rsquo;s to Whitehall, and of
+the fatal window of the Banqueting-hall which had been pointed out to
+her, and then her thoughts flew back again to that vault in the castle
+yard, and she saw only too vividly in memory that open vault, veiled
+partly by nettles and mulleins, which was the unblest, unknown grave
+of the old playfellow who had so loved her mother and herself.&nbsp;
+Perhaps she had hitherto more dwelt on and pitied the living than the
+dead, as one whom fears and prayers still concerned, but now as she
+thought of the lively sprite-like being who had professed such affection
+for her, and for whom her mother had felt so much, and recollected him
+so soon and suddenly cut down and consigned to that dreary darkness,
+the strange yearning spirit dismissed to the unknown world, instead
+of her old terror and repulsion, a great tenderness and compunction
+came over her, and she longed to join those who would in two days more
+be keeping All Souls&rsquo; Day in intercessions for their departed,
+so as to atone for her past dislike; and there was that sort of feeling
+about her which can only be described by the word &lsquo;eerie.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+To relieve it Anne walked to the window and undid a small wicket in
+the shutter, so as to look out into the quiet moonlight park where the
+trees cast their long shadows on the silvery grass, and there was a
+great calm that seemed to reach her heart and spirits.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, across the sward towards the palace there came the slight,
+impish, almost one-sided figure, with the peculiar walk, swift though
+suggestive of a limp, the elfish set of the plume, the foreign adjustment
+of short cloak.&nbsp; Anne gazed with wide-stretched eyes and beating
+heart, trying to rally her senses and believe it fancy, when the figure
+crossed into a broad streak of light cast by the lamp over the door,
+the face was upturned for a moment.&nbsp; It was deadly pale, and the
+features were beyond all doubt Peregrine Oakshott&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>She sprang back from the window, dropped on her knees, with her face
+hidden in her hands, and was hardly conscious till sounds of the others
+returning made her rally her powers so as to prevent all inquiries or
+surmises.&nbsp; It was Mrs. Labadie and Pauline Dunord, the former to
+see that all was well with the Prince before repairing to the Cockpit.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How pale you are!&rdquo; she exclaimed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have
+you seen anything?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;It may be nothing.&nbsp; He is dead!&rdquo; stammered
+Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh then, &rsquo;tis naught but a maid&rsquo;s fancies,&rdquo;
+said the nurse good-humouredly.&nbsp; &ldquo;Miss Dunord is in no mind
+for the sports, so she will stay with His Highness, and you had best
+come with me and drive the cobwebs out of your brain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, I thank you, ma&rsquo;am, but I could not,&rdquo;
+said Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You had best, I tell you, shake these megrims out of your
+brain,&rdquo; said Mrs. Labadie; but she was in too great haste not
+to lose her share of the amusements to argue the point, and the two
+young women were left together.&nbsp; Pauline was in a somewhat exalted
+state, full of the sermon on the connection of the Church with the invisible
+world.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have seen one of your poor dead,&rdquo; she said.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh, may it not be that he came to implore you to have pity, and
+join the Church, where you could intercede and offer the Holy Sacrifice
+for him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne started.&nbsp; This seemed to chime in with proclivities of
+poor Peregrine&rsquo;s own, and when she thought of his corpse in that
+unhallowed vault, it seemed to her as if he must be calling on her to
+take measures for his rest, both of body and of spirit.&nbsp; Yet something
+seemed to seal her tongue.&nbsp; She could not open her lips on what
+she had seen, and while Pauline talked on, repeating the sermon which
+had so deeply touched her feelings, Anne heard without listening to
+aught besides her own perturbations, mentally debating whether she could
+endure to reveal the story to Father Crump, if she confessed to him,
+or whether she should write to her uncle; and she even began to compose
+the letter in her own mind, with the terrible revelation that must commence
+it, but every moment the idea became more formidable.&nbsp; How transfer
+her own heavy burthen to her uncle, who might feel bound to take steps
+that would cut young Archfield off from parents, sister, child, and
+home.&nbsp; Or supposing Dr. Woodford disbelieved the apparition of
+to-night, the whole would be discredited in his eyes, and he might suppose
+the summer morning&rsquo;s duel as much a delusion of her fancy as the
+autumn evening&rsquo;s phantom, and what evidence had she to adduce
+save Charles&rsquo;s despair, Peregrine&rsquo;s absence, and what there
+might be in the vault?</p>
+<p>Yet if all that Father Crump and Pauline said was true, that dear
+uncle might be under a fatal delusion, and it might be the best hope
+for herself&mdash;nay, even for that poor restless spirit&mdash;to separate
+herself from them.&nbsp; Here was Pauline talking of the blessedness
+of being able to offer prayers on &lsquo;All Souls&rsquo; Day&rsquo;
+for all those of whose ultimate salvation there were fears, or who might
+be in a state of suffering.&nbsp; It even startled her as she thought
+of her mother, whom she always gave thanks for as one departed in faith
+and fear.&nbsp; Would Father Crump speak of her as one in a state of
+inevitable ignorance to be expiated in the invisible world?&nbsp; It
+shocked the daughter as almost profane.&nbsp; Yet if it were true, and
+prayers and masses could aid her?</p>
+<p>Altogether Anne was in a mood on which the voices broke strangely
+returning from the supper full of news.&nbsp; Jane Humphreys was voluble
+on her various experiments.&nbsp; The nuts had burnt quietly together,
+and that was propitious to the Life-guardsman, Mr. Shaw, who had shared
+hers; but on the other hand, the apple-paring thrown over her shoulder
+had formed a P, and he whom she had seen in the vista of looking-glasses
+had a gold chain but neither a uniform nor a P in his name, and Mrs.
+Buss declared that it meant that she should be three times married,
+and the last would be an Alderman, if not Lord Mayor; and Mrs. Royer
+was joking Miss Bridgeman on the I of her apple-paring, which could
+stand for nothing but a certain Incle among &lsquo;the Cockpit folk,&rsquo;
+who was her special detestation.</p>
+<p>Princess Anne and her husband had come down to see the nuts flying,
+and had laughed enough to split their sides, till Lord Cornbury came
+in and whispered something to Prince George, who said, &ldquo;<i>Est
+il possible</i>?&rdquo; and spoke to the Princess, and they all went
+away together.&nbsp; Yes, and the Bishop of Bath and Wells, who had
+been laughing before looked very grave, and went with them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; exclaimed Anne, &ldquo;is the Bishop of Bath and
+Wells here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, in spite of his disgrace.&nbsp; I hear he is to preach
+in your Protestant chapel to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne had brought a letter of introduction from her uncle in case
+she should have any opportunity of seeing his old fellow canon, who
+had often been kind to her when she was a little girl at Winchester.&nbsp;
+She was in many minds of hope and fear as to the meeting him or speaking
+to him, under the consciousness of the possible defection from his Church,
+and the doubt and dread whether to confide her secret and consult him.&nbsp;
+However, the extreme improbability of her being able to do so made the
+yearning for the sight of a Winchester face predominate, and her vigil
+of the night past made the nursery authorities concede that she had
+fairly earned her turn to go to church in the forenoon, since she was
+obstinate enough to want to run after an old heretic so-called Bishop
+who had so pragmatically withstood His Majesty.&nbsp; Jane Humphreys
+went too, for though she was not fond of week-day services, any escape
+from the nursery was welcome, and there was a chance of seeing Lady
+Churchill&rsquo;s new mantle.</p>
+<p>In this she was disappointed, for none of the grandees were present,
+indeed it was whispered as the two girls made their way to the chapel,
+that there was great excitement over the Declaration of the Prince of
+Orange, which had arrived last night, that he had been invited by the
+lords spiritual and temporal to take up the cause of the liberties of
+England, and inquire into the evidence of the birth of the Prince of
+Wales.</p>
+<p>People shrugged their shoulders, but looked volumes, though it was
+no time nor place for saying more; and when in the chapel, that countenance
+of Bishop Ken, so beautiful in outward form, so expressive of strength,
+sweetness, and devotion, brought back such a flood of old associations
+to Anne, that it was enough to change the whole current of her thoughts
+and make her her own mother&rsquo;s child again, even before he opened
+his mouth.&nbsp; She caught his sweet voice in the Psalms, and closing
+her eyes seemed to be in the Cathedral once more among those mighty
+columns and arches; and when he began his sermon, on the text, &lsquo;Let
+the Saints be joyful with glory, let them rejoice in their beds,&rsquo;
+she found the Communion of Saints in Paradise and on earth knit together
+in one fellowship as truly and preciously brought home to her as ever
+it had been to Pauline, and moreover when she thought of her mother,
+&lsquo;the lurid mist&rsquo; was dispelled which had so haunted her
+the night before.</p>
+<p>The longing to speak to him awoke; and as he was quitting the chapel
+in full procession his kindly eye lit upon her with a look of recognition;
+and before she had moved from her place, one of the attendant clergy
+came back by his desire to conduct her to him.</p>
+<p>He held out his hand as she courtesied low.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mistress Woodford,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;my old friend&rsquo;s
+niece!&nbsp; He wrote to me of you, but I have had no opportunity of
+seeing you before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, my Lord!&nbsp; I was so much longing to see and speak
+with you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am lodging at Lambeth,&rdquo; said the Bishop, &ldquo;and
+it is too far to take you with me thither, but perhaps my good brother
+here,&rdquo; turning to the chaplain, &ldquo;can help us to a room where
+we can be private.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was done; the chaplain&rsquo;s parlour at the Cockpit was placed
+at their disposal, and there a few kind words from Bishop Ken led to
+the unburthening of her heavy heart.&nbsp; Of Ken&rsquo;s replies to
+the controversial difficulties there is no need to tell.&nbsp; Indeed,
+ambition was far more her temptation than any real difficulties as to
+doctrine.&nbsp; Her dissatisfaction at being unable to answer the questions
+raised by Father Crump was exaggerated as the excuse and cover to herself
+of her craving for escape from her present subordinate post; and this
+the Bishop soon saw, and tenderly but firmly drew her to own both this
+and to confess the ambitious spirit which had led her into this scene
+of temptation.&nbsp; &ldquo;It was true indeed,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that
+trial by our own error is hardest to encounter, but you have repented,
+and by God&rsquo;s grace, my child, I trust you will be enabled to steer
+your course aright through the trials of loyalty to our God and to our
+King that are coming upon us all.&nbsp; Ever remember God and the plain
+duty first, His anointed next.&nbsp; Is there more that you would like
+to tell me? for you still bear a troubled look, and I have full time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then Anne told him all the strange adventure of Portchester Castle,
+and even of the apparition of the night before.&nbsp; That gentleness
+and sympathy seemed to draw out all that was in her heart, and to her
+surprise, he did not treat the story of that figure as necessarily a
+delusion.&nbsp; He had known and heard too much of spiritual manifestations
+to the outward senses to declare that such things could not be.</p>
+<p>What she had seen might be explained by one of four hypotheses.&nbsp;
+It was either a phantom of her brain, and her being fully awake, although
+recently dwelling on the recollection, rendered that idea less probable,
+or the young man had not been killed and she had seen him in <i>propri&acirc;
+person&acirc;</i>.</p>
+<p>She had Charles Archfield&rsquo;s word that the death was certain.&nbsp;
+He had never been heard of again, and if alive, the walk before Whitehall
+was the last place where he would be.&nbsp; As to mistaking any one
+else for him, the Bishop remembered enough of the queer changeling elf
+to agree with her that it was not a very probable contingency.&nbsp;
+And if it were indeed a spirit, why should it visit her?&nbsp; There
+had been one good effect certainly in the revival of home thoughts and
+turning her mind from the allurements of favour, but that did not seem
+to account for the spirit seeking her out.</p>
+<p>Was it, Anne faltered, a sign that she ought to confess all, for
+the sake of procuring Christian burial for him.&nbsp; Yet how should
+she, when she had promised silence to young Archfield?&nbsp; True, it
+was for his wife&rsquo;s sake, and she was dead; but there were the
+rest of his family and himself to be considered.&nbsp; What should she
+do?</p>
+<p>The Bishop thought a little while, then said that he did not believe
+that she ought to speak without Mr. Archfield&rsquo;s consent, unless
+she saw any one else brought into danger by her silence.&nbsp; If it
+ever became possible, he thought, that she should ascertain whether
+the body were in the vault, and if so, it might be possible to procure
+burial for it, perhaps without identification, or at any rate without
+making known what could only cause hostility and distress between the
+two families, unless the young man himself on his return should make
+the confession.&nbsp; This the Bishop evidently considered the sounder,
+though the harder course, but he held that Anne had no right to take
+the initiative.&nbsp; She could only wait, and bear her load alone;
+but the extreme kindness and compassion with which he talked to her
+soothed and comforted her so much that she felt infinitely relieved
+and strengthened when he dismissed her with his blessing, and far happier
+and more at peace than she had been since that terrible summer morning,
+though greatly humbled, and taught to repent of her aspirations after
+earthly greatness, and to accept her present condition as a just retribution,
+and a trial of constancy.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX<br />
+The Daughter&rsquo;s Secret</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Thy sister&rsquo;s naught: O Regan, she hath tied<br />
+Sharp-tooth&rsquo;d unkindness, like a vulture, here:<br />
+I can scarce speak to thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>King Lear.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Am I&mdash;oh! am I going home?&rdquo; thought Anne.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;My uncle will be at Winchester.&nbsp; I am glad of it.&nbsp;
+I could not yet bear to see Portchester again.&nbsp; That Shape would
+be there.&nbsp; Yet how shall I deal with what seems laid on me?&nbsp;
+But oh! the joy of escaping from this weary, weary court!&nbsp; Oh,
+the folly that took me hither!&nbsp; Now that the Prince is gone, Lady
+Strickland will surely speak to the Queen for my dismissal.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There had been seventeen days of alarms, reports, and counter-reports,
+and now the King, with the Prince of Denmark, had gone to join the army
+on Salisbury Plain, and at the same time the little Prince of Wales
+had been sent off to his half-brother, the Duke of Berwick, at Portsmouth,
+under charge of Lady Powys, there to be embarked for France.&nbsp; Anne
+had been somewhat disappointed at not going with them, hoping that when
+at Portsmouth or in passing Winchester she might see her uncle and obtain
+her release, for she had no desire to be taken abroad; but it was decreed
+otherwise.&nbsp; Miss Dunord went, rejoicing and thankful to be returning
+to France, and the other three rockers remained.</p>
+<p>There had already been more than one day of alarms and tumults.&nbsp;
+The Body-guards within were always on duty; the Life-guards without
+were constantly patrolling; and on the 5th of November, when the Prince
+of Orange was known to be near at hand, and was in fact actually landing
+at Torbay, the mob had with difficulty been restrained from burning
+in effigy, not only Guy Fawkes, but Pope, cardinals, and mitred bishops,
+in front of the palace, and actually paraded them all, with a figure
+of poor Sir Edmondbury Godfrey bearing his head in his hand, tied on
+horseback behind a Jesuit, full before the windows, with yells of</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;The Pope, the Pope,<br />
+Up the ladder and down the rope,&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and clattering of warming-pans.</p>
+<p>Jane Humphreys was dreadfully frightened.&nbsp; Anne found her crouching
+close to her bed, with the curtains wrapped round her.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have
+they got in?&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;O Miss Woodford, how shall
+we make them believe we are good Protestants?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And when this terror had subsided, and it was well known that the
+Dutch were at Exeter, there was another panic, for one of the Life-guardsmen
+had told her to beware, since if the Royal troops at Hounslow were beaten,
+the Papists would surely take their revenge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am to scream from the windows to Mr. Shaw,&rdquo; she said;
+but what good will that do if the priests and the Frenchmen have strangled
+me?&nbsp; And perhaps he won&rsquo;t be on guard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was only trying to frighten you,&rdquo; suggested Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear me, Miss Woodford, aren&rsquo;t you afraid?&nbsp; You
+have the stomach of a lion.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, what would be the good of hurting us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>However, Anne was not at all surprised, when on the very evening
+of the Prince&rsquo;s departure, old Mrs. Humphreys, a venerable-looking
+dame in handsome but Puritanically-fashioned garments, came in a hackney
+coach to request in her son&rsquo;s name that her granddaughter might
+return with her, as her occupation was at an end.</p>
+<p>Jane was transported with joy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, ay,&rdquo; said the grandmother, &ldquo;look at you now,
+and think how crazy you were to go to the palace, though &rsquo;twas
+always against my judgment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, I little knew how mortal dull it would be!&rdquo; said
+Jane.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&rsquo;ve found it no better than the husks that the swine
+did eat, eh?&nbsp; So much the better and safer for your soul, child.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nobody wanted to retain Jane, and while she was hastily putting her
+things together, the grandmother turned to Anne: &ldquo;And you, Mistress
+Woodford, from what I hear, you have been very good in keeping my silly
+child stanch to her religion and true to her duty.&nbsp; If ever on
+a pinch you needed a friend in London, my son and I would be proud to
+serve you&mdash;Master Joshua Humphreys, at the Golden Lamb, Gracechurch
+Street, mind you.&nbsp; No one knows what may hap in these strange and
+troublesome times, and you might be glad of a house to go to till you
+can send to your own friends&mdash;that is, if we are not all murdered
+by the Papists first.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Though Anne did not expect such a catastrophe as this, she was really
+grateful for the offer, and thought it possible that she might avail
+herself of it, as she had not been able to communicate with any of her
+mother&rsquo;s old friends, and Bishop Ken was not to her knowledge
+still in London.</p>
+<p>She watched anxiously for the opportunity of asking Lady Strickland
+whether she might apply for her dismissal, and write to her uncle to
+fetch her home.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Child,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;I think you love the Queen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed I do, madam.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is well that at this juncture all Protestants should not
+leave her.&nbsp; You are a gentlewoman in manner, and can speak her
+native tongue, friends are falling from her, scarcely ladies are left
+enough to make a fit appearance around her; if you are faithful to her,
+remain, I entreat of you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was no resisting such an appeal, and Anne remained in the rooms
+now left bare and empty, until a message was brought to her to come
+to the Queen.&nbsp; Mary Beatrice sat in a chair by her fire, looking
+sad and listless, her eyes red with weeping, but she gave her sweet
+smile as the girl entered, and held out her hand, saying in her sweet
+Italian, &ldquo;You are faithful, Signorina Anna! you remain!&nbsp;
+That is well; but now my son is gone, Anna, you must be mine.&nbsp;
+I make you my reader instead of his rocker.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As Anne knelt on one knee to kiss hands with tears in her eyes, the
+Queen impulsively threw her arms round her neck and kissed her.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Ah, you loved him, and he loved you, <i>il mio tesorino</i>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Promotion <i>had</i> come&mdash;how strangely.&nbsp; She had to enter
+on her duties at once, and to read some chapters of an Italian version
+of the <i>Imitation</i>.&nbsp; A reader was of a higher grade of importance
+than a rocker, and for the ensuing days, when not in attendance on the
+Queen, Anne was the companion of Lady Strickland and Lady Oglethorpe.&nbsp;
+In the absence of the King and Prince, the Queen received Princess Anne
+at her own table, and Lady Churchill and Lady Fitzhardinge joined that
+of her ladies-in-waiting.</p>
+<p>Lady Churchill, with her long neck, splendid hair and complexion,
+short chin, and sparkling blue eyes, was beautiful to look at, but not
+at all disposed to be agreeable to the Queen&rsquo;s ladies, whom she
+treated with a sort of blunt scorn, not at all disguised by the forms
+of courtesy.&nbsp; However, she had, to their relief, a good deal of
+leave of absence just then to visit her children, as indeed the ladies
+agreed that she did pretty much as she chose, and that the faithful
+Mrs. Morley was somewhat afraid of the dear Mrs. Freeman.</p>
+<p>One evening in coming up some steps Princess Anne entangled her foot
+in her pink taffetas petticoat, nearly fell, and tore a large rent,
+besides breaking the thread of the festoons of seed pearls which bordered
+it, and scattering them on the floor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lack-a-day!&nbsp; Lack-a-day!&rdquo; sighed she, as after
+a little screaming she gathered herself up again.&nbsp; &ldquo;That
+new coat!&nbsp; How shall I ever face Danvers again such a figure?&nbsp;
+She&rsquo;s an excellent tirewoman, but she will be neither to have
+nor to hold when she sees that gown&mdash;that she set such store by!&nbsp;
+Nay, I can hardly step for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think I could repair it, with Her Majesty&rsquo;s and your
+Royal Highness&rsquo;s permission,&rdquo; said Anne, who was creeping
+about on her knees picking up the pearls.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! do! do!&nbsp; There&rsquo;s a good child, and then Danvers
+and Dawson need know nothing about it,&rdquo; cried the Princess in
+great glee.&nbsp; &ldquo;You remember Dawson, don&rsquo;t you, little
+Woodie, as we used to call you, and how she used to rate us when we
+were children if we soiled our frocks?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So, in the withdrawing-room, Anne sat on the floor with needle and
+silk, by the light of the wax candles, deftly repairing the rent, and
+then threading the scattered pearls, and arranging the festoon so as
+to hide the darn.&nbsp; The Princess was delighted, and while the poor
+wife lay back in her chair, thankful that behind her fan she could give
+way to her terrible anxieties about her little son, who might be crossing
+to France, and her husband, suffering from fearful nose-bleeding, and
+wellnigh alone among traitors and deserters, the step-daughter, on the
+other side of the great hearth, chattered away complacently to &lsquo;little
+Woodford.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you recollect old Dawson, and how she used to grumble when
+I went to sup with the Duchess&mdash;my own mother&mdash;you know, because
+she used to give me chocolate, and she said it made me scream at night,
+and be over fat by day?&nbsp; Ah! that was before you used to come among
+us.&nbsp; It was after I went to France to my poor aunt of Orleans.&nbsp;
+I remember she never would let us kiss her for fear of spoiling her
+complexion, and Mademoiselle and I did so hate living <i>maigre</i>
+on the fast days.&nbsp; I was glad enough to get home at last, and then
+my sister was jealous because I talked French better than she did.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So the Princess prattled on without needing much reply, until her
+namesake had finished her work, with which she was well pleased, and
+promised to remember her.&nbsp; To Anne it was an absolute marvel how
+she could thus talk when she knew that her husband had deserted her
+father in his need, and that things were in a most critical position.</p>
+<p>The Queen could not refrain from a sigh of relief when her step-daughter
+had retired to the Cockpit; and after seeking her sleepless bed, she
+begged Anne, &ldquo;if it did not too much incommode her, to read to
+her from the Gospel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The next day was Sunday, and Anne felt almost as if deserting her
+cause, when going to the English service in Whitehall Chapel Royal,
+now almost emptied except of the Princess&rsquo;s suite, and some of
+these had the bad taste and profanity to cough and chatter all through
+the special prayer drawn up by the Archbishop for the King&rsquo;s safety.</p>
+<p>People were not very reverent, and as all stood up at the end of
+the Advent Sunday service to let the Princess sweep by in her glittering
+green satin petticoat, peach-coloured velvet train, and feather-crowned
+head, she laid a hand on Anne&rsquo;s arm, and whispered, &ldquo;Follow
+me to my closet, little Woodford.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was no choice but to obey, as the Queen would not require her
+reader till after dinner, and Anne followed after the various attendants,
+who did not seem very willing to forward a private interview with a
+possible rival, though, as Anne supposed, the object must be to convey
+some message to the Queen.&nbsp; By the time she arrived and had been
+admitted to the inner chamber or dressing-room, the Princess had thrown
+off her more cumbrous finery, and sat at ease in an arm-chair.&nbsp;
+She nodded her be-curled head, and said, &ldquo;You can keep a secret,
+little Woodie?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can, madam, but I do not love one,&rdquo; said Anne, thinking
+of her most burthensome one.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, no need to keep this long.&nbsp; You are a good young
+maiden, and my own poor mother&rsquo;s godchild, and you are handy and
+notable.&nbsp; You deserve better preferment than ever you will get
+in that Popish household, where your religion is in danger.&nbsp; Now,
+I am not going to be in jeopardy here any longer, nor let myself be
+kept hostage for his Highness.&nbsp; Come to my rooms at bedtime.&nbsp;
+Slip in when I wish the Queen good-night, and I&rsquo;ll find an excuse.&nbsp;
+Then you shall come with me to&mdash;no, I&rsquo;ll not say where, and
+I&rsquo;ll make your fortune, only mum&rsquo;s the word.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;Your Royal Highness is very good, but I am sworn
+to the Prince and Queen.&nbsp; I could not leave them without permission.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Prince!&nbsp; Prince!&nbsp; Pretty sort of a Prince.&nbsp;
+Prince of brickbats, as Churchill says.&nbsp; Nay, girl, don&rsquo;t
+turn away in that fashion.&nbsp; Consider.&nbsp; Your religion is in
+danger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, madam, my religion would not be served by breaking my
+oath.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pooh!&nbsp; What&rsquo;s your oath to a mere pretender?&nbsp;
+Besides, consider your fortune.&nbsp; Rocker to a puling babe&mdash;even
+if he was what they say he is.&nbsp; And don&rsquo;t build on the Queen&rsquo;s
+favour&mdash;even if she remains what she is now, she is too much beset
+with Papists and foreigners to do anything for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not,&rdquo; Anne began to say, but the Princess gave
+her no time.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Besides, pride will have a fall, and if you are a good maid,
+and hold your tongue, and serve me well in this strait, I&rsquo;ll make
+you my maid of honour, and marry you so that you shall put Lady before
+your name.&nbsp; Ay, and get good preferment for your uncle, who has
+had only a poor stall from the King here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne repressed an inclination to say this was not the way in which
+her uncle would wish to get promotion, and only replied, &ldquo;Your
+Royal Highness is very good, but&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Whereat the Princess, in a huff, exclaimed, &ldquo;Oh, very well,
+if you choose to be torn to pieces by the mob, and slaughtered by the
+priests, like poor Godfrey, and burnt by the Papists at last, unless
+you go to Mass, you may stay for aught I care, and joy go with you.&nbsp;
+I thought I was doing you a kindness for my poor mother&rsquo;s sake,
+but it seems you know best.&nbsp; If you like to cast in your lot with
+the Pope, I wash my hands of you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Accordingly Anne courtesied herself off, not seriously alarmed as
+to the various catastrophes foretold by the Princess, though a little
+shaken in nerves.&nbsp; Here then was another chance of promotion, certainly
+without treason to her profession of faith, but so offered that honour
+could not but revolt against it, though in truth poor Princess Anne
+was neither so foolish nor so heartless a woman as she appeared in the
+excitement to which an uneasy conscience, the expectation of a great
+enterprise, and a certain amount of terror had worked her up; but she
+had high words again in the evening, as was supposed, with the Queen.&nbsp;
+Certainly Anne found her own Royal Mistress weeping and agitated, though
+she only owned to being very anxious about the health of the King, who
+had had a second violent attack of bleeding at the nose, and she did
+not seem consoled by the assurances of her elder attendants that the
+relief had probably saved him from a far more dangerous attack.&nbsp;
+Again Anne read to her till a late hour, but next morning was strangely
+disturbed.</p>
+<p>The Royal household had not been long dressed, and breakfast had
+just been served to the ladies, when loud screams were heard, most startling
+in the unsettled and anxious state of affairs.&nbsp; The Queen, pale
+and trembling, came out of her chamber with her hair on her shoulders.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Tell me at once, for pity&rsquo;s sake.&nbsp; Is it my husband
+or my son?&rdquo; she asked with clasped hands, as two or three of the
+Princess&rsquo;s servants rushed forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Princess, the Princess!&rdquo; was the cry, &ldquo;the
+priests have murdered her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What have you done with her, madam?&rdquo; rudely demanded
+Mrs. Buss, one of the lost lady&rsquo;s nurses.</p>
+<p>Mary Beatrice drew herself up with grave dignity, saying, &ldquo;I
+suppose your mistress is where she likes to be.&nbsp; I know nothing
+of her, but I have no doubt that you will soon hear of her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was something in the Queen&rsquo;s manner that hushed the outcry
+in her presence, but the women, with Lady Clarendon foremost of them,
+continued to seek up and down the two palaces as if they thought the
+substantial person of the Princess Anne could be hidden in a cupboard.</p>
+<p>Anne, in the first impulse, exclaimed, &ldquo;She is gone!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In a moment Mrs. Royer turned, &ldquo;Gone, did you say?&nbsp; Do
+you know it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You knew it and kept it secret!&rdquo; cried Lady Strickland.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A traitor too!&rdquo; said Lady Oglethorpe, in her vehement
+Irish tone.&nbsp; &ldquo;I would not have thought it of Nanny Moore&rsquo;s
+daughter!&rdquo; and she turned her eyes in sad reproach on Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you know, tell me where she is gone,&rdquo; cried Mrs.
+Buss, and the cry was re-echoed by the other women, while Anne&rsquo;s
+startled &ldquo;I cannot tell!&nbsp; I do not know!&rdquo; was unheeded.</p>
+<p>Only the Queen raising her hand gravely said, &ldquo;Silence!&nbsp;
+What is this?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miss Woodford knew.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And never told!&rdquo; cried the babble of voices.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come hither, Mistress Woodford,&rdquo; said the Queen.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Tell me, do you know where Her Highness is?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, please your Majesty,&rdquo; said Anne, trembling from
+head to foot.&nbsp; &ldquo;I do not know where she is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you know of her purpose?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your Majesty pardon me.&nbsp; She called me to her closet
+yesterday and pledged me to secrecy before I knew what she would say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only youthful inexperience will permit that pledge to be implied
+in matters of State,&rdquo; said the Queen.&nbsp; &ldquo;Continue, Mistress
+Woodford; what did she tell you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She said she feared to be made a hostage for the Prince of
+Denmark, and meant to escape, and she bade me come to her chamber at
+night to go with her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And wherefore did you not?&nbsp; You are of her religion,&rdquo;
+said the Queen bitterly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madam, how could I break mine oath to your Majesty and His
+Royal Highness?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you thought concealing the matter according to that oath?&nbsp;
+Nay, nay, child, I blame you not.&nbsp; It was a hard strait between
+your honour to her and your duty to the King and to me, and I cannot
+but be thankful to any one who does regard her word.&nbsp; But this
+desertion will be a sore grief to His Majesty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mary Beatrice was fairer-minded than the women, who looked askance
+at the girl, Princess Anne&rsquo;s people resenting that one of the
+other household should have been chosen as confidante, and the Queen&rsquo;s
+being displeased that the secret had been kept.&nbsp; But at that moment
+frightful yells and shouts arose, and a hasty glance from the windows
+showed a mass of men, women, and children howling for their Princess.&nbsp;
+They would tear down Whitehall if she were not delivered up to them.&nbsp;
+However, a line of helmeted Life-guards on their heavy horses was drawn
+up between, with sabres held upright, and there seemed no disposition
+to rush upon these.&nbsp; Lord Clarendon, uncle to the Princess, had
+satisfied himself that she had really escaped, and he now came out and
+assured the mob, in a stentorian voice, that he was perfectly satisfied
+of his niece&rsquo;s safety, waving the letter she had left on her toilet-table.</p>
+<p>The mob shouted, &ldquo;Bless the Princess!&nbsp; Hurrah for the
+Protestant faith!&nbsp; No warming-pans!&rdquo; but in a good-tempered
+mood; and the poor little garrison breathed more freely; but Anne did
+not feel herself forgiven.&nbsp; She was in a manner sent to Coventry,
+and treated as if she were on the enemy&rsquo;s side.&nbsp; Never had
+her proud nature suffered so much, and she shed bitter tears as she
+said to herself, &ldquo;It is very unjust!&nbsp; What could I have done?&nbsp;
+How could I stop Her Highness from speaking?&nbsp; Could they expect
+me to run in and accuse her?&nbsp; Oh, that I were at home again!&nbsp;
+Mother, mother, you little know!&nbsp; Of what use am I now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was the very question asked by Hester Bridgeman, whom she found
+packing her clothes in her room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take care that this is sent after me,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;when
+a messenger I shall send calls for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, you have your dismissal?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I should no more get it than you have done.&nbsp; They
+cannot afford to let any one go, you see, or they will have to dress
+up the chambermaids to stand behind the Queen&rsquo;s chair.&nbsp; I
+have settled it with my cousin, Harry Bridgeman, I shall mix with the
+throng that come to ask for news, and be off with him before the crowd
+breaks in, as they will some of these days, for the guards are but half-hearted.&nbsp;
+My Portia, why did not you take a good offer, and go with the Princess?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought it would be base.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And much you gained by it!&nbsp; You are only suspected and
+accused.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t be a rat leaving a sinking ship.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is courteous, but I forgive it, Portia, as I know you
+will repent of your folly.&nbsp; But you never did know which side to
+look for the butter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Perhaps seeing how ugly desertion and defection looked in others
+made constancy easier to Anne, much as she longed for the Close at Winchester,
+and she even thought with a hope of the Golden Lamb, Gracechurch, as
+an immediate haven sure to give her a welcome.</p>
+<p>Her occupation of reading to the Queen was ended by the King&rsquo;s
+return, so physically exhausted by violent nose-bleeding, so despondent
+at the universal desertion, and so broken-hearted at his daughter&rsquo;s
+defection, that his wife was absorbed in attending upon him.</p>
+<p>Anne began to watch for an opportunity to demand a dismissal, which
+she thought would exempt her from all blame, but she was surprised and
+a little dismayed by being summoned to the King in the Queen&rsquo;s
+chamber.&nbsp; He was lying on a couch clad in a loose dressing-gown
+instead of his laced coat, and a red night-cap replacing his heavy peruke,
+and his face was as white and sallow as if he were recovering from a
+long illness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Little godchild,&rdquo; he said, holding out his hand as Anne
+made her obeisance, &ldquo;the Queen tells me you can read well.&nbsp;
+I have a fancy to hear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Immensely relieved at the kindness of his tone, Anne courtesied,
+and murmured out her willingness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Read this,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I would fain hear this;
+my father loved it.&nbsp; Here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne felt her task a hard one when the King pointed to the third
+Act of Shakespeare&rsquo;s <i>Richard II</i>.&nbsp; She steeled herself
+and strengthened her voice as best she could, and struggled on till
+she came to&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll give my jewels for a set of beads,<br />
+My gay apparel for an almsman&rsquo;s gown,<br />
+My figured goblets for a dish of wood,<br />
+My sceptre for a palmer&rsquo;s walking-staff,<br />
+My subjects for a pair of carved saints,<br />
+And my large kingdom for a little grave,<br />
+A little, little grave.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>There she fairly broke down, and sobbed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Little one, little one,&rdquo; said James, you are sorry for
+poor Richard, eh?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, sir!&rdquo; was all she could say.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you are in disgrace, they tell me, because my daughter
+chose to try to entice you away,&rdquo; said James, &ldquo;and you felt
+bound not to betray her.&nbsp; Never mind; it was an awkward case of
+conscience, and there&rsquo;s not too much faithfulness to spare in
+these days.&nbsp; We shall know whom to trust to another time.&nbsp;
+Can you continue now?&nbsp; I would take a lesson how, &lsquo;with mine
+own hands to give away my crown.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was well for Anne that fresh tidings were brought in at that moment,
+and she had to retire, with the sore feeling turned into an enthusiastic
+pity and loyalty, which needed the relief of sobs and mental vows of
+fidelity.&nbsp; She felt herself no longer in disgrace with her Royal
+master and mistress, but she was not in favour with her few companions
+left&mdash;all who could not get over her secrecy, and thought her at
+least a half traitor as well as a heretic.</p>
+<p>Whitehall was almost in a state of siege, the turbulent mob continually
+coming to shout, &lsquo;No Popery!&rsquo; and the like, though they
+proceeded no farther.&nbsp; The ministers and other gentlemen came and
+went, but the priests and the ladies durst not venture out for fear
+of being recognised and insulted, if not injured.&nbsp; Bad news came
+in from day to day, and no tidings of the Prince of Wales being in safety
+in France.&nbsp; Once Anne received a letter from her uncle, which cheered
+her much.</p>
+<blockquote><p>DEAR CHILD&mdash;So far as I can gather, your employment
+is at an end, if it be true as reported that the Prince of Wales is
+at Portsmouth, with the intent that he should be carried to France;
+but the gentlemen of the navy seem strongly disposed to prevent such
+a transportation of the heir of the realm to a foreign country.&nbsp;
+I fear me that you are in a state of doubt and anxiety, but I need not
+exhort your good mother&rsquo;s child to be true and loyal to her trust
+and to the Anointed of the Lord in all things lawful at all costs.&nbsp;
+If you are left in any distress or perplexity, go either to Sir Theophilus
+Oglethorpe&rsquo;s house, or to that of my good old friend, the Dean
+of Westminster; and as soon as I hear from you I will endeavour to ride
+to town and bring you home to my house, which is greatly at a loss without
+its young mistress.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The letter greatly refreshed Anne&rsquo;s spirits, and gave her something
+to look forward to, giving her energy to stitch at a set of lawn cuffs
+and bands for her uncle, and think with the more pleasure of a return
+that his time of residence at Winchester lay between her and that vault
+in the castle.</p>
+<p>There were no more attempts made at her conversion.&nbsp; Every one
+was too anxious and occupied, and one or more of the chiefly obnoxious
+priests were sent privately away from day to day.&nbsp; While summer
+friends departed, Anne often thought of Bishop Ken&rsquo;s counsel as
+to loyalty to Heaven and man.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX<br />
+The Flight</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Storms may rush in, and crimes and woes<br />
+&nbsp; Deform that peaceful bower;<br />
+They may not mar the deep repose<br />
+&nbsp; Of that immortal flower.<br />
+Though only broken hearts be found<br />
+&nbsp; To watch his cradle by,<br />
+No blight is on his slumbers sound,<br />
+&nbsp; No touch of harmful eye.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>KEBLE.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The news was even worse and worse in that palace of despondency and
+terror.&nbsp; Notice had arrived that Lord Dartmouth was withheld from
+despatching the young Prince to France by his own scruples and those
+of the navy; and orders were sent for the child&rsquo;s return.&nbsp;
+Then came a terrible alarm.&nbsp; The escort sent to meet him were reported
+to have been attacked by the rabble on entering London and dispersed,
+so that each man had to shift for himself.</p>
+<p>There was a quarter of an hour which seemed many hours of fearful
+suspense, while King and Queen both knelt at their altar, praying in
+agony for the child whom they pictured to themselves in the hands of
+the infuriated mob, too much persuaded of his being an imposture to
+pity his unconscious innocence.&nbsp; No one who saw the blanched cheeks
+and agonised face of Mary Beatrice, or James&rsquo;s stern, mute misery,
+could have believed for a moment in the cruel delusion that he was no
+child of theirs.</p>
+<p>The Roman Catholic women were with them.&nbsp; To enter the oratory
+would in those circumstances have been a surrender of principle, but
+none the less did Anne pray with fervent passion in her chamber for
+pity for the child, and comfort for his parents.&nbsp; At last there
+was a stir, and hurrying out to the great stair, Anne saw a man in plain
+clothes replying in an Irish accent to the King, who was supporting
+the Queen with his arm.&nbsp; Happily the escort had missed the Prince
+of Wales.&nbsp; They had been obliged to turn back to London without
+meeting him, and from that danger he had been saved.</p>
+<p>A burst of tears and a cry of fervent thanksgiving relieved the Queen&rsquo;s
+heart, and James gave eager thanks instead of the reprimand the colonel
+had expected for his blundering.</p>
+<p>A little later, another messenger brought word that Lord and Lady
+Powys had halted at Guildford with their charge.&nbsp; A French gentleman,
+Monsieur de St. Victor, was understood to have undertaken to bring him
+to London&mdash;understood&mdash;for everything was whispered rather
+than told among the panic-stricken women.&nbsp; No one who knew the
+expectation could go to bed that night except that the King and Queen
+had&mdash;in order to disarm suspicion&mdash;to go through the accustomed
+ceremonies of the <i>coucher</i>.&nbsp; The ladies sat or lay on their
+beds intently listening, as hour after hour chimed from the clocks.</p>
+<p>At last, at about three in the morning, the challenge of the sentinels
+was heard from point to point.&nbsp; Every one started up, and hurried
+almost pell-mell towards the postern door.&nbsp; The King and Queen
+were both descending a stair leading from the King&rsquo;s dressing-room,
+and as the door was cautiously opened, it admitted a figure in a fur
+cloak, which he unfolded, and displayed the sleeping face of the infant
+well wrapped from the December cold.</p>
+<p>With rapture the Queen gathered him into her arms, and the father
+kissed him with a vehemence that made him awake and cry.&nbsp; St. Victor
+had thought it safer that his other attendants should come in by degrees
+in the morning, and thus Miss Woodford was the only actually effective
+nursery attendant at hand.&nbsp; His food was waiting by the fire in
+his own sleeping chamber, and thither he was carried.&nbsp; There the
+Queen held him on her lap, while Anne fed him, and he smiled at her
+and held out his arms.</p>
+<p>The King came, and making a sign to Anne not to move, stood watching.</p>
+<p>Presently he said, &ldquo;She has kept one secret, we may trust her
+with another.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, not yet, not yet,&rdquo; implored the Queen.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now
+I have both my treasures again, let me rest in peace upon them for a
+little while.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The King turned away with eyes full of tears while Anne was lulling
+the child to sleep.&nbsp; She wondered, but durst not ask the Queen,
+where was the tiler&rsquo;s wife; but later she learnt from Miss Dunord,
+that the woman had been so terrified by the cries of the multitude against
+the &lsquo;pretender,&rsquo; and still more at the sight of the sea,
+that she had gone into transports of fright, implored to go home, and
+perhaps half wilfully, become useless, so that the weaning already commenced
+had to be expedited, and the fretfulness of the poor child had been
+one of the troubles for some days.&nbsp; However, he seemed on his return
+to have forgotten his troubles, and Anne had him in her arms nearly
+all the next day.</p>
+<p>It was not till late in the evening that Anne knew what the King
+had meant.&nbsp; Then, while she was walking up and down the room, amusing
+the little Prince with showing by turns the window and his face in a
+large mirror, the Queen came in, evidently fresh from weeping, and holding
+out her arms for him, said, after looking to see that there was no other
+audience&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Child, the King would repose a trust in you.&nbsp; He wills
+that you should accompany me to-night on a voyage to France to put this
+little angel in safety.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As your Majesty will,&rdquo; returned Anne; &ldquo;I will
+do my best.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So the King said.&nbsp; He knew his brave sailor&rsquo;s daughter
+was worthy of his trust, and you can speak French.&nbsp; It is well,
+for we go under the escort of Messieurs de Lauzun and St. Victor.&nbsp;
+Be ready at midnight.&nbsp; Lady Strickland or the good Labadie will
+explain more to you, but do not speak of this to anyone else.&nbsp;
+You have leave now,&rdquo; she added, as she herself carried the child
+towards his father&rsquo;s rooms.</p>
+<p>The maiden&rsquo;s heart swelled at the trust reposed in her, and
+the King&rsquo;s kind words, and she kept back the sense of anxiety
+and doubt as to so vague a future.&nbsp; She found Mrs. Labadie lying
+on her bed awake, but trying to rest between two busy nights, and she
+was then told that there was to be a flight from the palace of the Queen
+and Prince at midnight, Mrs. Labadie and Anne alone going with them,
+though Lord and Lady Powys and Lady Strickland, with the Queen&rsquo;s
+Italian ladies, would meet them on board the yacht which was waiting
+at Gravesend.&nbsp; The nurse advised Anne to put a few necessary equipments
+into a knapsack bound under a cloak, and to leave other garments with
+her own in charge of Mr. Labadie, who would despatch them with those
+of the suite, and would follow in another day with the King.&nbsp; Doubt
+or refusal there could of course be none in such circumstances, and
+a high-spirited girl like Anne could not but feel a thrill of heart
+at selection for such confidential and signal service at her age, scarcely
+seventeen.&nbsp; Her one wish was to write to her uncle what had become
+of her.&nbsp; Mrs. Labadie hardly thought it safe, but said her husband
+would take charge of a note, and if possible, post it when they were
+safe gone, but nothing of the King&rsquo;s plans must be mentioned.</p>
+<p>The hours passed away anxiously, and yet only too fast.&nbsp; So
+many had quitted the palace that there was nothing remarkable in packing,
+but as Anne collected her properties, she could not help wondering whether
+she should ever see them again.&nbsp; Sometimes her spirit rose at the
+thought of serving her lovely Queen, saving the little Prince, and fulfilling
+the King&rsquo;s trust; at others, she was full of vague depression
+at the thought of being cut off from all she knew and loved, with seas
+between, and with so little notice to her uncle, who might never learn
+where she was; but she knew she had his approval in venturing all, and
+making any sacrifice for the King whom all deserted; and she really
+loved her Queen and little Prince.</p>
+<p>The night came, and she and Mrs. Labadie, fully equipped in cloaks
+and hoods, waited together, Anne moving about restlessly, the elder
+woman advising her to rest while she could.&nbsp; The little Prince,
+all unconscious of the dangers of the night, or of his loss of a throne,
+lay among his wraps in his cradle fast asleep.</p>
+<p>By and by the door opened, and treading softly in came the King in
+his dressing-gown and night-cap, the Queen closely muffled, Lady Strickland
+also dressed for a journey, and two gentlemen, the one tall and striking-looking,
+the other slim and dark, in their cloaks, namely, Lauzun and St. Victor.</p>
+<p>It was one of those supreme moments almost beyond speech or manifestation
+of feeling.</p>
+<p>The King took his child in his arms, kissed him, and solemnly said
+to Lauzun, &ldquo;I confide my wife and son to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Both Frenchmen threw themselves on their knees kissing his hand with
+a vow of fidelity.&nbsp; Then giving the infant to Mrs. Labadie, James
+folded his wife in his arms in a long mute embrace; Anne carried the
+basket containing food for the child; and first with a lantern went
+St. Victor, then Lauzun, handing the Queen; Mrs. Labadie with the child,
+and Anne following, they sped down the stairs, along the great gallery,
+with steps as noiseless as they could make them, down another stair
+to a door which St. Victor opened.</p>
+<p>A sentry challenged, sending a thrill of dismay through the anxious
+hearts, but St. Victor had the word, and on they went into the privy
+gardens, where often Anne had paced behind Mrs. Labadie as the Prince
+took his airing.&nbsp; Startling lights from the windows fell on them,
+illuminating the drops of rain that plashed round them on that grim
+December night, and their steps sounded on the gravel, while still the
+babe, sheltered under the cloak, slept safely.&nbsp; Another door was
+reached, more sentries challenged and passed; here was a street whose
+stones and silent houses shone for a little space as St. Victor raised
+his lantern and exchanged a word with a man on the box of a carriage.</p>
+<p>One by one they were handed in, the Queen, the child, the nurse,
+Anne, and Lauzun, St. Victor taking his place outside.&nbsp; As if in
+a dream they rattled on through the dark street, no one speaking except
+that Lauzun asked the Queen if she were wet.</p>
+<p>It was not far before they stopped at the top of the steps called
+the Horseferry.&nbsp; A few lights twinkled here and there, and were
+reflected trembling in the river, otherwise a black awful gulf, from
+which, on St. Victor&rsquo;s cautious hail, a whistle ascended, and
+a cloaked figure with a lantern came up the steps glistening in the
+rain.</p>
+<p>One by one again, in deep silence, they were assisted down, and into
+the little boat that rocked ominously as they entered it.&nbsp; There
+the women crouched together over the child unable to see one another,
+Anne returning the clasp of a hand on hers, believing it Mrs. Labadie&rsquo;s,
+till on Lauzun&rsquo;s exclaiming, &ldquo;<i>Est ce que j&rsquo;incommode
+sa</i> <i>Majest&eacute;</i>?&rdquo; the reply showed her that it was
+the Queen&rsquo;s hand that she held, and she began a startled &ldquo;Pardon,
+your Majesty,&rdquo; but the sweet reply in Italian was, &ldquo;Ah,
+we are as sisters in this stress.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The eager French voice of Lauzun went on, in undertones certainly,
+but as if he had not the faculty of silence, and amid the plash of the
+oars, the rush of the river, and the roar of the rain, it was not easy
+to tell what he said, his voice was only another of the noises, though
+the Queen made little courteous murmurs in reply.&nbsp; It was a hard
+pull against wind and tide towards a little speck of green light which
+was shown to guide the rowers; and when at last they reached it, St.
+Victor&rsquo;s hail was answered by Dusions, one of the servants, and
+they drew to the steps where he held a lantern.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To the coach at once, your Majesty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is at the inn&mdash;ready&mdash;but I feared to let it
+stand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lauzun uttered a French imprecation under his breath, and danced
+on the step with impatience, only restrained so far as to hand out the
+Queen and her two attendants.&nbsp; He was hotly ordering off Dusions
+and St. Victor to bring the coach, when the former suggested that they
+must find a place for the Queen to wait in where they could find her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is that dark building above?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lambeth Church,&rdquo; Dusions answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, your Protestant churches are not open; there is no shelter
+for us there,&rdquo; sighed the Queen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is shelter in the angle of the buttress; I have been
+there, your Majesty,&rdquo; said Dusions.</p>
+<p>Thither then they turned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What can that be?&rdquo; exclaimed the Queen, starting and
+shuddering as a fierce light flashed in the windows and played on the
+wall.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is not within, madame,&rdquo; Lauzun encouraged; &ldquo;it
+is reflected light from a fire somewhere on the other side of the river.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A bonfire for our expulsion.&nbsp; Ah! why should they hate
+us so?&rdquo; sighed the poor Queen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis worse than that, only there&rsquo;s no need to
+tell Her Majesty so,&rdquo; whispered Mrs. Labadie, who, in the difficulties
+of the ascent, had been fain to hand the still-sleeping child to Anne.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis the Catholic chapel of St. Roque.&nbsp; The heretic
+miscreants!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pray Heaven no life be lost,&rdquo; sighed Anne.</p>
+<p>Sinister as the light was, it aided the poor fugitives at that dead
+hour of night to find an angle between the church wall and a buttress
+where the eaves afforded a little shelter from the rain, which slackened
+a little, when they were a little concealed from the road, so that the
+light need not betray them in case any passenger was abroad at such
+an hour, as two chimed from the clock overhead.</p>
+<p>The women kept together close against the wall to avoid the drip
+of the eaves.&nbsp; Lauzun walked up and down like a sentinel, his arms
+folded, and talking all the while, though, as before, his utterances
+were only an accompaniment to the falling rain and howling wind; Mary
+Beatrice was murmuring prayers over the sleeping child, which she now
+held in the innermost corner; Anne, with wide-stretched eyes, was gazing
+into the light cast beyond the buttress by the fire on the opposite
+side, when again there passed across it that form she had seen on All
+Saints&rsquo; Eve&mdash;the unmistakable phantom of Peregrine.</p>
+<p>It was gone into the darkness in another second; but a violent start
+on her part had given a note of alarm, and brought back the Count, whose
+walk had been in the opposite direction.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was it?&nbsp; Any spy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no&mdash;no&mdash;nothing!&nbsp; It was the face of one
+who is dead,&rdquo; gasped Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The poor child&rsquo;s nerve is failing her,&rdquo; said the
+Queen gently, as Lauzun drawing his sword burst out&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it be a spy it <i>shall</i> be the face of one who is dead;&rdquo;
+and he darted into the road, but returned in a few moments, saying no
+one had passed except one of the rowers returning after running up to
+the inn to hasten the coach; how could he have been seen from the church
+wall?&nbsp; The wheels were heard drawing up at that moment, so that
+the only thought was to enter it as quickly as might be in the same
+order as before, after which the start was made, along the road that
+led through the marshes of Lambeth; and then came the inquiry&mdash;an
+anxious one&mdash;whom or what mademoiselle, as Lauzun called her, had
+seen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O monsieur!&rdquo; exclaimed the poor girl in her confusion,
+her best French failing, &ldquo;it was nothing&mdash;no living man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can mademoiselle assure me of that?&nbsp; The dead I fear
+not, the living I would defy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He lives not,&rdquo; said she in an undertone, with a shudder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But who is he that mademoiselle can be so certain?&rdquo;
+asked the Frenchman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&nbsp; I know him well enough,&rdquo; said Anne, unable
+to control her voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mademoiselle must explain herself,&rdquo; said M. de Lauzun.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If he be spirit&mdash;or phantom&mdash;there is no more to say,
+but if he be in the flesh, and a spy&mdash;then&mdash;&rdquo;&nbsp;
+There was a little rattle of his sword.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Speak, I command,&rdquo; interposed the Queen; &ldquo;you
+must satisfy M. le Comte.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus adjured, Anne said in a low voice of horror: &ldquo;It was a
+gentleman of our neighbourhood; he was killed in a duel last summer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&nbsp; You are certain?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had the misfortune to see the fight,&rdquo; sighed Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That accounts for it,&rdquo; said the Queen kindly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If mademoiselle&rsquo;s nerves were shaken by such a remembrance,
+it is not wonderful that it should recur to her at so strange a watch
+as we have been keeping.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It might account for her seeing this <i>revenant</i> cavalier
+in any passenger,&rdquo; said Lauzun, not satisfied yet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one ever was like him,&rdquo; said Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+could not mistake him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May I ask mademoiselle to describe him?&rdquo; continued the
+count.</p>
+<p>Feeling all the time as if this first mention were a sort of betrayal,
+Anne faltered the words: &ldquo;Small, slight, almost misshapen&mdash;with
+a strange one-sided look&mdash;odd, unusual features.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lauzun&rsquo;s laugh jarred on her.&nbsp; &ldquo;Eh! it is not a
+flattering portrait.&nbsp; Mademoiselle is not haunted by a hero of
+romance, it appears, so much as by a demon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And none of those monsieur has employed in our escape answer
+to that description?&rdquo; asked the Queen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Assuredly not, your Majesty.&nbsp; Crooked person and crooked
+mind go together, and St. Victor would only have trusted to your big
+honest rowers of the Tamise.&nbsp; I think we may be satisfied that
+the demoiselle&rsquo;s imagination was excited so as to evoke a phantom
+impressed on her mind by a previous scene of terror.&nbsp; Such things
+have happened in my native Gascony.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne was fain to accept the theory in silence, though it seemed to
+her strange that at a moment when she was for once not thinking of Peregrine,
+her imagination should conjure him up, and there was a strong feeling
+within her that it was something external that had flitted across the
+shadow, not a mere figment of her brain, though the notion was evidently
+accepted, and she could hear a muttering of Mrs. Labadie that this was
+the consequence of employing young wenches with their whims and megrims.</p>
+<p>The Count de Lauzun did his best to entertain the Queen with stories
+of <i>revenants</i> in Gascony and elsewhere, and with reminiscences
+of his eleven years&rsquo; captivity at Pignerol, and his intercourse
+with Fouquet; but whenever in aftertimes Anne Woodford tried to recall
+her nocturnal drive with this strange personage, the chosen and very
+unkind husband of the poor old Grande Mademoiselle, she never could
+recollect anything but the fierce glare of his eyes in the light of
+the lamps as he put her to that terrible interrogation.</p>
+<p>The talk was chiefly monologue.&nbsp; Mrs. Labadie certainly slept,
+perhaps the Queen did so too, and Anne became conscious that she must
+have slumbered likewise, for she found every one gazing at her in the
+pale morning dawn and asking why she cried, &ldquo;O Charles, hold!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As she hastily entreated pardon, Lauzun was heard to murmur, &ldquo;<i>Je
+parie que le revenant se nomme Charles</i>,&rdquo; and she collected
+her senses just in time to check her contradiction, recollecting that
+happily such a name as Charles revealed nothing.&nbsp; The little Prince,
+who had slumbered so opportunely all night, awoke and received infinite
+praise, and what he better appreciated, the food that had been provided
+for him.&nbsp; They were near their journey&rsquo;s end, and it was
+well, for people were awakening and going to their work as they passed
+one of the villages, and once the remark was heard, &ldquo;There goes
+a coach full of Papists.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>However, no attempt was made to stop the party, and as it would be
+daylight when they reached Gravesend, the Queen arranged her disguise
+to resemble, as she hoped, a washerwoman&mdash;taking off her gloves,
+and hiding her hair, while the Prince, happily again asleep, was laid
+in a basket of linen.&nbsp; Anne could not help thinking that she thus
+looked more remarkable than if she had simply embarked as a lady; but
+she meant to represent the attendant of her Italian friend Countess
+Almonde, whom she was to meet on board.</p>
+<p>Leaving the coach outside a little block of houses, the party reached
+a projecting point of land, where three Irish officers received them,
+and conducted them to a boat.&nbsp; Then, wrapped closely in cloaks
+from the chill morning air, they were rowed to the yacht, on the deck
+of which stood Lord and Lady Powys, Lady Strickland, Pauline Dunord,
+and a few more faithful followers, who had come more rapidly.&nbsp;
+There was no open greeting nor recognition, for the captain and crew
+were unaware whom they were carrying, and, on the discovery, either
+for fear of danger or hope of reward, might have captured such a prize.</p>
+<p>Therefore all the others, with whispered apologies, were hoisted
+up before her, and Countess Almonde had to devise a special entreaty
+that the chair might be lowered again for her poor laundress as well
+as for the other two women.</p>
+<p>The yacht, which had been hired by St. Victor, at once spread her
+sails; Mrs. Labadie conversed with the captain while the countess took
+the Queen below into the stifling crowded little cabin.&nbsp; It was
+altogether a wretched voyage; the wind was high, and the pitching and
+tossing more or less disabled everybody in the suite.&nbsp; The Queen
+was exceedingly ill, so were the countess and Mrs. Labadie.&nbsp; Nobody
+could be the least effective but Signora Turini, who waited on her Majesty,
+and Anne, who was so far seasoned by excursions at Portsmouth that she
+was capable of taking sole care of the little Prince, as the little
+vessel dashed along on her way with her cargo of alarm and suffering
+through the Dutch fleet of fifty vessels, none of which seemed to notice
+her&mdash;perhaps by express desire not to be too curious as to English
+fugitives.</p>
+<p>Between the care of the little one, who needed in the tossing of
+the ship to be constantly in arms though he never cried and when awake
+was always merry, and the giving as much succour as possible to her
+suffering companions, Anne could not either rest or think, but seemed
+to live in one heavy dazed dream of weariness and endurance, hardly
+knowing whether it were day or night, till the welcome sound was heard
+that Calais was in sight.</p>
+<p>Then, as well as they could, the poor travellers crawled from the
+corners, and put themselves in such array as they could contrive, though
+the heaving of the waves, as the little yacht lay to, did not conduce
+to their recovery.&nbsp; The Count de Lauzun went ashore as soon as
+a boat could be lowered to apprise M. Charot, the Governor of Calais,
+of the guest he was to receive, and after an interval of considerable
+discomfort, in full view of the massive fortifications, boats came off
+to bring the Queen and her attendants on shore, this time as a Queen,
+though she refused to receive any honours.&nbsp; Lady Strickland, recovering
+as soon as she was on dry land, resumed her Prince, who was fondled
+with enthusiastic praises for his excellent conduct on the voyage.</p>
+<p>Anne could not help feebly thinking some of the credit might be due
+to her, since she had held him by land and water nearly ever since leaving
+Whitehall, but she was too much worn out by her nights of unrest, and
+too much battered and beaten by the tossings of her voyage, to feel
+anything except in a languid half-conscious way, under a racking headache;
+and when the curious old house where they were to rest was reached,
+and all the rest were eating with ravenous appetites, she could taste
+nothing, and being conducted by a compassionate Frenchwoman in a snow-white
+towering cap to a straw mattress spread on the ground, she slept the
+twenty-four hours round without moving.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI<br />
+Exile</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Oh, who are ye, young man?&rsquo; she said.<br />
+&lsquo;What country come ye frae?&rsquo;<br />
+&lsquo;I flew across the sea,&rsquo; he said;<br />
+&lsquo;&rsquo;Twas but this very day.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Old Ballad.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Five months had passed away since the midnight flight from England,
+when Anne Woodford was sitting on a stone bench flanked with statues
+in the stately gardens of the Palace of St. Germain, working away at
+some delicate point lace, destined to cover some of the deficiencies
+of her dress, for her difficulties were great, and these months had
+been far from happy ones.</p>
+<p>The King was in Ireland, the Queen spent most of the time of his
+absence in convents, either at Poissy or Chaillot, carrying her son
+with her to be the darling of the nuns, who had for the most part never
+even seen a baby, and to whom a bright lively child of a year old was
+a perfect treasure of delight.&nbsp; Not wishing to encumber the good
+Sisters with more attendants than were needful, the Queen only took
+with her one lady governess, one nurse, and one rocker, and this last
+naturally was Pauline Dunord, both a Frenchwoman and a Roman Catholic.</p>
+<p>This was in itself no loss to Anne.&nbsp; Her experience of the nunnery
+at Boulogne, where had been spent three days in expectation of the King,
+had not been pleasant.&nbsp; The nuns had shrunk from her as a heretic,
+and kept their novices and pensionnaires from the taint of communication
+with her; and all the honour she might have deserved for the Queen&rsquo;s
+escape seemed to have been forfeited by that moment of fear, which in
+the telling had become greatly exaggerated.</p>
+<p>It was true that the Queen had never alluded to it; but probably
+through Mrs. Labadie, it had become current that Miss Woodford had been
+so much alarmed under the churchyard wall that her fancy had conjured
+up a phantom and she had given a loud scream, which but for the mercy
+of the Saints would have betrayed them all.</p>
+<p>Anne was persuaded that she had done nothing worse than give an involuntary
+start, but it was not of the least use to say so, and she began to think
+that perhaps others knew better than she did.&nbsp; Miss Dunord, who
+had never been more than distantly polite to her in England, was of
+course more thrown with her at St. Germain, and examined her closely.&nbsp;
+Who was it?&nbsp; What was it?&nbsp; Had she seen it before?&nbsp; It
+was of no use to deny.&nbsp; Pauline knew she had seen something on
+that All Saints&rsquo; Eve.&nbsp; Was it true that it was a lover of
+hers, and that she had seen him killed in a duel on her account?&nbsp;
+Who would have imagined it in <i>cette demoiselle si sage</i>!&nbsp;
+Would she not say who it was!</p>
+<p>But though truth forced more than one affirmative to be pumped out
+of Anne, she clung to that last shred of concealment, and kept her own
+counsel as to the time, place, and persons of the duel, and thus she
+so far offended Pauline as to prevent that damsel from having any scruples
+in regarding her as an obnoxious and perilous rival, with a dark secret
+in her life.&nbsp; Certainly Miss Dunord did earnestly assure her that
+to adopt her Church, invoke the Saints, and have Masses for the dead
+was the only way to lay such ghosts; but Anne remained obdurate, and
+thus was isolated, for there were very few Protestants in the fugitive
+Court, and those were of too high a degree to consort with her.&nbsp;
+Perhaps that undefined doubt of her discretion was against her; perhaps
+too her education and knowledge of languages became less useful to the
+Queen when surrounded by French, for she was no longer called upon to
+act as reader; and the little Prince, during his residence in the convent,
+had time to forget her and lose his preference for her.&nbsp; She was
+not discharged, but except for taking her turn as a nursery-maid when
+the Prince was at St. Germain, she was a mere supernumerary, nor was
+there any salary forthcoming.&nbsp; The small amount of money she had
+with her had dwindled away, and when she applied to Lady Strickland,
+who was kinder to her than any one else, she was told that the Queen
+was far too much distressed for money wherewith to aid the King to be
+able to pay any one, and that they must all wait till the King had his
+own again.&nbsp; Her clothes were wearing out, and scarcely in condition
+for attendance on the Prince when he was shown in state to the King
+of France.&nbsp; Worse than all, she seemed entirely cut off from home.&nbsp;
+She had written several times to her uncle when opportunity seemed to
+offer, but had never heard from him, and she did not know whether her
+letters could reach him, or if he were even aware of what had become
+of her.&nbsp; People came with passports from England to join the exiled
+Court, but no one returned thither, or she would even have offered herself
+as a waiting-maid to have a chance of going back.&nbsp; Lady Strickland
+would have forwarded her, but no means or opportunity offered, and there
+was nothing for it but to look to the time that everybody declared to
+be approaching when the King was to be reinstated, and they would all
+go home in triumph.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Anne Woodford felt herself a supernumerary, treated with
+civility, and no more, as she ate her meals with a very feminine Court,
+for almost all the gentlemen were in Ireland with the King.&nbsp; She
+had a room in the entresol to herself, in Pauline&rsquo;s absence, and
+here she could in turn sit and dream, or mend and furbish up her clothes&mdash;a
+serious matter now&mdash;or read the least scrap of printed matter in
+her way, for books were scarcer than even at Whitehall; and though her
+&lsquo;mail&rsquo; had safely been forwarded by Mr. Labadie, some jealous
+censor had abstracted her Bible and Prayer-book.&nbsp; Probably there
+was no English service anywhere in France at that time, unless among
+the merchants at Bordeaux&mdash;certainly neither English nor Reformed
+was within her reach&mdash;and she had to spend her Sundays in recalling
+all she could, and going over it, feeling thankful to the mother who
+had made her store Psalms, Gospels, and Collects in her memory week
+by week.</p>
+<p>She was so far forgotten that active attempts to convert her had
+been dropped, except by Pauline.&nbsp; Perhaps it was thought that isolation
+would be effectual, but in fact the sight of popular Romanism not kept
+in check by Protestant surroundings shocked her, and made her far more
+averse to change than when she saw it at its best at Whitehall.&nbsp;
+In fine, the end of her ambition had been neglect and poverty, and the
+real service that she had rendered was unacknowledged, and marred by
+that momentary alarm.&nbsp; No wonder she felt sore.</p>
+<p>She had never once been to Paris, and seldom beyond the gardens,
+which happily were free in the absence of the Queen, and always had
+secluded corners apart from the noble terraces, safe from the intrusion
+of idle gallants.&nbsp; Anne had found a sort of bower of her own, shaded
+by honeysuckles and wild roses, where she could sit looking over the
+slopes and the windings of the Seine and indulge her musings and longings.</p>
+<p>The lonely life brought before her all the anxieties that had been
+stifled for the time by the agitations of the escape.&nbsp; Again and
+again she lived over the scene in the ruins.&nbsp; Again and again she
+recalled those two strange appearances, and shivering at the thought
+of the anniversary that was approaching in another month, still felt
+sometimes that, alive or dead, Peregrine&rsquo;s would be a home face,
+and framed to herself imaginary scenes in which she addressed him, and
+demanded whether he could not rest in his unhallowed grave.&nbsp; What
+would Bishop Ken say?&nbsp; Sometimes even she recollected the strange
+theory which had made him crave execution from the late King, seven
+years, yes, a little more than seven years ago, and marvel whether at
+that critical epoch he had indeed between life and death been snatched
+away to his native land of fa&euml;ry.&nbsp; Imagination might well
+run riot in the solitary, unoccupied condition to which she was reduced;
+and she also brooded much over the fragments of doubtful news which
+reached her.</p>
+<p>Something was said of all loyal clergy being expelled and persecuted,
+and this of course suggested those sufferings of the clergy during the
+Commonwealth, of which she had often heard, making her very anxious
+about her uncle, and earnestly long for wings to fly to him.&nbsp; The
+Archfields too!&nbsp; Had Charles returned, and did that secret press
+upon him as it did upon her?&nbsp; Did Lucy think herself utterly forgotten
+and cast aside, receiving no word or message from her friend?&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; thought Anne, &ldquo;they fancy me sailing about
+at Court in silks and satins, jewels and curls, and forgetting them
+all, as I remember Lucy said I should when she first heard that I was
+going to Whitehall.&nbsp; Nay, and I even took pleasure in the picture
+of myself so decked out, though I never, never meant to forget her.&nbsp;
+Foolish, worse than foolish, that I was!&nbsp; And to think that I might
+now be safe and happy with good Lady Russell, near my uncle and all
+of them.&nbsp; I could almost laugh to think how my fine notions of
+making my fortune have ended in sitting here, neglected, forgotten,
+banished, almost in rags!&nbsp; I suppose it was all self-seeking, and
+that I must take it meekly as no more than I deserve.&nbsp; But oh,
+how different! how different is this captivity!&nbsp; &lsquo;Oh that
+I had wings like a dove, for then would I flee away, and be at rest.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Swallow, swallow! you are sweeping through the air.&nbsp; Would that
+my spirit could fly like you! if only for one glimpse to tell me what
+they are doing.&nbsp; Ah! there&rsquo;s some one coming down this unfrequented
+walk, where I thought myself safe.&nbsp; A young gentleman!&nbsp; I
+must rise and go as quietly as I can before he sees me.&nbsp; Nay,&rdquo;
+as the action following the impulse, she was gathering up her work,
+&ldquo;&rsquo;tis an old abb&eacute; with him! no fear!&nbsp; Abb&eacute;?&nbsp;
+Nay, &rsquo;tis liker to an English clergyman!&nbsp; Can a banished
+one have strayed hither?&nbsp; The younger man is in mourning.&nbsp;
+Could it be?&nbsp; No graver, older, more manly&mdash;Oh!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Anne!&nbsp; Anne!&nbsp; We have found you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Archfield!&nbsp; You!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And as Charles Archfield, in true English fashion, kissed her cheek,
+Anne fairly choked with tears of joy, and she ever after remembered
+that moment as the most joyful of her life, though the joy was almost
+agony.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is Mistress Anne Woodford, sir,&rdquo; said Charles,
+the next moment.&nbsp; &ldquo;Allow me, madam, to present Mr. Fellowes,
+of Magdalen College.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne held out her hand, and courtesied in response to the bow and
+wave of the shovel hat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How did you know that I was here?&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Doctor Woodford thought it likely, and begged us to come and
+see whether we could do anything for you,&rdquo; said Charles; &ldquo;and
+you may believe that we were only too happy to do so.&nbsp; A lady to
+whom we had letters, who is half English, the Vicomtesse de Bellaise,
+was so good as to go to the convent at Poissy and discover for us from
+some of the suite where you were.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My uncle&mdash;my dear uncle&mdash;is he well?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite well, when last we heard,&rdquo; said Charles.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;That was at Florence, nearly a month ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And all at Fareham, are they well?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All just as usual,&rdquo; said Charles, &ldquo;at the last
+hearing, which was at the same time.&nbsp; I hoped to have met letters
+at Paris, but no doubt the war prevents the mails from running.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&nbsp; I have never had a single letter,&rdquo; said Anne.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Did my uncle know anything of me?&nbsp; Has he never had one
+of mine?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Up to the time when he wrote, last March, that is to say,
+he had received nothing.&nbsp; He had gone to London to make inquiries&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! my dear good uncle!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And had ascertained that you had been chosen to accompany
+the Queen and Prince in their escape from Whitehall.&nbsp; You have
+played the heroine, Miss Anne.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! if you knew&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And,&rdquo; said Mr. Fellowes, &ldquo;both he and Sir Philip
+Archfield requested us, if we could make our way home through Paris,
+to come and offer our services to Mistress Woodford, in case she should
+wish to send intelligence to England, or if she should wish to make
+use of our escort to return home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh sir! oh sir! how can I thank you enough!&nbsp; You cannot
+guess the happiness you have brought me,&rdquo; cried Anne with clasped
+hands, tears welling up again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You <i>will</i> come with us then,&rdquo; cried Charles.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I am sure you ought.&nbsp; They have not used you well, Anne;
+how pale and thin you have grown.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is only pining!&nbsp; I am quite well, only home-sick,&rdquo;
+she said with a smile.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am sure the Queen will let me
+go.&nbsp; I am nothing but a burthen now.&nbsp; She has plenty of her
+own people, and they do not like a Protestant about the Prince.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is Madame de Bellaise,&rdquo; said Mr. Fellowes, &ldquo;advancing
+along the walk with Lady Powys.&nbsp; Let me present you to her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have succeeded, I see,&rdquo; a kind voice said, as Anne
+found herself making her courtesy to a tall and stately old lady, with
+a mass of hair of the peculiar silvered tint of flaxen mixed with white.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sincerely glad,&rdquo; said Lady Powys, &ldquo;that Miss
+Woodford has met her friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Also,&rdquo; said Madame de Bellaise, &ldquo;Lady Powys is
+good enough to say that if mademoiselle will honour me with a visit,
+she gives permission for her to return with me to Paris.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was still greater joy, except for that one recollection, formidable
+in the midst of her joy, of her dress.&nbsp; Did Madame de Bellaise
+divine something? for she said, &ldquo;These times remind me of my youth,
+when we poor cavalier families well knew what sore straits were.&nbsp;
+If mademoiselle will bring what is most needful, the rest can be sent
+afterwards.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Making her excuses for the moment, Anne with light and gladsome foot
+sped along the stately alley, up the stairs to her chamber, round which
+she looked much as if it had been a prison cell, fell on her knees in
+a gush of intense thankfulness, and made her rapid preparations, her
+hands trembling with joy, and a fear that she might wake to find all
+again a dream.&nbsp; She felt as if this deliverance were a token of
+forgiveness for her past wilfulness, and as if hope were opened to her
+once more.&nbsp; Lady Powys met her as she came down, and spoke very
+kindly, thanking her for her services, and hoping that she would enjoy
+the visit she was about to make.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does your ladyship think Her Majesty will require me any longer?&rdquo;
+asked Anne timidly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you wish to return to the country held by the Prince of
+Orange,&rdquo; said the Countess coldly, &ldquo;you must apply for dismissal
+to Her Majesty herself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne perceived from the looks of her friends that it was no time
+for discussing her loyalty, and all taking leave, she was soon seated
+beside Madame de Bellaise, while the coach and four rolled down the
+magnificent avenue, and scene after scene disappeared, beautiful and
+stately indeed, but which she was as glad to leave behind her as if
+they had been the fetters and bars of a dungeon, and she almost wondered
+at the words of admiration of her companions.</p>
+<p>Madame de Bellaise sat back, and begged the others to speak English,
+saying that it was her mother tongue, and she loved the sound of it,
+but really trying to efface herself, while the eager conversation between
+the two young people went on about their homes.</p>
+<p>Charles had not been there more recently than Anne, and his letters
+were at least two months old, but the intelligence in them was as water
+to her thirsty soul.&nbsp; All was well, she heard, including the little
+heir of Archfield, though the young father coloured a little, and shuffled
+over the answers to the inquiries with a rather sad smile.&nbsp; Charles
+was, however, greatly improved.&nbsp; He had left behind him the loutish,
+unformed boy, and had become a handsome, courteous, well-mannered gentleman.&nbsp;
+The very sight of him handing Madame de Bellaise in and out of her coach
+was a wonder in itself when Anne recollected how he had been wont to
+hide himself in the shrubbery to prevent being called upon for such
+services, and how uncouthly in the last extremity he would perform them.</p>
+<p>Madame de Bellaise was inhabiting her son&rsquo;s great H&ocirc;tel
+de Nidemerle.&nbsp; He was absent in garrison, and she was presiding
+over the family of grandchildren, their mother being in bad health.&nbsp;
+So much Anne heard before she was conducted to a pleasant little bedroom,
+far more home-like and comfortable than in any of the palaces she had
+inhabited.&nbsp; It opened into another, whence merry young voices were
+heard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is the apartment of my sister&rsquo;s youngest daughter,&rdquo;
+said Madame de Bellaise, &ldquo;No&eacute;mi Darpent.&nbsp; I borrowed
+her for a little while to teach her French and dancing, but now that
+we are gone to war, they want to have her back again, and it will be
+well that she should avail herself of the same escort as yourself.&nbsp;
+All will then be <i>selon les convenances</i>, which had been a difficulty
+to me,&rdquo; she added with a laugh.</p>
+<p>Then opening the door of communication she said; &ldquo;Here, No&eacute;mi,
+we have found your countrywoman, and I put her under your care.&nbsp;
+Ah! you two chattering little pies, I knew the voices were yours.&nbsp;
+This is my granddaughter, Marguerite de Nidemerle, and my niece&mdash;<i>&agrave;</i>
+<i>la mode de Bretagne</i>&mdash;C&eacute;cile d&rsquo;Aub&eacute;pine,
+all bestowing their chatter on their cousin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No&eacute;mi Darpent was a tall, fair, grave-faced maiden, some years
+over twenty, and so thoroughly English that it warmed Anne&rsquo;s heart
+to look at her, and the other two were bright little Frenchwomen&mdash;Marguerite
+a pretty blonde, C&eacute;cile pale, dark, and sallow, but full of life.&nbsp;
+Both were at the age at which girls were usually in convents, but as
+Anne learnt, Madame de Bellaise was too English at heart to give up
+the training of her grandchildren, and she had an English governess
+for them, daughter to a Romanist cavalier ruined by sequestration.</p>
+<p>She was evidently the absolute head of the family.&nbsp; Her daughter-in-law
+was a delicate little creature, who scarcely seemed able to bear the
+noise of the family at the long supper-table, when all talked with shrill
+French voices, from the two youths and their abb&eacute; tutor down
+to the little four-year-old Lolotte in her high chair.&nbsp; But to
+Anne, after the tedious formality of the second table at the palace,
+stiff without refinement, this free family life was perfectly delightful
+and refreshing, though as yet she was too much cramped, as it were,
+by long stiffness, silence, and treatment as an inferior to join, except
+by the intelligent dancing of her brown eyes, and replies when directly
+addressed.</p>
+<p>After Mrs. Labadie&rsquo;s homeliness, Pauline&rsquo;s exclusive
+narrowness, Jane&rsquo;s petty frivolity, Hester&rsquo;s vulgar worldliness,
+and the general want of cultivation in all who treated her on an equality,
+it was like returning to rational society; and she could not but observe
+that Mr. Archfield altogether held his own in conversation with the
+rest, whether in French or English.&nbsp; Little more than a year ago
+he would hardly have opened his mouth, and would have worn the true
+bumpkin look of contemptuous sheepishness.&nbsp; Now he laughed and
+made others laugh as readily and politely as&mdash;Ah!&nbsp; With whom
+was she comparing him?&nbsp; Did the thought of poor Peregrine dwell
+on his mind as it did upon hers?&nbsp; But perhaps things were not so
+terrible to a man as to a woman, and he had not seen those apparitions!&nbsp;
+Indeed, when not animated, she detected a certain thoughtful melancholy
+on his brow which certainly had not belonged to former times.</p>
+<p>Mr. Fellowes early made known to Anne that her uncle had asked him
+to be her banker, and the first care of her kind hostess was to assist
+her in supplying the deficiencies of her wardrobe, so that she was able
+to go abroad without shrinking at her own shabby appearance.</p>
+<p>The next thing was to take her to Poissy to request her dismissal
+from the Queen, without which it would be hardly decorous to depart,
+though in point of fact, in the present state of affairs, as No&eacute;mi
+said, there was nothing to prevent it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Mr. Fellowes; &ldquo;but for that reason Miss
+Woodford would feel bound to show double courtesy to the discrowned
+Queen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And she has often been very kind to me&mdash;I love her much,&rdquo;
+said Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No&eacute;mi is a little Whig,&rdquo; said Madame de Bellaise.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I shall not take her with us, because I know her father would
+not like it, but to me it is only like the days of my youth to visit
+an exiled queen.&nbsp; Will these gentlemen think fit to be of the party?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, madam, not I,&rdquo; said the Magdalen man.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I am very sorry for the poor lady, but my college has suffered
+too much at her husband&rsquo;s hands for me to be very anxious to pay
+her my respects; and if my young friend will take my advice, neither
+will he.&nbsp; It might be bringing his father into trouble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To this Charles agreed, so M. L&rsquo;Abb&eacute; undertook to show
+them the pictures at the Louvre, and Anne and Madame de Bellaise were
+the only occupants of the carriage that conveyed them to the great old
+convent of Poissy, the girl enjoying by the way the comfort of the kindness
+of a motherly woman, though even to her there could be no confiding
+of the terrible secret that underlay all her thoughts.&nbsp; Madame
+de Bellaise, however, said how glad she was to secure this companionship
+for her niece.&nbsp; No&eacute;mi had been more attached than her family
+realised to Claude Merrycourt, a neighbour who had had the folly, contrary
+to her prudent father&rsquo;s advice, to rush into Monmouth&rsquo;s
+rebellion, and it had only been by the poor girl&rsquo;s agony when
+he suffered under the summary barbarities of Kirke that her mother had
+known how much her heart was with him.&nbsp; The depression of spirits
+and loss of health that ensued had been so alarming that when Madame
+de Bellaise, after some months, paid a long visit to her sister in England,
+Mrs. Darpent had consented to send the girl to make acquaintance with
+her French relations, and try the effect of change of scene.&nbsp; She
+had gone, indifferent, passive, and broken-hearted, but her aunt had
+watched over her tenderly, and she had gradually revived, not indeed
+into a joyous girl, but into a calm and fairly cheerful woman.</p>
+<p>When she had left home, France and England were only too closely
+connected, but now they were at daggers drawn, and probably would be
+so for many years, and the Revolution had come so suddenly that Madame
+de Bellaise had not been able to make arrangements for her niece&rsquo;s
+return home, and No&eacute;mi was anxiously waiting for an opportunity
+of rejoining her parents.</p>
+<p>The present plan was this.&nbsp; Madame de Bellaise&rsquo;s son,
+the Marquis de Nidemerle, was Governor of Douai, where his son, the
+young Baron de Ribaumont, with his cousin, the Chevalier d&rsquo;Aub&eacute;pine,
+were to join him with their tutor, the Abb&eacute; Leblanc.&nbsp; The
+war on the Flemish frontier was not just then in an active state, and
+there were often friendly relations between the commandants of neighbouring
+garrisons, so that it might be possible to pass a party on to the Spanish
+territory with a flag of truce, and then the way would be easy.&nbsp;
+This passing, however, would be impossible for No&eacute;mi alone, since
+etiquette would not permit of her thus travelling with the two young
+gentlemen, nor could she have proceeded after reaching Douai, so that
+the arrival of the two Englishmen and the company of Miss Woodford was
+a great boon.&nbsp; Madame de Bellaise had already despatched a courier
+to ask her son whether he could undertake the transit across the frontier,
+and hoped to apply for passports as soon as his answer was received.&nbsp;
+She told Anne her niece&rsquo;s history to prevent painful allusions
+on the journey.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, madame!&rdquo; said Anne, &ldquo;we too have a sad day
+connected with that unfortunate insurrection.&nbsp; We grieved over
+Lady Lisle, and burnt with indignation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. Barillon tells me that her judge, the Lord Chancellor,
+was actually forced to commit himself to the Tower to escape being torn
+to pieces by the populace, and it is since reported that he has there
+died of grief and shame.&nbsp; I should think his prison cell must have
+been haunted by hundreds of ghosts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I pray you, madame! do you believe that there are apparitions?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have heard of none that were not explained by some accident,
+or else were the produce of an excited brain;&rdquo; and Anne said no
+more on that head, though it was a comfort to tell of her own foolish
+preference for the chances of Court preferment above the security of
+Lady Russell&rsquo;s household, and Madame de Bellaise smiled, and said
+her experience of Courts had not been too agreeable.</p>
+<p>And thus they reached Poissy, where Queen Mary Beatrice had separate
+rooms set apart for visitors, and thus did not see them from behind
+the grating, but face to face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You wish to leave me, signorina,&rdquo; she said, using the
+appellation of their more intimate days, as Anne knelt to kiss her hand.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I cannot wonder.&nbsp; A poor exile has nothing wherewith to
+reward the faithful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! your Majesty, that is not the cause; if I were of any
+use to you or to His Royal Highness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True, signorina; you have been faithful and aided me to the
+best of your power in my extremity, but while you will not embrace the
+true faith I cannot keep you about the person of my son as he becomes
+more intelligent.&nbsp; Therefore it may be well that you should leave
+us, until such time as we shall be recalled to our kingdom, when I hope
+to reward you more suitably.&nbsp; You loved my son, and he loved you&mdash;perhaps
+you would like to bid him farewell.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For this Anne was very grateful, and the Prince was sent for by the
+mother, who was too proud of him to miss any opportunity of exhibiting
+him to an experienced mother and grandmother like the vicomtesse.&nbsp;
+He was a year old, and had become a very beautiful child, with large
+dark eyes like his mother&rsquo;s, and when Mrs. Labadie carried him
+in, he held out his arms to Anne with a cry of glad recognition that
+made her feel that if she could have been allowed the charge of him
+she could hardly have borne to part with him.&nbsp; And when the final
+leave-taking came, the Queen made his little hand present her with a
+little gold locket, containing his soft hair, with a J in seed pearls
+outside, in memory, said Mary Beatrice, of that night beneath the church
+wall.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, yes, you had your moment of fear, but we were all in terror,
+and you hushed him well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus with another kiss to the white hand, returned on her own forehead,
+ended Anne Jacobina&rsquo;s Court life.&nbsp; Never would she be Jacobina
+again&mdash;always Anne or sweet Nancy!&nbsp; It was refreshing to be
+so called, when Charles Archfield let the name slip out, then blushed
+and apologised, while she begged him to resume it, which he was now
+far too correct to do in public.&nbsp; No&eacute;mi quite readily adopted
+it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am tired of fine French names,&rdquo; she said: &ldquo;an
+English voice is quite refreshing; and do you call me Naomi, not No&eacute;mi.&nbsp;
+I did not mind it so much at first, because my father sometimes called
+me so, after his good old mother, who was bred a Huguenot, but it is
+like the first step towards home to hear Naomi&mdash;Little Omy, as
+my brothers used to shout over the stairs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That was a happy fortnight.&nbsp; Madame de Bellaise said it would
+be a shame to let Anne have spent a half year in France and have seen
+nothing, so she took the party to the theatre, where they saw the <i>Cid</i>
+with extreme delight.&nbsp; She regretted that the season was so far
+advanced that the winter representations of <i>Esther</i>, at St. Cyr
+by the young ladies, were over, but she invited M. Racine for an evening,
+when Mr. Fellowes took extreme pleasure in his conversation, and he
+was prevailed on to read some of the scenes.&nbsp; She also used her
+<i>entr&eacute;e</i> at Court to enable them to see the fountains at
+Versailles, which Winchester was to have surpassed but for King Charles&rsquo;s
+death.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just as well otherwise,&rdquo; remarked Charles to Anne.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;These fine feathers and flowers of spray are beautiful enough
+in themselves, but give me the clear old Itchen not tortured into playing
+tricks, with all the trout killed; and the open down instead of all
+these terraces and marble steps where one feels as cramped as if it
+were a perpetual minuet.&nbsp; And look at the cost!&nbsp; Ah! you will
+know what I mean when we travel through the country.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Another sight was from a gallery, whence they beheld the King eat
+his dinner alone at a silver-loaded table, and a lengthy ceremony it
+was.&nbsp; Four plates of soup to begin with, a whole capon with ham,
+followed by a melon, mutton, salad, garlic, <i>p&acirc;t&eacute; de
+foie gras</i>, fruit, and confitures.&nbsp; Charles really grew so indignant,
+that, in spite of his newly-acquired politeness, Anne, who knew his
+countenance, was quite glad when she saw him safe out of hearing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The old glutton!&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;I should like to put
+him on a diet of buckwheat and sawdust like his poor peasants for a
+week, and then see whether he would go on gormandising, with his wars
+and his buildings, starving his poor.&nbsp; It is almost enough to make
+a Whig of a man to see what we might have come to.&nbsp; How can you
+bear it, madame?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas! we are powerless,&rdquo; said the Vicomtesse.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;A seigneur can do little for his people, but in Anjou we have
+some privileges, and our peasants are better off than those you have
+seen, though indeed I grieved much for them when first I came among
+them from England.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was perhaps the less sorry that Paris was nearly emptied of fashionable
+society since her guest had the less chance of uttering dangerous sentiments
+before those who might have repeated them, and much as she liked him,
+she was relieved when letters came from her son undertaking to expedite
+them on their way provided they made haste to forestall any outbreak
+of the war in that quarter.</p>
+<p>Meantime Naomi and Anne had been drawn much nearer together by a
+common interest.&nbsp; The door between their rooms having some imperfection
+in the latch swung open as they were preparing for bed, and Anne was
+aware of a sound of sobbing, and saw one of the white-capped, short-petticoated
+<i>femmes de chambre</i> kneeling at Naomi&rsquo;s feet, ejaculating,
+&ldquo;Oh, take me! take me, mademoiselle!&nbsp; Madame is an angel
+of goodness, but I cannot go on living a lie.&nbsp; I shall do something
+dreadful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor Suzanne! poor Suzanne!&rdquo; Naomi was answering: &ldquo;I
+will do what I can, I will see if it is possible&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They started at the sound of the step, Suzanne rising to her feet
+in terror, but Naomi, signing to Anne and saying, &ldquo;It is only
+Mademoiselle Woodford, a good Protestant, Suzanne.&nbsp; Go now; I will
+see what can be done; I know my aunt would like to send a maid with
+us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then as Suzanne went out with her apron to her eyes, and Anne would
+have apologised, she said, &ldquo;Never mind; I must have told you,
+and asked your help.&nbsp; Poor Suzanne, she is one of the Rotrous,
+an old race of Huguenot peasants whom my aunt always protected; she
+would protect any one, but these people had a special claim because
+they sheltered our great-grandmother, Lady Walwyn, when she fled after
+the S. Barth&eacute;l&eacute;mi.&nbsp; When the Edict of Nantes was
+revoked, the two brothers fled.&nbsp; I believe she helped them, and
+they got on board ship, and brought a token to my father; but the old
+mother was feeble and imbecile, and could not move, and the monks and
+the dragoons frightened and harassed this poor wench into what they
+called conforming.&nbsp; When the mother died, my aunt took Suzanne
+and taught her, and thought she was converted; and indeed if all Papists
+were like my aunt it would not be so hard to become one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh yes!&nbsp; I know others like that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But this poor Suzanne, knowing that she only was converted
+out of terror, has always had an uneasy conscience, and the sight of
+me has stirred up everything.&nbsp; She says, though I do not know if
+it be true, that she was fast drifting into bad habits, when finding
+my Bible, though it was English and she could not read it, seems to
+have revived everything, and recalled the teaching of her good old father
+and pastor, and now she is wild to go to England with us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will take her?&rdquo; exclaimed Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course I will.&nbsp; Perhaps that is what I was sent here
+for.&nbsp; I will ask her of my aunt, and I think she will let me have
+her.&nbsp; You will keep her secret, Anne.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed I will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Madame de Bellaise granted Suzanne to her niece without difficulty,
+evidently guessing the truth, but knowing the peril of the situation
+too well to make any inquiry.&nbsp; Perhaps she was disappointed that
+her endeavours to win the girl to her Church had been ineffectual, but
+to have any connection with one &lsquo;relapsed&rsquo; was so exceedingly
+perilous that she preferred to ignore the whole subject, and merely
+let it be known that Suzanne was to accompany Mademoiselle Darpent,
+and this was only disclosed to the household on the very last morning,
+after the passports had been procured and the mails packed, and she
+hushed any remark of the two English girls in such a decided manner
+as quite startled them by the manifest need of caution.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We should have come to that if King James were still allowed
+to have his own way,&rdquo; said Naomi.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no! we are too English,&rdquo; said Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our generation might not see it,&rdquo; said Naomi; &ldquo;but
+who can be safe when a Popish king can override law?&nbsp; Oh, I shall
+breathe more freely when I am on the other side of the Channel.&nbsp;
+My aunt is much too good for this place, and they don&rsquo;t approve
+of her, and keep her down.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII<br />
+Revenants</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;But soft, behold! lo, where it comes again!<br />
+I&rsquo;ll cross it, though it blast me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hamlet.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Floods of tears were shed at the departure of the two young officers
+of sixteen and seventeen.&nbsp; The sobs of the household made the English
+party feel very glad when it was over and the cavalcade was in motion.&nbsp;
+A cavalcade it was, for each gentleman rode and so did his body-servant,
+and each horse had a mounted groom.&nbsp; The two young officers had
+besides each two chargers, requiring a groom and horse boy, and each
+conducted half a dozen fresh troopers to join the army.&nbsp; A coach
+was the regulation mode of travelling for ladies, but both the English
+girls had remonstrated so strongly that Madame de Bellaise had consented
+to their riding, though she took them and Suzanne the first day&rsquo;s
+journey well beyond the ken of the Parisians in her own carriage, as
+far as Senlis, where there was a fresh parting with the two lads, fewer
+tears, and more counsel and encouragement, with many fond messages to
+her son, many to her sister in England, and with affectionate words
+to her niece a whisper to her to remember that she would not be in a
+Protestant country till she reached Holland or England.</p>
+<p>The last sight they had of the tall dignified figure of the old lady
+was under the arch of the cathedral, where she was going to pray for
+their safety.&nbsp; Suzanne was to ride on a pillion behind the Swiss
+valet of Mr. Fellowes, whom Naomi had taken into her confidence, and
+the two young ladies each mounted a stout pony.&nbsp; Mr. Fellowes had
+made friends with the Abb&eacute; Leblanc, who was of the old Gallican
+type, by no means virulently set against Anglicanism, and also a highly
+cultivated man, so that they had many subjects in common, besides the
+question of English Catholicity.&nbsp; The two young cousins, Ribaumont
+and D&rsquo;Aub&eacute;pine, were chiefly engaged in looking out for
+sport, setting their horses to race with one another, and the like,
+in which Charles Archfield sometimes took a share, but he usually rode
+with the two young ladies, and talked to them very pleasantly of his
+travels in Italy, the pictures and antiquities which had made into an
+interesting reality the studies that he had hated when a boy, also the
+condition of the country he had seen with a mind which seemed to have
+opened and enlarged with a sudden start beyond the interests of the
+next fox-hunt or game at bowls.&nbsp; All were, as he had predicted,
+greatly shocked at the aspect of the country through which they passed:
+the meagre crops ripening for harvest, the hay-carts, sometimes drawn
+by an equally lean cow and woman, the haggard women bearing heavy burthens,
+and the ragged, barefooted children leading a wretched cow or goat to
+browse by the wayside, the gaunt men toiling at road-mending with their
+poor starved horses, or at their seigneur&rsquo;s work, alike unpaid,
+even when drawn off from their own harvests.&nbsp; And in the villages
+the only sound buildings were the church and <i>presbyt&eacute;re</i>
+by its side, the dwellings being miserable hovels, almost sunk into
+the earth, an old crone or two, marvels of skinniness, spinning at the
+door, or younger women making lace, and nearly naked children rushing
+out to beg.&nbsp; Sometimes the pepper-box turrets of a ch&acirc;teau
+could be seen among distant woods, or the walls of a cloister, with
+a taper spire in the midst, among greener fields; and the towns were
+approached through long handsome avenues, and their narrow streets had
+a greater look of prosperity, while their inns, being on the way to
+the place of warfare, were almost luxurious, with a choice of dainty
+meats and good wines.&nbsp; Everywhere else was misery, and Naomi said
+it was the vain endeavour to reform the source of these grievances that
+had forced her father to become an exile from his native country, and
+that he had much apprehended that the same blight might gradually be
+brought over his adopted land, on which Charles stood up for the constitution,
+and for the resolute character of Englishmen, and Anne, as in duty bound,
+for the good intentions of her godfather.&nbsp; Thus they argued, and
+Anne not only felt herself restored to the company of rational beings,
+but greatly admired Charles&rsquo;s sentiments and the ability with
+which he put them forward, and now and then the thought struck her,
+and with a little twinge of pain of which she was ashamed, would Naomi
+Darpent be the healer of the wound nearly a year old, and find in him
+consolation for the hero of her girlhood?&nbsp; Somehow there would
+be a sense of disappointment in them both if so it were.</p>
+<p>At length the spires and towers of Douai came in sight, fenced in
+by stern lines of fortification according to the science of Vauban&mdash;smooth
+slopes of glacis, with the terrible muzzles of cannon peeping out on
+the summits of the ramparts, and the line of salient angle and ravelin
+with the moat around, beautiful though formidable.&nbsp; The Marquis
+de Nidemerle had sent a young officer and sergeant&rsquo;s party to
+meet the travellers several miles off, and bring them unquestioned through
+the outposts of the frontier town, so closely watched in this time of
+war, and at about half a mile from the gates he himself, with a few
+attendants, rode out all glittering and clanking in their splendid uniforms
+and accoutrements.&nbsp; He doffed his hat with the heavy white plume,
+and bowed his greeting to the ladies and clergymen, but both the young
+Frenchmen, after a military salute, hastily dismounted and knelt on
+one knee, while he sprang from his horse, and then, making the sign
+of the Cross over his son, raised him, and folding him in his arms pressed
+him to his breast and kissed him on each cheek, not without tears, then
+repeated the same greeting with young D&rsquo;Aub&eacute;pine.&nbsp;
+He then kissed the hand of his <i>belle cousine</i>, whom, of course,
+he knew already, and bowed almost to the ground on being presented to
+Mademoiselle Woodford, a little less low to Monsieur Archfield, who
+was glad the embracing was not to be repeated, politely received Mr.
+Fellowes, and honoured the domestic abb&eacute; with a kindly word and
+nod.&nbsp; The gradation was amusing, and he was a magnificent figure,
+with his noble horse and grand military dress, while his fine straight
+features, sunburnt though naturally fair, and his tall, powerful frame,
+well became his surroundings&mdash;&lsquo;a true white Ribaumont,&rsquo;
+as Naomi said, as she looked at the long fair hair drawn back and tied
+with ribbon.&nbsp; &ldquo;He is just like the portrait of our great-grandfather
+who was almost killed on the S. Barth&eacute;l&eacute;mi!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+However, Naomi had no more time to talk <i>of</i> him, for he rode by
+her side inquiring for his mother, wife, and children, but carefully
+doing the honours to the stranger lady and gentleman.</p>
+<p>Moat and drawbridge there were at Portsmouth, and a sentry at the
+entrance, but here there seemed endless guards, moats, bridges, and
+gates, and there was a continual presenting of arms and acknowledging
+of salutes as the commandant rode in with the travellers.&nbsp; It was
+altogether a very new experience in life.&nbsp; They were lodged in
+the governor&rsquo;s quarters in the fortress, where the accommodation
+for ladies was of the slenderest, and M. de Nidemerle made many apologies,
+though he had evidently given up his own sleeping chamber to the two
+ladies, who would have to squeeze into his narrow camp-bed, with Suzanne
+on the floor, and the last was to remain there entirely, there being
+no woman with whom she could have her meals.&nbsp; The ladies were invited
+to sup with the staff, and would, as M. de Nidemerle assured them, be
+welcomed with the greatest delight.&nbsp; So Naomi declared that they
+must make their toilette do as much justice as possible to their country;
+and though full dress was not attainable, they did their best with ribbons
+and laces, and the arrangement of her fair locks and Anne&rsquo;s brown
+ones, when Suzanne proved herself an adept; the ladies meantime finding
+no small amusement in the varieties of swords, pistols, spurs, and other
+accoutrements, for which the marquis had apologised, though Naomi told
+him that they were the fittest ornaments possible.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And my cousin Gaspard is a really good man,&rdquo; she said,
+indicating to her friend the little shrine with holy-water stoup, ivory
+crucifix, print of the Madonna, two or three devotional books, and the
+miniatures of mother, wife, and children hung not far off; also of two
+young cavaliers, one of whom Naomi explained to be the young father
+whom Gaspard could not recollect, the other, that of the uncle Eustace,
+last Baron Walwyn and Ribaumont, of whom her own mother talked with
+such passionate affection, and whose example had always been a guiding
+star to the young marquis.</p>
+<p>He came to their door to conduct them down to supper, giving his
+arm to Miss Woodford as the greatest stranger, while Miss Darpent was
+conducted by a resplendent ducal colonel.&nbsp; The supper-room was
+in festal guise, hung round with flags, and the table adorned with flowers;
+a band was playing, and never had either Anne or Naomi been made so
+much of.&nbsp; All were eagerly talking, Charles especially so, and
+Anne thought, with a thrill, &ldquo;Did he recollect that this was the
+very anniversary of that terrible 1st of July?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was a beautiful summer evening, and the supper taking place at
+five o&rsquo;clock there was a considerable time to spare afterwards,
+so that M. de Nidemerle proposed to show the strangers the place, and
+the view from the ramparts.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In my company you can see all well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but
+otherwise there might be doubts and jealousies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He took them through the narrow Flemish streets of tall houses with
+projecting upper stories, and showed them that seminary which was popularly
+supposed in England to be the hotbed of truculent plots, but where they
+only saw a quiet academic cloister and an exquisite garden, green turf,
+roses and white lilies in full perfection, and students flitting about
+in cassocks and square caps, more like an Oxford scene, as Mr. Fellowes
+said, than anything he had yet seen.&nbsp; He was joined by an English
+priest from his own original neighbourhood.&nbsp; The Abb&eacute; Leblanc
+found another acquaintance, and these two accompanied their friends
+to the ramparts.&nbsp; The marquis had a great deal to hear from his
+cousin about his home, and thus it happened that Charles Archfield and
+Anne found themselves more practically alone together than they had
+yet been.&nbsp; As they looked at the view over the country, he told
+her of a conversation that he had had with an officer now in the French
+army, but who had served in the Imperial army against the Turks, and
+that he had obtained much useful information.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Useful?&rdquo; asked Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&nbsp; I have been watching for the moment to tell you,
+Anne; I have resolved what to do.&nbsp; I intend to make a few campaigns
+there against the enemy of Christendom.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O Mr. Archfield!&rdquo; was all she could say.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See here, I have perceived plainly that to sink down into
+my lady&rsquo;s eldest son is no wholesome life for a man with all his
+powers about him.&nbsp; I understand now what a set of oafs we were
+to despise the poor fellow you wot of, because he was not such a lubber
+as ourselves.&nbsp; I have no mind to go through the like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are so different; it could not be the same.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not quite; but remember there is nothing for me to do.&nbsp;
+My father is still an active man, and I am not old enough to take my
+part in public affairs, even if I loved greatly either the Prince of
+Orange or King James.&nbsp; I could not honestly draw my sword for either.&nbsp;
+I have no estate to manage, my child&rsquo;s inheritance is all in money,
+and it would drive me mad, or worse, to go home to be idle.&nbsp; No;
+I will fight against the common enemy till I have made me a name, and
+won reputation and standing; or if I should not come back, there&rsquo;s
+the babe at home to carry on the line.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, sir! your father and mother&mdash;Lucy&mdash;all that
+love you.&nbsp; What will they say?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would only put them to needless pain to ask them.&nbsp;
+I shall not.&nbsp; I shall write explaining all my motives&mdash;all
+except one, and that you alone know, Anne.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She shuddered a little, and felt him press her arm tightly.&nbsp;
+They had fallen a good deal behind the marquis and his cousin, and were
+descending as twilight fell into a narrow, dark, lonely street, with
+all the houses shut up.&nbsp; &ldquo;No one has guessed, have they?&rdquo;
+she faltered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not that I know of.&nbsp; But I cannot&mdash;no!&nbsp; I can<i>not</i>
+go home, to have that castle near me, and that household at Oakwood.&nbsp;
+I see enough in my dreams without that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See!&nbsp; Ah, yes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then, Anne, you have suffered then too&mdash;guiltless as
+you are in keeping my terrible secret!&nbsp; I have often thought and
+marvelled whether it were so with you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was about to tell him what she had seen, when he began, &ldquo;There
+is one thing in this world that would sweeten and renew my life&mdash;and
+that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her heart was beating violently at what was so suddenly coming on
+her, when at that instant Charles broke off short with &ldquo;Good Heavens!&nbsp;
+What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the opposite side of the street, where one of the many churches
+stood some way back, making an opening, there was a figure, essentially
+the same that Anne had seen at Lambeth, but bare-headed, clad apparently
+in something long and white, and with a pale bluish light on the ghastly
+but unmistakable features.</p>
+<p>She uttered a faint gasping cry scarcely audible, Charles&rsquo;s
+impulse was to exclaim, &ldquo;Man or spirit, stand!&rdquo; and drawing
+his sword to rush across the street; but in that second all had vanished,
+and he only struck against closed doors, which he shook, but could not
+open.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Archfield!&nbsp; Oh, come back!&nbsp; I have seen it before,&rdquo;
+entreated Anne; and he strode back, with a gesture of offering her support,
+and trembling, she clung to his arm.&nbsp; &ldquo;It does not hurt,&rdquo;
+she said.&nbsp; &ldquo;It comes and goes&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have seen it before!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Twice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No more could be said, for through the gloom the white plume and
+gold-laced uniform of the marquis were seen.&nbsp; He had missed them,
+and come back to look for them, beginning to apologise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am confounded at having left Mademoiselle behind.&mdash;<i>Comment</i>!&rdquo;&mdash;as
+the sound betrayed that Charles was sheathing his sword.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+trust that Monsieur has met with no unpleasant adventure from my people.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, Monsieur,&rdquo; was the answer, as he added&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One can never be sure as to these fiery spirits towards an
+Englishman in the present state of feeling, and I blame myself extremely
+for having permitted myself to lose sight of Monsieur and Mademoiselle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, sir, we have met with no cause of complaint,&rdquo;
+said Charles, adding as if casually, &ldquo;What is that church?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis the Jesuits&rsquo; Church,&rdquo; replied the governor.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;There is the best preaching in the town, they say, and Jansenists
+as we are, I was struck with the Lenten course.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne went at once to her room on returning to the house.&nbsp; Naomi,
+who was there already, exclaimed at her paleness, and insisted on administering
+a glass of wine from what the English called the rere supper, the French
+an <i>encas</i>, the substantial materials for which had been left in
+the chamber.&nbsp; Then Anne felt how well it had been for her that
+her fellows at the palace had been so uncongenial, for she could hardly
+help disclosing to Naomi the sight she had seen, and the half-finished
+words she had heard.&nbsp; It was chiefly the feeling that she could
+not bear Naomi to know of the blood on Charles&rsquo;s hand which withheld
+her in her tumult of feeling, and made her only entreat, &ldquo;Do not
+ask me, I cannot tell you.&rdquo;&nbsp; And Naomi, who was some years
+older, and had had her own sad experience, guessed perhaps at one cause
+for her agitation, and spared her inquiries, though as Anne, tired out
+by the long day, and forced by their close quarters to keep herself
+still, dropped asleep, strange mutterings fell from her lips about &ldquo;The
+vault&mdash;the blood&mdash;come back.&nbsp; There he is.&nbsp; The
+secret has risen to forbid.&nbsp; O, poor Peregrine!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Between the July heat, the narrow bed, and the two chamber fellows,
+Anne had little time to collect her thoughts, except for the general
+impression that if Charles finished what he had begun to say, the living
+and the dead alike must force her to refuse, though something within
+foreboded that this would cost her more than she yet durst perceive,
+and her heart was ready to spring forth and enclose him as it were in
+an embrace of infinite tenderness, above all when she thought of his
+purpose of going to those fearful Hungarian wars.</p>
+<p>But after the hot night, it was a great relief to prepare for an
+early start.&nbsp; M. de Nidemerle had decided on sending the travellers
+to Tournay, the nearest Spanish town, on the Scheldt, since he had some
+acquaintance with the governor, and when no campaign was actually on
+foot the courtesies of generous enemies passed between them.&nbsp; He
+had already sent an intimation of his intention of forwarding an English
+kinswoman of his own with her companions, and bespoken the good offices
+of his neighbour, and they were now to set off in very early morning
+under the escort of a flag of truce, a trumpeter, and a party of troopers,
+commanded by an experienced old officer with white moustaches and the
+peaked beard of the last generation, contrasting with a face the colour
+of walnut wood.</p>
+<p>The marquis himself and his son, however, rode with the travellers
+for their first five miles, through a country where the rich green of
+the natural growth showed good soil, all enamelled with flowers and
+corn crops run wild; but the villages looked deserted, the remains of
+burnt barns and houses were frequent, and all along that frontier, it
+seemed as if no peaceful inhabitants ventured to settle, and only brigands
+often rendered such by misery might prowl about.&nbsp; The English party
+felt as if they had never understood what war could be.</p>
+<p>However, in a melancholy orchard run wild, under the shade of an
+apple-tree laden with young fruit, backed by a blackened gable half
+concealed by a luxuriant untrimmed vine, the <i>avant couriers</i> of
+the commandant had cleared a space in the rank grass, and spread a morning
+meal, of cold <i>p&acirc;t&eacute;</i>, fowl and light wines, in which
+the French officers drank to the good journey of their friends, and
+then when the horses had likewise had their refreshment the parting
+took place with much affection between the cousins.&nbsp; The young
+Ribaumont augured that they should meet again when he had to protect
+No&eacute;mi in a grand descent on Dorsetshire in behalf of James, and
+she merrily shook her fist at him and defied him, and his father allowed
+that they were a long way from that.</p>
+<p>M. de Nidemerle hinted to Mr. Archfield that nobody could tell him
+more about the war with the Turks than M. le Capitaine Delaune, who
+was, it appeared, a veteran Swiss who had served in almost every army
+in Europe, and thus could give information by no means to be neglected.&nbsp;
+So that, to Anne&rsquo;s surprise and somewhat to her mortification,
+since she had no knowledge of the cause, she saw Charles riding apart
+with this wooden old veteran, who sat as upright as a ramrod on his
+wiry-looking black horse, leaving her to the company of Naomi and Mr.
+Fellowes.&nbsp; Did he really wish not to pursue the topic which had
+brought Peregrine from his grave?&nbsp; It would of course be all the
+better, but it cost her some terrible pangs to think so.</p>
+<p>There were far more formalities and delays before the travellers
+could cross the Tournay bridge across the Scheldt.&nbsp; They were brought
+to a standstill a furlong off, and had to wait while the trumpeter rode
+forward with the white flag, and the message was referred to the officer
+on guard, while a sentry seemed to be watching over them.&nbsp; Then
+the officer came to the gateway of the bridge, and Captain Delaune rode
+forward to him, but there was still a long weary waiting in the sun
+before he came back, after having shown their credentials to the governor,
+and then he was accompanied by a Flemish officer, who, with much courtesy,
+took them under his charge, and conducted them through all the defences,
+over the bridge, and to the gate where their baggage had to be closely
+examined.&nbsp; Naomi had her Bible in her bosom, or it would not have
+escaped; Anne heartily wished she had used the same precaution on her
+flight from England, but she had not, like her friend, been warned beforehand.</p>
+<p>When within the city there was more freedom, and the Fleming conducted
+the party to an inn, where, unlike English inns, they could not have
+a parlour to themselves, but had to take their meals in common with
+other guests at a sort of <i>table d&rsquo;h&ocirc;te</i>, and the ladies
+had no refuge but their bedroom, where the number of beds did not promise
+privacy.&nbsp; An orderly soon arrived with an invitation to Don Carlos
+Arcafila to sup with the Spanish governor, and of course the invitation
+could not be neglected.&nbsp; The ladies walked about a little in the
+town with Mr. Fellowes, looking without appreciation at the splendid
+five-towered cathedral, but recollecting with due English pride that
+the place had been conquered by Henry VIII.&nbsp; Thence they were to
+make for Ostend, where they were certain of finding a vessel bound for
+England.</p>
+<p>It was a much smaller party that set forth from Tournay than from
+Paris, and soon they fell into pairs, Mr. Fellowes and Naomi riding
+together, sufficiently out of earshot of the others for Charles to begin&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have not been able to speak to you, Anne, since that strange
+interruption&mdash;if indeed it were not a dream.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, sir, it was no dream!&nbsp; How could it be?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How could it, indeed, when we both saw it, and both of us
+awake and afoot, and yet I cannot believe my senses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I can believe it only too truly!&nbsp; I have seen him
+twice before.&nbsp; I thought you said you had.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Merely in dreams, and that is bad enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you sure? for I was up and awake.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are <i>you</i> sure?&nbsp; I might ask again.&nbsp; I was
+asleep in bed, and glad enough to shake myself awake.&nbsp; Where were
+you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Once on Hallowmas Eve, looking from the window at Whitehall;
+once when waiting with the Queen under the wall of Lambeth Church, on
+the night of our flight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did others see him then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was alone the first time.&nbsp; The next time when he flitted
+across the light, no one else saw him; but they cried out at my start.&nbsp;
+Why should he appear except to us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is true,&rdquo; muttered Charles.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And oh, sir, those two times he looked as he did in life&mdash;not
+ghastly as now.&nbsp; There can be no doubt now that&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, sweet Anne?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir, I must tell you!&nbsp; I could bear it no longer, and
+I <i>did</i> consult the Bishop of Bath and Wells.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Any more?&rdquo; he asked in a somewhat displeased voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one, not a soul, and he is as safe as any of the priests
+here; he regards a confession in the same way.&nbsp; Mr. Archfield,
+forgive me.&nbsp; He seemed divinely sent to me on that All Saints&rsquo;
+day!&nbsp; Oh, forgive me!&rdquo; and tears were in her eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is Dr. Ken&mdash;eh?&nbsp; I remember him.&nbsp; I suppose
+he is as safe as any man, and a woman must have some relief.&nbsp; You
+have borne enough indeed,&rdquo; said Charles, greatly touched by her
+tears.&nbsp; &ldquo;What did he say?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He asked, was I certain of the&mdash;death,&rdquo; said she,
+bringing out the word with difficulty; &ldquo;but then I had only seen
+<i>it</i> at Whitehall; and these other appearances, in such places
+too, take away all hope that it is otherwise!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Assuredly,&rdquo; said Charles; &ldquo;I had not the least
+doubt at the moment.&nbsp; I know I ran my sword through his body, and
+felt a jar that I believe was his backbone,&rdquo; he said with a shudder,
+&ldquo;and he fell prone and breathless; but since I have seen more
+of fencing, and heard more of wounds, the dread has crossed me that
+I acted as an inexperienced lad, and that I ought to have tried whether
+the life was in him, or if he could be recovered.&nbsp; If so, I slew
+him twice, by launching him into that pit.&nbsp; God forgive me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it so deep?&rdquo; asked Anne, shuddering.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+know there is a sort of step at the top; but I always shunned the place,
+and never looked in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are two or three steps at the top, but all is broken
+away below.&nbsp; Sedley and I once threw a ball down, and I am sure
+it dropped to a depth down which no man could fall and <i>live</i>.&nbsp;
+I believe there once were underground passages leading to the harbour
+on one hand, and out to Portsdown Hill on the other, but that the communication
+was broken away and the openings destroyed when Lord Goring was governor
+of Portsmouth, to secure the castle.&nbsp; Be that as it may, he could
+not have been living after he reached that floor.&nbsp; I heard the
+thud, and the jingle of his sword, and it will haunt me to my dying
+day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And yet you never intended it.&nbsp; You did it in defence
+of me.&nbsp; You did not mean to strike thus hard.&nbsp; It was an accident.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would that I could so feel it!&rdquo; he sighed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Nay,
+of course I had no evil design when my poor little wife drove me out
+to give you her rag of ribbon, or whatever it was; but I hated as well
+as despised the fellow.&nbsp; He had angered me with his scorn&mdash;well
+deserved, as now I see&mdash;of our lubberly ways.&nbsp; She had vexed
+me with her teasing commendations&mdash;out of harmless mischief, poor
+child.&nbsp; I hated him more every time you looked at him, and when
+I had occasion to strike him I was glad of it.&nbsp; There was murder
+in my heart, and I felt as if I were putting a rat or a weasel out of
+the way when I threw him down that pit.&nbsp; God forgive me!&nbsp;
+Then, in my madness, I so acted that in a manner I was the death of
+that poor young thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, sir.&nbsp; Your mother had never thought she would
+live.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So they say; but her face comes before me in reproach.&nbsp;
+There are times when I feel myself a double murderer.&nbsp; I have been
+on the point of telling all to Mr. Fellowes, or going home to accuse
+myself.&nbsp; Only the thought of my father and mother, and of leaving
+such a blight on that poor baby, has withheld me; but I cannot go home
+to face the sight of the castle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Anne, choked with tears.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor is there any suspicion of the poor fellow&rsquo;s fate,&rdquo;
+he added.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not that I ever heard.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His family think him fled, as was like enough, considering
+the way in which they treated him,&rdquo; said Charles.&nbsp; &ldquo;Nor
+do I see what good it would do them to know the truth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would only be a grief and bitterness to all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope I have repented, and that God accepts my forgiveness,&rdquo;
+said Charles sadly.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am banishing myself from all I love,
+and there is a weight on me for life; but, unless suspicion falls on
+others, I do not feel bound to make it worse for all by giving myself
+up.&nbsp; Yet those appearances&mdash;to you, to me, to us both!&nbsp;
+At such a moment, too, last night!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can it be because of his unhallowed grave?&rdquo; said Anne,
+in a low voice of awe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it were!&rdquo; said Charles, drawing up his horse for
+a moment in thought.&nbsp; &ldquo;Anne, if there be one more appearance,
+the place shall be searched, whether it incriminate me or not.&nbsp;
+It would be adding to all my wrongs towards the poor fellow, if that
+were the case.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Even if he were found,&rdquo; said Anne, &ldquo;suspicion
+would not light on you.&nbsp; And at home it will be known if he haunts
+the place.&nbsp; I will&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, but, Anne, he will not interrupt me now.&nbsp; I have
+much more to say.&nbsp; I want you to remember that we were sweethearts
+ere ever I, as a child of twelve, knew that I was contracted to that
+poor babe, and bidden to think only of her.&nbsp; Poor child!&nbsp;
+I honestly did my best to love her, so far as I knew how, and mayhap
+we could have rubbed on through life passably well as things go.&nbsp;
+But&mdash;but&mdash;It skills not talking of things gone by, except
+to show that it is a whole heart&mdash;not the reversion of one that
+is yours for ever, mine only love.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, but&mdash;but&mdash;I am no match for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve had enough of grand matches.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your father would never endure it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My father would soon rejoice.&nbsp; Besides, if we are wedded
+here&mdash;say at Ostend&mdash;and you make me a home at Buda, or Vienna,
+or some place at our winter quarters, as my brave wench will, my father
+will be glad enough to see us both at home again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; it cannot be.&nbsp; It would be plain treachery to your
+parents; Mr. Fellowes would say so.&nbsp; I am sure he would not marry
+us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are English chaplains.&nbsp; Is that all that holds
+you back?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir.&nbsp; If the Archbishop of Canterbury were here himself,
+it could not make it other than a sin, and an act of mean ingratitude,
+for me, the Prince&rsquo;s rocker, to take advantage of their goodness
+in permitting you to come and bring me home&mdash;to do what would be
+pain, grief, and shame to them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never shame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is wrong is shame!&nbsp; Cannot you see how unworthy
+it would be in me, and how it would grieve my uncle that I should have
+done such a thing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Love would override scruples.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not <i>true</i> love.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True!&nbsp; Then you own to some love for me, Anne.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do&mdash;not&mdash;know.&nbsp; I have guarded&mdash;I mean&mdash;cast
+away&mdash;I mean&mdash;never entertained any such thought ever since
+I was old enough to know how wicked it would be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Anne!&nbsp; Anne!&rdquo; (in an undertone very like rapture),
+&ldquo;you have confessed all!&nbsp; It is no sin <i>now</i>.&nbsp;
+Even you cannot say so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She hung her head and did not answer, but silence was enough for
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is enough!&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;you will wait.&nbsp;
+I shall know you are waiting till I return in such sort that nothing
+can be denied me.&nbsp; Let me at least have that promise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You need not fear,&rdquo; murmured Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;How
+could I need?&nbsp; The secret would withhold me, were there nothing
+else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And there is something else?&nbsp; Eh, sweetheart?&nbsp; Is
+that all I am to be satisfied with?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh sir!&mdash;Mr. Archfield, I mean&mdash;O Charles!&rdquo;
+she stammered.</p>
+<p>Mr. Fellowes turned round to consult his pupil as to whether the
+halt should be made at the village whose peaked roofs were seen over
+the fruit trees.</p>
+<p>But when Anne was lifted down from the steed it was with no grasp
+of common courtesy, and her hand was not relinquished till it had been
+fervently kissed.</p>
+<p>Charles did not again torment her with entreaties to share his exile.&nbsp;
+Mayhap he recognised, though unwillingly, that her judgment had been
+right, but there was no small devotion in his whole demeanour, as they
+dined, rode, and rested on that summer&rsquo;s day amid fields of giant
+haycocks, and hostels wreathed with vines, with long vistas of sleek
+cows and plump dappled horses in the sheds behind.&nbsp; The ravages
+of war had lessened as they rode farther from the frontier, and the
+rich smiling landscape lay rejoicing in the summer sunshine; the sturdy
+peasants looked as if they had never heard of marauders, as they herded
+their handsome cattle and responded civilly when a draught of milk was
+asked for the ladies.</p>
+<p>There was that strange sense of Eden felicity that sometimes comes
+with the knowledge that the time is short for mutual enjoyment in full
+peace.&nbsp; Charles and Anne would part, their future was undefined;
+but for the present they reposed in the knowledge of each other&rsquo;s
+hearts, and in being together.&nbsp; It was as in their childhood, when
+by tacit consent he had been Anne&rsquo;s champion from the time she
+came as a little Londoner to be alarmed at rough country ways, and to
+be easily scared by Sedley.&nbsp; It had been then that Charles had
+first awakened to the chivalry of the better part of boyhood&rsquo;s
+nature, instead of following his cousin&rsquo;s lead, and treating girls
+as creatures meant to be bullied.&nbsp; Many a happy reminiscence was
+shared between the two as they rode together, and it was not till the
+pale breadth of sea filled their horizon, broken by the tall spires
+and peaked gables and many-windowed steep roofs of Ostend, that the
+future was permitted to come forward and trouble them.&nbsp; Then Anne&rsquo;s
+heart began to feel that persistence in her absolute refusal was a much
+harder thing than at the first, when the idea was new and strange to
+her.&nbsp; And there were strange yearnings that Charles should renew
+the proposal, mixed with dread of herself and of her own resolution
+in case of his doing so.&nbsp; As her affections embraced him more and
+more she pictured him sick, wounded, dying, out of reach of all, among
+Germans, Hungarians, Turks,&mdash;no one at hand to comfort him or even
+to know his fate.</p>
+<p>There was even disappointment in his acquiescence, though her better
+mind told her that it was in accordance with her prayer against temptation.&nbsp;
+Moreover, he was of a reserved nature, not apt to discuss what was once
+fixed, and perhaps it showed that he respected her judgment not to try
+to shake her decision.&nbsp; Though for once love had carried him away,
+he might perhaps be grateful to her for sparing him the perplexities
+of dragging her about with him and of giving additional offence to his
+parents.&nbsp; The affection born of lifelong knowledge is not apt to
+be of the vehement character that disregards all obstacles or possible
+miseries to the object thereof.&nbsp; Yet enough feeling was betrayed
+to make Naomi whisper at night, &ldquo;Sweet Nan, are you not some one
+else&rsquo;s sweet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Anne, now with another secret on her heart, only replied with
+embraces, and, &ldquo;Do not talk of it!&nbsp; I cannot tell how it
+is to be.&nbsp; I cannot tell you all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naomi was discreet enough only to caress.</p>
+<p>With strict formalities at outworks, moat, drawbridge, and gates,
+and the customary inquisitorial search of the luggage, the travellers
+were allowed to repair to a lofty inn, with the Lion of Flanders for
+its sign, and a wide courtyard, the successive outside galleries covered
+with luxuriant vines.&nbsp; Here, as usual, though the party of females
+obtained one bedroom together, the gentlemen had to share one vast sleeping
+chamber with a variety of merchants, Dutch, Flemish, Spanish, and a
+few English.&nbsp; Meals were at a great <i>table d&rsquo;h&ocirc;te</i>
+in the public room, opening into the court, and were shared by sundry
+Spanish, Belgic, and Swiss officers of the garrison, who made this their
+mess-room.&nbsp; Two young English gentlemen, like Charles Archfield,
+making the grand tour, whom he had met in Italy, were delighted to encounter
+him again, and still more so at the company of English ladies.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No wonder the forlorn widower has recovered his spirits!&rdquo;
+Anne heard one say with a laugh that made her blush and turn away; and
+there was an outcry that after a monopoly of the fair ones all the way
+from Paris, the seats next to them must be yielded.</p>
+<p>Anne was disappointed, and could not bring herself to be agreeable
+to the obtrusive cavalier with the rich lace cravat and perfumed hair,
+both assumed in her honour.</p>
+<p>The discussion was respecting the vessels where a passage might be
+obtained.&nbsp; The cavaliers were to sail in a couple of days for London,
+but another ship would go out of harbour with the tide on the following
+day for Southampton, and this was decided on by acclamation by the Hampshire
+party, though no good accommodation was promised them.</p>
+<p>There was little opportunity for a <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;tes</i>,
+for the young men insisted on escorting the ladies to the picture galleries,
+palaces, and gardens, and Charles did not wish to reawaken the observations
+that, according to the habits of the time, might not be of the choicest
+description.&nbsp; Anne watched him under her eyelashes, and wondered
+with beating heart whether after all he intended to return home, and
+there plead his cause, for he gave no token of intending to separate
+from the rest.</p>
+<p>The <i>Hampshire Hog</i> was to sail at daybreak, so the passengers
+went on board over night, after supper, when the summer twilight was
+sinking down and the far-off west still had a soft golden tint.</p>
+<p>Anne felt Charles&rsquo;s arm round her in the boat and grasping
+her hand, then pulling off her glove and putting a ring on her finger&mdash;all
+in silence.&nbsp; She still felt that arm on the deck in the confusion
+of men, ropes, and bales of goods, and the shouts and hails on all sides
+that nearly deafened her.&nbsp; There was imminent danger of being hurled
+down, if not overboard, among the far from sober sailors, and Mr. Fellowes
+urged the ladies to go below at once, conducting Miss Darpent himself
+as soon as he could ascertain where to go.&nbsp; Anne felt herself almost
+lifted down.&nbsp; Then followed a strong embrace, a kiss on brow, lips,
+and either cheek, and a low hoarse whisper&mdash;&ldquo;So best!&nbsp;
+Mine own!&nbsp; God bless you,&rdquo;&mdash;and as Suzanne came tumbling
+aft into the narrow cabin, Anne found herself left alone with her two
+female companions, and knew that these blissful days were over.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIII<br />
+French Leave</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;When ye gang awa, Jamie,<br />
+&nbsp; Far across the sea, laddie,<br />
+When ye gang to Germanie<br />
+&nbsp; What will ye send to me, laddie?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Huntingtower.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p><i>Fides</i> was the posy on the ring.&nbsp; That was all Anne could
+discover, and indeed only this much with the morning light of the July
+sun that penetrated the remotest corners.&nbsp; For the cabin was dark
+and stifling, and there was no leaving it, for both Miss Darpent and
+her attendant were so ill as to engross her entirely.</p>
+<p>She could hardly leave them when there was a summons to a meal in
+the captain&rsquo;s cabin, and there she found herself the only passenger
+able to appear, and the rest of the company, though intending civility,
+were so rough that she was glad to retreat again, and wretched as the
+cabin was, she thought it preferable to the deck.</p>
+<p>Mr. Fellowes, she heard, was specially prostrated, and jokes were
+passing round that it was the less harm, since it might be the worse
+for him if the crew found out that there was a parson on board.</p>
+<p>Thus Anne had to forego the first sight of her native land, and only
+by the shouts above and the decreased motion of the vessel knew when
+she was within lee of the Isle of Wight, and on entering the Solent
+could encourage her companions that their miseries were nearly over,
+and help them to arrange themselves for going upon deck.</p>
+<p>When at length they emerged, as the ship lay-to in sight of the red
+roofs and white steeples of Southampton, and of the green mazes of the
+New Forest, Mr. Fellowes was found looking everywhere for the pupil
+whom he had been too miserable to miss during the voyage.&nbsp; Neither
+Charles Archfield nor his servant was visible, but Mr. Fellowes&rsquo;s
+own man coming forward, delivered to the bewildered tutor a packet which
+he said that his comrade had put in his charge for the purpose.&nbsp;
+In the boat, on the way to land, Mr. Fellowes read to himself the letter,
+which of course filled him with extreme distress.&nbsp; It contained
+much of what Charles had already explained to Anne of his conviction
+that in the present state of affairs it was better for so young a man
+as himself, without sufficient occupation at home, to seek honourable
+service abroad, and that he thought it would spare much pain and perplexity
+to depart without revisiting home.&nbsp; He added full and well-expressed
+thanks for all that Mr. Fellowes had done for him, and for kindness
+for which he hoped to be the better all his life.&nbsp; He enclosed
+a long letter to his father, which he said would, he hoped, entirely
+exonerate his kind and much-respected tutor from any remissness or any
+participation in the scheme which he had thought it better on all accounts
+to conceal till the last.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And indeed,&rdquo; said poor Mr. Fellowes, &ldquo;if I had
+had any inkling of it, I should have applied to the English Consul to
+restrain him as a ward under trust.&nbsp; But no one would have thought
+it of him.&nbsp; He had always been reasonable and docile beyond his
+years, and I trusted him entirely.&nbsp; I should as soon have thought
+of our President giving me the slip in this way.&nbsp; Surely he came
+on board with us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He handed me into the boat,&rdquo; said Miss Darpent.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Who saw him last?&nbsp; Did you, Miss Woodford?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne was forced to own that she had seen him on board, and her cheeks
+were in spite of herself such tell-tales that Mr. Fellowes could not
+help saying, &ldquo;It is not my part to rebuke you, madam, but if you
+were aware of this evasion, you will have a heavy reckoning to pay to
+the young man&rsquo;s parents.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Anne, &ldquo;I knew indeed that he meant
+to join the Imperial army, but I knew not how nor when.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, well!&nbsp; I ask no questions.&nbsp; You need not justify
+yourself to me, young lady; but Sir Philip and Lady Archfield little
+knew what they did when they asked us to come by way of Paris.&nbsp;
+Not that I regret it on all accounts,&rdquo; he added, with a courteous
+bow to Naomi which set her blushing in her turn.&nbsp; He avoided again
+addressing Miss Woodford, and she thought with consternation of the
+prejudice he might excite against her.&nbsp; It had been arranged between
+the two maidens that Naomi should be a guest at Portchester Rectory
+till she could communicate with Walwyn, and her father or brother could
+come and fetch her.</p>
+<p>They landed at the little wharf, among the colliers, and made their
+way up the street to an inn, where, after ordering a meal to satisfy
+the ravenous sea-appetite, Mr. Fellowes, after a few words with Naomi,
+left the ladies to their land toilet, while he went to hire horses for
+the journey.</p>
+<p>Then Naomi could not help saying, &ldquo;O Anne!&nbsp; I did not
+think you would have done this.&nbsp; I am grieved!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do not know all,&rdquo; said Anne sadly, &ldquo;or you
+would not think so hardly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I saw you had an understanding with him.&nbsp; I see you have
+a new ring on your finger; but how could I suppose you would encourage
+an only son thus to leave his parents?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush, hush, Naomi!&rdquo; cried Anne, as the uncontrollable
+tears broke out.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you believe that it is quite
+as hard for me as for them that he should have gone off to fight those
+dreadful blood-thirsty Turks?&nbsp; Indeed I would have hindered him,
+but that&mdash;but that&mdash;I know it is best for him.&nbsp; No!&nbsp;
+I can&rsquo;t tell you why, but I <i>know</i> it is; and even to the
+very last, when he helped me down the companion-ladder, I hoped he might
+be coming home first.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you are troth-plight to him, and secretly?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am not troth-plight; I know I am not his equal, I told him
+so, but he thrust this ring on me in the boat, in the dark, and how
+could I give it back!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naomi shook her head, but was more than half-disarmed by her friend&rsquo;s
+bitter weeping.&nbsp; Whether she gave any hint to Mr. Fellowes Anne
+did not know, but his manner remained drily courteous, and as Anne had
+to ride on a pillion behind a servant she was left in a state of isolation
+as to companionship, which made her feel herself in disgrace, and almost
+spoilt the joy of dear familiar recognition of hill, field, and tree,
+after her long year&rsquo;s absence, the longest year in her life, and
+substituted the sinking of heart lest she should be returning to hear
+of misfortune and disaster, sickness or death.</p>
+<p>Her original plan had been to go on with Naomi to Portchester at
+once, if by inquiry at Fareham she found that her uncle was at home,
+but she perceived that Mr. Fellowes decidedly wished that Miss Darpent
+should go first to the Archfields, and something within her determined
+first to turn thither in spite of all there was to encounter, so that
+she might still her misgivings by learning whether her uncle was well.&nbsp;
+So she bade the man turn his horse&rsquo;s head towards the well-known
+poplars in front of Archfield House.</p>
+<p>The sound of the trampling horses brought more than one well-known
+old &lsquo;blue-coated serving-man&rsquo; into the court, and among
+them a woman with a child in her arms.&nbsp; There was the exclamation,
+&ldquo;Mistress Anne!&nbsp; Sure Master Charles be not far behind,&rdquo;
+and the old groom ran to help her down.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&nbsp; Ralph, thanks.&nbsp; All well?&nbsp; My uncle?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is here, with his Honour,&rdquo; and in scarcely a moment
+more Lucy, swift of foot, had flown out, and had Anne in her embrace,
+and crying out&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Charles! my brother!&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t see him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne was glad to have no time to answer before she was in her uncle&rsquo;s
+arms.&nbsp; &ldquo;My child, at last!&nbsp; God bless thee!&nbsp; Safe
+in soul and body!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Philip was there too, greeting Mr. Fellowes, and looking for
+his son, and with the cursory assurance that Mr. Archfield was well,
+and that they would explain, a hasty introduction of Miss Darpent was
+made, and all moved in to where Lady Archfield, more feeble and slow
+of movement, had come into the hall, and the nurse stood by with the
+little heir to be shown to his father, and Sedley Archfield stood in
+the background.&nbsp; It was a cruel moment for all, when the words
+came from Mr. Fellowes, &ldquo;Sir, I have to tell you, Mr. Archfield
+is not here.&nbsp; This letter, he tells me, is to explain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was an outburst of exclamation, during which Sir Philip withdrew
+into a window with his spectacles to read the letter, while all to which
+the tutor or Anne ventured to commit themselves was that Mr. Archfield
+had only quitted them without notice on board the <i>Hampshire Hog.</i></p>
+<p>The first tones of the father had a certain sound of relief, &ldquo;Gone
+to the Imperialist army to fight the Turks in Hungary!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Poor Lady Archfield actually shrieked, and Lucy turned quite pale,
+while Anne caught a sort of lurid flush of joy on Sedley Archfield&rsquo;s
+features, and he was the first to exclaim, &ldquo;Undutiful young dog!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tut! tut!&rdquo; returned Sir Philip, &ldquo;he might as well
+have come home first, and yet I do not know but that it is the best
+thing he could do.&nbsp; There might have been difficulties in the way
+of getting out again, you see, my lady, as things stand now.&nbsp; Ay!
+ay! you are in the right of it, my boy.&nbsp; It is just as well to
+let things settle themselves down here before committing himself to
+one side or the other.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis easy enough for an old fellow
+like me who has to let nothing go but his Commission of the Peace, but
+not the same for a stirring young lad; and he is altogether right as
+to not coming back to idle here as a rich man.&nbsp; It would be the
+ruin of him.&nbsp; I am glad he has the sense to see it.&nbsp; I was
+casting about to obtain an estate for him to give him occupation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But the wars,&rdquo; moaned the mother; &ldquo;if he had only
+come home we could have persuaded him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The wars, my lady!&nbsp; Why, they will be a feather in his
+cap; and may be if he had come home, the Dutchman would have claimed
+him for his, and let King James be as misguided as he may, I cannot
+stomach fighting against his father&rsquo;s son for myself or mine.&nbsp;
+No, no; it was the best thing there was for the lad to do.&nbsp; You
+shall hear his letter, it does him honour, and you, too, Mr. Fellowes.&nbsp;
+He could not have written such a letter when he left home barely a year
+ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Philip proceeded to read the letter aloud.&nbsp; There was a
+full explanation of the motives, political and private, only leaving
+out one, and that the most powerful of all of those which led Charles
+Archfield to absent himself for the present.&nbsp; He entreated pardon
+for having made the decision without obtaining permission from his father
+on returning home; but he had done so in view of possible obstacles
+to his leaving England again, and to the belief that a brief sojourn
+at home would cause more grief and perplexity than his absence.&nbsp;
+He further explained, as before, his reasons for secrecy towards his
+travelling companion, and entreated his father not to suppose for a
+moment that Mr. Fellowes had been in any way culpable for what he could
+never have suspected; warmly affectionate messages to mother and sister
+followed, and an assurance of feeling that &lsquo;the little one&rsquo;
+needed for no care or affection while with them.</p>
+<p>Lady Archfield was greatly disappointed, and cried a great deal,
+making sure that the poor dear lad&rsquo;s heart was still too sore
+to brook returning after the loss of his wife, who had now become the
+sweetest creature in the world; but Sir Philip&rsquo;s decision that
+the measure was wise, and the secrecy under the circumstances so expedient
+as to be pardonable, prevented all public blame; Mr. Fellowes, however,
+was drawn apart, and asked whether he suspected any other motive than
+was here declared, and which might make his pupil unwilling to face
+the parental brow, and he had declared that nothing could have been
+more exemplary than the whole demeanour of the youth, who had at first
+gone about as one crushed, and though slowly reviving into cheerfulness,
+had always been subdued, until quite recently, when the meeting with
+his old companion had certainly much enlivened his spirits.&nbsp; Poor
+Mr. Fellowes had been rejoicing in the excellent character he should
+have to give, when this evasion had so utterly disconcerted him, and
+it was an infinite relief to him to find that all was thought comprehensible
+and pardonable.</p>
+<p>Anne might be thankful that none of the authorities thought of asking
+her the question about hidden motives; and Naomi, looking about with
+her bright eyes, thought she had perhaps judged too hardly when she
+saw the father&rsquo;s approval, and that the mother and sister only
+mourned at the disappointment at not seeing the beloved one.</p>
+<p>The Archfields would not hear of letting any of the party go on to
+Portchester that evening.&nbsp; Dr. Woodford, who had ridden over for
+consultation with Sir Philip, must remain, he would have plenty of time
+for his niece by and by, and she and Miss Darpent must tell them all
+about the journey, and about Charles; and Anne must tell them hundreds
+of things about herself that they scarcely knew, for not one letter
+from St. Germain had ever reached her uncle.</p>
+<p>How natural it all looked! the parlour just as when she saw it last,
+and the hall, with the long table being laid for supper, and the hot
+sun streaming in through the heavy casements.&nbsp; She could have fancied
+it yesterday that she had left it, save for the plump rosy little yearling
+with flaxen curls peeping out under his round white cap, who had let
+her hold him in her arms and fondle him all through that reading of
+his father&rsquo;s letter.&nbsp; Charles&rsquo;s child!&nbsp; He was
+her prince indeed now.</p>
+<p>He was taken from her and delivered over to Lady Archfield to be
+caressed and pitied because his father would not come home &lsquo;to
+see his grand-dame&rsquo;s own beauty,&rsquo; while Lucy took the guests
+upstairs to prepare for supper, Naomi and her maid being bestowed in
+the best guest-chamber, and Lucy taking her friend to her own, the scene
+of many a confabulation of old.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, how I love it!&rdquo; cried Anne, as the door opened on
+the well-known little wainscotted abode.&nbsp; &ldquo;The very same
+beau-pot.&nbsp; One would think they were the same clove gillyflowers
+as when I went away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O Anne, dear, and you are just the same after all your kings
+and queens, and all you have gone through;&rdquo; and the two friends
+were locked in another embrace.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Kings and queens indeed!&nbsp; None of them all are worth
+my Lucy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now, tell me all; tell me all, Nancy, and first of all
+about my brother.&nbsp; How does he look, and is he well?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He looks!&nbsp; O Lucy, he is grown such a noble cavalier;
+most like the picture of that uncle of yours who was killed, and that
+Sir Philip always grieves for.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My father always hoped Charley would be like him,&rdquo; said
+Lucy.&nbsp; &ldquo;You must tell him that.&nbsp; But I fear he may be
+grave and sad.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Graver, but not sad now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you have seen him and talked to him, Anne?&nbsp; Did you
+know he was going on this terrible enterprise?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He spoke of it, but never told me when.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&nbsp; I was sure you knew more about it than the old tutor
+man.&nbsp; You always were his little sweetheart before poor little
+Madam came in the way, and he would tell you anything near his heart.&nbsp;
+Could you not have stopped him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think not, Lucy; he gave his reasons like a man of weight
+and thought, and you see his Honour thinks them sound ones.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh yes; but somehow I cannot fancy our Charley doing anything
+for grand, sound, musty reasons, such as look well marshalled out in
+a letter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t know how much older he is grown,&rdquo; said
+Anne, again, with the tell-tale colour in her cheeks.&nbsp; &ldquo;Besides,
+he cannot bear to come home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t tell me that, Nan.&nbsp; My mother does not see
+it; but though he was fond of poor little Madam in a way, and tried
+to think himself more so, as in duty bound, she really was fretting
+and wearing the very life&mdash;no, perhaps not the life, but the temper&mdash;out
+of him.&nbsp; What I believe it to be the cause is, that my father must
+have been writing to him about that young gentlewoman in the island
+that he is so set upon, because she would bring a landed estate which
+would give Charles something to do.&nbsp; They say that Peregrine Oakshott
+ran away to escape wedding his cousin; Charley will banish himself for
+the like cause.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He said nothing of it,&rdquo; said Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O Anne, I wish you had a landed estate!&nbsp; You would make
+him happier than any other, and would love his poor little Phil!&nbsp;
+Anne! is it so?&nbsp; I have guessed!&rdquo; and Lucy kissed her on
+each cheek.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed, indeed I have not promised.&nbsp; I know it can never,
+never be&mdash;and that I am not fit for him.&nbsp; Do not speak of
+it, Lucy?&nbsp; He spoke of it once as we rode together&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you could not be so false as to tell him you did not love
+him?&nbsp; No, you could not?&rdquo; and Lucy kissed her again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; faltered Anne; &ldquo;but I would not do as he
+wished.&nbsp; I have given him no troth-plight.&nbsp; I told him it
+would never be permitted.&nbsp; And he said no more, but he put this
+ring on my finger in the boat without a word.&nbsp; I ought not to wear
+it; I shall not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh yes, you shall.&nbsp; Indeed you shall.&nbsp; No one need
+understand it but myself, and it makes us sisters.&nbsp; Yes, Anne,
+Charley was right.&nbsp; My father will not consent now, but he will
+in due time, if he does not hear of it till he wearies to see Charles
+again.&nbsp; Trust it to me, my sweet sister that is to be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a great comfort that you know,&rdquo; said Anne, almost
+moved to tell her the greater and more perilous secret that lay in the
+background, but withheld by receiving Lucy&rsquo;s own confidence that
+she herself was at present tormented by her cousin Sedley&rsquo;s courtship.&nbsp;
+He was still, more&rsquo;s the pity, she said, in garrison at Portsmouth,
+but there were hopes of his regiment being ere long sent to the Low
+Countries, since it was believed to be more than half inclined to King
+James.&nbsp; In the meantime he certainly had designs on Lucy&rsquo;s
+portion, and as her father never believed half the stories of his debaucheries
+that were rife, and had a kindness for his only brother&rsquo;s orphan,
+she did not feel secure against his yielding so as to provide for Sedley
+without continuance in the Dutch service.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I could almost follow the example of running away!&rdquo;
+said Lucy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; Anne ventured to say, faltering, &ldquo;that
+nothing has been heard of poor Mr. Oakshott.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing at all.&nbsp; His uncle&rsquo;s people, who have come
+home from Muscovy, know nothing of him, and it is thought he may have
+gone off to the plantations.&nbsp; The talk is that Mistress Martha
+is to be handed on to the third brother, but that she is not willing.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+It was clear that there could have been no spectres here, and Lucy went
+on, &ldquo;But you have told me nothing yet of yourself and your doings,
+my Anne.&nbsp; How well you look, and more than ever the Court lady,
+even in your old travelling habit.&nbsp; Is that the watch the King
+gave you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In private and in public there was quite enough to tell on that evening
+for intimate friends who had not met for a year, and one of whom had
+gone through so many vicissitudes.&nbsp; Nor were the other two guests
+by any means left out of the welcome, and the evening was a very happy
+one.</p>
+<p>Mr. Fellowes intimated his intention of going himself to Walwyn with
+the news of Miss Darpent&rsquo;s arrival, and Naomi accepted the invitation
+to remain at Portchester till she could be sent for from home.</p>
+<p>It was not till the next morning that Anne Woodford could be alone
+with her uncle.&nbsp; As she came downstairs in the morning she saw
+him waiting for her; he held out his hands, and drew her out with him
+into the walled garden that lay behind the house.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Child! dear child!&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you are welcome
+to my old eyes.&nbsp; May God bless you, as He has aided you to be faithful
+alike to Him and to your King through much trial.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, sir!&nbsp; I have sorely repented the folly and ambition
+that would not heed your counsel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No doubt, my maid; but the spirit of humility and repentance
+hath worked well in you.&nbsp; I fear me, however, that you are come
+back to further trials, since probably Portchester may be no longer
+our home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor Winchester?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nor Winchester.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then is this new King going to persecute as in the old times
+you talk of?&nbsp; He who was brought over to save the Church!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He accepts the English Church, my maid, so far as it accepts
+him.&nbsp; All beneficed clergy are required to take the oath of allegiance
+to him before the first of August, now approaching, under pain of losing
+their preferments.&nbsp; Many of my brethren, even our own Bishop and
+Dean, think this merely submission to the powers that be, and that it
+may be lawfully done; but as I hear neither the Archbishop himself,
+nor my good old friends Doctors Ken and Frampton can reconcile it to
+their conscience, any more than my brother Stanbury, of Botley, nor
+I, to take this fresh oath, while the King to whom we have sworn is
+living.&nbsp; Some hold that he has virtually renounced our allegiance
+by his flight.&nbsp; I cannot see it, while he is fighting for his crown
+in Ireland.&nbsp; What say you, Anne, who have seen him; did he treat
+his case as that of an abdicated prince?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir, certainly not.&nbsp; All the talk was of his enjoying
+his own again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can I then, consistently with my duty and loyalty, swear
+to this William and Mary as my lawful sovereigns?&nbsp; I say not &rsquo;tis
+incumbent on me to refuse to live under them a peaceful life, but make
+oath to them as my King and Queen I cannot, so long as King James shall
+live.&nbsp; True, he has not been a friend to the Church, and has wofully
+trampled on the rights of Englishmen, but I cannot hold that this absolves
+me from my duty to him, any more than David was freed from duty to Saul.&nbsp;
+So, Anne, back must we go to the poverty in which I was reared with
+your own good father.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne might grieve, but she felt the gratification of being talked
+to by her uncle as a woman who could understand, as he had talked to
+her mother.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The first of August!&rdquo; she repeated, as if it were a
+note of doom.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; I hear whispers of a further time of grace, but I know
+not what difference that should make.&nbsp; A Christian man&rsquo;s
+oath may not be broken sooner or later.&nbsp; Well, poverty is the state
+blessed by our Lord, and it may be that I have lived too much at mine
+ease; but I could wish, dear child, that you were safely bestowed in
+a house of your own.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So do not I,&rdquo; said Anne, &ldquo;for now I can work for
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He smiled faintly, and here Mr. Fellowes joined them; a good man
+likewise, but intent on demonstrating the other side of the question,
+and believing that the Popish, persecuting King had forfeited his rights,
+so that there need be no scruple as to renouncing what he had thrown
+up by his flight.&nbsp; It was an endless argument, in which each man
+could only act according to his own conscience, and endeavour that this
+conscience should be as little biassed as possible by worldly motives
+or animosity.</p>
+<p>Mr. Fellowes started at once with his servant for Walwyn, and Naomi
+accompanied the two Woodfords to Portchester.&nbsp; In spite of the
+cavalier sentiments of her family, Naomi had too much of the spire of
+her Frondeur father to understand any feeling for duty towards the King,
+who had so decidedly broken his covenant with his people, and moreover
+had so abominably treated the Fellows of Magdalen College; and her pity
+for Anne as a sufferer for her uncle&rsquo;s whim quite angered her
+friend into hot defence of him and his cause.</p>
+<p>The dear old parsonage garden under the gray walls, the honeysuckle
+and monthly roses trailing over the porch, the lake-like creek between
+it and green Portsdown Hill, the huge massive keep and towers, and the
+masts in the harbour, the Island hills sleeping in blue summer haze&mdash;Anne&rsquo;s
+heart clave to them more than ever for the knowledge that the time was
+short and that the fair spot must be given up for the right&rsquo;s
+sake.&nbsp; Certainly there was some trepidation at the thought of the
+vault, and she had made many vague schemes for ascertaining that which
+her very flesh trembled at the thought of any one suspecting; but these
+were all frustrated, for since the war with France had begun, the bailey
+had been put under repair and garrisoned by a detachment of soldiers,
+the vault had been covered in, there was a sentry at the gateway of
+the castle, and the postern door towards the vicarage was fastened up,
+so that though the parish still repaired to church through the wide
+court solitary wanderings there were no longer possible, nor indeed
+safe for a young woman, considering what the soldiery of that period
+were.</p>
+<p>The thought came over her with a shudder as she gazed from her window
+at the creek where she remembered Peregrine sending Charles and Sedley
+adrift in the boat.</p>
+<p>The tide was out, the mud glistened in the moonlight, but nothing
+was to be seen more than Anne had beheld on many a summer night before,
+no phantom was evoked before her eyes, no elfin-like form revealed his
+presence, nor did any spirit take shape to upbraid her with his unhallowed
+grave, so close at hand.</p>
+<p>No, but Naomi Darpent, yearning for sympathy, came to her side, caressed
+her on that summer night, and told her that Mr. Fellowes had gone to
+ask her of her father, and though she could never love again as she
+had once loved, she thought if her parents wished it, she could be happy
+with so good a man.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIV<br />
+In The Moonlight</h2>
+<blockquote><p>I have had a dream this evening,<br />
+While the white and gold were fleeting,<br />
+But I need not, need not tell it.<br />
+Where would be the good?</p>
+<p>Requiescat in Pace.&mdash;JEAN INGELOW.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Anne Woodford sat, on a sultry summer night, by the open window in
+Archfield House at Fareham, busily engaged over the tail of a kite,
+while asleep in a cradle in the corner of the room lay a little boy,
+his apple-blossom cheeks and long flaxen curls lying prone upon his
+pillow as he had tossed when falling asleep in the heat.</p>
+<p>The six years since her return had been eventful.&nbsp; Dr. Woodford
+had adhered to his view that his oath of allegiance could not be forfeited
+by James&rsquo;s flight; and he therefore had submitted to be ousted
+from his preferments, resigning his pleasant prebendal house, and his
+sea-side home, and embracing poverty for his personal oath&rsquo;s sake,
+although he was willing to acquiesce in the government of William and
+Mary, and perhaps to rejoice that others had effected what he would
+not have thought it right to do.</p>
+<p>Things had been softened to him as regarded his flock by the appointment
+of Mr. Fellowes to Portchester, which was a Crown living, though there
+had been great demur at thus slipping into a friend&rsquo;s shoes, so
+that Dr. Woodford had been obliged to asseverate that nothing so much
+comforted him as leaving the parish in such hands, and that he blamed
+no man for seeing the question of Divine right as he did in common with
+the Non-jurors.&nbsp; The appointment opened the way to the marriage
+with Naomi Darpent, and the pair were happily settled at Portchester.</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford and his niece found a tiny house at Winchester, near
+the wharf, with the clear Itchen flowing in front and the green hills
+rising beyond, while in the rear were the ruins of Wolvesey, and the
+buildings of the Cathedral and College.&nbsp; They retained no servant
+except black Hans, poor Peregrine&rsquo;s legacy, who was an excellent
+cook, and capable of all that Anne could not accomplish in her hours
+of freedom.</p>
+<p>It was a fall indeed from her ancient aspirations, though there was
+still that bud of hope within her heart.&nbsp; The united means of uncle
+and niece were so scanty that she was fain to offer her services daily
+at Mesdames Reynaud&rsquo;s still flourishing school, where the freshness
+of her continental experiences made her very welcome.</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford occasionally assisted some student preparing for the
+university, but this was not regular occupation, and it was poorly paid,
+so that it was well that fifty pounds a year went at least three times
+as far as it would do in the present day.&nbsp; Though his gown and
+cassock lost their richness and lustre, he was as much respected as
+ever.&nbsp; Bishop Mews often asked him to Wolvesey, and allowed him
+to assist the parochial clergy when it was not necessary to utter the
+royal name, the vergers marshalled him to his own stall at daily prayers,
+and he had free access to Bishop Morley&rsquo;s Cathedral library.</p>
+<p>The Archfield family still took a house in the Close for the winter
+months, and there a very sober-minded and conventional courtship of
+Lucy took place by Sir Edmund Nutley, a worthy and well-to-do gentleman
+settled on the borders of Parkhurst Forest, in the Isle of Wight.</p>
+<p>Anne, with the thought of her Charles burning within her heart, was
+a little scandalised at the course of affairs.&nbsp; Sir Edmund was
+a highly worthy man, but not in his first youth, and ponderous&mdash;a
+Whig, moreover, and an intimate friend of the masterful governor of
+the island, Lord Cutts, called the &ldquo;Salamander.&rdquo;&nbsp; He
+had seen Miss Archfield before at the winter and spring Quarter Sessions,
+and though her father was no longer in the Commission of the Peace,
+the residence at Winchester gave him opportunities, and the chief obstacle
+seemed to be the party question.&nbsp; He was more in love than was
+the lady, but she was submissive, and believed that he would be a kind
+husband.&nbsp; She saw, too, that her parents would be much disappointed
+and displeased if she made any resistance to so prosperous a settlement,
+and she was positively glad to be out of reach of Sedley&rsquo;s addresses.&nbsp;
+Such an entirely unenthusiastic acceptance was the proper thing, and
+it only remained to provide for Lady Archfield&rsquo;s comfort in the
+loss of her daughter.</p>
+<p>For this the elders turned at once to Anne Woodford.&nbsp; Sir Philip
+made it his urgent entreaty that the Doctor and his niece would take
+up their abode with him, and that Anne would share with the grandmother
+the care of the young Philip, a spirited little fellow who would soon
+be running wild with the grooms, without the attention that his aunt
+had bestowed on him.</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford himself was much inclined to accept the office of chaplain
+to his old friend, who he knew would be far happier for his company;
+and Anne&rsquo;s heart bounded at the thought of bringing up Charles&rsquo;s
+child, but that very start of joy made her blush and hesitate, and finally
+surprise the two old gentlemen by saying, with crimson cheeks&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir, your Honour ought to know what might make you change
+your mind.&nbsp; There have been passages between Mr. Archfield and
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Philip laughed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ah, the rogue!&nbsp; You were always
+little sweethearts as children.&nbsp; Why, Anne, you should know better
+than to heed what a young soldier says.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No doubt you have other views for your son,&rdquo; said Dr.
+Woodford, &ldquo;and I trust that my niece has too much discretion and
+sense of propriety to think that they can be interfered with on her
+account.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Passages!&rdquo; repeated Sir Philip thoughtfully.&nbsp; &ldquo;Mistress
+Anne, how much do you mean by that?&nbsp; Surely there is no promise
+between you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir,&rdquo; said Anne; &ldquo;I would not give any; but
+when we parted in Flanders he asked me to&mdash;to wait for him, and
+I feel that you ought to know it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I understand!&rdquo; said the baronet.&nbsp; &ldquo;It
+was only natural to an old friend in a foreign land, and you have too
+much sense to dwell on a young man&rsquo;s folly, though it was an honourable
+scruple that made you tell me, my dear maid.&nbsp; But he is not come
+or coming yet, more&rsquo;s the pity, so there is no need to think about
+it at present.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne&rsquo;s cheeks did not look as if she had attained that wisdom;
+but her conscience was clear, since she had told the fact, and the father
+did not choose to take it seriously.&nbsp; To say how she herself loved
+Charles would have been undignified and nothing to the purpose, since
+her feelings were not what would be regarded, and there was no need
+to mention her full and entire purpose to wed no one else.&nbsp; Time
+enough for that if the proposal were made.</p>
+<p>So the uncle and niece entered on their new life, with some loss
+of independence, and to the Doctor a greater loss in the neighbourhood
+of the Cathedral and its library; for after the first year or two, as
+Lady Archfield grew rheumatic, and Sir Philip had his old friend to
+play backgammon and read the <i>Weekly Gazette</i>, they became unwilling
+to make the move to Winchester, and generally stayed at home all the
+winter.</p>
+<p>Before this, however, Princess Anne had been at the King&rsquo;s
+House at Winchester for a short time; and Lady Archfield paid due respects
+to her, with Anne in attendance.&nbsp; With the royal faculty of remembering
+everybody, the Princess recognised her namesake, gave her hand to be
+kissed, and was extremely gracious.&nbsp; She was at the moment in the
+height of a quarrel with her sister, and far from delighted with the
+present <i>r&eacute;gime</i>.&nbsp; She sent for Miss Woodford, and,
+to Anne&rsquo;s surprise, laughed over her own escape from the Cockpit,
+adding, &ldquo;You would not come, child.&nbsp; You were in the right
+on&rsquo;t.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s no gratitude among them!&nbsp; Had I
+known how I should be served I would never have stirred a foot!&nbsp;
+So &rsquo;twas you that carried off the child!&nbsp; Tell me what he
+is like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And she extracted by questions all that Anne could tell her of the
+life at St. Germain, and the appearance of her little half-brother.&nbsp;
+It was impossible to tell whether she asked from affectionate remorse
+or gossiping interest, but she ended by inquiring whether her father&rsquo;s
+god-daughter were content with her position, or desired one&mdash;if
+there were a vacancy&mdash;in her own household, where she might get
+a good husband.</p>
+<p>Anne declined courteously and respectfully, and was forced to hint
+at an engagement which she could not divulge.&nbsp; She had heard Charles&rsquo;s
+expressions of delight at the arrangement which gave his boy to her
+tender care, warming her heart.</p>
+<p>Lady Archfield had fits of talking of finding a good husband for
+Anne Woodford among the Cathedral clergy, but the maiden was so necessary
+to her, and so entirely a mother to little Philip, that she soon let
+the idea drop.&nbsp; Perhaps it was periodically revived, when, about
+three times a year, there arrived a letter from Charles.&nbsp; He wrote
+in good spirits, evidently enjoying his campaigns, and with no lack
+of pleasant companions, English, Scotch, and Irish Jacobites, with whom
+he lived in warm friendship and wholesome emulation.&nbsp; He won promotion,
+and the county Member actually came out of his way to tell Sir Philip
+what he had heard from the Imperial ambassador of young Archfield&rsquo;s
+distinguished services at the battle of Salankamen, only regretting
+that he was not fighting under King William&rsquo;s colours.&nbsp; Little
+Philip pranced about cutting off Turks&rsquo; heads in the form of poppies,
+&lsquo;like papa,&rsquo; for whose safety Anne taught him to pray night
+and morning.</p>
+<p>Pride in his son&rsquo;s exploits was a compensation to the father,
+who declared them to be better than vegetating over the sheepfolds,
+like Robert Oakshott, or than idling at Portsmouth, like Sedley Archfield.</p>
+<p>That young man&rsquo;s regiment had been ordered to Ireland during
+the campaign that followed the battle of Boyne Water.&nbsp; He had suddenly
+returned from thence, cashiered: by his own story, the victim of the
+enmity of the Dutch General Ginkel; according to another version, on
+account of brutal excesses towards the natives and insolence to his
+commanding officer.&nbsp; Courts-martial had only just been introduced,
+and Sir Philip could believe in a Whig invention doing injustice to
+a member of a loyal family, so that his doors were open to his nephew,
+and Sedley haunted them whenever he had no other resource; but he spent
+most of his time between Newmarket and other sporting centres, and contrived
+to get a sort of maintenance by bets at races, cock-fights, and bull-baitings,
+and by extensive gambling.&nbsp; Evil reports of him came from time
+to time, but Sir Philip was loth to think ill of the son of his brother,
+or to forbode that as his grandson grew older, such influence might
+be dangerous.</p>
+<p>In his uncle&rsquo;s presence Sedley was on his good behaviour; but
+if he caught Miss Woodford without that protection, he attempted rude
+compliments, and when repelled by her dignified look and manner, sneered
+at the airs of my lady&rsquo;s waiting-woman, and demanded how long
+she meant to mope after Charley, who would never look so low.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She need not be so ungracious to a poor soldier.&nbsp; She might
+have to put up with worse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Moreover, he deliberately incited Philip to mischief, putting foul
+words into the little mouth, and likewise giving forbidden food and
+drink, lauding evil sports, and mocking at obedience to any authority,
+especially Miss Woodford&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Philip was very fond of his
+Nana, and in general good and obedient; but what high-spirited boy is
+proof against the allurements of the only example before him of young
+manhood, assuring him that it was manly not to mind what the women said,
+nor to be tied to the apron-strings of his grand-dame&rsquo;s abigail?</p>
+<p>The child had this summer thus been actually taken to the outskirts
+of a bull-fight, whence he had been brought home in great disgrace by
+Ralph, the old servant who had been charged to look after his out-door
+amusements, and to ride with him.&nbsp; The grandfather was indeed more
+shocked at the danger and the vulgarity of the sport than its cruelty,
+but Philip had received his first flogging, and his cousin had been
+so sharply rebuked that&mdash;to the great relief of Anne and of Lady
+Archfield&mdash;he had not since appeared at Fareham House.</p>
+<p>The morrow would be Philip&rsquo;s seventh birthday, a stage which
+would take him farther out of Anne&rsquo;s power.&nbsp; He was no longer
+to sleep in her chamber, but in one of his own with Ralph for his protector,
+and he was to begin Latin with Dr. Woodford.&nbsp; So great was his
+delight that he had gone to bed all the sooner in order to bring the
+great day more quickly, and Anne was glad of the opportunity of finishing
+the kite, which was to be her present, for Ralph to help him fly upon
+Portsdown Hill.</p>
+<p>That great anniversary, so delightful to him, with pony and whip
+prepared for him&mdash;what a day of confusion, distress, and wretchedness
+did it not recall to his elders?&nbsp; Anne could not choose but recall
+the time, as she sat alone in the window, looking out over the garden,
+the moon beginning to rise, and the sunset light still colouring the
+sky in the north-west, just as it had done when she returned home after
+the bonfire.&nbsp; The events of that sad morning had faded out of the
+foreground.&nbsp; The Oakshott family seemed to have resigned themselves
+to the mystery of Peregrine&rsquo;s fate.&nbsp; Only his mother had
+declined from the time of his disappearance.&nbsp; When it was ascertained
+that his uncle had died in Russia, and that nothing had been heard of
+him there, it seemed to bring on a fresh stage of her illness, and she
+had expired at last in Martha Browning&rsquo;s arms, her last words
+being a blessing not only to Robert, but to Peregrine, and a broken
+entreaty to her husband to forgive the boy, for he might have been better
+if they had used him well.</p>
+<p>Martha was then found to hold out against the idea of his being dead.&nbsp;
+Little affection and scant civility as she had received from him, her
+dutiful heart had attached itself to her destined lord, and no doubt
+her imagination had been excited by his curious abilities, and her compassion
+by the persecution he suffered at home.&nbsp; At any rate, when, after
+a proper interval, the Major tried to transfer her to his remaining
+son, she held out against it for a long interval, until at last, after
+full three years, the desolation and disorganisation of Oakwood without
+a mistress, a severe illness of the Major, and the distress of his son,
+so worked upon her feelings that she consented to the marriage with
+Robert, and had ever since been the ruling spirit at Oakwood, and a
+very different one from what had been expected&mdash;sensible, kindly,
+and beneficent, and allowing the young husband more liberty and indulgence
+than he had ever known before.</p>
+<p>The remembrance of Peregrine seemed to have entirely passed away,
+and Anne had been troubled with no more apparitions, so that though
+she thought over the strange scene of that terrible morning, the rapid
+combat, the hasty concealment, the distracted face of the unhappy youth,
+it was with the thought that time had been a healer, and that Charles
+might surely now return home.&nbsp; And what then?</p>
+<p>She raised her eyes to the open window, and what did she behold in
+the moonlight streaming full upon the great tree rose below?&nbsp; It
+was the same face and figure that had three times startled her before,
+the figure dark and the face very white in the moonlight, but like nothing
+else, and with that odd, one-sided feather as of old.&nbsp; It had flitted
+ere she could point its place&mdash;gone in a single flash&mdash;but
+she was greatly startled!&nbsp; Had it come to protest against the scheme
+she had begun to indulge in on that very night of all nights, or had
+it merely been her imagination?&nbsp; For nothing was visible, though
+she leant from the window, no sound was to be heard, though when she
+tried to complete her work, her hands trembled and the paper rustled,
+so that Philip showed symptoms of wakening, and she had to defer her
+task till early morning.</p>
+<p>She said nothing of her strange sight, and Phil had a happy successful
+birthday, flying the kite with a propitious wind, and riding into Portsmouth
+on his new pony with grandpapa.&nbsp; But there was one strange event.&nbsp;
+The servants had a holiday, and some of them went into Portsmouth, black
+Hans, who never returned, being one.&nbsp; The others had lost sight
+of him, but had not been uneasy, knowing him to be perfectly well able
+to find his way home; but as he never appeared, the conclusion was that
+he must have been kidnapped by some ship&rsquo;s crew to serve as a
+cook.&nbsp; He had not been very happy among the servants at Fareham,
+who laughed at his black face and Dutch English, and he would probably
+have gone willingly with Dutchmen; but Anne and her uncle were grieved,
+and felt as if they had failed in the trust that poor Sir Peregrine
+had left them.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXV<br />
+Tidings From The Iron Gates</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;He has more cause to be proud.&nbsp; Where is
+he wounded?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Coriolanus.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It was a wet autumn day, when the yellow leaves of the poplars in
+front of the house were floating down amid the misty rain; Dr. Woodford
+had gone two days before to consult a book in the Cathedral library,
+and was probably detained at Winchester by the weather; Lady Archfield
+was confined to her bed by a sharp attack of rheumatism.&nbsp; Sir Philip
+was taking his after-dinner doze in his arm-chair; and little Philip
+was standing by Anne, who was doing her best to keep him from awakening
+his grandfather, as she partly read, partly romanced, over the high-crowned
+hatted fishermen in the illustrations to Izaak Walton&rsquo;s <i>Complete
+Angler.</i></p>
+<p>He had just, caught by the musical sound, made her read to him a
+second time Marlowe&rsquo;s verses,</p>
+<blockquote><p>&lsquo;Come live with me and be my love,&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>and informed her that his Nana was his love, and that she was to
+watch him fish in the summer rivers, when the servant who had been sent
+to meet His Majesty&rsquo;s mail and extract the <i>Weekly Gazette</i>
+came in, bringing not only that, but a thick, sealed packet, the aspect
+of which made the boy dance and exclaim, &ldquo;A packet from my papa!&nbsp;
+Oh! will he have written an answer to my own letter to him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Sir Philip, who had started up at the opening of the door, had
+no sooner glanced at the packet than he cried out, &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis
+not his hand!&rdquo; and when he tried to break the heavy seals and
+loosen the string, his hands shook so much that he pushed it over to
+Anne, saying, &ldquo;You open it; tell me if my boy is dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne&rsquo;s alarm took the course of speed.&nbsp; She tore off the
+wrapper, and after one glance said, &ldquo;No, no, it cannot be the
+worst; here is something from himself at the end.&nbsp; Here, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot!&nbsp; I cannot,&rdquo; said the poor old man, as
+the tears dimmed his spectacles, and he could not adjust them.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Read it, my dear wench, and let me know what I am to tell his
+poor mother.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he sank into a chair, holding between his knees his little grandson,
+who stood gazing with widely-opened blue eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He sends love, duty, blessing.&nbsp; Oh, he talks of coming
+home, so do not fear, sir!&rdquo; cried Anne, a vivid colour on her
+cheeks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what is it?&rdquo; asked the father.&nbsp; &ldquo;Tell
+me first&mdash;the rest after.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is in the side&mdash;the left side,&rdquo; said Anne, gathering
+up in her agitation the sense of the crabbed writing as best she could.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;They have not extracted the bullet, but when they have, he will
+do well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;God grant it!&nbsp; Who writes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Norman Graham of Glendhu&mdash;captain in his K. K. Regiment
+of Volunteer Dragoons.&nbsp; That&rsquo;s his great friend!&nbsp; Oh,
+sir, he has behaved so gallantly!&nbsp; He got his wound in saving the
+colours from the Turks, and kept his hands clutched over them as his
+men carried him out of the battle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Philip gave another little spring, and his grandfather bade Anne
+read the letter to him in detail.</p>
+<p>It told how the Imperial forces had met a far superior number of
+Turks at Lippa, and had sustained a terrible defeat, with the loss of
+their General Veterani, how Captain Archfield had received a scimitar
+wound in the cheek while trying to save his commander, but had afterwards
+dashed forward among the enemy, recovered the colours of the regiment,
+and by a desperate charge of his fellow-soldiers, who were devotedly
+attached to him, had been borne off the field with a severe wound on
+the left side.&nbsp; Retreat had been immediately necessary, and he
+had been taken on an ammunition waggon along rough roads to the fortress
+called the Iron Gates of Transylvania, whence this letter was written,
+and sent by the messenger who was to summon the Elector of Saxony to
+the aid of the remnant of the army.&nbsp; It had not yet been possible
+to probe the wound, but Charles gave a personal message, begging his
+parents not to despond but to believe him recovering, so long as they
+did not see his servant return without him, and he added sundry tender
+and dutiful messages to his parents, and a blessing to his son, with
+thanks for the pretty letter he had not been able to answer (but which,
+his friend said, was lying spread on his pillow, not unstained with
+blood), and he also told his boy always to love and look up to her who
+had ever been as a mother to him.&nbsp; Anne could hardly read this,
+and the scrap in feeble irregular lines she handed to Sir Philip.&nbsp;
+It was&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>With all my heart I entreat pardon for all the errors
+that have grieved you.&nbsp; I leave you my child to comfort you, and
+mine own true love, whom yon will cherish.&nbsp; She will cherish you
+as a daughter, as she will be, with your consent, if God spares me to
+come home.&nbsp; The love of all my soul to her, my mother, sister,
+and you.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>There was a scrawl for conclusion and signature, and Captain Graham
+added&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>Writing and dictating have greatly exhausted him.&nbsp;
+He would have said more, but he says the lady can explain much, and
+he repeats his urgent entreaties that you will take her to your heart
+as a daughter, and that his son will love and honour her.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>There was a final postscript&mdash;</p>
+<p>The surgeon thinks him better for having disburthened his mind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My child,&rdquo; said Sir Philip, with a long sigh, looking
+up at Anne, who had gathered the boy into her arms, and was hiding her
+face against his little awe-struck head, &ldquo;my child, have you read?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; faltered Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Read then.&rdquo;&nbsp; And as she would have taken it, he
+suddenly drew her into his embrace and kissed her as the eyes of both
+overflowed.&nbsp; &ldquo;My poor girl!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;this is
+as hard to you as to us!&nbsp; Oh, my brave boy!&rdquo; and he let her
+lay her head on his shoulder and held her hand as they wept together,
+while little Phil stared for a moment or two at so strange a sight and
+then burst out with a great cry&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You shall not cry! you shall not! my papa is not dead!&rdquo;
+and he stamped his little foot.&nbsp; &ldquo;No, he isn&rsquo;t.&nbsp;
+He will get well; the letter said so, and I will go and tell grandmamma.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The need of stopping this roused them both; Sir Philip, heavily groaning,
+went away to break the tidings to his wife, and Anne went down on her
+knees on the hearth to caress the boy, and help him to understand his
+father&rsquo;s state and realise the valorous deeds that would always
+be a crown to him, and which already made the little fellow&rsquo;s
+eye flash and his fair head go higher.</p>
+<p>By and by she was sent for to Lady Archfield&rsquo;s room, and there
+she had again to share the grief and the fears and try to dwell on the
+glory and the hopes.&nbsp; When in a calmer moment the parents interrogated
+her on what had passed with Charles, it was not in the spirit of doubt
+and censure, but rather as dwelling on all that was to be told of one
+whom alike they loved, and finally Sir Philip said, &ldquo;I see, dear
+child, I would not believe how far it had gone before, though you tried
+to tell me.&nbsp; Whatever betide, you have won a daughter&rsquo;s place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was true that naturally a far more distinguished match would have
+been sought for the heir, and he could hardly have carried out his purpose
+without more opposition than under their present feelings, his parents
+supposed themselves likely to make, but they really loved Anne enough
+to have yielded at last; and Lady Nutley, coming home with a fuller
+knowledge of her brother&rsquo;s heart, prevented any reaction, and
+Anne was allowed full sympathies as a betrothed maiden, in the wearing
+anxiety that continued in the absence of all intelligence.&nbsp; On
+the principle of doing everything to please him, she was even encouraged
+to write to Charles in the packet in which he was almost implored to
+recover, though all felt doubts whether he were alive even while the
+letters were in hand, and this doubt lasted long and long.&nbsp; It
+was all very well to say that as long as the servant did not return
+his master must be safe&mdash;perhaps himself on the way home; but the
+journey from Transylvania was so long, and there were so many difficulties
+in the way of an Englishman, that there was little security in this
+assurance.&nbsp; And so the winter set in while the suspense lasted;
+and still Dr. Woodford spoke Charles&rsquo;s name in the intercessions
+in the panelled household chapel, and his mother and Anne prayed together
+and separately, and his little son morning and evening entreated God
+to &ldquo;Bless papa, and make him well, and bring him home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus passed more than six weeks, during which Sir Philip&rsquo;s
+attention was somewhat diverted from domestic anxieties by an uninvited
+visit to Portchester from Mr. Charnock, who had once been a college
+mate of Mr. Fellowes, and came professing anxiety, after all these years,
+to renew the friendship which had been broken when they took different
+sides on the election of Dr. Hough to the Presidency of Magdalen College.&nbsp;
+From his quarters at the Rectory Mr. Charnock had gone over to Fareham,
+and sounded Sir Philip on the practicability of a Jacobite rising, and
+whether he and his people would join it.&nbsp; The old gentleman was
+much distressed, his age would not permit him to exert himself in either
+cause, and he had been too much disturbed by James&rsquo;s proceedings
+to feel desirous of his restoration, though his loyal heart would not
+permit of his opposing it, and he had never overtly acknowledged William
+of Orange as his sovereign.</p>
+<p>He could only reply that in the present state of his family he neither
+could nor would undertake anything, and he urgently pleaded against
+any insurrection that could occasion a civil war.</p>
+<p>There was reason to think that Sedley had no hesitation in promising
+to use all his influence over his uncle&rsquo;s tenants, and considerably
+magnifying their extremely small regard to him&mdash;nay, probably,
+dwelling on his own expectations.</p>
+<p>At any rate, even when Charnock was gone, Sedley continued to talk
+big of the coming changes and his own distinguished part in them.&nbsp;
+Indeed one very trying effect of the continued alarm about Charles was
+that he took to haunting the place, and report declared that he had
+talked loudly and coarsely of his cousin&rsquo;s death and his uncle&rsquo;s
+dotage, and of his soon being called in to manage the property for the
+little heir&mdash;insomuch that Sir Edmund Nutley thought it expedient
+to let him know that Charles, on going on active service soon after
+he had come of age, had sent home a will, making his son, who was a
+young gentleman of very considerable property on his mother&rsquo;s
+side, ward to his grandfather first, and then to Sir Edmund Nutley himself
+and to Dr. Woodford.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVI<br />
+The Legend Of Penny Grim</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;O dearest Marjorie, stay at hame,<br />
+&nbsp; For dark&rsquo;s the gate ye have to go,<br />
+For there&rsquo;s a maike down yonder glen<br />
+&nbsp; Hath frightened me and many me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>HOGG.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;Nana,&rdquo; said little Philip in a meditative voice, as
+he looked into the glowing embers of the hall fire, &ldquo;when do fairies
+leave off stealing little boys?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not believe they ever steal them, Phil.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes they do;&rdquo; and he came and stood by her with
+his great limpid blue eyes wide open.&nbsp; &ldquo;Goody Dearlove says
+they stole a little boy, and his name was Penny Grim.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Goody Dearlove is a silly old body to tell my boy such stories,&rdquo;
+said Anne, disguising how much she was startled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, but Ralph Huntsman says &rsquo;tis true, and he knew him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How could he know him when he was stolen?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They put another instead,&rdquo; said the boy, a little puzzled,
+but too young to make his story consistent.&nbsp; &ldquo;And he was
+an elf&mdash;a cross spiteful elf, that was always vexing folk.&nbsp;
+And they stole him again every seven years.&nbsp; Yes&mdash;that was
+it&mdash;they stole him every seven years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whom, Phil; I don&rsquo;t understand&mdash;the boy or the
+elf?&rdquo; she said, half-diverted, even while shocked at the old story
+coming up in such a form.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The elf, I think,&rdquo; he said, bending his brows; &ldquo;he
+comes back, and then they steal him again.&nbsp; Yes; and at last they
+stole him quite&mdash;quite away&mdash;but it is seven years, and Goody
+Dearlove says he is to be seen again!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; exclaimed Anne, with an irrepressible start of
+dismay.&nbsp; &ldquo;Has any one seen him, or fancied so?&rdquo; she
+added, though feeling that her chance of maintaining her rational incredulity
+was gone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Goody Dearlove&rsquo;s Jenny did,&rdquo; was the answer.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She saw him stand out on the beach at night by moonlight, and
+when she screamed out, he was gone like the snuff of a candle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Saw him?&nbsp; What was he like?&rdquo; said Anne, struggling
+for the dispassionate tone of the governess, and recollecting that Jenny
+Dearlove was a maid at Portchester Rectory.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A little bit of a man, all twisty on one side, and a feather
+sticking out.&nbsp; Ralph said they always were like that;&rdquo; and
+Phil&rsquo;s imitation, with his lithe, graceful little figure, of Ralph&rsquo;s
+clumsy mimicry was sufficient to show that there was some foundation
+for this story, and she did not answer at once, so that he added, &ldquo;I
+am seven, Nana; do you think they will get me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no, no, Phil, there&rsquo;s no fear at all of that.&nbsp;
+I don&rsquo;t believe fairies steal anybody, but even old women like
+Goody Dearlove only say they steal little tiny babies if they are left
+alone before they are christened.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The boy drew a long breath, but still asked, &ldquo;Was Penny Grim
+a little baby?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So they said,&rdquo; returned Anne, by no means interfering
+with the name, and with a quailing heart as she thought of the child&rsquo;s
+ever knowing what concern his father had in that disappearance.&nbsp;
+She was by no means sorry to have the conversation broken off by Sir
+Philip&rsquo;s appearance, booted and buskined, prepared for an expedition
+to visit a flock of sheep and their lambs under the shelter of Portsdown
+Hill, and in a moment his little namesake was frisking round eager to
+go with grandpapa.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, &rsquo;tis a brisk frost.&nbsp; Is it too far for him,
+think you, Mistress Anne?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no, sir; he is a strong little man and a walk will only
+be good for him, if he does not stand still too long and get chilled.&nbsp;
+Run, Phil, and ask nurse for your thick coat and stout shoes and leggings.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His grandmother only half trusts me with him,&rdquo; said
+Sir Philip, laughing.&nbsp; &ldquo;I tell her she was not nearly so
+careful of his father.&nbsp; I remember him coming in crusted all over
+with ice, so that he could hardly get his clothes off, but she fancies
+the boy may have some of his poor mother&rsquo;s weakliness about him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see no tokens of it, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Grand-dames will be anxious, specially over one chick.&nbsp;
+Heigho!&nbsp; Winter travelling must be hard in Germany, and posts do
+not come.&nbsp; How now, my man!&nbsp; Are you rolled up like a very
+Russian bear?&nbsp; The poor ewes will think you are come to eat up
+their lambs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll growl at them,&rdquo; said Master Philip, uttering
+a sound sufficient to disturb the nerves of any sheep if he were permitted
+to make it, and off went grandfather and grandson together, Sir Philip
+only pausing at the door to say&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lady wants you, Anne; she is fretting over the delay.&nbsp;
+I fear, though I tell her it bodes well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne watched for a moment the hale old gentleman briskly walking
+on, the merry child frolicking hither and thither round him, and the
+sturdy body-servant Ralph, without whom he never stirred, plodding after,
+while Keeper, the only dog allowed to follow to the sheepfolds, marched
+decorously along, proud of the distinction.&nbsp; Then she went up to
+Lady Archfield, who could not be perfectly easy as to the precious grandchild
+being left to his own devices in the cold, while Sir Philip was sure
+to run into a discussion with the shepherd over the turnips, which were
+too much of a novelty to be approved by the Hampshire mind.&nbsp; It
+was quite true that she could not watch that little adventurous spirit
+with the same absence of anxiety as she had felt for her own son in
+her younger days, and Anne had to devote herself to soothing and diverting
+her mind, till Dr. Woodford knocked at the door to read and converse
+with her.</p>
+<p>The one o&rsquo;clock dinner waited for the grandfather and grandson,
+and when they came at last, little Philip looked somewhat blue with
+cold and more subdued than usual, and his grandfather observed severely
+that he had been a naughty boy, running into dangerous places, sliding
+where he ought not, and then muttered under his breath that Sedley ought
+to have known better than to have let him go there.</p>
+<p>Discipline did not permit even a darling like little Phil to speak
+at dinner-time; but he fidgeted, and the tears came into his eyes, and
+Anne hearing a little grunt behind Sir Philip&rsquo;s chair, looked
+up, and was aware that old Ralph was mumbling what to her ears sounded
+like: &lsquo;Knew too well.&rsquo;&nbsp; But his master, being slightly
+deaf, did not hear, and went on to talk of his lambs and of how Sedley
+had joined them on the road, but had not come back to dinner.</p>
+<p>Phil was certainly quieter than usual that afternoon, and sat at
+Anne&rsquo;s feet by the fire, filling little sacks with bran to be
+loaded on his toy cart to go to the mill, but not chattering as usual.&nbsp;
+She thought him tired, and hearing a sort of sigh took him on her knee,
+when he rested his fair little head on her shoulder, and presently said
+in a low voice&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve seen him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who?&nbsp; Not your father?&nbsp; Oh, my child!&rdquo; cried
+Anne, in a sudden horror.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no&mdash;the Penny Grim thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What?&nbsp; Tell me, Phil dear, how or where?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By the end of the great big pond; and he threw up his arms,
+and made a horrid grin.&rdquo;&nbsp; The boy trembled and hid his face
+against her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But go on, Phil.&nbsp; He can&rsquo;t hurt you, you know.&nbsp;
+Do tell me.&nbsp; Where were you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was sliding on the ice.&nbsp; Grandpapa was ever so long
+talking to Bill Shepherd, and looking at the men cutting turnips, and
+I got cold and tired, and ran about with Cousin Sedley till we got to
+the big pond, and we began to slide, and the ice was so nice and hard&mdash;you
+can&rsquo;t think.&nbsp; He showed me how to take a good long slide,
+and said I might go out to the other end of the pond by the copse, by
+the great old tree.&nbsp; And I set off, but before I got there, out
+it jumped, out of the copse, and waved its arms, and made <i>that</i>
+face.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He cowered into her bosom again and almost cried.&nbsp; Anne knew
+the place, and was ready to start with dismay in her turn.&nbsp; It
+was such a pool as is frequent in chalk districts&mdash;shallow at one
+end, but deep and dangerous with springs at the other.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, Phil dear,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;it was well you were
+stopped; the ice most likely would have broken at that end, and then
+where would Nana&rsquo;s little man have been?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cousin Sedley never told me not,&rdquo; said the boy in self-defence;
+&ldquo;he was whistling to me to go on.&nbsp; But when I tumbled down
+Ralph and grandpapa and all <i>did</i> scold me so&mdash;and Cousin
+Sedley was gone.&nbsp; Why did they scold me, Nana?&nbsp; I thought
+it was brave not to mind danger&mdash;like papa.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is brave when one can do any good by it, but not to slide
+on bad ice, when one must be drowned,&rdquo; said Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;Oh,
+my dear, dear little fellow, it was a blessed thing you saw <i>that</i>,
+whatever it was!&nbsp; But why do you call it Pere&mdash;Penny Grim?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was, Nana!&nbsp; It was a little man&mdash;rather.&nbsp;
+And one-sided looking, with a bit of hair sticking out, just like the
+picture of Riquet-with-a-tuft in your French fairy-book.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This last was convincing to Anne that the child must have seen the
+phantom of seven years ago, since he was not repeating the popular description
+he had given her in the morning, but one quite as individual.&nbsp;
+She asked if grandpapa had seen it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no; he was in the shed, and only came out when he heard
+Ralph scolding me.&nbsp; Was it a wicked urchin come to steal me, Nana?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, I think not,&rdquo; she answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Whatever
+it was, I think it came because God was taking care of His child, and
+warning him from sliding into the deep pool.&nbsp; We will thank him,
+Phil.&nbsp; &lsquo;He shall give his angels charge over thee, to keep
+thee in all thy ways.&rsquo;&rdquo;&nbsp; And to that verse she soothed
+the tired child till he fell asleep, and she could lay him on the settle,
+and cover him with a cloak, musing the while on the strange story, until
+presently she started up and repaired to the buttery in search of the
+old servant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ralph, what is this Master Philip tells me?&rdquo; she asked.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;What has he seen?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Mistress Anne, that is what I can&rsquo;t tell&mdash;no,
+not I; but I knows this, that the child has had a narrow escape of his
+precious life, and I&rsquo;d never trust him again with that there Sedley&mdash;no,
+not for hundreds of pounds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You <i>really</i> think, Ralph&mdash;?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What can I think, ma&rsquo;am?&nbsp; When I finds he&rsquo;s
+been a-setting that there child to slide up to where he&rsquo;d be drownded
+as sure as he&rsquo;s alive, and you see, if we gets ill news of Master
+Archfield (which God forbid), there&rsquo;s naught but the boy atween
+him and this here place&mdash;and he over head and ears in debt.&nbsp;
+Be it what it might that the child saw, it saved the life of him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you see it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Mistress Anne; I can&rsquo;t say as I did.&nbsp; I only
+heard the little master cry out as he fell.&nbsp; I was in the shed,
+you see, taking a pipe to keep me warm.&nbsp; And when I took him up,
+he cried out like one dazed.&nbsp; &rsquo;Twas Penny Grim, Ralph!&nbsp;
+Keep me.&nbsp; He is come to steal me.&rdquo;&nbsp; But Sir Philip wouldn&rsquo;t
+hear nothing of it, only blamed Master Phil for being foolhardy, and
+for crying for the fall, and me for letting him out of sight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And Mr. Sedley&mdash;did he see it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, mayhap he did, for I saw him as white as a sheet and
+his eyes staring out of his head; but that might have been his evil
+conscience.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What became of him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To say the truth, ma&rsquo;am, I believe he be at the Brocas
+Arms, a-drowning of his fright&mdash;if fright it were, with Master
+Harling&rsquo;s strong waters.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But this apparition, this shape&mdash;or whatever it is?&nbsp;
+What put it into Master Philip&rsquo;s head?&nbsp; What has been heard
+of it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ralph looked unwilling.&nbsp; &ldquo;Bless you, Mistress Anne, there&rsquo;s
+been some idle talk among the women folk, as how that there crooked
+slip of Major Oakshott&rsquo;s, as they called Master Perry or Penny,
+and said was a changeling, has been seen once and again.&nbsp; Some
+says as the fairies have got him, and &rsquo;tis the seven year for
+him to come back again.&nbsp; And some says that he met with foul play,
+and &rsquo;tis the ghost of him, but I holds it all mere tales, and
+I be sure &rsquo;twere nothing bad as stopped little master on that
+there pond.&nbsp; So I be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne could not but be of the same mind, but her confusion, alarm,
+and perplexity were great.&nbsp; It seemed strange, granting that this
+were either spirit or elf connected with Peregrine Oakshott, that it
+should interfere on behalf of Charles Archfield&rsquo;s child, and on
+the sweet hypothesis that a guardian angel had come to save the child,
+it was in a most unaccountable form.</p>
+<p>And more pressing than any such mysterious idea was the tangible
+horror of Ralph&rsquo;s suggestion, too well borne out by the boy&rsquo;s
+own unconscious account of the adventure.&nbsp; It was too dreadful,
+too real a peril to be kept to herself, and she carried the story to
+her uncle on his return, but without speaking of the spectral warning.&nbsp;
+Not only did she know that he would not attend to it, but the hint,
+heard for the first time, that Peregrine was supposed to have met with
+foul play, sealed her lips, just when she still was hoping against hope
+that Charles might be on the way home.&nbsp; But that Ralph believed,
+and little Philip&rsquo;s own account confirmed, that his cousin had
+incited the little heir to the slide that would have been fatal save
+for his fall, she told with detail, and entreated that the grandfather
+might be warned, and some means be found of ensuring the safety of her
+darling, the motherless child!</p>
+<p>To her disappointment Dr. Woodford was not willing to take alarm.&nbsp;
+He did not think so ill of Sedley as to believe him capable of such
+a secret act of murder, and he had no great faith in Ralph&rsquo;s sagacity,
+besides that he thought his niece&rsquo;s nerves too much strained by
+the long suspense to be able to judge fairly.&nbsp; He thought it would
+be cruel to the grandparents, and unjust to Sedley, to make such a frightful
+suggestion without further grounds during their present state of anxiety,
+and as to the boy&rsquo;s safety, which Anne pleaded with an uncontrollable
+passion of tears, he believed that it was provided for by watchfulness
+on the part of his two constant guardians, as well as himself, since,
+even supposing the shocking accusation to be true, Sedley would not
+involve himself in danger of suspicion, and it was already understood
+that he was not a fit companion for his little cousin to be trusted
+with.&nbsp; Philip had already brought home words and asked questions
+that distressed his grandmother, and nobody was willing to leave him
+alone with the ex-lieutenant.&nbsp; So again the poor maiden had to
+hold her peace under an added burthen of anxiety and many a prayer.</p>
+<p>When the country was ringing with the tidings of Sir George Barclay&rsquo;s
+conspiracy for the assassination of William III, it was impossible not
+to hope that Sedley&rsquo;s boastful tongue might have brought him sufficiently
+under suspicion to be kept for a while under lock and key; but though
+he did not appear at Fareham, there was reason to suppose that he was
+as usual haunting the taverns and cockpits of Portsmouth.</p>
+<p>No one went much abroad that winter.&nbsp; Sir Philip, perhaps from
+anxiety and fretting, had a fit of the gout, and Anne kept herself and
+her charge within the garden or the street of the town.&nbsp; In fact
+there was a good deal of danger on the roads.&nbsp; The neighbourhood
+of the seaport was always lawless, and had become more so since Sir
+Philip had ceased to act as Justice of the Peace, and there were reports
+of highway robberies of an audacious kind, said to be perpetrated by
+a band calling themselves the Black Gang, under a leader known as Piers
+Pigwiggin, who were alleged to be half smuggler, half Jacobite, and
+to have their headquarters somewhere in the back of the Isle of Wight,
+in spite of the Governor, the terrible Salamander, Lord Cutts, who was,
+indeed, generally absent with the army.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVII<br />
+The Vault</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Heaven awards the vengeance due.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>COWPER.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The weary days had begun to lengthen before the door of the hall
+was flung open, and little Phil, forgetting his bow at the door, rushed
+in, &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s a big packet from foreign parts!&nbsp; Harry
+had to pay ever so much for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have wellnigh left off hoping,&rdquo; sighed the poor mother.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Tell me the worst at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No fear, my lady,&rdquo; said her husband.&nbsp; &ldquo;Thank
+God!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis our son&rsquo;s hand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was the silence for a moment of intense relief, and then the
+little boy was called to cut the silk and break the seals.</p>
+<p>Joy ineffable!&nbsp; There were three letters&mdash;for Master Philip
+Archfield, for Mistress Anne Jacobina Woodford, and for Sir Philip himself.&nbsp;
+The old gentleman glanced over it, caught the words &lsquo;better,&rsquo;
+and &lsquo;coming home,&rsquo; then failed to read through tears of
+joy as before through tears of sorrow, and was fain to hand the sheet
+to his old friend to be read aloud, while little Philip, handling as
+a treasure the first letter he had ever received, though as yet he was
+unable to decipher it, stood between his grandfather&rsquo;s knees listening
+as Dr. Woodford read&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>DEAR AND HONOURED SIR&mdash;I must ask your pardon for
+leaving you without tidings so long, but while my recovery still hung
+in doubt I thought it would only distress you to hear of the fluctuations
+that I went through, and the pain to which the surgeons put me for a
+long time in vain.&nbsp; Indeed frequently I had no power either to
+think or speak, until at last with much difficulty, and little knowledge
+or volition of my own, my inestimable friend Graham brought me to Vienna,
+where I have at length been relieved from my troublesome companion,
+and am enjoying the utmost care and kindness from my friend&rsquo;s
+mother, a near kinswoman, as indeed he is himself, of the brave and
+lamented Viscount Dundee.&nbsp; My wound is healing finally, as I hope,
+and though I have not yet left my bed, my friends assure me that I am
+on the way to full and complete recovery, for which I am more thankful
+to the Almighty than I could have been before I knew what suffering
+and illness meant.&nbsp; As soon as I can ride again, which they tell
+me will be in a fortnight or three weeks, I mean to set forth on my
+way home.&nbsp; I cannot describe to you how I am longing after the
+sight of you all, nor how home-sick I have become.&nbsp; I never had
+time for it before, but I have lain for hours bringing all your faces
+before me, my father&rsquo;s, and mother&rsquo;s, my sister&rsquo;s,
+and that of her whom I hope to call my own; and figuring to myself that
+of the little one.&nbsp; I have thought much over my past life, and
+become sensible of much that was amiss, and while earnestly entreating
+your forgiveness, especially for having absented myself all these years,
+I hope to return so as to be more of a comfort than I was in the days
+of my rash and inconsiderate youth.&nbsp; I am of course at present
+invalided, but I want to consult you, honoured sir, before deciding
+whether it be expedient for me to resign my commission.&nbsp; How I
+thank and bless you for the permission you have given me, and the love
+you bear to my own heart&rsquo;s joy, no words can tell.&nbsp; It shall
+be the study of my life to be worthy of her and of you.&mdash;And so
+no more from your loving and dutiful son, CHARLES ARCHFIELD.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Having drunk in these words with her ears, Anne left Phil to have
+his note interpreted by his grandparents, and fled away to enjoy her
+own in her chamber, yet it was as short as could be and as sweet.</p>
+<blockquote><p>Mine own, mine own sweet Anne, sweetheart of good old
+days, your letter gave me strength to go through with it.&nbsp; The
+doctors could not guess why I was so much better and smiled through
+all their torments.&nbsp; These are our first, I hope our last letters,
+for I shall soon follow them home, and mine own darling will be mine.&mdash;Thine
+own, C. A.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>She had but short time to dwell on it and kiss it, for little Philip
+was upon her, waving his letter, which he already knew by heart; and
+galloping all over the house to proclaim the good news to the old servants,
+who came crowding into the hall, trembling with joy, to ask if there
+were indeed tidings of Mr. Archfield&rsquo;s return, whereupon the glad
+father caused his grandson to carry each a full glass of wine to drink
+to the health of the young master.</p>
+<p>Anne had at first felt only the surpassing rapture of the restoration
+of Charles, but there ensued another delight in the security his recovery
+gave to the life of his son.&nbsp; Sedley Archfield would not be likely
+to renew his attempt, and if only on that account the good news should
+be spread as widely as possible.&nbsp; She was the first to suggest
+the relief it would be to Mr. Fellowes, who had never divested himself
+of the feeling that he ought to have divined his pupil&rsquo;s intention.</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford offered to ride to Portchester with the news, and Sir
+Philip, in the gladness of his heart, proposed that Anne should go with
+him and see her friend.</p>
+<p>Shall it be told how on the way Anne&rsquo;s mind was assailed by
+feminine misgivings whether three and twenty could be as fair in her
+soldier&rsquo;s eyes as seventeen had been?&nbsp; Old maidenhood came
+earlier then than in these days, and Anne knew that she was looked upon
+as an old waiting-gentlewoman or governess by the belles of Winchester.&nbsp;
+Her glass might tell her that her eyes were as softly brown, her hair
+as abundant, her cheek as clear and delicately moulded as ever, but
+there was no one to assure her that the early bloom had not passed away,
+and that she had not rather gained than lost in dignity of bearing and
+the stately poise of the head, which the jealous damsels called Court
+airs.&nbsp; &ldquo;And should he be disappointed, I shall see it in
+his eyes,&rdquo; she said to herself, &ldquo;and then his promise shall
+not bind him, though it will break my heart, and oh! how hard to resign
+my Phil to a strange stepmother.&rdquo;&nbsp; Still her heart was lighter
+than for many a long year, as she cantered along in the brisk March
+air, while the drops left by the departing frost glistened in the sunshine,
+and the sea lay stretched in a delicate gray haze.&nbsp; The old castle
+rose before her in its familiar home-like massiveness as they turned
+towards the Rectory, where in that sheltered spot the well-known clusters
+of crocuses were opening their golden hearts to the sunshine, and recalling
+the days when Anne was as sunny-hearted as they, and she felt as if
+she could be as bright again.</p>
+<p>In Mrs. Fellowes&rsquo;s parlour they found an unexpected guest,
+no other than Mrs. Oakshott.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Gadding about&rsquo; not being the fashion of the Archfield
+household, Anne had not seen the lady for several years, and was agreeably
+surprised by her appearance.&nbsp; Perhaps the marks of smallpox had
+faded, perhaps motherhood had given expression, and what had been gaunt
+ungainliness in the maiden had rounded into a certain importance in
+the matron, nor had her dress, though quiet, any of the Puritan rigid
+ugliness that had been complained of, and though certainly not beautiful,
+she was a person to inspire respect.</p>
+<p>It was explained that she was waiting for her husband, who was gone
+with Mr. Fellowes to speak to the officer in command of the soldiers
+at the castle.&nbsp; &ldquo;For,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;I am quite
+convinced that there is something that ought to be brought to light,
+and it may be in that vault.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne&rsquo;s heart gave such a throb as almost choked her.</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford asked what the lady meant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, sir, when spirits and things &rsquo;tis not well to
+talk of are starting up and about here, there, and everywhere, &rsquo;tis
+plain there must be cause for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not quite take your meaning, madam.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, well! you gentlemen, reverend ones especially, are the
+last to hear such things.&nbsp; There&rsquo;s the poor old Major, he
+won&rsquo;t believe a word of it, but you know, Mistress Woodford.&nbsp;
+I see it in your face.&nbsp; Have you seen anything?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not here, not now,&rdquo; faltered Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+have, Mrs. Fellowes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have heard of some foolish fright of the maids,&rdquo; said
+Naomi, &ldquo;partly their own fancy, or perhaps caught from the sentry.&nbsp;
+There is no keeping those giddy girls from running after the soldiers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Perhaps Naomi hoped by throwing out this hint to conduct her visitors
+off into the safer topic of domestic delinquencies, but Mrs. Oakshott
+was far too earnest to be thus diverted, and she exclaimed, &ldquo;Ah,
+they saw him, I&rsquo;ll warrant!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Him?&rdquo; the Doctor asked innocently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Him or his likeness,&rdquo; said Mrs. Oakshott, &ldquo;my
+poor brother-in-law, Peregrine Oakshott; you remember him, sir?&nbsp;
+He always said, poor lad, that you and Mrs. Woodford were kinder to
+him than his own flesh and blood, except his uncle, Sir Peregrine.&nbsp;
+For my part, I never did give in to all the nonsense folk talked about
+his being a changeling or at best a limb of Satan.&nbsp; He had more
+spirit and sense than the rest of them, and they led him the life of
+a dog, though they knew no better.&nbsp; If I had had him at Emsworth,
+I would have shown them what he was;&rdquo; and she sighed heavily.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Well, I did not so much wonder when he disappeared, I made sure
+that he could bear it no longer and had run away.&nbsp; I waited as
+long as there was any reason, till there should be tidings of him, and
+only took his brother at last because I found they could not do without
+me at home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Remarkable frankness! but it struck both the Doctor and Anne that
+if Peregrine could have submitted, his life might have been freer and
+less unhappy than he had expected, though Mrs. Martha spoke the broadest
+Hampshire.</p>
+<p>Naomi asked, &ldquo;Then you no longer think that he ran away?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, madam; I am certain there was worse than that.&nbsp; You
+remember the night of the bonfire for the Bishops&rsquo; acquittal,
+Miss Woodford?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed I do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, he was never seen again after that, as you know.&nbsp;
+The place was full of wild folk.&nbsp; There was brawling right and
+left.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Were you there?&rdquo; asked Anne surprised.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; in my coach with my uncle and aunt that lived with me,
+though, except Robin, none of the young sparks would come near me, except
+some that I knew were after my pockets,&rdquo; said Martha, with a good-humoured
+laugh.&nbsp; &ldquo;Properly frightened we were too by the brawling
+sailors ere we got home!&nbsp; Now, what could be more likely than that
+some of them got hold of poor Perry?&nbsp; You know he always would
+go about with the rapier he brought from Germany, with amber set in
+the hilt, and the mosaic snuff-box he got in Italy, and what could be
+looked for but that the poor dear lad should be put out of the way for
+the sake of these gewgaws?&rdquo;&nbsp; This supposition was gratifying
+to Anne, but her uncle must needs ask why Mrs. Oakshott thought so more
+than before.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because,&rdquo; she said impressively, &ldquo;there is no
+doubt but that he has been seen, and not in the flesh, once and again,
+and always about these ruins.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By whom, madam, may I ask?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mrs. Fellowes&rsquo;s maids, as she knows, saw him once on
+the beach at night, just there.&nbsp; The sentry, who is Tom Hart, from
+our parish, saw a shape at the opening of the old vault before the keep
+and challenged him, when he vanished out of sight ere there was time
+to present a musket.&nbsp; There was once more, when one moonlight night
+our sexton, looking out of his cottage window, saw what he declares
+was none other than Master Perry standing among the graves of our family,
+as if, poor youth, he were asking why he was not among them.&nbsp; When
+I heard that, I said to my husband, &lsquo;Depend upon it,&rsquo; says
+I, &lsquo;he met with his death that night, and was thrown into some
+hole, and that&rsquo;s the reason he cannot rest.&nbsp; If I pay a hundred
+pounds for it, I&rsquo;ll not give up till his poor corpse is found
+to have Christian burial, and I&rsquo;ll begin with the old vault at
+Portchester!&rsquo;&nbsp; My good father, the Major, would not hear
+of it at first, nor my husband either, but &rsquo;tis my money, and
+I know how to tackle Robin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was with strangely mingled feelings that Anne listened.&nbsp;
+That search in the vault, inaugurated by faithful Martha, was what she
+had always felt ought to be made, and she had even promised to attempt
+it if the apparitions recurred.&nbsp; The notion of the deed being attributed
+to lawless sailors and smugglers or highwaymen, who were known to swarm
+in the neighbourhood, seemed to remove all danger of suspicion.&nbsp;
+Yet she could not divest herself of a vague sense of alarm at this stirring
+up of what had slept for seven years.&nbsp; Neither she nor her uncle
+deemed it needful to mention the appearance seen by little Philip, but
+to her surprise Naomi slowly and hesitatingly said it was very remarkable,
+that her husband having occasion to be at the church at dusk one evening
+just after Midsummer, had certainly seen a figure close to Mrs. Woodford&rsquo;s
+grave, and lost sight of it before he could speak of it.&nbsp; He thought
+nothing more of it till these reports began to be spread, but he had
+then recollected that it answered the descriptions given of the phantom.</p>
+<p>Here the ladies were interrupted by the appearance of Mr. Fellowes
+and Robert Oakshott, now grown into a somewhat heavy but by no means
+foolish-looking young man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, madam,&rdquo; said he, in Hampshire as broad as his
+wife&rsquo;s, &ldquo;you will have your will.&nbsp; Not that Captain
+Henslowe believes a word of your ghosts&mdash;not he; but he took fire
+when he heard of queer sights about the castle.&nbsp; He sent for the
+chap who stood sentry, and was downright sharp on him for not reporting
+what he had seen, and he is ordering out a sergeant&rsquo;s party to
+open the vault, so you may come and see, if you have any stomach for
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I could not but come!&rdquo; said Madam Oakshott, who certainly
+did not look squeamish, but who was far more in earnest than her husband,
+and perhaps doubted whether without her presence the quest would be
+thorough.&nbsp; Anne was full of dread, and almost sick at the thought
+of what she might see, but she was far too anxious to stay away.&nbsp;
+Mrs. Fellowes made some excuse about the children for not accompanying
+them.</p>
+<p>It always thrilled Anne to enter that old castle court, the familiar
+and beloved play-place of her childhood, full of memories of Charles
+and of Lucy, and containing in its wide precincts the churchyard where
+her mother lay.&nbsp; She moved along in a kind of dream, glad to be
+let alone, since Mr. Fellowes naturally attended Mrs. Oakshott, and
+Robert was fully occupied in explaining to the Doctor that he only gave
+in to this affair for the sake of pacifying madam, since women folk
+would have their little megrims.&nbsp; Assuredly that tall, solid, resolute
+figure stalking on in front, looked as little subject to megrims as
+any of her sex.&nbsp; Her determination had brought her husband thither,
+and her determination further carried the day, when the captain, after
+staring at the solid-looking turf, stamping on the one stone that was
+visible, and trampling down the bunch of nettles beside it, declared
+that the entrance had been so thoroughly stopped that it was of no use
+to dig farther.&nbsp; It was Madam Martha who demanded permission to
+offer the four soldiers a crown apiece if they opened the vault, a guinea
+each if they found anything.&nbsp; The captain could not choose but
+grant it, though with something of a sneer, and the work was begun.&nbsp;
+He walked up and down with Robert, joining in hopes that the lady would
+be satisfied before dinner-time.&nbsp; The two clergymen likewise walked
+together, arguing, as was their wont, on the credibility of apparitions.&nbsp;
+The two ladies stood in almost breathless watch, as the bricks that
+had covered in the opening were removed, and the dark hole brought to
+light.&nbsp; Contrary to expectation, when the opening had been enlarged,
+it was found that there were several steps of stone, and where they
+were broken away, there was a rude ladder.</p>
+<p>A lantern was fetched from the guard-room in the bailey, and after
+much shaking and trying of the ladder, one of the soldiers descended,
+finding the place less deep than was commonly supposed, and soon calling
+out that he was at the bottom.&nbsp; Another followed him, and presently
+there was a shout.&nbsp; Something was found!&nbsp; &ldquo;A rusty old
+chain, no doubt,&rdquo; grumbled Robert; but his wife shrieked.&nbsp;
+It was a sword in its sheath, the belt rotted, the clasp tarnished,
+but of silver.&nbsp; Mrs. Oakshott seized it at once, rubbed away the
+dust from the handle, and brought to light a glistening yellow piece
+of amber, which she mutely held up, and another touch of her handkerchief
+disclosed on a silver plate in the scabbard an oak-tree, the family
+crest, and the twisted cypher P. O.&nbsp; Her eyes were full of tears,
+and she did not speak.&nbsp; Anne, white and trembling, was forced to
+sink down on the stone, unnoticed by all, while Robert Oakshott, convinced
+indeed, hastily went down himself.&nbsp; The sword had been hidden in
+a sort of hollow under the remains of the broken stair.&nbsp; Thence
+likewise came to light the mouldy remnant of a broad hat and the quill
+of its plume, and what had once been a coat, even in its present state
+showing that it had been soaked through and through with blood, the
+same stains visible on the watch and the mosaic snuff-box.&nbsp; That
+was all; there was no purse, and no other garments, though, considering
+the condition of the coat, they might have been entirely destroyed by
+the rats and mice.&nbsp; There was indeed a fragment of a handkerchief,
+with the cypher worked on it, which Mrs. Oakshott showed to Anne with
+the tears in her eyes: &ldquo;There!&nbsp; I worked that, though he
+never knew it.&nbsp; No!&nbsp; I know he did not like me!&nbsp; But
+I would have made him do so at last.&nbsp; I would have been so good
+to him.&nbsp; Poor fellow, that he should have been lying there all
+this time!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lying there; but where, then, was he?&nbsp; No signs of any corpse
+were to be found, though one after another all the gentlemen descended
+to look, and Mrs. Oakshott was only withheld by her husband&rsquo;s
+urgent representations, and promise to superintend a diligent digging
+in the ground, so as to ascertain whether there had been a hasty burial
+there.</p>
+<p>Altogether, Anne was so much astonished and appalled that she could
+hardly restrain herself, and her mind reverted to Bishop Ken&rsquo;s
+theory that Peregrine still lived; but this was contradicted by the
+appearance at Douai, which did not rest on the evidence of her single
+perceptions.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Fellowes sent out an entreaty that they would come to dinner,
+and the gentlemen were actually base enough to wish to comply, so that
+the two ladies had no choice save to come with them, especially as the
+soldiers were unwilling to work on without their meal.&nbsp; Neither
+Mrs. Oakshott nor Anne felt as if they could swallow, and the polite
+pressure to eat was only preferable in Anne&rsquo;s eyes to the conversation
+on the discoveries that had been made, especially the conclusion arrived
+at by all, that though the purse and rings had not been found, the presence
+of the watch and snuff-box precluded the idea of robbery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;These would be found on the body,&rdquo; said Mr. Oakshott.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I could swear to the purse.&nbsp; You remember, madam, your uncle
+bantering him about French ladies and their finery, asking whose token
+it was, and how black my father looked?&nbsp; Poor Perry, if my father
+could have had a little patience with him, he would not have gone roaming
+about and getting into brawls, and we need not be looking for him in
+yonder black pit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll never find him there, Master Robert,&rdquo; spoke
+out the old Oakwood servant, behind Mrs. Oakshott&rsquo;s chair, free
+and easy after the manner of the time.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And wherefore not, Jonadab?&rdquo; demanded his mistress,
+by no means surprised at the liberty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, ma&rsquo;am, &rsquo;twas the seven years, you sees, and
+in course when them you wot of had power to carry him off, they could
+not take his sword, nor his hat, not they couldn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How about his purse, then?&rdquo; put in Dr. Woodford.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be bound you will find it yet, sir,&rdquo; responded
+Jonadab, by no means disconcerted, &ldquo;leastways unless some two-legged
+fairies have got it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this some of the party found it impossible not to laugh, and this
+so upset poor Martha&rsquo;s composure that she was obliged to leave
+the table, and Anne was not sorry for the excuse of attending her, although
+there were stings of pain in all her rambling lamentations and conjectures.</p>
+<p>Very tardily, according to the feelings of the anxious women, was
+the dinner finished, and their companions ready to take them out again.&nbsp;
+Indeed, Madam Oakshott at last repaired to the dining-parlour, and roused
+her husband from his glass of Spanish wine to renew the search.&nbsp;
+She would not listen to Mrs. Fellowes&rsquo;s advice not to go out again,
+and Anne could not abstain either from watching for what could not be
+other than grievous and mournful to behold.</p>
+<p>The soldiers were called out again by their captain, and reinforced
+by the Rectory servant and Jonadab.</p>
+<p>There was an interval of anxious prowling round the opening.&nbsp;
+Mr. Oakshott and the captain had gone down again, and found, what the
+military man was anxious about, that if there were passages to the outer
+air, they had been well blocked up and not re-opened.</p>
+<p>Meantime the digging proceeded.</p>
+<p>It was just at twilight that a voice below uttered an exclamation.&nbsp;
+Then came a pause.&nbsp; The old sergeant&rsquo;s voice ordered care
+and a pause, somewhere below the opening with, &ldquo;Sir, the spades
+have hit upon a skull.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a shuddering pause.&nbsp; All the gentlemen except Dr.
+Woodford, who feared the chill, descended again.&nbsp; Mrs. Oakshott
+and Anne held each other&rsquo;s hands and trembled.</p>
+<p>By and by Mr. Fellowes came up first.&nbsp; &ldquo;We have found,&rdquo;
+he said, looking pale and grave, &ldquo;a skeleton.&nbsp; Yes, a perfect
+skeleton, but no more&mdash;no remains except a fine dust.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Robert Oakshott following, awe-struck and sorrowful, added, &ldquo;Yes,
+there he is, poor Perry&mdash;all that is left of him&mdash;only his
+bones.&nbsp; No, madam, we must leave him there for the present; we
+cannot bring it up without preparation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You need not fear meddling curiosity, madam,&rdquo; said the
+captain.&nbsp; &ldquo;I will post a sentry here to bar all entrance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thanks, sir,&rdquo; said Robert.&nbsp; &ldquo;That will be
+well till I can bury the poor fellow with all due respect by my mother
+and Oliver.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And then I trust his spirit will have rest,&rdquo; said Martha
+Oakshott fervently.&nbsp; &ldquo;And now home to your father.&nbsp;
+How will he bear it, sir?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I verily believe he will sleep the quieter for knowing for
+a certainty what has become of poor Peregrine,&rdquo; said her husband.</p>
+<p>And Anne felt as if half her burthen of secrecy was gone when they
+all parted, starting early because the Black Gang rendered all the roads
+unsafe after dark.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII<br />
+The Disclosure</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;He looked about as one betrayed,<br />
+What hath he done, what promise made?<br />
+Oh! weak, weak moment, to what end<br />
+Can such a vain oblation tend?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>WORDSWORTH.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>For the most part Anne was able to hold her peace and keep out of
+sight while Dr. Woodford related the strange revelations of the vault
+with all the circumstantiality that was desired by two old people living
+a secluded life and concerned about a neighbour of many years, whom
+they had come to esteem by force of a certain sympathy in honest opposition.&nbsp;
+The mystery occupied them entirely, for though the murder was naturally
+ascribed to some of the lawless coast population, the valuables remaining
+with the clothes made a strange feature in the case.</p>
+<p>It was known that there was to be an inquest held on the remains
+before their removal, and Dr. Woodford, both from his own interest in
+the question, and as family intelligencer, rode to the castle.&nbsp;
+Sir Philip longed to go, but it was a cold wet day, and he had threatenings
+of gout, so that he was persuaded to remain by the fireside.&nbsp; Inquests
+were then always held where the body lay, and the court of Portchester
+Castle was no place for him on such a day.</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford came home just before twilight, looking grave and troubled,
+and, much to Anne&rsquo;s alarm, desired to speak to Sir Philip privately
+in the gun-room.&nbsp; Lady Archfield took alarm, and much distressed
+her by continually asking what could be the meaning of the interview,
+and making all sorts of guesses.</p>
+<p>When at last they came together into the parlour the poor lady looked
+so anxious and frightened that her husband went up to her and said,
+&ldquo;Do not be alarmed, sweetheart.&nbsp; We shall clear him; but
+those foolish fellows have let suspicion fall on poor Sedley.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nobody looked at Anne, or her deadly paleness must have been remarked,
+and the trembling which she could hardly control by clasping her hands
+tightly together, keeping her feet hard on the floor, and setting her
+teeth.</p>
+<p>Lady Archfield was perhaps less fond of the scapegrace nephew than
+was her husband, and she felt the matter chiefly as it affected him,
+so that she heard with more equanimity than he had done; and as they
+sat round the fire in the half-light, for which Anne was thankful, the
+Doctor gave his narration in order.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I found a large company assembled in the castle court, waiting
+for the coroner from Portsmouth, though the sentry on guard would allow
+no one to go down, in spite of some, even ladies, I am ashamed to say,
+who offered him bribes for the permission.&nbsp; Everything, I heard,
+had been replaced as we found it.&nbsp; The poor Major himself was there,
+looking sadly broken, and much needing the help of his son&rsquo;s arm.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;To think that I was blaming my poor son as a mere reprobate,
+and praying for his conversion,&rsquo; says he, &lsquo;when he was lying
+here, cut off without a moment for repentance.&rsquo;&nbsp; There was
+your nephew, suspecting nothing, Squire Brocas, Mr. Eyre, of Botley
+Grange, Mr. Biden, Mr. Larcom, and Mr. Bargus, and a good many more,
+besides Dr. James Yonge, the naval doctor, and the Mayor of Portsmouth,
+and more than I can tell you.&nbsp; When the coroner came, and the jury
+had been sworn in, they went down and viewed the spot, and all that
+was there.&nbsp; The soldiers had put candles round, and a huge place
+it is, all built up with large stones.&nbsp; Then, as it was raining
+hard, they adjourned to the great room in the keep and took the evidence.&nbsp;
+Robert Oakshott identified the clothes and the watch clearly enough,
+and said he had no doubt that the other remains were Peregrine&rsquo;s;
+but as to swearing to a brother&rsquo;s bones, no one could do that;
+and Dr. Yonge said in my ear that if the deceased were so small a man
+as folks said, the skeleton could scarce be his, for he thought it had
+belonged to a large-framed person.&nbsp; That struck no one else, for
+naturally it is only a chirurgeon who is used to reckon the proportion
+that the bones bear to the body, and I also asked him whether in seven
+years the other parts would be so entirely consumed, to which he answered
+that so much would depend on the nature of the soil that there was no
+telling.&nbsp; However, jury and coroner seemed to feel no doubt, and
+that old seafaring man, Tom Block, declared that poor Master Peregrine
+had been hand and glove with a lot of wild chaps, and that the vault
+had been well known to them before the gentlemen had had it blocked
+up.&nbsp; Then it was asked who had seen him last, and Robert Oakshott
+spoke of having parted with him at the bonfire, and never seen him again.&nbsp;
+There, I fancy, it would have ended in a verdict of wilful murder against
+some person or persons unknown, but Robert Oakshott must needs say,
+&ldquo;I would give a hundred pounds to know who the villain was.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And then who should get up but George Rackstone, with &ldquo;Please
+your Honour, I could tell summat.&rdquo;&nbsp; The coroner bade swear
+him, and he deposed to having seen Master Peregrine going down towards
+the castle somewhere about four o&rsquo;clock that morning after the
+bonfire when he was getting up to go to his mowing.&nbsp; But that was
+not all.&nbsp; You remember, Anne, that his father&rsquo;s cottage stands
+on the road towards Portsmouth.&nbsp; Well, he brought up the story
+of your running in there, frightened, the day before the bonfire, when
+I was praying with his sick mother, calling on me to stop a fray between
+Peregrine and young Sedley, and I had to get up and tell of Sedley&rsquo;s
+rudeness to you, child.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was that?&rdquo; hastily asked Lady Archfield.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The old story, my lady.&nbsp; The young officer&rsquo;s swaggering
+attempt to kiss the girl he meets on the road.&nbsp; I doubt even if
+he knew at the moment that it was my niece.&nbsp; Peregrine was coming
+by at the moment, and interfered to protect her, and swords were drawn.&nbsp;
+I could not deny it, nor that there was ill blood between the lads;
+and then young Brocas, who was later on Portsdown than we were, remembered
+high words, and had thought to himself that there would be a challenge.&nbsp;
+And next old Goody Spore recollects seeing Master Sedley and another
+soldier officer out on the Portsmouth road early that morning.&nbsp;
+The hay was making in the court then, and Jenny Light remembered that
+when the haymakers came she raked up something that looked like a bloody
+spot, and showed it to one of the others, but they told her that most
+likely a rabbit or a hare had been killed there, and she had best take
+no heed.&nbsp; Probably there was dread of getting into trouble about
+a smugglers&rsquo; fray.&nbsp; Well, every one was looking askance at
+Master Sedley by this time, and the coroner asked him if he had anything
+to say.&nbsp; He spoke out boldly enough.&nbsp; He owned to the dispute
+with Peregrine Oakshott, and to having parted with him that night on
+terms which would only admit of a challenge.&nbsp; He wrote a cartel
+that night, and sent it by his friend Lieutenant Ainslie, but doubting
+whether Major Oakshott might not prevent its delivery, he charged him
+to try to find Peregrine outside the house, and arrange with him a meeting
+on the hill, where you know the duellists of the garrison are wont to
+transact such encounters.&nbsp; Sedley himself walked out part of the
+way with his friend, but neither of them saw Peregrine, nor heard anything
+of him.&nbsp; So he avers, but when asked for his witness to corroborate
+the story, he says that Ainslie, I fear the only person who could have
+proved an <i>alibi</i>&mdash;if so it were&mdash;was killed at Landen;
+but, he added, certainly with too much of his rough way, it was a mere
+absurdity to charge it upon him.&nbsp; What should a gentleman have
+to do with private murders and robberies?&nbsp; Nor did he believe the
+bones to be Perry Oakshott&rsquo;s at all.&nbsp; It was all a bit of
+Whiggish spite!&nbsp; He worked himself into a passion, which only added
+to the impression against him; and I own I cannot wonder that the verdict
+has sent him to Winchester to take his trial.&nbsp; Why, Anne, child,
+how now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis a terrible story.&nbsp; Take my essences, child,&rdquo;
+said Lady Archfield, tottering across, and Anne, just saving herself
+from fainting by a long gasp at them, let herself be led from the room.&nbsp;
+The maids buzzed about her, and for some time she was sensible of nothing
+but a longing to get rid of them, and to be left alone to face the grievous
+state of things which she did not yet understand.&nbsp; At last, with
+kind good-nights from Lady Archfield, such as she could hardly return,
+she was left by herself in the darkness to recover from the stunned
+helpless feeling of the first moment.</p>
+<p>Sedley accused!&nbsp; Charles to be sacrificed to save his worthless
+cousin, the would-be murderer of his innocent child, who morally thus
+deserved to suffer!&nbsp; Never, never!&nbsp; She could not do so.&nbsp;
+It would be treason to her benefactors, nay, absolute injustice, for
+Charles had struck in generous defence of herself; but Sedley had tried
+to allure the boy to his death merely for his own advantage.&nbsp; Should
+she not be justified in simply keeping silence?&nbsp; Yet there was
+like an arrow in her heart, the sense of guilt in so doing, guilt towards
+God and truth, guilt towards man and justice.&nbsp; She should die under
+the load, and it would be for Charles.&nbsp; Might it only be before
+he came home, then he would know that she had perished under his secret
+to save him.&nbsp; Nay, but would he be thankful at being saved at the
+expense of his cousin&rsquo;s life?&nbsp; If he came, how should she
+meet him?</p>
+<p>The sense of the certain indignation of a good and noble human spirit
+often awakes the full perception of what an action would be in the sight
+of Heaven, and Anne began to realise the sin more than at first, and
+to feel the compulsion of truth.&nbsp; If only Charles were not coming
+home she could write to him and warn him, but the thought that he might
+be already on the way had turned from joy to agony.&nbsp; &ldquo;And
+to think,&rdquo; she said to herself, &ldquo;that I was fretting as
+to whether he would think me pretty!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She tossed about in misery, every now and then rising on her knees
+to pray&mdash;at first for Charles&rsquo;s safety&mdash;for she shrank
+from asking for Divine protection, knowing only too well what that would
+be.&nbsp; Gradually, however, a shudder came over her at the thought
+that if she would not commit her way unto the Lord, she might indeed
+be the undoing of her lover, and then once more the higher sense of
+duty rose on her.&nbsp; She prayed for forgiveness for the thought,
+and that it might not be visited upon him; she prayed for strength to
+do what must be her duty, for safety for him, and comfort to his parents,
+and so, in passing gusts of misery and apprehension, of failing heart
+and recovered resolution, of anguish and of prayer, the long night at
+length passed, and with the first dawn she arose, shaken and weak, but
+resolved to act on her terrible resolution before it again failed her.</p>
+<p>Sir Philip was always an early riser, and she heard his foot on the
+stairs before seven o&rsquo;clock.&nbsp; She came out on the staircase,
+which met the flight which he was descending, and tried to speak, but
+her lips seemed too dry to part.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Child! child! you are ill,&rdquo; said the old gentleman,
+as he saw her blanched cheek; &ldquo;you should be in bed this chilly
+morning.&nbsp; Go back to your chamber.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no, sir, I cannot.&nbsp; Pray, your Honour, come here,
+I have something to say;&rdquo; and she drew him to the open door of
+his justice-room, called the gun-room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bless me,&rdquo; he muttered, &ldquo;the wench does not mean
+that she has got smitten with that poor rogue my nephew!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! no, no,&rdquo; said Anne, almost ready for a hysterical
+laugh, yet letting the old man seat himself, and then dropping on her
+knees before him, for she could hardly stand, &ldquo;it is worse than
+that, sir; I know who it was who did that thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, who?&rdquo; he said hastily; &ldquo;why have you kept
+it back so long and let an innocent man get into trouble?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;O Sir Philip!&nbsp; I could not help it.&nbsp; Forgive me;&rdquo;
+and with clasped hands, she brought out the words, &ldquo;It was your
+son, Mr. Archfield;&rdquo; and then she almost collapsed again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Child! child! you are ill; you do not know what you are saying.&nbsp;
+We must have you to bed again.&nbsp; I will call your uncle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! sir, it is only too true;&rdquo; but she let him fetch
+her uncle, who was sure to be at his devotions in a kind of oratory
+on the farther side of the hall.&nbsp; She had not gone to him first,
+from the old desire to keep him clear of the knowledge, but she longed
+for such support as he might give her, or at least to know whether he
+were very angry with her.</p>
+<p>The two old men quickly came back together, and Dr. Woodford began,
+&ldquo;How now, niece, are you telling us dreams?&rdquo; but he broke
+off as he saw the sad earnest of her face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir, it is too true.&nbsp; He charged me to speak out if any
+one else were brought into danger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come,&rdquo; said Sir Philip, testily; &ldquo;don&rsquo;t
+crouch grovelling on the floor there.&nbsp; Get up and let us know the
+meaning of this.&nbsp; Good heavens! the lad may be here any day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne had much rather have knelt where she was, but her uncle raised
+her, and placed her in a chair, saying, &ldquo;Try to compose yourself,
+and tell us what you mean, and why it has been kept back so long.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed he did not intend it,&rdquo; pleaded Anne; &ldquo;it
+was almost an accident&mdash;to protect me&mdash;Peregrine was&mdash;pursuing
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Upon my word, young mistress,&rdquo; burst out the father,
+&ldquo;you seem to have been setting all the young fellows together
+by the ears.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I doubt if she could help it,&rdquo; said the Doctor.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She tried to be discreet, but it was the reason her mother&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, go on,&rdquo; interrupted poor Sir Philip, too unhappy
+to remember manners or listen to the defence; &ldquo;what was it? when
+was it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne was allowed then to proceed.&nbsp; &ldquo;It was the morning
+I went to London.&nbsp; I went out to gather some mouse-ear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mouse-ear! mouse-ear!&rdquo; growled he.&nbsp; &ldquo;Some
+one else&rsquo;s ear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was for Lady Oglethorpe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was,&rdquo; said her uncle, &ldquo;a specific, it seems,
+for whooping-cough.&nbsp; I saw the letter, and knew&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Umph! let us hear,&rdquo; said Sir Philip, evidently with
+the idea of a tryst in his mind.&nbsp; &ldquo;No wonder mischief comes
+of maidens running about at such hours.&nbsp; What next?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The poor girl struggled on: &ldquo;I saw Peregrine coming, and hoping
+he would not see me, I ran into the keep, meaning to get home by the
+battlements out of his sight, but when I looked down he and Mr. Archfield
+were fighting.&nbsp; I screamed, but I don&rsquo;t think they heard
+me, and I ran down; but I had fastened all the doors, and I was a long
+time getting out, and by that time Mr. Archfield had dragged him to
+the vault and thrown him in.&nbsp; He was like one distracted, and said
+it must be hidden, or it would be the death of his wife and his mother,
+and what could I do?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is that all the truth?&rdquo; said Sir Philip sternly.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;What brought them there&mdash;either of them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Archfield came to bring me a pattern of sarcenet to match
+for poor young Madam in London.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No doubt Sir Philip recollected the petulant anger that this had
+been forgotten, but he was hardly appeased.&nbsp; &ldquo;And the other
+fellow?&nbsp; Why, he was brawling with my nephew Sedley about you the
+day before!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not think she was to blame there,&rdquo; said Dr. Woodford.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The unhappy youth was set against marrying Mistress Browning,
+and had talked wildly to my sister and me about wedding my niece.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But why should she run away as if he had the plague, and set
+the foolish lads to fight?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir, I must tell you,&rdquo; Anne owned, &ldquo;he had beset
+me, and talked so desperately that I was afraid of what he might do
+in that lonely place and at such an hour in the morning.&nbsp; I hoped
+he had not seen me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Umph!&rdquo; said Sir Philip, much as if he thought a silly
+girl&rsquo;s imagination had caused all the mischief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When did he thus speak to you, Anne?&rdquo; asked her uncle,
+not unkindly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;At the inn at Portsmouth, sir,&rdquo; said Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;He
+came while you were with Mr. Stanbury and the rest, and wanted me to
+marry him and flee to France, or I know not where, or at any rate marry
+him secretly so as to save him from poor Mistress Browning.&nbsp; I
+could not choose but fear and avoid him, but oh!&nbsp; I would have
+faced him ten times over rather than have brought this on&mdash;us all.&nbsp;
+And now what shall I do?&nbsp; He, Mr. Archfield, when I saw him in
+France, said as long as no one was suspected, it would only give more
+pain to say what I knew, but that if suspicion fell on any one&mdash;&rdquo;
+and her voice died away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He could not say otherwise,&rdquo; returned Sir Philip, with
+a groan.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now what shall I do? what shall I do?&rdquo; sighed the
+poor girl.&nbsp; &ldquo;I must speak truth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I never bade you perjure yourself,&rdquo; said Sir Philip
+sharply, but hiding his face in his hands, and groaning out, &ldquo;Oh,
+my son! my son!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Seeing that his distress so overcame poor Anne that she could scarcely
+contain herself, Dr. Woodford thought it best to take her from the room,
+promising to come again to her.&nbsp; She could do nothing but lie on
+her bed and weep in a quiet heart-broken way.&nbsp; Sir Philip&rsquo;s
+anger seemed to fill up the measure, by throwing the guilt back upon
+her and rousing a bitter sense of injustice, and then she wept again
+at her cruel selfishness in blaming the broken-hearted old man.</p>
+<p>She could hardly have come down to breakfast, so heavy were her limbs
+and so sick and faint did every movement render her, and she further
+bethought herself that the poor old father might not brook the sight
+of her under the circumstances.&nbsp; It was a pang to hear little Philip
+prancing about the house, and when he had come to her to say his prayers,
+she sent him down with a message that she was not well enough to come
+downstairs, and that she wanted nothing, only to be quiet.</p>
+<p>The little fellow was very pitiful, and made her cry again by wanting
+to know whether she had gout like grandpapa or rheumatics like grandmamma,
+and then stroking her face, calling her his dear Nana, and telling her
+of the salad in his garden that his papa was to eat the very first day
+he came home.</p>
+<p>By and by Dr. Woodford knocked at her door.&nbsp; He had had a long
+conversation with poor old Sir Philip, who was calmer now than under
+the first blow, and somewhat less inclined to anger with the girl, who
+might indeed be the cause, but surely the innocent cause, of all.&nbsp;
+The Doctor had done his best to show that her going out had no connection
+with any of the youths, and he thought Sir Philip would believe it on
+quieter reflection.&nbsp; He had remembered too, signs of self-reproach
+mixed with his son&rsquo;s grief for his wife, and his extreme relief
+at the plan for going abroad, recollecting likewise that Charles had
+strongly disliked poor Peregrine, and had much resented the liking which
+young Madam had shown for one whose attentions might have been partly
+intended to tease the young husband.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said Dr. Woodford, &ldquo;the unhappy deed
+was no more than an unfortunate accident, and if all had been known
+at first, probably it would so have been treated.&nbsp; The concealment
+was an error, but it is impossible to blame either of you for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh never mind that, dear uncle!&nbsp; Only tell me!&nbsp;
+Must he&mdash;must Charles suffer to save that man?&nbsp; You know what
+he is, real murderer in heart!&nbsp; Oh I know.&nbsp; The right must
+be done!&nbsp; But it is dreadful!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The right must be done and the truth spoken at all costs.&nbsp;
+No one knows that better than our good old patron,&rdquo; said the Doctor;
+&ldquo;but, my dear child, you are not called on to denounce this young
+man as you seem to imagine, unless there should be no other means of
+saving his cousin, or unless you are so questioned that you cannot help
+replying for truth&rsquo;s sake.&nbsp; Knowing nothing of all this,
+it struck others besides myself at the inquest that the evidence against
+Sedley was utterly insufficient for a conviction, and if he should be
+acquitted, matters will only be as they were before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you think I am not bound to speak&mdash;The truth, the
+whole truth, nothing but the truth,&rdquo; she murmured in exceeding
+grief, yet firmly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You certainly may, nay, <i>must</i> keep your former silence
+till the trial, at the Lent Assizes.&nbsp; I trust you may not be called
+on as a witness to the fray with Sedley, but that I may be sufficient
+testimony to that.&nbsp; I could testify to nothing else.&nbsp; Remember,
+if you are called, you have only to answer what you are asked, nor is
+it likely, unless Sedley have any suspicion of the truth, that you will
+be asked any question that will implicate Mr. Archfield.&nbsp; If so,
+God give you strength my poor child, to be true to Him.&nbsp; But the
+point of the trial is to prove Sedley guilty or not guilty; and if the
+latter, there is no more to be said.&nbsp; God grant it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But he&mdash;Mr. Archfield?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His father is already taking measures to send to all the ports
+to stop him on his way till the trial is over.&nbsp; Thus there will
+be no actual danger, though it is a sore disappointment, and these wicked
+attempts of Charnock and Barclay put us in bad odour, so that it may
+be less easy to procure a pardon than it once would have been.&nbsp;
+So, my dear child, I do not think you need be in terror for his life,
+even if you are obliged to speak out plainly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And then the good old man knelt with Anne to pray for pardon, direction,
+and firmness, and protection for Charles.&nbsp; She made an entreaty
+after they rose that her uncle would take her away&mdash;her presence
+must be so painful to their kind hosts.&nbsp; He agreed with her, and
+made the proposition, but Sir Philip would not hear of it.&nbsp; Perhaps
+he was afraid of any change bringing suspicion of the facts, and he
+might have his fears of Anne being questioned into dangerous admissions,
+besides which, he hoped to keep his poor old wife in ignorance to the
+last.&nbsp; So Anne was to remain at Fareham, and after that one day&rsquo;s
+seclusion she gathered strength to be with the family as usual.&nbsp;
+Poor old Sir Philip treated her with a studied but icy courtesy which
+cut her to the heart; but Lady Archfield&rsquo;s hopes of seeing her
+son were almost worse, together with her regrets at her husband&rsquo;s
+dejection at the situation of his nephew and the family disgrace.&nbsp;
+As to little Philip, his curious inquiries about Cousin Sedley being
+in jail for murdering Penny Grim had to be summarily hushed by the assurance
+that such things were not to be spoken about.&nbsp; But why did Nana
+cry when he talked of papa&rsquo;s coming home?</p>
+<p>All the neighbourhood was invited to the funeral in Havant Churchyard,
+the burial-place of the Oakshotts.&nbsp; Major Oakshott himself wrote
+to Dr. Woodford, as having been one of the kindest friends of his poor
+son, adding that he could not ask Sir Philip Archfield, although he
+knew him to be no partner in the guilt of his unhappy nephew, who so
+fully exemplified that Divine justice may be slow, but is sure.</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford decided on accepting the invitation, not only for Peregrine&rsquo;s
+sake, but to see how the land lay.&nbsp; Scarcely anything remarkable,
+however, occurred, except that it was painful to perceive the lightness
+of the coffin.&nbsp; A funeral sermon was previously preached by a young
+Nonconformist minister in his own chapel, on the text, &ldquo;Whoso
+sheddeth man&rsquo;s blood, by man shall his blood be shed;&rdquo; and
+then the burial took place, watched by a huge crowd of people.&nbsp;
+But just as the procession was starting from the chapel for the churchyard,
+over the wall there came a strange peal of wild laughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, would not the unquiet spirit be at rest till it was avenged?&rdquo;
+thought Anne when she was told of it.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIX<br />
+The Assize Court</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;O terror! what hath she perceived?&nbsp; O joy,<br />
+What doth she look on? whom hath she perceived?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>WORDSWORTH.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Time wore away, and the Lent Assizes at Winchester had come.&nbsp;
+Sir Philip had procured the best legal assistance for his nephew, but
+in criminal cases, though the prisoner was allowed the advice of counsel,
+the onus of defence rested upon himself.&nbsp; To poor Anne&rsquo;s
+dismay, a subpoena was sent to her, as well as to her uncle, to attend
+as a witness at the trial.&nbsp; Sir Philip was too anxious to endure
+to remain at a distance from Winchester, and they travelled in his coach,
+Sir Edmund Nutley escorting them on horseback, while Lucy was left with
+her mother, both still in blissful ignorance.&nbsp; They took rooms
+at the George Inn.&nbsp; That night was a strange and grievous one to
+Anne, trying hard to sleep so as to be physically capable of composure
+and presence of mind, yet continually wakened by ghastly dreams, and
+then recollecting that the sense of something terrible was by no means
+all a dream.</p>
+<p>Very white, very silent, but very composed, she came to the sitting-room,
+and was constrained by her uncle and Sir Philip to eat, much as it went
+against her.&nbsp; On this morning Sir Philip had dropped his sternness
+towards her, and finding a moment when his son-in-law was absent, he
+said, &ldquo;Child, I know that this is wellnigh, nay, quite as hard
+for you as for me.&nbsp; I can only say, Let no earthly regards hold
+you back from whatever is your duty to God and man.&nbsp; Speak the
+truth whatever betide, and leave the rest to the God of truth.&nbsp;
+God bless you, however it may be;&rdquo; and he kissed her brow.</p>
+<p>The intelligence that the trial was coming on was brought by Sedley&rsquo;s
+counsel, Mr. Simon Harcourt.&nbsp; They set forth for the County Hall
+up the sharply-rising street, thronged with people, who growled and
+murmured at the murderer savagely, Sir Philip, under the care of his
+son-in-law, and Anne with her uncle.&nbsp; Mr. Harcourt was very hopeful;
+he said the case for the prosecution had not a leg to stand on, and
+that the prisoner himself was so intelligent, and had so readily understood
+the line of defence to take, that he ought to have been a lawyer.&nbsp;
+There would be no fear except that it might be made a party case, and
+no stone was likely to be left unturned against a gentleman of good
+loyal family.&nbsp; Moreover Mr. William Cowper, whom Robert Oakshott,
+or rather his wife, had engaged at great expense for the prosecution,
+was one of the most rising of barristers, noted for his persuasive eloquence,
+and unfortunately Mr. Harcourt had not the right of reply.</p>
+<p>The melancholy party were conducted into court, Sir Philip and Sir
+Edmund to the seats disposed of by the sheriff, beside the judge, strangely
+enough only divided by him from Major Oakshott.&nbsp; The judge was
+Mr. Baron Hatsel, a somewhat weak-looking man, in spite of his red robes
+and flowing wig, as he sat under his canopy beneath King Arthur&rsquo;s
+Round Table.&nbsp; Sedley, perhaps a little thinner since his imprisonment,
+but with the purple red on his face, and his prominent eyes so hard
+and bold that it was galling to know that this was really the confidence
+of innocence.</p>
+<p>Mr. Cowper was with great ability putting the case.&nbsp; Here were
+two families in immediate neighbourhood, divided from the first by political
+opinions of the strongest complexion; and he put the Oakshott views
+upon liberty, civil and religious, in the most popular light.&nbsp;
+The unfortunate deceased he described as having been a highly promising
+member of the suite of the distinguished Envoy, Sir Peregrine Oakshott,
+whose name he bore.&nbsp; On the death of the eldest brother he had
+been recalled, and his accomplishments and foreign air had, it appeared,
+excited the spleen of the young gentlemen of the county belonging to
+the Tory party, then in the ascendant, above all of the prisoner.&nbsp;
+There was then little or no etiquette as to irrelevant matter, so that
+Mr. Cowper could dwell at length on Sedley&rsquo;s antecedents, as abusing
+the bounty of his uncle, a known bully expelled for misconduct from
+Winchester College, then acting as a suitable instrument in those violences
+in Scotland which had driven the nation finally to extremity, noted
+for his debaucheries when in garrison, and finally broken for insubordination
+in Ireland.</p>
+<p>After this unflattering portrait, which Sedley&rsquo;s looks certainly
+did not belie, the counsel went back to 1688, proceeded to mention several
+disputes which had taken place when Peregrine had met Lieutenant Archfield
+at Portsmouth; but, he added with a smile, that no dart of malice was
+ever thoroughly winged till Cupid had added his feather; and he went
+on to describe in strong colours the insult to a young gentlewoman,
+and the interference of the other young man in her behalf, so that swords
+were drawn before the appearance of the reverend gentleman her uncle.&nbsp;
+Still, he said, there was further venom to be added to the bolt, and
+he showed that the two had parted after the rejoicings on Portsdown
+Hill with a challenge all but uttered between them, the Whig upholding
+religious liberty, the Tory hotly defending such honour as the King
+possessed, and both parting in anger.</p>
+<p>Young Mr. Oakshott was never again seen alive, though his family
+long hoped against hope.&nbsp; There was no need to dwell on the strange
+appearances that had incited them to the search.&nbsp; Certain it was,
+that after seven years&rsquo; silence, the grave had yielded up its
+secrets.&nbsp; Then came the description of the discovery of the bones,
+and of the garments and sword, followed by the mention of the evidence
+as to the blood on the grass, and the prisoner having been seen in the
+neighbourhood of the castle at that strange hour.&nbsp; He was observed
+to have an amount of money unusual with him soon after, and, what was
+still more suspicious, after having gambled this away, he had sold to
+a goldsmith at Southampton a ruby ring, which both Mr. and Mrs. Oakshott
+could swear to have belonged to the deceased.&nbsp; In fact, when Mr.
+Cowper marshalled the facts, and even described the passionate encounter
+taking place hastily and without witnesses, and the subsequent concealment
+of guilt in the vault, the purse taken, and whatever could again be
+identified hidden, while providentially the blocking up of the vault
+preserved the evidence of the crime so long undetected and unavenged,
+it was hardly possible to believe the prisoner innocent.</p>
+<p>When the examination of the witnesses began, however, Sedley showed
+himself equal to his own defence.&nbsp; He made no sign when Robert
+Oakshott identified the clothes, sword, and other things, and their
+condition was described; but he demanded of him sharply how he knew
+the human remains to be those of his brother.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course they were,&rdquo; said Robert.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Were there any remains of clothes with them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can you swear to them?&nbsp; Did you ever before see your
+brother&rsquo;s bones?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At which, and at the witness&rsquo;s hesitating, &ldquo;No, but&mdash;&rdquo;
+the court began to laugh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was the height of the deceased?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He reached about up to my ear,&rdquo; said the witness with
+some hesitation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was the length of the skeleton?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quite small.&nbsp; It looked like a child&rsquo;s.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; said Sedley, &ldquo;I have a witness here,
+a surgeon, whom I request may be called to certify the proportion of
+a skeleton to the size of a living man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Though this was done, the whole matter of size was so vague that
+there was nothing proved, either as to the inches of Peregrine or those
+of the skeleton, but still Sedley made his point that the identity of
+the body was unproved at least in some minds.&nbsp; Still, there remained
+the other articles, about which there was no doubt.</p>
+<p>Mr. Cowper proceeded with his examination as to the disputes at Portsmouth,
+but again the prisoner scored a point by proving that Peregrine had
+staked the ring against him at a cock-fight at Southampton, and had
+lost it.</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford was called, and his evidence could not choose but to
+be most damaging as to the conflict on the road at Portsmouth; but as
+he had not seen the beginning, &lsquo;Mistress Anne Jacobina Woodford&rsquo;
+was called for.</p>
+<p>There she stood, tall and stately, almost majestic in the stiffness
+of intense self-restraint, in her simple gray dress, her black silk
+hood somewhat back, her brown curls round her face, a red spot in each
+cheek, her earnest brown eyes fixed on the clerk as he gabbled out the
+words so awful to her, &ldquo;The truth, the whole truth, and nothing
+but the truth;&rdquo; and her soul re-echoed the words, &ldquo;So help
+you God.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Cowper was courteous; he was a gentleman, and he saw she was
+no light-minded girl.&nbsp; He asked her the few questions needful as
+to the attack made on her, and the defence; but something moved him
+to go on and ask whether she had been on Portsdown Hill, and to obtain
+from her the account of the high words between the young men.&nbsp;
+She answered each question in a clear low voice, which still was audible
+to all.&nbsp; Was it over, or would Sedley begin to torture her, when
+so much was in his favour?&nbsp; No!&nbsp; Mr. Cowper&mdash;oh! why
+would he? was asking in an affirmative tone, as if to clench the former
+evidence, &ldquo;And did you ever see the deceased again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;&nbsp; The answer was at first almost choked, then
+cleared into sharpness, and every eye turned in surprise on the face
+that had become as white as her collar.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed!&nbsp; And when?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The next morning,&rdquo; in a voice as if pronouncing her
+own doom, and with hands clinging tight to the front of the witness-box
+as though in anguish.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where?&rdquo; said the counsel, like inexorable fate.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will save the gentlewoman from replying to that question,
+sir;&rdquo; and a gentleman with long brown hair, in a rich white and
+gold uniform, rose from among the spectators.&nbsp; &ldquo;Perhaps I
+may be allowed to answer for her, when I say that it was at Portchester
+Castle, at five in the morning, that she saw Peregrine Oakshott slain
+by my hand, and thrown into the vault.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a moment of breathless amazement in the court, and the
+judge was the first to speak.&nbsp; &ldquo;Very extraordinary, sir!&nbsp;
+What is your name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Charles Archfield,&rdquo; said the clear resolute voice.</p>
+<p>Then came a general movement and sensation, and Anne, still holding
+fast to the support, saw the newcomer start forward with a cry, &ldquo;My
+father!&rdquo; and with two or three bounds reach the side of Sir Philip,
+who had sunk back in his seat for a moment, but recovered himself as
+he felt his son&rsquo;s arm round him.</p>
+<p>There was a general buzz, and a cry of order, and in the silence
+thus produced the judge addressed the witness:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is what this gentleman says the truth?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And on Anne&rsquo;s reply, &ldquo;Yes, my Lord,&rdquo; spoken with
+the clear ring of anguish, the judge added&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was the prisoner present?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, my Lord; he had nothing to do with it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then, brother Cowper, do you wish to proceed with the case?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Cowper replied in the negative, and the judge then made a brief
+summing-up, and the jury, without retiring, returned a verdict of &lsquo;Not
+guilty.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>In the meantime Anne had been led like one blinded from the witness-box,
+and almost dropped into her uncle&rsquo;s arms.&nbsp; &ldquo;Cheer up,
+cheer up, my child,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;You have done your
+part bravely, and after so upright a confession no one can deal hardly
+with the young man.&nbsp; God will surely protect him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The acquittal had been followed by a few words from Baron Hatsel,
+congratulating the late prisoner on his deliverance through this gentleman&rsquo;s
+generous confession.&nbsp; Then there was a moment&rsquo;s hesitation,
+ended by the sheriff asking Charles, who stood up by his old father,
+one arm supporting the trembling form, and the other hand clasped in
+the two aged ones, &ldquo;Then, sir, do you surrender to take your trial?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly, sir,&rdquo; said Charles.&nbsp; &ldquo;I ought
+to have done so long ago, but in the first shock&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Harcourt here cautioned him not to say anything that could be
+used against him, adding in a low tone, much to Sir Philip&rsquo;s relief,
+&ldquo;It may be brought in manslaughter, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He should be committed,&rdquo; another authority said.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Is there a Hampshire magistrate here to sign a warrant?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Of these there were plenty; and as the clerk asked for his description,
+all eyes turned on the tall and robust form in the prime of manhood,
+with the noble resolute expression on his fine features and steadfast
+eyes, except when, as he looked at his father, they were full of infinite
+pity.&nbsp; The brown hair hung over the rich gold-laced white coat,
+faced with black, and with a broad gold-coloured sash fringed with black
+over his shoulder, and there was a look of distinction about him that
+made his answer only natural.&nbsp; &ldquo;Charles Archfield, of Archfield
+House, Fareham, Lieutenant-Colonel of his Imperial Majesty&rsquo;s Light
+Dragoons, Knight of the Holy Roman Empire.&nbsp; Must I give up my sword
+like a prisoner of war?&rdquo; he asked, with a smile.</p>
+<p>Sir Philip rose to his feet with an earnest trembling entreaty that
+bail might be taken for him, and many voices of gentlemen and men of
+substance made offers of it.&nbsp; There was a little consultation,
+and it was ruled that bail might be accepted under the circumstances,
+and Charles bowed his thanks to the distant and gave his hand to the
+nearer, while Mr. Eyre of Botley Grange, and Mr. Brocas of Roche Court,
+were accepted as sureties.&nbsp; The gentle old face of Mr. Cromwell
+of Hursley, was raised to poor old Sir Philip&rsquo;s with the words,
+spoken with a remnant of the authority of the Protector: &ldquo;Your
+son has spoken like a brave man, sir; God bless you, and bring you well
+through it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charles was then asked whether he wished for time to collect witnesses.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;No, my lord,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I thank you heartily,
+but I have no one to call, and the sooner this is over the better for
+all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After a little consultation it was found that the Grand Jury had
+not been dismissed, and could find a true bill against him; and it was
+decided that the trial should take place after the rest of the criminal
+cases were disposed of.</p>
+<p>This settled, the sorrowful party with the strangely welcomed son
+were free to return to their quarters at the George.&nbsp; Mr. Cromwell
+pressed forward to beg that they would make use of his coach.&nbsp;
+It was a kind thought, for Sir Philip hung feebly on his son&rsquo;s
+arm, and to pass through the curious throng would have been distressing.&nbsp;
+After helping him in, Charles turned and demanded&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is she, the young gentlewoman, Miss Woodford?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was just within, her uncle waiting to take her out till the crowd&rsquo;s
+attention should be called off.&nbsp; Charles lifted her in, and Sir
+Edmund and Dr. Woodford followed him, for there was plenty of room in
+the capacious vehicle.</p>
+<p>Nobody spoke in the very short interval the four horses took in getting
+themselves out of the space in front of the County Hall and down the
+hill to the George.&nbsp; Only Charles had leant forward, taken Anne&rsquo;s
+hand, drawn it to his lips, and then kept fast hold of it.</p>
+<p>They were all in the room at the inn at last, they hardly knew how;
+indeed, as Charles was about to shut the door there was a smack on his
+back, and there stood Sedley holding out his hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So, Charley, old fellow, you were the sad dog after all.&nbsp;
+You got me out of it, and I owe you my thanks, but you need not have
+put your neck into the noose.&nbsp; I should have come off with flying
+colours, and made them all make fools of themselves, if you had only
+waited.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think I could sit still and see <i>her</i> put to the
+torture?&rdquo; said Charles.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Torture?&nbsp; You are thinking of your barbarous countries.&nbsp;
+No fear of the boot here, nor even in Scotland nowadays.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all the torture you understand,&rdquo; muttered
+Sir Edmund Nutley.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not but what I am much beholden to you all the same,&rdquo;
+went on Sedley.&nbsp; &ldquo;And look here, sir,&rdquo; turning to his
+uncle, &ldquo;if you wish to get him let off cheap you had better send
+up another special retainer to Harcourt, without loss of time, as he
+may be off.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Edmund Nutley concurred in the advice, and they hurried off together
+in search of the family attorney, through whom the great man had to
+be approached.</p>
+<p>The four left together could breathe more freely.&nbsp; Indeed Dr.
+Woodford would have taken his niece away, but that Charles already had
+her in his arms in a most fervent embrace, as he said, &ldquo;My brave,
+my true maid!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She could not speak, but she lifted up her eyes, with infinite relief
+in all her sorrow, as for a moment she rested against him; but they
+had to move apart, for a servant came up with some wine, and Charles,
+putting her into a chair, began to wait on her and on his father.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have not quite forgotten my manners,&rdquo; he said lightly,
+as if to relieve the tension of feeling, &ldquo;though in Germany the
+ladies serve the gentlemen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was very hard not to burst into tears at these words, but Anne
+knew that would be the way to distress her companions and to have to
+leave the room and lose these precious moments.&nbsp; Sir Philip, after
+swallowing the wine, succeeded in saying, &ldquo;Have you been at home?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charles explained that he had landed at Gravesend, and had ridden
+thence, sleeping at Basingstoke, and taking the road through Winchester
+in case his parents should be wintering there, and on arriving a couple
+of hours previously and inquiring for them, he had heard the tidings
+that Sir Philip Archfield was indeed there, for his nephew was being
+tried for his life for the wilful murder of Major Oakshott&rsquo;s son
+seven years ago.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you had none of my warnings?&nbsp; I wrote to all the
+ports,&rdquo; said his father, &ldquo;to warn you to wait till all this
+was over.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No; he had crossed from Sluys, and had met no letter.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+suppose,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that I must not ride home to-morrow.&nbsp;
+It might make my sureties uneasy; but I would fain see them all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would kill your mother to be here,&rdquo; said Sir Philip.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She knows nothing of what Anne told me on Sedley&rsquo;s arrest.&nbsp;
+She is grown very feeble;&rdquo; and he groaned.&nbsp; &ldquo;But we
+might send for your sister, if she can leave her, and the boy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should like my boy to be fetched,&rdquo; said Charles.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I should wish him to remember his father&mdash;not as a felon
+convicted!&rdquo;&nbsp; Then putting a knee to the ground before Sir
+Philip, he said, &ldquo;Sir, I ask your blessing and forgiveness.&nbsp;
+I never before thoroughly understood my errors towards you, especially
+in hiding this miserable matter, and leaving all this to come on you,
+while my poor Anne there was left to bear all the load.&nbsp; It was
+a cowardly and selfish act, and I ask your pardon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The old man sobbed with his hand on his son&rsquo;s head.&nbsp; &ldquo;My
+dear boy! my poor boy! you were distraught.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was then.&nbsp; I did it, as I thought, for my poor Alice&rsquo;s
+sake at first, and as it proved, it was all in vain; but at the year&rsquo;s
+end, when I was older, it was folly and wrong.&nbsp; I ought to have
+laid all before you, and allowed you to judge, and I sincerely repent
+the not having so done.&nbsp; And Anne, my sweetest Anne, has borne
+the burthen all this time,&rdquo; he added, going back to her.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Let no one say a woman cannot keep secrets, though I ought never
+to have laid this on her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! it might have gone better for you then,&rdquo; sighed
+Sir Philip.&nbsp; &ldquo;No one would have visited a young lad&rsquo;s
+mischance hardly on a loyal house in those days.&nbsp; What is to be
+done, my son?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That we will discuss when the lawyer fellow comes.&nbsp; Is
+it old Lee?&nbsp; Meantime let us enjoy our meeting.&nbsp; So that is
+Lucy&rsquo;s husband.&nbsp; Sober and staid, eh?&nbsp; And my mother
+is feeble, you say.&nbsp; Has she been ill?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charles was comporting himself with the cheerfulness that had become
+habitual to him as a soldier, always in possible danger, but it was
+very hard to the others to chime in with his tone, and when a message
+was brought to ask whether his Honour would be served in private, the
+cheery greeting and shake of the hand broke down the composure of the
+old servant who brought it, and he cried, &ldquo;Oh, sir, to see you
+thus, and such a fine young gentleman!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charles, the only person who could speak, gave the orders, but they
+did not eat alone, for Sir Edmund Nutley and Sedley arrived with the
+legal advisers, and it was needful, perhaps even better, to have their
+company.&nbsp; The chief of the conversation was upon Hungarian and
+Transylvanian politics and the Turkish war.&nbsp; Mr. Harcourt seeming
+greatly to appreciate the information that Colonel Archfield was able
+to give him, and the anecdotes of the war, and descriptions of scenes
+therein actually brightened Sir Philip into interest, and into forgetting
+for a moment his son&rsquo;s situation in pride in his conduct, and
+at the distinction he had gained.&nbsp; &ldquo;We must save him,&rdquo;
+said Mr. Harcourt to Sir Edmund.&nbsp; &ldquo;He is far too fine a fellow
+to be lost for a youthful mischance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The meal was a short one, and a consultation was to follow, while
+Sedley departed.&nbsp; Anne was about to withdraw, when Mr. Lee the
+attorney said, &ldquo;We shall need Mistress Woodford&rsquo;s evidence,
+sir, for the defence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not see what defence there can be,&rdquo; returned Charles.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I can only plead guilty, and throw myself on the King&rsquo;s
+mercy, if he chooses to extend it to one of a Tory family.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not so fast, sir,&rdquo; said Mr. Harcourt; &ldquo;as far
+as I have gathered the facts, there is every reason to hope you may
+obtain a verdict of manslaughter, and a nominal penalty, although that
+rests with the judge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On this the discussion began in earnest.&nbsp; Charles, who had never
+heard the circumstances which led to the trial, was greatly astonished
+to hear what remains had been discovered.&nbsp; He said that he could
+only declare himself to have thrown in the body, full dressed, just
+as it was, and how it could have been stripped and buried he could not
+imagine.&nbsp; &ldquo;What made folks think of looking into the vault?&rdquo;
+he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was Mrs. Oakshott,&rdquo; said Lee, &ldquo;the young man&rsquo;s
+wife, she who was to have married the deceased.&nbsp; She took up some
+strange notion about stories of phantoms current among the vulgar, and
+insisted on having the vault searched, though it had been walled up
+for many years past.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charles and Anne looked at each other, and the former said, &ldquo;Again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh yes!&rdquo; said Anne; &ldquo;indeed there have been enough
+to make me remember what you bade me do, in case they recurred, only
+it was impossible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Phantoms!&rdquo; said Mr. Harcourt; &ldquo;what does this
+mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mere vulgar superstitions, sir,&rdquo; said the attorney.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But very visible,&rdquo; said Charles; &ldquo;I have seen
+one myself, of which I am quite sure, besides many that may be laid
+to the account of the fever of my wound.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I must beg to hear,&rdquo; said the barrister.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do
+I understand that these were apparitions of the deceased?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Charles.&nbsp; &ldquo;Miss Woodford saw the
+first, I think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May I beg you to describe it?&rdquo; said Mr. Harcourt, taking
+a fresh piece of paper to make notes on.</p>
+<p>Anne narrated the two appearances in London, and Charles added the
+story of the figure seen in the street at Douai, seen by both together,
+asking what more she knew of.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Once at night last summer, at the very anniversary, I saw
+his face in the trees in the garden,&rdquo; said Anne; &ldquo;it was
+gone in a moment.&nbsp; That has been all I have seen; but little Philip
+came to me full of stories of people having seen Penny Grim, as he calls
+it, and very strangely, once it rose before him at the great pond, and
+his fright saved him from sliding to the dangerous part.&nbsp; What
+led Mrs. Oakshott to the examination was that it was seen once on the
+beach, once by the sentry at the vault itself, once by the sexton at
+Havant Churchyard, and once by my mother&rsquo;s grave.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Seven?&rdquo; said the counsel, reviewing the notes he jotted
+down.&nbsp; &ldquo;Colonel Archfield, I should recommend you pleading
+not guilty, and basing your defence, like your cousin, on the strong
+probability that this same youth is a living man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo; said Charles, starting, &ldquo;I could have
+hoped it from these recent apparitions, but what I myself saw forbids
+the idea.&nbsp; If any sight were ever that of a spirit, it was what
+we saw at Douai; besides, how should he come thither, a born and bred
+Whig and Puritan?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is no need to mention that; you can call witnesses to
+his having been seen within these few months.&nbsp; It would rest with
+the prosecution to disprove his existence in the body, especially as
+the bones in the vault cannot be identified.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Charles, &ldquo;the defence that would have
+served my innocent cousin cannot serve me, who know what I did to Oakshott.&nbsp;
+I am <i>now</i> aware that it is quite possible that the sword might
+not have killed him, but when I threw him into that vault I sealed his
+fate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How deep is the vault?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Lee and Dr. Woodford both averred that it was not above twenty
+or twenty-four feet deep, greatly to Charles&rsquo;s surprise, for as
+a lad he had thought it almost unfathomable; but then he owned his ideas
+of Winchester High Street had been likewise far more magnificent than
+he found it.&nbsp; The fall need not necessarily have been fatal, especially
+to one insensible and opposing no resistance, but even supposing that
+death had not resulted, in those Draconian days, the intent to murder
+was equally subject with its full accomplishment to capital punishment.&nbsp;
+Still, as Colonel Archfield could plead with all his heart that he had
+left home with no evil intentions towards young Oakshott, the lawyers
+agreed that to prove that the death of the victim was uncertain would
+reduce the matter to a mere youthful brawl, which could not be heavily
+visited.&nbsp; Mr. Harcourt further asked whether it were possible to
+prove that the prisoner had been otherwise employed than in meddling
+with the body; but unfortunately it had been six hours before he came
+home.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was distracted,&rdquo; said Charles; &ldquo;I rode I knew
+not whither, till I came to my senses on finding that my horse was ready
+to drop, when I led him into a shed at a wayside public-house, bade
+them feed him, took a drink, then I wandered out into the copse near,
+and lay on the ground there till I thought him rested, for how long
+I know not.&nbsp; I think it must have been near Bishops Waltham, but
+I cannot recollect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Lee decided on setting forth at peep of dawn the next morning
+to endeavour to collect witnesses of Peregrine&rsquo;s appearances.&nbsp;
+Sir Edmund Nutley intended to accompany him as far as Fareham to fetch
+little Philip and Lady Nutley, if the latter could leave her mother
+after the tidings had been broken to them, and also to try to trace
+whether Charles&rsquo;s arrival at any public-house were remembered.</p>
+<p>To her dismay, Anne received another summons from the other party
+to act as witness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hoped to have spared you this, my sweet,&rdquo; said Charles,
+&ldquo;but never mind; you cannot say anything worse of me than I shall
+own of myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The two were left to each other for a little while in the bay window.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Oh, sir! can you endure me thus after all?&rdquo; murmured Anne,
+as she felt his arm round her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can you endure me after all I left you to bear?&rdquo; he
+returned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was not like what I brought on you,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>But they could not talk much of the future; and Charles told how
+he had rested through all his campaigns in the knowledge that his Anne
+was watching and praying for him, and how his long illness had brought
+before him deeper thoughts than he had ever had before, and made him
+especially dwell on the wrong done to his parents by his long absence,
+and the lightness with which he had treated home duties and responsibilities,
+till he had resolved that if his life were then spared, he would neglect
+them no longer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now,&rdquo; he said, and paused, &ldquo;all I shall have
+done is to break their hearts.&nbsp; What is that saying, &lsquo;Be
+sure your sin will find you out.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, sir! they are sure not to deal hardly with you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps the Emperor&rsquo;s Ambassador may claim me.&nbsp;
+If so, would you go into banishment with the felon, Anne, love?&nbsp;
+It would not be quite so mad as when I asked you before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would go to the ends of the world with you; and we would
+take little Phil.&nbsp; Do you know, he is growing a salad, and learning
+Latin, all for papa?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And so she told him of little Phil till his father was seen looking
+wistfully at him.</p>
+<p>With Sir Philip, Charles was all cheerfulness and hope, taking such
+interest in all there was to hear about the family, estate, and neighbourhood
+that the old gentleman was beguiled into feeling as if there were only
+a short ceremony to be gone through before he had his son at home, saving
+him ease and trouble.</p>
+<p>But after Sir Philip had been persuaded to retire, worn out with
+the day&rsquo;s agitations, and Anne likewise had gone to her chamber
+to weep and pray, Charles made his arrangements with Mr. Lee for the
+future for all connected with him in case of the worst; and after the
+lawyer&rsquo;s departure poured out his heart to Dr. Woodford in deep
+contrition, as he said he had longed to do when lying in expectation
+of death at the Iron Gates.&nbsp; &ldquo;However it may end,&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;and I expect, as I deserve, the utmost, I am thankful
+for this opportunity, though unhappily it gives more pain to those about
+me than if I had died out there.&nbsp; Tell them, when they need comfort,
+how much better it is for me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear boy, I cannot believe you will have to suffer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is much against me, sir.&nbsp; My foolish flight, the
+state of parties, and the recent conspiracy, which has made loyal families
+suspected and odious.&nbsp; I saw something of that as I came down.&nbsp;
+The crowd fancied my uniform French, and hooted and hissed me.&nbsp;
+Unluckily I have no other clothes to wear.&nbsp; Nor can I from my heart
+utterly disclaim all malice or ill will when I remember the thrill of
+pleasure in driving my sword home.&nbsp; I have had to put an end to
+a Janissary or two more than once in the way of duty, but their black
+eyes never haunted me like those parti-coloured ones.&nbsp; Still I
+trust, as you tell me I may, that God forgives me, for our Blessed Lord&rsquo;s
+sake; but I should like, if I could, to take the Holy Sacrament with
+my love while I am still thus far a free man.&nbsp; I have not done
+so since the Easter before these troubles.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You shall, my dear boy, you shall.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There were churches at which the custom freshly begun at the Restoration
+was not dropped.&nbsp; The next was St. Matthias&rsquo;s Day, and Anne
+and her uncle had already purposed to go to the quiet little church
+of St. Lawrence, at no great distance, in the very early morning.&nbsp;
+They were joined on their way down the stair into the courtyard of the
+inn by a gentleman in a slouched hat and large dark cloak, who drew
+Anne&rsquo;s arm within his own.</p>
+<p>Truly there was peace on that morning, and strength to the brave
+man beyond the physical courage that had often before made him bright
+in the face of danger, and Anne, though weeping, had a sense of respite
+and repose, if not of hope.</p>
+<p>Late in the afternoon, little Philip was lifted down from riding
+before old Ralph into the arms of the splendid officer, whose appearance
+transcended all his visions.&nbsp; He fumbled in his small pocket, and
+held out a handful of something green and limp.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s my salad, papa.&nbsp; I brought it all the way
+for you to eat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Colonel Archfield ate every scrap of it for supper, though it
+was much fitter for a rabbit, and all the evening he held on his knee
+the tired child, and responded to his prattle about Nana and dogs and
+rabbits; nay, ministered to his delight and admiration of the sheriff&rsquo;s
+coach, javelin men, and even the judge, with a strange mixture of wonder,
+delight, and with melancholy only in eyes and undertones.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXX<br />
+Sentence</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I have hope to live, and am prepared to die.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Measure for Measure.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Ralph was bidden to be ready to take his young master home early
+the next morning.&nbsp; At eight o&rsquo;clock the boy, who had slept
+with his father, came down the stair, clinging to his father&rsquo;s
+hand, and Miss Woodford coming closely with him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Charles, as he held the little fair fellow
+in his arms, ere seating him on the horse, &ldquo;he knows all, Ralph.&nbsp;
+He knows that his father did an evil thing, and that what we do in our
+youth finds us out later, and must be paid for.&nbsp; He has promised
+me to be a comfort to the old people, and to look on this lady as a
+mother.&nbsp; Nay, no more, Ralph; &rsquo;tis not good-bye to any of
+you yet.&nbsp; There, Phil, don&rsquo;t lug my head off, nor catch my
+hair in your buttons.&nbsp; Give my dutiful love to your grandmamma
+and to Aunt Nutley, and be a good boy to them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And when I come to see you again I&rsquo;ll bring another
+salad,&rdquo; quoth Philip, as he rode out of the court; and his father,
+by way of excusing a contortion of features, smoothed the entangled
+lock of hair, and muttered something about, &ldquo;This comes of not
+wearing a periwig.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then he said&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And to think that I have wasted the company of such a boy
+as that, all his life except for this mere glimpse!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! you will come back to him,&rdquo; was all that could be
+said.</p>
+<p>For it was time for Charles Archfield to surrender himself to take
+his trial.</p>
+<p>He had been instructed over and over again as to the line of his
+defence, and cautioned against candour for himself and delicacy towards
+others, till he had more than once to declare that he had no intention
+of throwing his life away; but the lawyers agreed in heartily deploring
+the rules that thus deprived the accused of the assistance of an advocate
+in examining witnesses and defending himself.&nbsp; All depended, as
+they knew and told Sir Edmund Nutley, on the judge and jury.&nbsp; Now
+Mr. Baron Hatsel had shown himself a well-meaning but weak and vacillating
+judge, whose summing up was apt rather to confuse than to elucidate
+the evidence; and as to the jury, Mr. Lee scanned their stolid countenances
+somewhat ruefully when they were marshalled before the prisoner, to
+be challenged if desirable.&nbsp; A few words passed, into which the
+judge inquired.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am reminded, my Lord,&rdquo; said Colonel Archfield, bowing,
+&ldquo;that I once incurred Mr. Holt&rsquo;s displeasure as a mischievous
+boy by throwing a stone which injured one of his poultry; but I cannot
+believe such a trifle would bias an honest man in a question of life
+and death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nevertheless the judge put aside Mr. Holt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I like his spirit,&rdquo; whispered Mr. Harcourt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; returned Lee, &ldquo;I doubt if he has done himself
+any good with those fellows by calling it a trifle to kill an old hen.&nbsp;
+I should like him to have challenged two or three more moody old Whiggish
+rascals; but he has been too long away from home to know how the land
+lies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Too generous and high-spirited for this work,&rdquo; sighed
+Sir Edmund, who sat with them.</p>
+<p>The indictment was read, the first count being &ldquo;That of malice
+aforethought, by the temptation of the Devil, Charles Archfield did
+wilfully kill and slay Peregrine Oakshott,&rdquo; etc.&nbsp; The second
+indictment was that &ldquo;By misadventure he had killed and slain the
+said Peregrine Oakshott.&rdquo;&nbsp; To the first he pleaded &lsquo;Not
+guilty;&rsquo; to the second &lsquo;Guilty.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Tall, well-made, manly, and soldierly he stood, with a quiet set
+face, while Mr. Cowper proceeded to open the prosecution, with a certain
+compliment to the prisoner and regret at having to push the case against
+one who had so generously come forward on behalf of a kinsman; but he
+must unwillingly state the circumstances that made it doubtful, nay,
+more than doubtful, whether the prisoner&rsquo;s plea of mere misadventure
+could stand.&nbsp; The dislike to the unfortunate deceased existing
+among the young Tory country gentlemen of the county was, he should
+prove, intensified in the prisoner on account of not inexcusable jealousies,
+as well as of the youthful squabbles which sometimes lead to fatal results.&nbsp;
+On the evening of the 30th of June 1688 there had been angry words between
+the prisoner and the deceased on Portsdown Hill, respecting the prisoner&rsquo;s
+late lady.&nbsp; At four or five o&rsquo;clock on the ensuing morning,
+the 1st of July, the one fell by the sword of the other in the then
+unfrequented court of Portchester Castle.&nbsp; It was alleged that
+the stroke was fatal only through the violence of youthful impetuosity;
+but was it consistent with that supposition that the young gentleman&rsquo;s
+time was unaccounted for afterwards, and that the body should have been
+disposed of in a manner that clearly proved the assistance of an accomplice,
+and with so much skill that no suspicion had arisen for seven years
+and a half, whilst the actual slayer was serving, not his own country,
+but a foreign prince, and had only returned at a most suspicious crisis?</p>
+<p>The counsel then proceeded to construct a plausible theory.&nbsp;
+He reminded the jury that at that very time, the summer of 1688, messages
+and invitations were being despatched to his present Gracious Majesty
+to redress the wrongs of the Protestant Church, and protect the liberties
+of the English people.&nbsp; The father of the deceased was a member
+of a family of the country party, his uncle a distinguished diplomatist,
+to whose suite he had belonged.&nbsp; What was more obvious than that
+he should be employed in the correspondence, and that his movements
+should be dogged by parties connected with the Stewart family?&nbsp;
+Already there was too much experience of how far even the most estimable
+and conscientious might be blinded by the sentiment that they dignified
+by the title of loyalty.&nbsp; The deceased had already been engaged
+in a struggle with one of the Archfield family, who had been acquitted
+of his actual slaughter; but considering the strangeness of the hour
+at which the two cousins were avowedly at or near Portchester, the condition
+of the clothes, stripped of papers, but not of valuables, and the connection
+of the principal witness with the pretended Prince of Wales, he could
+not help thinking that though personal animosity might have added an
+edge to the weapon, yet that there were deeper reasons, to prompt the
+assault and the concealment, than had yet been brought to light.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He will make nothing of that,&rdquo; whispered Mr. Lee.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Poor Master Peregrine was no more a Whig than old Sir Philip
+there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Twill prejudice the jury,&rdquo; whispered back Mr.
+Harcourt, &ldquo;and discredit the lady&rsquo;s testimony.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Cowper concluded by observing that half truths had come to light
+in the former trial, but whole truths would give a different aspect
+to the affair, and show the unfortunate deceased to have given offence,
+not only as a man of gallantry, but as a patriot, and to have fallen
+a victim to the younger bravoes of the so-called Tory party.&nbsp; To
+his (the counsel&rsquo;s) mind, it was plain that the prisoner, who
+had hoped that his crime was undiscovered and forgotten, had returned
+to take his share in the rising against Government so happily frustrated.&nbsp;
+He was certain that the traitor Charnock had been received at his father&rsquo;s
+house, and that Mr. Sedley Archfield had used seditious language on
+several occasions, so that the cause of the prisoner&rsquo;s return
+at this juncture was manifest, and only to the working of Providence
+could it be ascribed that the evidence of the aggravated murder should
+have at that very period been brought to light.</p>
+<p>There was an evident sensation, and glances were cast at the upright,
+military figure, standing like a sentinel, as if the audience expected
+him to murder them all.</p>
+<p>As before, the examination began with Robert Oakshott&rsquo;s identification
+of the clothes and sword, but Mr. Cowper avoided the subject of the
+skeleton, and went on to inquire about the terms on which the two young
+men had lived.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Robert, &ldquo;they quarrelled, but in a
+neighbourly sort of way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you call a neighbourly way?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My poor brother used to be baited for being so queer.&nbsp;
+But then we were as bad to him as the rest,&rdquo; said Robert candidly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is, when you were boys?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And after his return from his travels?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was the same then.&nbsp; He was too fine a gentleman for
+any one&rsquo;s taste.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You speak generally.&nbsp; Was there any especial animosity?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My brother bought a horse that Archfield was after.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was there any dispute over it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not that I know of.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can you give an instance of displeasure manifested by the
+prisoner at the deceased?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have seen him look black when my brother held a gate open
+for his wife.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then there were gallant attentions towards Mrs. Archfield?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charles&rsquo;s face flushed, and he made a step forward, but Robert
+gruffly answered: &ldquo;No more than civility; but he had got Frenchified
+manners, and liked to tease Archfield.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did they ever come to high words before you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&nbsp; They knew better.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, Mr. Oakshott,&rdquo; said the prisoner, as it was
+intimated that Mr. Cowper had finished.&nbsp; &ldquo;You bear witness
+that only the most innocent civility ever passed between your brother
+and my poor young wife?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; responded Robert.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing that could cause serious resentment, if it excited
+passing annoyance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What were your brother&rsquo;s political opinions?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well&rdquo;&mdash;with some slow consideration&mdash;&ldquo;he
+admired the Queen as was, and could not abide the Prince of Orange.&nbsp;
+My father was always <i>at him</i> for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would you think him likely to be an emissary to Holland?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one less likely.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Mr. Cowper started up.&nbsp; &ldquo;Sir, I believe you are the
+younger brother?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How old were you at the time?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nigh upon nineteen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; as if that accounted for his ignorance.</p>
+<p>The prisoner continued, and asked whether search was made when the
+deceased was missed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hardly any.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was never content at home, and we believed he had gone
+to my uncle in Muscovy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What led you to examine the vault?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My wife was disquieted by stories of my brother&rsquo;s ghost
+being seen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you ever see this ghost?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, never.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That was all that was made of Robert Oakshott, and then again came
+Anne Woodford&rsquo;s turn, and Mr. Cowper was more satirical and less
+considerate than the day before.&nbsp; Still it was a less dreadful
+ordeal than previously, though she had to tell the worst, for she knew
+her ground better, and then there was throughout wonderful support in
+Charles&rsquo;s eyes, which told her, whenever she glanced towards him,
+that she was doing right and as he wished.&nbsp; As she had not heard
+the speech for the prosecution it was a shock, after identifying herself
+a niece to a &lsquo;non-swearing&rsquo; clergyman, to be asked about
+the night of the bonfire, and to be forced to tell that Mrs. Archfield
+had insisted on getting out of the carriage and walking about with Mr.
+Oakshott.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was the prisoner present?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He came up after a time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did he show any displeasure?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He thought it bad for her health.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did any words pass between him and the deceased?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not that I remember.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now, madam, will you be good enough to recur to the following
+morning, and continue the testimony in which you were interrupted the
+day before yesterday?&nbsp; What was the hour?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The church clock struck five just after.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May I ask what took a young gentlewoman out at such an untimely
+hour?&nbsp; Did you expect to meet any one?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No indeed, sir,&rdquo; said Anne hotly.&nbsp; &ldquo;I had
+been asked to gather some herbs to carry to a friend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&nbsp; And why at that time in the morning?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because I was to leave home at seven, when the tide served.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where were you going?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To London, sir.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And for what reason?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had been appointed to be a rocker in the Royal nursery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see.&nbsp; And your impending departure may explain certain
+strange coincidences.&nbsp; May I ask what was this same herb?&rdquo;
+in a mocking tone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mouse-ear, sir,&rdquo; said Anne, who would fain have called
+it by some less absurd title, but knew no other.&nbsp; &ldquo;A specific
+for the whooping-cough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&nbsp; Not &lsquo;Love in a mist.&rsquo;&nbsp; Are your
+sure?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; here Simon Harcourt ventured, &ldquo;may I
+ask, is this regular?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The judge intimated that his learned brother had better keep to the
+point, and Mr. Cowper, thus called to order, desired the witness to
+continue, and demanded whether she was interrupted in her quest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I saw Mr. Peregrine Oakshott enter the castle court, and I
+hurried into the tower, hoping he had not seen me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You said before he had protected you.&nbsp; Why did you run
+from him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She had foreseen this, and quietly answered, &ldquo;He had made me
+an offer of marriage which I had refused, and I did not wish to meet
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you see any one else?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not till I had reached the door opening on the battlements.&nbsp;
+Then I heard a clash, and saw Mr. Archfield and Mr. Oakshott fighting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Archfield!&nbsp; The prisoner?&nbsp; Did he come to gather
+mouse-ear too?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&nbsp; His wife had sent him over with a pattern of sarcenet
+for me to match in London.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Early rising and prompt obedience.&rdquo;&nbsp; And there
+ensued the inquiries that brought out the history of what she had seen
+of the encounter, of the throwing the body into the vault, full dressed,
+and of her promise of silence and its reason.&nbsp; Mr. Cowper did not
+molest her further except to make her say that she had been five months
+at the Court, and had accompanied the late Queen to France.</p>
+<p>Then came the power of cross-examination on the part of the prisoner.&nbsp;
+He made no attempt to modify what had been said before, but asked in
+a gentle apologetic voice: &ldquo;Was that the last time you ever saw,
+or thought you saw, Peregrine Oakshott?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo;&nbsp; And here every one in court started and looked
+curious.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The 31st of October 1688, in the evening.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Looking from the window in the palace at Whitehall, I saw
+him, or his likeness, walking along in the light of the lantern over
+the great door.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The appearance at Lambeth was then described, and that in the garden
+at Archfield House.&nbsp; This strange cross-examination was soon over,
+for Charles could not endure to subject her to the ordeal, while she
+equally longed to be able to say something that might not damage him,
+and dreaded every word she spoke.&nbsp; Moreover, Mr. Cowper looked
+exceedingly contemptuous, and made the mention of Whitehall and Lambeth
+a handle for impressing on the jury that the witness had been deep in
+the counsels of the late royal family, and that she was escorted from
+St. Germain by the prisoner just before he entered on foreign service.</p>
+<p>One of the servants at Fareham was called upon to testify to the
+hour of his young master&rsquo;s return on the fatal day.&nbsp; It was
+long past dinner-time, he said.&nbsp; It must have been about three
+o&rsquo;clock.</p>
+<p>Charles put in an inquiry as to the condition of his horse.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Hard ridden, sir, as I never knew your Honour bring home Black
+Bess in such a pickle before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After a couple of young men had been called who could speak to some
+outbreaks of dislike to poor Peregrine, in which all had shared, the
+case for the prosecution was completed.&nbsp; Cowper, in a speech that
+would be irregular now, but was permissible then, pointed out that the
+jealousy, dislike, and Jacobite proclivities of the Archfield family
+had been fully made out, that the coincidence of visits to the castle
+at that untimely hour had been insufficiently explained, that the condition
+of the remains in the vault was quite inconsistent with the evidence
+of the witness, Mistress Woodford, unless there were persons waiting
+below unknown to her, and that the prisoner had been absent from Fareham
+from four or five o&rsquo;clock in the morning till nearly three in
+the afternoon.&nbsp; As to the strange story she had further told, he
+(Mr. Cowper) was neither superstitious nor philosophic, but the jury
+would decide whether conscience and the sense of an awful secret were
+not sufficient to conjure up such phantoms, if they were not indeed
+spiritual, occurring as they did in the very places and at the very
+times when the spirit of the unhappy young man, thus summarily dismissed
+from the world, his corpse left in an unblessed den, would be most likely
+to reappear, haunting those who felt themselves to be most accountable
+for his lamentable and untimely end.</p>
+<p>The words evidently told, and it was at a disadvantage that the prisoner
+rose to speak in his own defence and to call his witnesses.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and gentlemen of the jury,
+let me first say that I am deeply grieved and hurt that the name of
+my poor young wife has been brought into this matter.&nbsp; In justice
+to her who is gone, I must begin by saying that though she was flattered
+and gratified by the polite manners that I was too clownish and awkward
+to emulate, and though I may have sometimes manifested ill-humour, yet
+I never for a moment took serious offence nor felt bound to defend her
+honour or my own.&nbsp; If I showed displeasure it was because she was
+fatiguing herself against warning.&nbsp; I can say with perfect truth,
+that when I left home on that unhappy morning, I bore no serious ill-will
+to any living creature.&nbsp; I had no political purpose, and never
+dreamt of taking the life of any one.&nbsp; I was a heedless youth of
+nineteen.&nbsp; I shall be able to prove the commission of my wife&rsquo;s
+on which this learned gentleman has thought fit to cast a doubt.&nbsp;
+For the rest, Mistress Anne Woodford was my sister&rsquo;s friend and
+playfellow from early childhood.&nbsp; When I entered the castle court
+I saw her hurrying into the keep, pursued by Oakshott, whom I knew her
+to dread and dislike.&nbsp; I naturally stepped between.&nbsp; Angry
+words passed.&nbsp; He challenged my right to interfere, and in a passion
+drew upon me.&nbsp; Though I was the taller and stronger, I knew him
+to be proud of his skill in fencing, and perhaps I may therefore have
+pressed him the harder, and the dislike I acknowledge made me drive
+home my sword.&nbsp; But I was free from all murderous intention up
+to that moment.&nbsp; In my inexperience I had no doubt but that he
+was dead, and in a terror and confusion which I regret heartily, I threw
+him into the vault, and for the sake of my wife and mother bound Miss
+Woodford to secrecy.&nbsp; I mounted my horse, and scarcely knowing
+what I did, rode till I found it ready to drop.&nbsp; I asked for rest
+for it in the first wayside public-house I came to.&nbsp; I lay down
+meanwhile among some bushes adjoining, and there waited till my horse
+could take me home again.&nbsp; I believe it was at the White Horse,
+near Bishops Waltham, but the place has changed hands since that time,
+so that I can only prove my words, as you have heard, by the state of
+my horse when I came home.&nbsp; For the condition of the remains in
+the vault I cannot account; I never touched the poor fellow after throwing
+him there.&nbsp; My wife died a few hours after my return home, where
+I remained for a week, nor did I suggest flight, though I gladly availed
+myself of my father&rsquo;s suggestion of sending me abroad with a tutor.&nbsp;
+Let me add, to remove misconception, that I visited Paris because my
+tutor, the Reverend George Fellowes, one of the Fellows of Magdalen
+College expelled by the late King, and now Rector of Portchester, had
+been asked to provide for Miss Woodford&rsquo;s return to her home,
+and he is here to testify that I never had any concern with politics.&nbsp;
+I did indeed accompany him to St. Germain, but merely to find the young
+gentlewoman, and in the absence of the late King and Queen, nor did
+I hold intercourse with any other person connected with their Court.&nbsp;
+After escorting her to Ostend, I went to Hungary to serve in the army
+of our ally, the Emperor, against the Turks, the enemies of all Christians.&nbsp;
+After a severe wound, I have come home, knowing nothing of conspiracies,
+and I was taken by surprise on arriving here at Winchester at finding
+that my cousin was on his trial for the unfortunate deed into which
+I was betrayed by haste and passion, but entirely without premeditation
+or intent to do more than to defend the young lady.&nbsp; So that I
+plead that my crime does not amount to murder from malicious intent;
+and likewise, that those who charge me with the actual death of Peregrine
+Oakshott should prove him to be dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charles&rsquo;s first witness was Mrs. Lang, his late wife&rsquo;s
+&lsquo;own woman,&rsquo; who spared him many questions by garrulously
+declaring &lsquo;what a work&rsquo; poor little Madam had made about
+the rose-coloured sarcenet, causing the pattern to be searched out as
+soon as she came home from the bonfire, and how she had &lsquo;gone
+on at&rsquo; her husband till he promised to give it to Mistress Anne,
+and how he had been astir at four o&rsquo;clock in the morning, and
+had called to her (Mrs. Lang) to look to her mistress, who might perhaps
+get some sleep now that she had her will and hounded him out to go over
+to Portchester about that silk.</p>
+<p>Nothing was asked of this witness by the prosecution except the time
+of Mr. Archfield&rsquo;s return.&nbsp; The question of jealousy was
+passed over.</p>
+<p>Of the pond apparition nothing was said.&nbsp; Anne had told Charles
+of it, but no one could have proved its identity but Sedley, and his
+share in it was too painful to be brought forward.&nbsp; Three other
+ghost seers were brought forward: Mrs. Fellowes&rsquo;s maid, the sentry,
+and the sexton; but only the sexton had ever seen Master Perry alive,
+and he would not swear to more than that it was something in his likeness;
+the sentry was already bound to declare it something unsubstantial;
+and the maid was easily persuaded into declaring that she did not know
+what she had seen or whether she had seen anything.</p>
+<p>There only remained Mr. Fellowes to bear witness of his pupil&rsquo;s
+entire innocence of political intrigues, together with a voluntary testimony
+addressed to the court, that the youth had always appeared to him a
+well-disposed but hitherto boyish lad, suddenly sobered and rendered
+thoughtful by a shock that had changed the tenor of his mind.</p>
+<p>Mr. Baron Hatsel summed up in his dreary vacillating way.&nbsp; He
+told the gentlemen of the jury that young men would be young men, especially
+where pretty wenches were concerned, and that all knew that there was
+bitterness where Whig and Tory were living nigh together.&nbsp; Then
+he went over the evidence, at first in a tone favourable to the encounter
+having been almost accidental, and the stroke an act of passion.&nbsp;
+But he then added, it was strange, and he did not know what to think
+of these young sparks and the young gentlewoman all meeting in a lonely
+place when honest folks were abed, and the hiding in the vault, and
+the state of the clothes were strange matters scarce agreeing with what
+either prisoner or witness said.&nbsp; It looked only too like part
+of a plot of which some one should make a clean breast.&nbsp; On the
+other hand, the prisoner was a fine young gentleman, an only son, and
+had been fighting the Turks, though it would have been better to have
+fought the French among his own countrymen.&nbsp; He had come ingenuously
+forward to deliver his cousin, and a deliberate murderer was not wont
+to be so generous, though may be he expected to get off easily on this
+same plea of misadventure.&nbsp; If it was misadventure, why did he
+not try to do something for the deceased, or wait to see whether he
+breathed before throwing him into this same pit? though, to be sure,
+a lad might be inexperienced.&nbsp; For the rest, as to these same sights
+of the deceased or his likeness, he (the judge) was no believer in ghosts,
+though he would not say there were no such things, and the gentlemen
+of the jury must decide whether it was more likely the poor youth was
+playing pranks in the body, or whether he were haunting in the spirit
+those who had most to do with his untimely end.&nbsp; This was the purport,
+or rather the no-purport, of the charge.</p>
+<p>The jury were absent for a very short time, and as it leaked out
+afterwards, their intelligence did not rise above the idea that the
+young gentleman was thick with they Frenchies who wanted to bring in
+murder and popery, warming-pans and wooden shoes.&nbsp; He called stoning
+poultry a trifle, so of what was he not capable?&nbsp; Of course he
+spited the poor young chap, and how could the fact be denied when the
+poor ghost had come back to ask for his blood?</p>
+<p>So the awful suspense ended with &lsquo;Guilty, my Lord.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of murder or manslaughter?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of murder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The prisoner stood as no doubt he had faced Turkish batteries.</p>
+<p>The judge asked the customary question whether he had any reason
+to plead why he should not be condemned to death.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, my lord.&nbsp; I am guilty of shedding Peregrine Oakshott&rsquo;s
+blood, and though I declare before God and man that I had no such purpose,
+and it was done in the heat of an undesigned struggle, I hated him enough
+to render the sentence no unjust one.&nbsp; I trust that God will pardon
+me, if man does not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The gentlemen around drew the poor old father out of the court so
+as not to hear the final sentence, and Anne, half stunned, was taken
+away by her uncle, and put into the same carriage with him.&nbsp; The
+old man held her hands closely and could not speak, but she found voice,
+&ldquo;Sir, sir, do not give up hope.&nbsp; God will save him.&nbsp;
+I know what I can do.&nbsp; I will go to Princess Anne.&nbsp; She is
+friendly with the King now.&nbsp; She will bring me to tell him all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hurriedly she spoke, her object, as it seemed to be that of every
+one, to keep up such hope and encouragement as to drown the terrible
+sense of the actual upshot of the trial.&nbsp; The room at the George
+was full in a moment of friends declaring that all would go well in
+the end, and consulting what to do.&nbsp; Neither Sir Philip nor Dr.
+Woodford could be available, as their refusal to take the oaths to King
+William made them marked men.&nbsp; The former could only write to the
+Imperial Ambassador, beseeching him to claim the prisoner as an officer
+of the Empire, though it was doubtful whether this would be allowed
+in the case of an Englishman born.&nbsp; Mr. Fellowes undertook to be
+the bearer of the letter, and to do his best through Archbishop Tenison
+to let the King know the true bearings of the case.&nbsp; Almost in
+pity, to spare Anne the misery of helpless waiting, Dr. Woodford consented
+to let her go under his escort, starting very early the next morning,
+since the King might immediately set off for the army in Holland, and
+the space was brief between condemnation and execution.</p>
+<p>Sir Edmund proposed to hurry to Carisbrooke Castle, being happily
+on good terms with that fiery personage, Lord Cutts, the governor of
+the Isle of Wight as well as a favoured general of the King, whose intercession
+might do more than Princess Anne&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Moreover, a message
+came from old Mr. Cromwell, begging to see Sir Edmund.&nbsp; It was
+on behalf of Major Oakshott, who entreated that Sir Philip might be
+assured of his own great regret at the prosecution and the result, and
+his entire belief that the provocation came from his unhappy son.&nbsp;
+Both he and Richard Cromwell were having a petition for pardon drawn
+up, which Sir Henry Mildmay and almost all the leading gentlemen of
+Hampshire of both parties were sure to sign, while the sheriff would
+defer the execution as long as possible.&nbsp; Pardons, especially in
+cases of duelling, had been marketable articles in the last reigns,
+and there could not but be a sigh for such conveniences.&nbsp; Sir Philip
+wanted to go at once to the jail, which was very near the inn, but consented
+on strong persuasion to let his son-in-law precede him.</p>
+<p>Anne longed for a few moments to herself, but durst not leave the
+poor old man, who sat holding her hand, and at each interval of silence
+saying how this would kill the boy&rsquo;s mother, or something equally
+desponding, so that she had to talk almost at random of the various
+gleams of hope, and even to describe how the little Duke of Gloucester
+might be told of Philip and sent to the King, who was known to be very
+fond of him.&nbsp; It was a great comfort when Dr. Woodford came and
+offered to pray with them.</p>
+<p>By and by Sir Edmund returned, having been making arrangements for
+Charles&rsquo;s comfort.&nbsp; Ordinary prisoners were heaped together
+and miserably treated, but money could do something, and by application
+to the High Sheriff, permission had been secured for Charles to occupy
+a private room, on a heavy fee to the jailor, and for his friends to
+have access to him, besides other necessaries, purchased at more than
+their weight in gold.&nbsp; Sir Edmund brought word that Charles was
+in good heart; sent love and duty to his father, whom he would welcome
+with all his soul, but that as Miss Woodford was&mdash;in her love and
+bravery&mdash;going so soon to London, he prayed that she might be his
+first visitor that evening.</p>
+<p>There was little more to do than to cross the street, and Sir Edmund
+hurried her through the flagged and dirty yard, and the dim, foul hall,
+filled with fumes of smoke and beer, where melancholy debtors held out
+their hands, idle scapegraces laughed, heavy degraded faces scowled,
+and evil sounds were heard, up the stairs to a nail-studded door, where
+Anne shuddered to hear the heavy key turned by the coarse, rude-looking
+warder, only withheld from insolence by the presence of a magistrate.&nbsp;
+Her escort tarried outside, and she saw Charles, his rush-light candle
+gleaming on his gold lace as he wrote a letter to the ambassador to
+be forwarded by his father.</p>
+<p>He sprang up with outstretched arms and an eager smile.&nbsp; &ldquo;My
+brave sweetheart! how nobly you have done.&nbsp; Truth and trust.&nbsp;
+It did my heart good to hear you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her head was on his shoulder.&nbsp; She wanted to speak, but could
+not without loosing the flood of tears.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Faith entire,&rdquo; he went on; &ldquo;and you are still
+striving for me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Princess Anne is&mdash;&rdquo; she began, then the choking
+came.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True!&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Come, do not expect the
+worst.&nbsp; I have not made up my mind to that!&nbsp; If the ambassador
+will stir, the King will not be disobliging, though it will probably
+not be a free pardon, but Hungary for some years to come&mdash;and you
+are coming with me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you will have one who might be&mdash;may have been&mdash;your
+death.&nbsp; Oh, every word I said seemed to me stabbing you;&rdquo;
+and the tears would come now.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No such thing!&nbsp; They only showed how true my love is
+to God and me, and made my heart swell with pride to hear her so cheering
+me through all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His strength seemed to allow her to break down.&nbsp; She had all
+along had to bear up the spirits of Sir Philip and Lady Archfield, and
+though she had struggled for composure, the finding that she had in
+him a comforter and support set the pent-up tears flowing fast, as he
+held her close.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, I did not mean to vex you thus!&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Vex! no indeed!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis something to be wept for.&nbsp;
+But cheer up, Anne mine.&nbsp; I have often been in far worse plights
+than this, when I have ridden up in the face of eight big Turkish guns.&nbsp;
+The balls went over my head then, by God&rsquo;s good mercy.&nbsp; Why
+not the same now?&nbsp; Ay! and I was ready to give all I had to any
+one who would have put a pistol to my head and got me out of my misery,
+jolting along on the way to the Iron Gates.&nbsp; Yet here I am!&nbsp;
+Maybe the Almighty brought me back to save poor Sedley, and clear my
+own conscience, knowing well that though it does not look so, it is
+better for me to die thus than the other way.&nbsp; No, no; &rsquo;tis
+ten to one that you and the rest of you will get me off.&nbsp; I only
+meant to show you that supposing it fails, I shall only feel it my due,
+and much better for me than if I had died out there with it unconfessed.&nbsp;
+I shall try to get them all to feel it so, and, after all, now the whole
+is out, my heart feels lighter than it has done these seven years.&nbsp;
+And if I could only believe that poor fellow alive, I could almost die
+content, though that sounds strange.&nbsp; It will quiet his poor restless
+spirit any way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are too brave.&nbsp; Oh!&nbsp; I hoped to come here to
+comfort you, and I have only made you comfort me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The best way, sweetest.&nbsp; Now, I will seal and address
+this letter, and you shall take it to Mr. Fellowes to carry to the ambassador.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This gave Anne a little time to compose herself, and when he had
+finished, he took the candle, and saying, &ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; he
+held it to the wall, and they read, scratched on the rough bricks, &ldquo;Alice
+Lisle, 1685.&nbsp; This is thankworthy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lady Lisle&rsquo;s cell!&nbsp; Oh, this is no good omen!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I call it a goodly legacy even to one who cannot claim to
+suffer wrongfully,&rdquo; said Charles.&nbsp; &ldquo;There, they knock&mdash;one
+kiss more&mdash;we shall meet again soon.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t linger in
+town, but give me all the days you can.&nbsp; Yes, take her back, Sir
+Edmund, for she must rest before her journey.&nbsp; Cheer up, love,
+and do not lie weeping all night, but believe that your prayers to God
+and man must prevail one way or another.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXI<br />
+Elf-Land</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Three ruffians seized me yestermorn,<br />
+&nbsp; Alas! a maiden most forlorn;<br />
+They choked my cries with wicked might,<br />
+&nbsp; And bound me on a palfrey white.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>S. T. COLERIDGE.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Yet after the night it was with more hope than despondency, Anne,
+in the February morning, mounted <i>en croupe</i> behind Mr. Fellowes&rsquo;s
+servant, that being decided on as the quickest mode of travelling.&nbsp;
+She saw the sunrise behind St. Catherine&rsquo;s Hill, and the gray
+mists filling the valley of the Itchen, and the towers of the Cathedral
+and College barely peeping beyond them.&nbsp; Would her life rise out
+of the mist?</p>
+<p>Through hoar-frosted hedges, deeply crested with white, they rode,
+emerging by and by on downs, becoming dully green above, as the sun
+touched them, but white below.&nbsp; Suddenly, in passing a hollow,
+overhung by two or three yew-trees, they found themselves surrounded
+by masked horsemen.&nbsp; The servant on her horse was felled, she herself
+snatched off and a kerchief covered her face, while she was crying,
+&ldquo;Oh sir, let me go!&nbsp; I am on business of life and death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The covering was stuffed into her mouth, and she was borne along
+some little way; then there was a pause, and she freed herself enough
+to say, &ldquo;You shall have everything; only let me go;&rdquo; and
+she felt for the money with which Sir Philip had supplied her, and for
+the watch given her by King James.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We want you; nothing of yours,&rdquo; said a voice.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be afraid.&nbsp; No one will hurt you; but we must
+have you along with us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Therewith she was pinioned by two large hands, and a bandage was
+made fast over her eyes, and when she shrieked out, &ldquo;Mr. Fellowes!&nbsp;
+Oh! where are you?&rdquo; she was answered&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No harm has been done to the parson.&nbsp; He will be free
+as soon as any one comes by.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis you we want.&nbsp; Now,
+I give you fair notice, for we don&rsquo;t want to choke you; there&rsquo;s
+no one to hear a squall.&nbsp; If there were, we should gag you, so
+you had best be quiet, and you shall suffer no hurt.&nbsp; Now then,
+by your leave, madam.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was lifted on horseback again, and a belt passed round her and
+the rider in front of her.&nbsp; Again she strove, in her natural voice,
+to plead that to stop her would imperil a man&rsquo;s life, and to implore
+for release.&nbsp; &ldquo;We know all that,&rdquo; she was told.&nbsp;
+It was not rudely said.&nbsp; The voice was not that of a clown; it
+was a gentleman&rsquo;s pronunciation, and this was in some ways more
+inexplicable and alarming.&nbsp; The horses were put in rapid motion;
+she heard the trampling of many hoofs, and felt that they were on soft
+turf, and she knew that for many miles round Winchester it was possible
+to keep on the downs so as to avoid any inhabited place.&nbsp; She tried
+to guess, from the sense of sunshine that came through her bandage,
+in what direction she was being carried, and fancied it must be southerly.&nbsp;
+On&mdash;on&mdash;on&mdash;still the turf.&nbsp; It seemed absolutely
+endless.&nbsp; Time was not measurable under such circumstances, but
+she fancied noon must have more than passed, when the voice that had
+before spoken said, &ldquo;We halt in a moment, and shift you to another
+horse, madam; but again I forewarn you that our comrades here have no
+ears for you, and that cries and struggles will only make it the worse
+for you.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then came the sound as of harder ground and a
+stop&mdash;undertones, gruff and manly, could be heard, the peculiar
+noise of horses&rsquo; drinking; and her captor came up this time on
+foot, saying, &ldquo;Plaguy little to be had in this accursed hole;
+&rsquo;tis but the choice between stale beer and milk.&nbsp; Which will
+you prefer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She could not help accepting the milk, and she was taken down to
+drink it, and a hunch of coarse barley bread was given to her, with
+it the words, &ldquo;I would offer you bacon, but it tastes as if Old
+Nick had smoked it in his private furnace.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Such expressions were no proof that gentle blood was lacking, but
+whose object could her abduction be&mdash;her, a penniless dependent?&nbsp;
+Could she have been seized by mistake for some heiress?&nbsp; In that
+moment&rsquo;s hope she asked, &ldquo;Sir, do you know who I am&mdash;Anne
+Woodford, a poor, portionless maid, not&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know perfectly well, madam,&rdquo; was the reply.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;May I trouble you to permit me to mount you again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was again placed behind one of the riders, and again fastened
+to him, and off they went, on a rougher horse, on harder ground, and,
+as she thought, occasionally through brushwood.&nbsp; Again a space,
+to her illimitable, went by, and then came turf once more, and by and
+by what seemed to her the sound of the sea.</p>
+<p>Another halt, another lifting down, but at once to be gathered up
+again, and then a splashing through water.&nbsp; &ldquo;Be careful,&rdquo;
+said the voice.&nbsp; A hand, a gentleman&rsquo;s hand, took hers; her
+feet were on boards&mdash;on a boat; she was drawn down to sit on a
+low thwart.&nbsp; Putting her hand over, she felt the lapping of the
+water and tasted that it was salt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, sir, where are you taking me?&rdquo; she asked, as the
+boat was pushed off.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That you will know in due time,&rdquo; he answered.</p>
+<p>Some more refreshment was offered her in a decided but not discourteous
+manner, and she partook of it, remembering that exhaustion might add
+to her perils.&nbsp; She perceived that after pushing off from shore
+sounds of eating and low gruff voices mingled with the plash of oars.&nbsp;
+Commands seemed to be given in French, and there were mutterings of
+some strange language.&nbsp; Darkness was coming on.&nbsp; What were
+they doing with her?&nbsp; And did Charles&rsquo;s fate hang upon hers?</p>
+<p>Yet in spite of terrors and anxieties, she was so much worn out as
+to doze long enough to lose count of time, till she was awakened by
+the rocking and tossing of the boat and loud peremptory commands.&nbsp;
+She became for the first time in her life miserable with sea-sickness,
+for how long it was impossible to tell, and the pitching of the boat
+became so violent that when she found herself bound to one of the seats
+she was conscious of little but a longing to be allowed to go to the
+bottom in peace, except that some great cause&mdash;she could hardly
+in her bewildered wretchedness recollect what&mdash;forbade her to die
+till her mission was over.</p>
+<p>There were loud peremptory orders, oaths, sea phrases, in French
+and English, sometimes in that unknown tongue.&nbsp; Something expressed
+that a light was directing to a landing-place, but reaching it was doubtful.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Unbind her eyes,&rdquo; said a voice; &ldquo;let her shift
+for herself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Better not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There followed a fresh upheaval, as if the boat were perpendicular;
+a sudden sinking, some one fell over and bruised her; another frightful
+rising and falling, then smoothness; the rope that held her fast undone;
+the keel grating; hands apparently dragging up the boat.&nbsp; She was
+lifted out like a doll, carried apparently through water over shingle.&nbsp;
+Light again made itself visible; she was in a house, set down on a chair,
+in the warmth of fire, amid a buzz of voices, which lulled as the bandage
+was untied and removed.&nbsp; Her eyes were so dazzled, her head so
+giddy, her senses so faint, that everything swam round her, and there
+that strange vision recurred.&nbsp; Peregrine Oakshott was before her.&nbsp;
+She closed her eyes again, as she lay back in the chair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take this; you will be better.&rdquo;&nbsp; A glass was at
+her lips, and she swallowed some hot drink, which revived her so that
+she opened her eyes again, and by the lights in an apparently richly
+curtained room, she again beheld that figure standing by her, the glass
+in his hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; she gasped.&nbsp; &ldquo;Are you alive?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The answer was to raise her still gloved hand with substantial fingers
+to a pair of lips.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then&mdash;then&mdash;he is safe!&nbsp; Thank God!&rdquo;
+she murmured, and shut her eyes again, dizzy and overcome, unable even
+to analyse her conviction that all would be well, and that in some manner
+he had come to her rescue.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where am I?&rdquo; she murmured dreamily.&nbsp; &ldquo;In
+Elf-land?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; come to be Queen of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The words blended with her confused fancies.&nbsp; Indeed she was
+hardly fully conscious of anything, except that a woman&rsquo;s hands
+were about her, and that she was taken into another room, where her
+drenched clothes were removed, and she was placed in a warm, narrow
+bed, where some more warm nourishment was put into her mouth with a
+spoon, after which she sank into a sleep of utter exhaustion.&nbsp;
+That sleep lasted long.&nbsp; There was a sensation of the rocking of
+the boat, and of aching limbs, through great part of the time; also
+there seemed to be a continual roaring and thundering around her, and
+such strange misty visions, that when she finally awoke, after a long
+interval of deeper and sounder slumber, she was incapable of separating
+the fact from the dream, more especially as head and limbs were still
+heavy, weary, and battered.&nbsp; The strange roaring still sounded,
+and sometimes seemed to shake the bed.&nbsp; Twilight was coming in
+at a curtained window, and showed a tiny chamber, with rafters overhead
+and thatch, a chest, a chair, and table.&nbsp; There was a pallet on
+the floor, and Anne suspected that she had been wakened by the rising
+of its occupant.&nbsp; Her watch was on the chair by her side, but it
+had not been wound, and the dim light did not increase, so that there
+was no guessing the time; and as the remembrance of her dreadful adventures
+made themselves clear, she realised with exceeding terror that she must
+be a prisoner, while the evening&rsquo;s apparition relegated itself
+to the world of dreams.</p>
+<p>Being kidnapped to be sent to the plantations was the dread of those
+days.&nbsp; But if such were the case, what would become of Charles?&nbsp;
+In the alarm of that thought she sat up in bed and prepared to rise,
+but could nowhere see her clothes, only the little cloth bag of toilet
+necessaries that she had taken with her.</p>
+<p>At that moment, however, the woman came in with a steaming cup of
+chocolate in her hand and some of the garments over her arm.&nbsp; She
+was a stout, weather-beaten, kindly-looking woman with a high white
+cap, gold earrings, black short petticoat, and many-coloured apron.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;<i>Monsieur veut savoir si mademoiselle va bien</i>?&rdquo; said
+she in slow careful French, and when questions in that language were
+eagerly poured out, she shook her head, and said, &ldquo;<i>Ne comprends
+pas</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; She, however, brought in the rest of the clothes,
+warm water, and a light, so that Anne rose and dressed, exceedingly
+perplexed, and wondering whether she could be in a ship, for the sounds
+seemed to say so, and there was no corresponding motion.&nbsp; Could
+she be in France?&nbsp; Certainly the voyage had seemed interminable,
+but she did not think it <i>could</i> have been long enough for that,
+nor that any person in his senses would try to cross in an open boat
+in such weather.&nbsp; She looked at the window, a tiny slip of glass,
+too thick to show anything but what seemed to be a dark wall rising
+near at hand.&nbsp; Alas! she was certainly a prisoner!&nbsp; In whose
+hands?&nbsp; With what intent?&nbsp; How would it affect that other
+prisoner at Winchester?&nbsp; Was that vision of last night substantial
+or the work of her exhausted brain?&nbsp; What could she do?&nbsp; It
+was well for her that she could believe in the might of prayer.</p>
+<p>She durst not go beyond her door, for she heard men&rsquo;s tones,
+suppressed and gruff, but presently there was a knock, and wonder of
+wonders, she beheld Hans, black Hans, showing all his white teeth in
+a broad grin, and telling her that Missee Anne&rsquo;s breakfast was
+ready.&nbsp; The curtain that overhung the door was drawn back, and
+she passed into another small room, with a fire on the open hearth,
+and a lamp hung from a beam, the walls all round covered with carpets
+or stuffs of thick glowing colours, so that it was like the inside of
+a tent.&nbsp; And in the midst, without doubt, stood Peregrine Oakshott,
+in such a dress as was usually worn by gentlemen in the morning&mdash;a
+loose wrapping coat, though with fine lace cuffs and cravat, all, like
+the shoes and silk stockings, worn with his peculiar daintiness, and,
+as was usual when full-bottomed wigs were the rule in <i>grande tenue</i>,
+its place supplied by a silken cap.&nbsp; This was olive green with
+a crimson tassel, which had assumed exactly the characteristic one-sided
+Riquet-with-a-tuft aspect.&nbsp; For the rest, these years seemed to
+have made the slight form slighter and more wiry, and the face keener,
+more sallow, and more marked.</p>
+<p>He bowed low with the foreign courtesy which used to be so offensive
+to his contemporaries, and offered a delicate, beringed hand to lead
+the young lady to the little table, where grilled fowl and rolls, both
+showing the cookery of Hans, were prepared for her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope you rested well, and have an appetite this morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir, what does it all mean?&nbsp; Where am I?&rdquo; asked
+Anne, drawing herself up with the native dignity that she felt to be
+her defence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In Elf-land,&rdquo; he said, with a smile, as he heaped her
+plate.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Speak in earnest,&rdquo; she entreated.&nbsp; &ldquo;I cannot
+eat till I understand.&nbsp; It is no time for trifling!&nbsp; Life
+and death hang on my reaching London!&nbsp; If you saved me from those
+men, let me go free.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one can move at present,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;See
+here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He drew back a curtain, opened first one door and then another, and
+she saw sheets of driving rain, and rising, roaring waves, with surf
+which came beating in on the force of such a fearful gust of wind that
+Peregrine hastily shut the door, not without difficulty.&nbsp; &ldquo;Nobody
+can stir at present,&rdquo; he said, as they came into the warm bright
+room again.&nbsp; &ldquo;It is a frightful tempest, the worst known
+here for years, they say.&nbsp; The dead-lights, as they call them,
+have been put in, or the windows would be driven in.&nbsp; Come and
+taste Hans&rsquo;s work; you know it of old.&nbsp; Will you drink tea?&nbsp;
+Do you remember how your mother came to teach mine to brew it, and how
+she forgave me for being graceless enough to squirt at her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was something so gentle and reassuring in the demeanour of
+this strange being that Anne, convinced of the utter hopelessness of
+confronting the storm, as well as of the need of gathering strength,
+allowed herself to be placed in a chair, and to partake of the food
+set before her, and the tea, which was served without milk, in an exquisite
+dragon china cup, but with a saucer that did not match it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We don&rsquo;t get our sets perfect,&rdquo; said Peregrine,
+with a smile, who was waiting on her as if she were a princess.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I entreat you to tell me where we are!&rdquo; said Anne.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Not in France?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, not in France!&nbsp; I wish we were.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then&mdash;can this be the Island?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, the Island it is,&rdquo; said Peregrine, both speaking
+as South Hants folk; &ldquo;this is the strange cave or chasm called
+Black Gang Chine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Black Gang!&nbsp; Oh! the highwaymen, the pirates!&nbsp; You
+have saved me from them.&nbsp; Were they going to send me to the plantations?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You need have no fears.&nbsp; No one shall touch you, or hurt
+you.&nbsp; You shall see no one save by your own consent, my queen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And when this storm is passed&mdash;Oh!&rdquo; as a more fearful
+roar and dash sounded as if the waves were about to sweep away their
+frail shelter&mdash;&ldquo;you will come with me and save Mr. Archfield&rsquo;s
+life?&nbsp; You cannot know&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; he interrupted; &ldquo;but why should I be
+solicitous for his life?&nbsp; That I am here now is no thanks to him,
+and why should I give up mine for the sake of him who meant to make
+an end of me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You little know how he repented.&nbsp; And your own life?&nbsp;
+What do you mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;People don&rsquo;t haunt the Black Gang Chine when their lives
+are secure from Dutch Bill,&rdquo; he answered.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
+be terrified, my queen; though I cannot lay claim, like Prospero, to
+having raised this storm by my art magic, yet it perforce gives me time
+to make you understand who and what I am, and how I have recovered my
+better angel to give her no mean nor desperate career.&nbsp; It will
+be better thus than with the suddenness with which I might have had
+to act.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A new alarm seized upon Anne as to his possible intentions, but she
+would not forestall what she so much apprehended, and, sensible that
+self-control alone could guard her, since escape at present was clearly
+impossible, she resigned herself to sit opposite to him by the ample
+hearth of what she perceived to be a fisherman&rsquo;s hut, thus fitted
+up luxuriously with, it might be feared, the spoils of the sea.</p>
+<p>The story was a long one, and not by any means told consecutively
+or without interruption, and all the time those eyes were upon her,
+one yellow the other green, with the effect she knew so well of old
+in childish days, of repulsion yet compulsion, of terror yet attraction,
+as if irresistibly binding a reluctant will.&nbsp; Several times Peregrine
+was called off to speak to some one outside the door, and at noon he
+begged permission for his friends to dine with them, saying that there
+was no other place where the dinner could be taken to them comfortably
+in this storm.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXII<br />
+Seven Years</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;It was between the night and day,<br />
+&nbsp; When the Fairy King has power,<br />
+That I sunk down in a sinful fray,<br />
+And &rsquo;twixt life and death was snatched away<br />
+&nbsp; To the joyless Elfin bower.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>SCOTT.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This motto was almost the account that the twisted figure, with queer
+contortions of face, yet delicate feet and hands, and dainty utterance,
+might have been expected to give, when Anne asked him, &ldquo;Was it
+you, really?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&mdash;or my double?&rdquo; he asked.&nbsp; &ldquo;When?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She told him, and he seemed amazed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So you were there?&nbsp; Well, you shall hear.&nbsp; You know
+how things stood with me&mdash;your mother, my good spirit, dead, my
+uncle away, my father bent on driving me to utter desperation, and Martha
+Browning laying her great red hands on me&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, sir, she really loved you, and is far wiser and more tolerant
+than you thought her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; he smiled grimly.&nbsp; &ldquo;She buried the
+huge Scot that was killed in the great smuggling fray under the Protector,
+with all honours, in our family vault, and had a long-winded sermon
+preached on my untimely end.&nbsp; Ha! ha!&rdquo; with his mocking laugh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t, sir!&nbsp; If you had seen your father then!&nbsp;
+Why did no one come forward and explain?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mayhap there were none at hand who knew, or wished to meddle
+with the law,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Well, things were beyond
+all bearing at home, and you were going away, and would not so much
+as look at me.&nbsp; Now, one of the few sports my father did not look
+askance at was fishing, and he would endure my being out at night with,
+as he thought, poor man, old Pete Perring, who was as stern a Puritan
+as himself; but I had livelier friends, and more adventurous.&nbsp;
+They had connections with French free-traders for brandy and silks,
+and when they found I was one with them, my French tongue was a boon
+to them, till I came to have a good many friends among the Norman fishermen,
+and to know the snug hiding-places about the coast.&nbsp; So at last
+I made up my mind to be off with them, and make my way to my uncle in
+Muscovy.&nbsp; I had raised money enough at play and on the jewels one
+picks up in an envoy&rsquo;s service, and there was one good angel whom
+I meant to take with me if I could secure her and bind her wings.&nbsp;
+Now you know with what hopes I saw you gathering flowers alone that
+morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne clasped her hands; Charles had truly interfered with good cause.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had all arranged,&rdquo; he continued; &ldquo;my uncle would
+have given you a hearty welcome, and made our peace with my father,
+or if not, he would have left us all his goods, and secured my career.&nbsp;
+What call had that great lout, with a wife of his own too, to come thrusting
+between us?&nbsp; I thought I should make short work of him, and give
+him a lesson against meddling&mdash;great unlicked cub as he was, while
+I had had the best training at Berlin and Paris in fencing; but somehow
+those big strong fellows, from their very clumsiness, throw one out.&nbsp;
+And he meant mischief&mdash;yes, that he did.&nbsp; I saw it in his
+eyes.&nbsp; I suppose his sulky rustic jealousy was a-fire at a few
+little civilities to that poor little wife of his.&nbsp; Any way, when
+he bore me down like the swing of a windmill, he drove his sword home.&nbsp;
+Talk of his being innocent!&nbsp; Why should he never look whether I
+were dead or alive, but fling me headlong into that pit?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne could not but utter her eager defence, but it was met with a
+sinister smile, half of scorn, half of pity, and as she would have gone
+on, &ldquo;Hush! your pleading only fills up the measure of my loathing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her heart sank, but she let him go on, listening perhaps less attentively
+as she considered how to take him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In fact,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;little as the lubber
+knew it, &rsquo;twas the best he could have done for me.&nbsp; For though
+I never looked for such luck as your being out in the court at that
+hour, I did think the chance not to be lost of visiting the garden or
+the churchyard, and there were waiting in the vault a couple of stout
+Normans, who were to come at my whistle.&nbsp; It seems that when I
+came tumbling down in their midst, senseless and bleeding like a calf,
+they did not take it quite so easily as your champion above, but began
+doing what they could for me, and were trying to staunch the wound,
+when they heard a trampling and a rumbling overhead, and being aware
+that our undertaking might look ugly in the sight of the law, and thinking
+this might be pursuers, they carried me off with all speed, not so much
+as stopping to pick up the things that have made such a commotion.&nbsp;
+Was there any pursuit?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no; it must have been the haymakers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No doubt.&nbsp; The place was in no great favour with our
+own people; they were in awe of the big Scot, who is in comfortable
+quarters in my grave, and the Frenchmen could not have found their way
+thither, so it was let alone till Mistress Martha&rsquo;s researches.&nbsp;
+So I came to myself in the boat in which they took me on board the lugger
+that was waiting for us; and instead of making for Alderney, as I had
+intended, so as to get the knot safely tied to your satisfaction, they
+sailed straight for Havre.&nbsp; They had on board a Jesuit father,
+whom I had met once or twice among the Duke of Berwick&rsquo;s people,
+but who had found Portsmouth too hot to hold him in the frenzy of Protestant
+zeal on the Bishops&rsquo; account.&nbsp; He had been beset, and owed
+his life, he says, to the fists of the Breton and Norman sailors, who
+had taken him on board.&nbsp; It was well for me, for I doubt if ever
+I was tough enough to have withstood my good friends&rsquo; treatment.&nbsp;
+He had me carried to a convent in Havre, where the fathers nursed me
+well; and before I was on my legs again, I had made up my mind to cast
+in my lot with them, or rather with their Church.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had been baulked of winning the one being near whom my devil
+never durst come.&nbsp; And blood-letting had pretty well disposed of
+him.&nbsp; I was as meek and mild as milk under the good fathers.&nbsp;
+Moreover, as my good friend at Turin had told me, and they repeated
+it, such a doubly heretical baptism as mine was probably invalid, and
+accounted for my being as much a vessel of wrath as even my father was
+pleased to call me.&nbsp; There was the Queen&rsquo;s rosary drawing
+me too.&nbsp; Everything else was over with me, and it seemed to open
+a new life.&nbsp; So, bless me, what a soft and pious frame I was in
+when they chastened me, water, oil, salt and all, on what my father
+raged at folks calling Lammas Day, but which it seems really belongs
+to St. Peter in the Fetters.&nbsp; So I was named Pierre or Piers after
+him, thus keeping my own initial.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Piers! oh! not Piers Pigwiggin?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pierre de Pilpignon, if you please.&nbsp; I have a right to
+that too; but we shall come to it by and by.&nbsp; I can laugh now,
+or perhaps weep, over the fervid state I was in then, as if I had trodden
+down my snake, and by giving up everything&mdash;you, estate, career,
+I could keep him down.&nbsp; So it was settled that I would devote myself
+to the priesthood&mdash;don&rsquo;t laugh!&mdash;and I was ordered off
+to their seminary in London, partly, I believe, for the sake of piloting
+a couple of fathers, who could not speak a word of English.&nbsp; It
+was, as they rightly judged, the last place where my father would think
+of looking for me, but they did not as rightly judge that we should
+long keep possession there.&nbsp; Matters grew serious, and it was not
+over safe in the streets.&nbsp; There was a letter of importance from
+a friend in Holland, carrying the Prince of Orange&rsquo;s hypocritical
+Declaration, which was to be got to Father Petre or the King on the
+night&mdash;Hallowmas Eve it was&mdash;and I was told off to put on
+a secular dress, which I could wear more naturally than most of them,
+and convey it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, that explains!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Apparition number one!&nbsp; I guessed you were somewhere
+in those parts, and looked up at the windows, and though I did not see
+you, I believe it was your eyes that first sent a thrill through me
+that boded ill for Roman orders.&nbsp; After that we lived in a continual
+state of rumours and alarms, secret messages and expeditions, until
+I, being strong in the arm and the wind and a feather-weight, was one
+of those honoured by rowing the Queen and Prince across the river.&nbsp;
+M. de St. Victor accepted me.&nbsp; He told me there would be two nurses,
+but never knew or cared who they were, nor did I guess, as we sat in
+the dark, how near I was to you.&nbsp; And only for one second did I
+see your face, as you were entering the carriage, and I blessed you
+the more for what you were doing for Her Majesty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He proceeded to tell how he had accompanied the Jesuit fathers, on
+their leaving London, to the great English seminary at Douai, and being
+for the time convinced by them that his feelings towards Anne were a
+delusion of the enemy, he had studied with all his might, and as health
+and monotony of life began to have their accustomed effect in rousing
+the restlessness and mischievousness of his nature, with all the passions
+of manhood growing upon him, he strove to force them down by fasting
+and scourging.&nbsp; He told, in a bitter, almost savage way, of his
+endeavours to flog his demon out of himself, and of his anger and disappointment
+at finding Piers Pilgrim in the seminary of Douai, quite as subject
+to his attacks as ever was Perry Oakshott under a sermon of Mr. Horncastle&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>Then came the information among the students that the governor of
+the city, the Marquis de Nidemerle, had brought some English gentlemen
+and ladies to visit the gardens.&nbsp; As most of the students were
+of British families there was curiosity as to who they were, and thus
+Peregrine heard that one was young Archfield of the Hampshire family,
+with his tutor, and the lady was Mistress Darpent, daughter to a French
+lawyer, who had settled in England after the Fronde.&nbsp; Anne&rsquo;s
+name had not transpired, for she was viewed merely as an attendant.&nbsp;
+Peregrine had been out on some errand in the town, and had a distant
+view of his enemy as he held him, flaunting about with a fine lady on
+his arm, forgetting the poor little pretty wife whom no doubt he had
+frightened to death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! you little know how tenderly he speaks of her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tenderly!&mdash;that&rsquo;s the way they speak of me at Oakwood,
+eh?&nbsp; Human, not to say elf, nature, could not withstand giving
+the fellow a start.&nbsp; I sped off, whipped into the Church, popped
+into a surplice I found ready to hand, caught up a candle, and!&mdash;Little
+did I think who it was that was hanging on his arm.&nbsp; So little
+did I know it that my heart began to be drawn to St. Germain, where
+I still imagined you.&nbsp; Altogether, after that prank, all broke
+out again.&nbsp; I entertained the lads with a few more freaks, for
+which I did ample penance, but it grew on me that in my case all was
+a weariness and a sham, and that my demon might get a worse hold of
+me if I got into a course of hypocrisy.&nbsp; They were very good to
+me, those fathers, but Jesuits as they were, I doubt whether they ever
+fathomed me.&nbsp; Any way, perhaps they thought I should be a scandal,
+but they agreed with me that their order was not my vocation, and that
+we had better part before my fiend drove me to do so with dishonour.&nbsp;
+They even gave me recommendations to the French officers that were besieging
+Tournay.&nbsp; I knew the Duke of Berwick a little at Portsmouth, and
+it ended in my becoming under-secretary to the Duke of Chartres.&nbsp;
+A man who knows languages has his value among Frenchmen, who despise
+all but their own.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peregrine did not enter into full details of this stage of his career,
+and Anne was not fully informed of the habits that the young Duke of
+Chartres, the future Regent Duke of Orleans, was already developing,
+but she gathered that, what the young man called his demon, had nearly
+undisputed sway over him, and she had not spent eight months at St.
+Germain without knowing by report of the dissolute manners of the substratum
+of fashionable society at Paris, even though outward decorum had been
+restored by Madame de Maintenon.&nbsp; Yet he seemed to have been crossed
+by fits of vehement penitence, and almost the saddest part of the story
+was the mocking tone in which he alluded to these.</p>
+<p>He had sought service at the Court in the hope of meeting Miss Woodford
+there, and had been grievously disappointed when he found that she had
+long since returned to England.&nbsp; The sight of the gracious and
+lovely countenance of the exiled Queen seemed always to have moved and
+touched him, as in some inexplicable manner her eyes and expression
+recalled to him those of Mrs. Woodford and Anne; but the thought had
+apparently only stung him into the sense of being forsaken and abandoned
+to his own devices or those of his evil spirit.</p>
+<p>One incident, occurring some three years previously, he told more
+fully, as it had a considerable effect on his life.&nbsp; &ldquo;I was
+attending the Duke in the gardens at Versailles,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;when
+we were aware of a great commotion.&nbsp; All the gentlemen were standing
+gazing up into the top of a great chestnut tree, the King and all, and
+in the midst stood the Abb&eacute; de F&eacute;nelon with his little
+pupils, the youngest, the Duke of Anjou, sobbing piteously, and the
+Duke of Burgundy in a furious passion, stamping and raging, and only
+withheld from rolling on the ground by the Abb&eacute;&rsquo;s hand
+grasping his shoulder.&nbsp; &lsquo;I will not have him killed!&nbsp;
+He is mine,&rsquo; he cried.&nbsp; And up in the tree, the object of
+all their gaze, was a monkey with a paper fluttering in his hand.&nbsp;
+Some one had made a present of the creature to the King&rsquo;s grandsons;
+he was the reigning favourite, and having broken his chain, had effected
+an entrance by the window into the King&rsquo;s cabinet, where after
+giving himself the airs of a minister of state, on being interrupted,
+he had made off through the window with an important document, which
+he was affecting to peruse at his leisure, only interrupting himself
+to hurl down leaves or unripe chestnuts at those who attempted to pelt
+him with stones, and this only made him mount higher and higher, entirely
+out of their reach, for no one durst climb after him.&nbsp; I believe
+it was a letter from the King of Spain; at any rate the whole Cabinet
+was in agony lest the brute should proceed to tear it into fragments,
+and a musqueteer had been sent for to shoot him down.&nbsp; I remembered
+my success with the monkey on poor little Madam Archfield&rsquo;s back&mdash;nay,
+perhaps &rsquo;twas the same, my familiar taking shape.&nbsp; I threw
+myself at the King&rsquo;s feet, and desired permission to deal with
+the beast.&nbsp; By good luck it had not been so easy as they supposed
+to find a musquet fit for immediate use, so I had full time.&nbsp; To
+ascend the tree was no more than I had done many times before, and I
+went high in the branches, but cautiously, not to give Monsieur le Singe
+the idea of being pursued, lest he should leap to a bough incapable
+of supporting me.&nbsp; When I had reached a fork tolerably high, and
+where he could see me, I settled myself, took out a letter, which fortunately
+was in my pocket, read it with the greatest deliberation, the monkey
+watching me all the time, and finally I proceeded to fold it neatly
+in all its creases.&nbsp; The creature imitated me with its black fingers,
+little aware, poor thing, that the musqueteer had covered him with his
+weapon, and was waiting for the first sign of tearing the letter to
+pull the trigger, but withheld by a sign from the King, who did not
+wish to sacrifice his grandson&rsquo;s pet before his eyes.&nbsp; Finally,
+after finishing the folding, I doubled it a second time, and threw it
+at the animal.&nbsp; To my great joy he returned the compliment by throwing
+the other at my head.&nbsp; I was able to catch it, and moreover, as
+he was disposed to go in pursuit of his plaything, he swung his chain
+so near me that I got hold of it, twisted it round my arm, and made
+the best of my way down the tree, amid the &lsquo;Bravos!&rsquo; started
+by the royal lips themselves, and repeated with ecstasy by all the crowd,
+who waved their hats, and made such a hallooing that I had much ado
+to get the monkey down safely; but finally, all dishevelled, with my
+best cuffs and cravat torn to ribbons, and my wig happily detached,
+unlike Absalom&rsquo;s, for it remained in the tree, I had the honour
+of presenting on my knee the letter to the King, and the monkey to the
+Princes.&nbsp; I kissed His Majesty&rsquo;s hand, the little Duke of
+Anjou kissed the monkey, and the Duke of Burgundy kissed me with arms
+round my neck, then threw himself on his knees before his grandfather
+to ask pardon for his passion.&nbsp; Every one said my fortune was made,
+and that my agility deserved at least the <i>cordon bleu</i>.&nbsp;
+My own Duke of Chartres, who in many points is like his cousin, our
+late King Charles, gravely assured me that a new office was to be invented
+for me, and that I was to be <i>Grand Singier du Roi</i>.&nbsp; I believe
+he pushed my cause, and so did the little Duke of Burgundy, and finally
+I got the pension without the office, and a good deal of occasional
+employment besides, in the way of translation of documents.&nbsp; There
+were moments of success at play.&nbsp; Oh yes, quite fairly, any one
+with wits about him can make his profit in the long-run among the Court
+set.&nbsp; And thus I had enough to purchase a pretty little estate
+and ch&acirc;teau on the coast of Normandy, the confiscated property
+of a poor Huguenot refugee, so that it went cheap.&nbsp; It gives the
+title of Pilpignon, which I assumed in kindness to the tongues of my
+French friends.&nbsp; So you see, I have a station and property to which
+to carry you, my fair one, won by myself, though only by catching an
+ape.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He went on to say that the spot had been chosen advisedly, with a
+view to communication with the opposite coast, where his old connection
+with the smugglers was likely to be useful in the Jacobite plots.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;As you well know,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;my father had done his
+utmost to make Whiggery stink in my nostrils, to say nothing of the
+kindness I have enjoyed from our good Queen; and I was ready to do my
+utmost in the cause, especially after I had stolen a glimpse of you,
+and when Charnock, poor fellow, returning from reconnoitring among the
+loyal, told me that you were still unmarried, and living as a dependent
+in the Archfields&rsquo; house.&nbsp; Our headquarters were in Romney
+Marsh, but it was as well to have, as it were, a back door here, and
+as it has turned out it has been the saving of some of us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, sir! you were not in that wicked plot?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay; surely <i>you</i> are not turned Whig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But this was assassination.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not at all, if they would have listened to me.&nbsp; The Dutchman
+is no bigger than I am.&nbsp; I could have dropped on him from one of
+his trees at Hampton Court, or through a window, <i>via presto</i>,
+and we would have had him off by the river, given him an interview to
+beg his uncle&rsquo;s pardon, and despatched him for the benefit of
+his asthma to the company of the Iron Mask at St. Marguerite; then back
+again, the King to enjoy his own again, Dr. Woodford, archbishop or
+bishop of whatever you please, and a lady here present to be Marquise
+de Pilpignon, or Countess of Havant, whichever she might prefer.&nbsp;
+Yes, truly those were the hopes with which I renewed my communications
+with the contraband trade on this coast, a good deal more numerous since
+the Dutchman and his wars have raised the duties and driven many good
+men to holes and corners.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ever since last spring, when the Princess Royal died, and
+thus extinguished the last spark of forbearance in the King&rsquo;s
+breast, I have been here, there, and everywhere&mdash;Romney Marsh,
+Drury Lane, Paris, besides this place and Pilpignon, where I have a
+snug harbour for the yacht, <i>Ma Belle Annik</i>, as the Breton sailors
+call her.&nbsp; The crew are chiefly Breton; it saves gossip; but I
+have a boat&rsquo;s crew of our own English folk here, stout fellows,
+ready for anything by land or sea.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Black Gang,&rdquo; said Anne faintly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t suppose I have meddled in their exploits on the
+road,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;except where a King&rsquo;s messenger or
+a Royal mail was concerned, and that is war, you know, for the cause.&nbsp;
+Unluckily my personal charms are not easily disguised, so that I have
+had to lurk in the background, and only make my private investigations
+in the guise of my own ghost.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then so it was you saved the dear little Philip?&rdquo; said
+Anne.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Archfield boy?&nbsp; I could not see a child sent to his
+destruction by that villain Sedley, whoever were his father, for he
+meant mischief if ever man did.&nbsp; &rsquo;Twas superhuman scruple
+not to hold your peace and let him swing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was it, then, on his cousin&rsquo;s part?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Peregrine only answered with a shrug.&nbsp; It appeared further,
+that as long as the conspirators had entertained any expectation of
+success, he had merely kept a watch over Anne, intending to claim her
+in the hour of the triumph of his party, when he looked to enjoy such
+a position as would leave his brother free to enjoy his paternal inheritance.&nbsp;
+In the failure of all their schemes through Mr. Pendergrast&rsquo;s
+denunciation, Sir George Barclay, and one or two inferior plotters,
+had succeeded in availing themselves of the assistance of the Black
+Gang, and had been conducted by Peregrine to the hut that he had fitted
+up for himself.&nbsp; Still trusting to the security there, although
+his name of Piers Pilgrim or de Pilpignon had been among those given
+up to the Privy Council, he had insisted on lingering, being resolved
+that an attempt should be made to carry away the woman he had loved
+for so many years.&nbsp; Captain Burford had so disguised himself as
+to be able to attend the trial, loiter about the inn, and collect intelligence,
+while the others waited on the downs.&nbsp; Peregrine had watched over
+the capture, but being unwilling to disclose himself, had ridden on
+faster and crossed direct, traversing the Island on horseback, while
+the captive was rounding it in the boat.&nbsp; &ldquo;As should never
+have been done,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;could I have foretold to what
+stress of weather you would be exposed while I was preparing for your
+reception.&nbsp; But for this storm&mdash;it rages louder than ever&mdash;we
+would have been married by a little parson whom Burford would have fetched
+from Portsmouth, and we should have been over the Channel, and my people
+hailing my bride with ecstasy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never!&rdquo; exclaimed Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;Can you suppose
+I could accept one who would leave an innocent man to suffer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;People sometimes are obliged to accept,&rdquo; said Peregrine.&nbsp;
+Then at her horrified start, &ldquo;No, no, fear no violence; but is
+not something due to one who has loved you through exile all these years,
+and would lay down his life for you? you, the only being who overcomes
+his evil angel!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is what you call overcoming it,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay; indeed, Mistress Anne, I would let the authorities know
+that they are hanging a man for murdering one who is still alive if
+I could; but no one would believe without seeing, and I and all who
+could bear witness to my existence would be rushing to an end even worse
+than a simple noose.&nbsp; You were ready enough to denounce him to
+save that worthless fellow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not ready.&nbsp; It tore my heart.&nbsp; But truth is truth.&nbsp;
+I could not do that wickedness.&nbsp; Oh! how can you?&nbsp; This <i>is</i>
+the prompting of the evil spirit indeed, to expect me to join in leaving
+that innocent, generous spirit to die in cruel injustice.&nbsp; Let
+me go.&nbsp; I will not betray where you are.&nbsp; You will be safe
+in France; but there will yet be time for me to bear witness to your
+life.&nbsp; Write a letter.&nbsp; Your father would thankfully swear
+to your handwriting, and I think they would believe me.&nbsp; Only let
+me go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what then becomes of the hopes of a lifetime?&rdquo; demanded
+Peregrine.&nbsp; &ldquo;I, who have waited as long as Jacob, to be defrauded
+now I have you; and for the sake of the fellow who killed me in will
+if not in deed, and then ran away like a poltroon leaving you to bear
+the brunt!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He did not act like a poltroon when he saved the life of his
+general, or when he rescued the colours of his regiment, still less
+when he stood up to save me from the pain of bearing witness against
+him, and to save a guiltless man,&rdquo; cried Anne, with flashing eyes.</p>
+<p>Before she had finished her indignant words, Hans was coming in from
+some unknown region to lay the cloth for supper, and Peregrine, with
+an imprecation under his breath, had gone to the door to admit his two
+comrades, who came into the narrow entry on a gust of wind as it were,
+struggling out of their cloaks, stamping and swearing.</p>
+<p>In the middle of the day, they had been much more restrained in their
+behaviour.&nbsp; There had at that time been a slight clearance in the
+sky, though the wind was as furious as ever, and they were in haste
+to despatch the meal and go out again to endeavour to stand on the heights
+and to watch some vessels that were being tossed by the storm.&nbsp;
+Almost all the conversation had then been on the chances of their weathering
+the tempest, and the probability of its lasting on, and they had hurried
+away as soon as possible.&nbsp; Anne had not then known who they were,
+and only saw that they were fairly civil to her, and kept under a certain
+constraint by Pilpignon, as they called their host.&nbsp; Now she fully
+knew the one who was addressed as Sir George to be Barclay, the prime
+mover in the wicked scheme of assassination of which all honest Tories
+had been so much ashamed, and she could see Captain Burford to be one
+of those bravoes who were only too plentiful in those days, attending
+on dissolute and violent nobles.</p>
+<p>She was the less inclined to admit their attentions, and shielded
+herself with a grave coldness of stately manners; but their talk was
+far more free than at noon, suggesting the thought that they had anticipated
+the meal with some of the Nantz or other liquors that seemed to be in
+plenty.</p>
+<p>They began by low bows of affected reverence, coarser and worse in
+the ruffian of inferior grade, and the knight complimented Pilpignon
+on being a lucky dog, and hoped he had made the best use of his time
+in spite of the airs of his duchess.&nbsp; It was his own fault if he
+were not enjoying such fair society, while they, poor devils, were buffeting
+with the winds, which had come on more violently than ever.&nbsp; Peregrine
+broke in with a question about the vessels in sight.</p>
+<p>There was an East Indiaman, Dutch it was supposed, laying-to, that
+was the cause of much excitement.&nbsp; &ldquo;If she drives ashore
+our fellows will neither be to have nor to hold,&rdquo; said Sir George.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They will obey me,&rdquo; said Peregrine quietly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;More than the sea will just yet,&rdquo; laughed the captain.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;However, as soon as this villainous weather is a bit abated,
+I&rsquo;ll be off across the Island to do your little errand, and only
+ask a kiss of the bride for my pains; but if the parson be at Portsmouth
+there will be no getting him to budge till the water is smooth.&nbsp;
+Never mind, madam, we&rsquo;ll have a merry wedding feast, whichever
+side of the water it is.&nbsp; I should recommend the voyage first for
+my part.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>All Anne could do was to sit as upright and still as she could, apparently
+ignoring the man&rsquo;s meaning.&nbsp; She did not know how dignified
+she looked, and how she was daunting his insolence.&nbsp; When presently
+Sir George Barclay proposed as a toast a health to the bride of to-morrow,
+she took her part by raising the glass to her lips as well as the gentlemen,
+and adding, &ldquo;May the brides be happy, wherever they may be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Coy, upon my soul,&rdquo; laughed Sir George.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+have not made the best of your opportunities, Pil.&rdquo;&nbsp; But
+with an oath, &ldquo;It becomes her well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A truce with fooling, Barclay,&rdquo; muttered Peregrine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, come, remember faint heart&mdash;no lowering your crest,
+more than enough to bring that devilish sparkle in the eyes, and turn
+of the neck!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said Anne rising, &ldquo;Monsieur de Pilpignon
+is an old neighbour, and understands how to respect his most unwilling
+guest.&nbsp; I wish you a good-night, gentlemen.&nbsp; Guennik, <i>venez
+ici</i>, <i>je vous prie</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Guennik, the Breton boatswain&rsquo;s wife, understood French thus
+far, and comprehended the situation enough to follow willingly, leaving
+the remainder of the attendance to Hans, who was fully equal to it.&nbsp;
+The door was secured by a long knife in the post, but Anne could hear
+plainly the rude laugh at her entrenchment within her fortress and much
+of the banter of Peregrine for having proceeded no further.&nbsp; It
+was impossible to shut out all the voices, and very alarming they were,
+as well as sometimes so coarse that they made her cheeks glow, while
+she felt thankful that the Bretonne could not understand.</p>
+<p>These three men were all proscribed traitors in haste to be off,
+but Peregrine, to whom the yacht and her crew belonged, had lingered
+to obtain possession of the lady, and they were declaring that now they
+had caught his game and given him his toy, they would brook no longer
+delay than was absolutely necessitated by the storm, and married or
+not married, he and she should both be carried off together, let the
+damsel-errant give herself what haughty airs she would.&nbsp; It was
+a weak concession on their part to the old Puritan scruples that he
+might have got rid of by this time, to attempt to bring about the marriage.&nbsp;
+They jested at him for being afraid of her, and then there were jokes
+about gray mares.</p>
+<p>The one voice she could not hear was Peregrine&rsquo;s, perhaps because
+he realised more than they did that she was within ear-shot, and besides,
+he was absolutely sober; but she thought he silenced them; and then
+she heard sounds of card-playing, which made an accompaniment to her
+agonised prayers.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIII<br />
+Black Gang Chine</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Come, Lady; while Heaven lends us grace,<br />
+Let us fly this cursed place,<br />
+Lest the sorcerer us entice<br />
+With some other new device.<br />
+Not a word or needless sound<br />
+Till we come to holier ground.<br />
+I shall be your faithful guide<br />
+Through this gloomy covert wide.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>MILTON.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Never was maiden in a worse position than that in which Anne Woodford
+felt herself when she revolved the matter.&nbsp; The back of the Isle
+of Wight, all along the Undercliff, had always had a wild reputation,
+and she was in the midst of the most lawless of men.&nbsp; Peregrine
+alone seemed to have any remains of honour or conscience, and apparently
+he was in some degree in the hands of his associates.&nbsp; Even if
+the clergyman came, there was little hope in an appeal to him.&nbsp;
+Naval chaplains bore no good reputation, and Portsmouth and Cowes were
+haunted by the scum of the profession.&nbsp; All that seemed possible
+was to commit herself and Charles to Divine protection, and in that
+strength to resist to the uttermost.&nbsp; The tempest had returned
+again, and seemed to be raging as much as ever, and the delay was in
+her favour, for in such weather there could be no putting to sea.</p>
+<p>She was unwilling to leave the stronghold of her chamber, but Hans
+came to announce breakfast to her, telling her that the Mynheeren were
+gone, all but Massa Perry; and that gentleman came forward to meet her
+just as before, hoping &lsquo;those fellows had not disturbed her last
+night.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I could not help hearing much,&rdquo; she said gravely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Brutes!&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am sick of them, and
+of this life.&nbsp; Save for the King&rsquo;s sake, I would never have
+meddled with it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The roar of winds and waves and the beat of spray was still to be
+heard, and in the manifest impossibility of quitting the place and the
+desire of softening him, Anne listened while he talked in a different
+mood from the previous day.&nbsp; The cynical tone was gone, as he spoke
+of those better influences.&nbsp; He talked of Mrs. Woodford and his
+deep affection for her, of the kindness of the good priests at Havre
+and Douai, and especially of one Father Seyton, who had tried to reason
+with him in his bitter disappointment, and savage penitence on finding
+that &lsquo;behind the Cross lurks the Devil,&rsquo; as much at Douai
+as at Havant.&nbsp; He told how a sermon of the Abb&eacute; F&eacute;nelon&rsquo;s
+had moved him, and how he had spent half a Lent in the severest penance,
+but only to have all swept away again in the wild and wicked revelry
+with which Easter came in.&nbsp; Again he described how his heart was
+ready to burst as he stood by Mrs. Woodford&rsquo;s grave at night and
+vowed to disentangle himself and lead a new life.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And with you I shall,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; she answered; &ldquo;what you win by a crime will
+never do you good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A crime!&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis no crime.&nbsp; You <i>know</i>
+I mean honourable marriage.&nbsp; You owe no duty to any one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a crime to leave the innocent to undeserved death,&rdquo;
+she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you love the fellow?&rdquo; he cried, with a voice rising
+to a shout of rage.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said firmly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why did not you say so before?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because I hoped to see you act for right and justice sake,&rdquo;
+was Anne&rsquo;s answer, fixing her eyes on him.&nbsp; &ldquo;For God&rsquo;s
+sake, not mine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yours indeed!&nbsp; Think, what can be his love to mine?&nbsp;
+He who let them marry him to that child, while I struggled and gave
+up everything.&nbsp; Then he runs away&mdash;<i>runs away</i>&mdash;leaving
+you all the distress; never came near you all these years.&nbsp; Oh
+yes! he looks down on you as his child&rsquo;s governess!&nbsp; What&rsquo;s
+the use of loving him?&nbsp; There&rsquo;s another heiress bespoken
+for him no doubt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No.&nbsp; His parents consent, and we have known one another&rsquo;s
+love for six years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, that&rsquo;s the way he bound you to keep his secret!&nbsp;
+He would sing another song as soon as he was out of this scrape.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You little know!&rdquo; was all she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay!&rdquo; continued Peregrine, pacing up and down the room,
+&ldquo;you know that all that was wanting to fill up the measure of
+my hatred was that he should have stolen your heart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You cannot say that, sir.&nbsp; He was my kind protector and
+helper from our very childhood.&nbsp; I have loved him with all my heart
+ever since I durst.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ay, the great straight comely lubbers have it all their own
+way with the women,&rdquo; said he bitterly.&nbsp; &ldquo;I remember
+how he rushed headlong at me with the horse-whip when I tripped you
+up at the Slype, and you have never forgiven that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! indeed I forgot that childish nonsense long ago.&nbsp;
+You never served me so again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No indeed, never since you and your mother were the first
+to treat me like a human being.&nbsp; You will be able to do anything
+with me, sweetest lady; the very sense that you are under the same roof
+makes another man of me.&nbsp; I loathe what I used to enjoy.&nbsp;
+Why, the very sight of you, sitting at supper like the lady in <i>Comus</i>,
+in your sweet grave dignity, made me feel what I am, and what those
+men are.&nbsp; I heard their jests with your innocent ears.&nbsp; With
+you by my side the Devil&rsquo;s power is quelled.&nbsp; You shall have
+a peaceful beneficent life among the poor folk, who will bless you;
+our good and gracious Queen will welcome you with joy and gratitude;
+and when the good time comes, as it must in a few years, you will have
+honours and dignities lavished on you.&nbsp; Can you not see what you
+will do for me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think a broken-hearted victim would be able to do you
+any good?&rdquo; said she, looking up with tears in her eyes.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I <i>do</i> believe, sir, that you mean well by me, in your own
+way, and I could, yes, I can, be sorry for you, for my mother did feel
+for you, and yours has been a sad life; but how could I be of any use
+or comfort to you if you dragged me away as these cruel men propose,
+knowing that he who has all my heart is dying guiltless, and thinking
+I have failed him!&rdquo; and here she broke down in an agony of weeping,
+as she felt the old power in his eyes that enforced submission.</p>
+<p>He marched up and down in a sort of passion.&nbsp; &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
+let me see you weep for him!&nbsp; It makes me ready to strangle him
+with my own hands!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A shout of &lsquo;Pilpignon!&rsquo; at the door here carried him
+off, leaving Anne to give free course to the tears that she had hitherto
+been able to restrain, feeling the need of self-possession.&nbsp; She
+had very little hope, since her affection for Charles Archfield seemed
+only to give the additional sting of jealousy, &lsquo;cruel as the grave,&rsquo;
+to the vindictive temper Peregrine already nourished, and which certainly
+came from his evil spirit.&nbsp; She shed many tears, and sobbed unrestrainingly
+till the Bretonne came and patted her shoulder, and said, &ldquo;<i>Pauvre</i>,
+<i>pauvre</i>!&rdquo;&nbsp; And even Hans looked in, saying, &ldquo;Missee
+Nana no cry, Massa Perry great herr&mdash;very goot.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She tried to compose herself, and think over alternatives to lay
+before Peregrine.&nbsp; He might let her go, and carry to Sir Edmund
+Nutley letters to which his father would willingly swear, while he was
+out of danger in Normandy.&nbsp; Or if this was far beyond what could
+be hoped for, surely he could despatch a letter to his father, and for
+such a price she <i>must</i> sacrifice herself, though it cost her anguish
+unspeakable to call up the thought of Charles, of little Philip, of
+her uncle, and the old people, who loved her so well, all forsaken,
+and with what a life in store for her!&nbsp; For she had not the slightest
+confidence in the power of her influence, whatever Peregrine might say
+and sincerely believe at present.&nbsp; If there were, more palpably
+than with all other human beings, angels of good and evil contending
+for him, swaying him now this way and now that; it was plain from his
+whole history that nothing had yet availed to keep him under the better
+influence for long together; and she believed that if he gained herself
+by these unjust and cruel means the worse spirit would thereby gain
+the most absolute advantage.&nbsp; If her heart had been free, and she
+could have loved him, she might have hoped, though it would have been
+a wild and forlorn hope; but as it was, she had never entirely surmounted
+a repulsion from him, as something strange and unnatural, a feeling
+involving fear, though here he was her only hope and protector, and
+an utter uncertainty as to what he might do.&nbsp; She could only hope
+that she might pine away and die quickly, and <i>perhaps</i> Charles
+Archfield might know at last that it had been for his sake.&nbsp; And
+would it be in her power to make even such terms as these?</p>
+<p>How long she wept and prayed and tried to &lsquo;commit her way unto
+the Lord&rsquo; she did not know, but light seemed to be making its
+way far more than previously through the shutters closed against the
+storm when Peregrine returned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will not be greatly troubled with those fellows to-day,&rdquo;
+he said; &ldquo;there&rsquo;s a vessel come on the rocks at Chale, and
+every man and mother&rsquo;s son is gone after it.&rdquo;&nbsp; So saying
+he unfastened the shutters and let in a flood of sunshine.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+would like a little air,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;&rsquo;tis all quiet
+now, and the tide is going down.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After two days&rsquo; dark captivity, Anne could not but be relieved
+by coming out, and she was anxious to understand where she was.&nbsp;
+It was, though only in March, glowing with warmth, as the sun beat against
+the cliffs behind, of a dark red brown, in many places absolutely black,
+in especial where a cascade, swelled by the rains into imposing size,
+came roaring, leaping, and sparkling down a sheer precipice.&nbsp; On
+either side the cove or chine was closely shut in by treeless, iron-coloured
+masses of rock, behind one of which the few inhabited hovels were clustered,
+and the boat which had brought her was drawn up.&nbsp; In front was
+the sea, still lashed by a fierce wind, which was driving the fantastically
+shaped remains of the great storm cloud rapidly across an intensely
+blue sky.&nbsp; The waves, although it was the ebb, were still tremendous,
+and their roar re-echoed as they reared to fearful heights and broke
+with the reverberations that she had heard all along.&nbsp; Peregrine
+kept quite high up, not venturing below the washed line of shingle,
+saying that the back draught of the waves was most perilous, and in
+a high wind could not be reckoned upon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No escape!&rdquo; he said, as he perceived Anne&rsquo;s gaze
+on the inaccessible cliff and the whole scene, the wild beauty of which
+was lost to her in its terrors.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s your ship?&rdquo; she asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Safe in Whale Chine.&nbsp; No putting to sea yet, though it
+may be fair to-morrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then she put before him the first scheme she had thought out, of
+letting her escape to Sir Edmund Nutley&rsquo;s house, whence she could
+make her way back, taking with her a letter that would prove his existence
+without involving him or his friends in danger.&nbsp; And eagerly she
+argued, &ldquo;You do not know me really!&nbsp; It is only an imagination
+that you can be the better for my presence.&rdquo;&nbsp; Then, unheeding
+his fervid exclamation, &ldquo;It was my dear mother who did you good.&nbsp;
+What would she think of the way in which you are trying to gain me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That I cannot do without you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what would you have in me?&nbsp; I could be only wretched,
+and feel all my life&mdash;such a life as it would be&mdash;that you
+had wrecked my happiness.&nbsp; Oh yes!&nbsp; I do believe that you
+would try to make me happy, but don&rsquo;t you see that it would be
+quite impossible with such a grief as that in my heart, and knowing
+that you had caused it?&nbsp; I know you hate him, and he did you the
+wrong; but he has grieved for it, and banished himself.&nbsp; But above
+all, of this I am quite sure, that to persist in this horrible evil
+of leaving him to die, because of your revenge, and stealing me away,
+is truly giving Satan such a frightful advantage over you that it is
+mere folly to think that winning me in such a way could do you any good.&nbsp;
+It is just a mere delusion of his, to ruin us both, body and soul.&nbsp;
+Peregrine, will you not recollect my mother, and what she would think?&nbsp;
+Have pity on me, and help me away, and I would pledge myself never to
+utter a word of this place nor that could bring you and yours into danger.&nbsp;
+We would bless and pray for you always.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No use,&rdquo; he gloomily said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I believe you,
+but the others will never believe a woman.&nbsp; No doubt we are watched
+even now by desperate men, who would rather shoot you than let you escape
+from our hands.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It seemed almost in connection with these words that at that moment,
+from some unknown quarter, where probably there was an entrance to the
+Chine, Sir George Barclay appeared with a leathern case under his arm.&nbsp;
+It had been captured on the wreck, and contained papers which he wanted
+assistance in deciphering, since they were in Dutch, and he believed
+them to be either despatches or bonds, either of which might be turned
+to profit.&nbsp; These were carried indoors, and spread on the table,
+and as Anne sat by the window, dejected and almost hopeless as she was,
+she could not help perceiving that, though Peregrine was so much smaller
+and less robust than his companions, he exercised over them the dominion
+of intellect, energy, and will, as if they too felt the force of his
+strange eyes; and it seemed to her as if, supposing he truly desired
+it, whatever he might say, he must be able to deliver her and Charles;
+but that a being such as she had always known him should sacrifice both
+his love and his hate seemed beyond all hope, and &ldquo;Change his
+heart!&nbsp; Turn our captivity, O Lord,&rdquo; could only be her cry.</p>
+<p>Only very late did Burford come back, full of the account of the
+wreck and of the spoils, and the struggles between the wreckers for
+the flotsam and jetsam.&nbsp; There was much of savage brutality mated
+with a cool indifference truly horrible to Anne, and making her realise
+into what a den of robbers she had fallen, especially as these narratives
+were diversified by consultations over the Dutch letters and bills of
+exchange in the wrecked East Indiaman, and how to turn them to the best
+advantage.&nbsp; Barclay and Burford were so full of these subjects
+that they took comparatively little notice of the young lady, only when
+she rose to retire, Burford made a sort of apology that this little
+business had hindered his going after the parson.&nbsp; He heard that
+the Salamander was at the castle, and redcoats all about, he said, and
+if the <i>Annick</i> could be got out to-morrow they must sail any way;
+and if Pil was still so squeamish, a Popish priest could couple them
+in a leash as tight as a Fleet parson could.&nbsp; And then Peregrine
+demanded whether Burford thought a Fleet parson the English for a naval
+chaplain, and there was some boisterous laughter, during which Anne
+shut herself up in her room in something very like despair, with that
+one ray of hope that He who had brought her back from exile before would
+again save her from that terrible fate.</p>
+<p>She heard card-playing and the jingle of glasses far into the night,
+as she believed, but it seemed to her as if she had scarcely fallen
+asleep before, to her extreme terror, she heard a knock and a low call
+at her door of &lsquo;Guennik.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then as the Bretonne went
+to the door, through which a light was seen, a lantern was handed in,
+and a scrap of paper on which the words were written: &ldquo;On second
+thoughts, my kindred elves at Portchester shall not be scared by a worricow.&nbsp;
+Dress quickly, and I will bring you out of this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For a moment Anne did not perceive the meaning of the missive, the
+ghastly idea never having occurred to her that if Charles had suffered,
+the gibbet would have been at Portchester.&nbsp; Then, with an electric
+flash of joy, she saw that it meant relenting on Peregrine&rsquo;s part,
+deliverance for them both.&nbsp; She put on her clothes with hasty,
+trembling hands, thankful to Guennik for helping her, pressed a coin
+into the strong toil-worn hand, and with an earnest thrill of thankful
+prayer opened the door.&nbsp; The driftwood fire was bright, and she
+saw Peregrine, looking deadly white, and equipped with slouched hat,
+short wrapping cloak, pistols and sword at his belt, dark lantern lighted
+on the table, and Hans also cloaked by his side.&nbsp; He bent his head
+in salutation, and put his finger to his lips, giving one hand to Anne,
+and showing by example instead of words that she must tread as softly
+as possible, as she perceived that he was in his slippers, Hans carrying
+his boots as well as the lantern she had used.&nbsp; Yet to her ears
+the roar of the advancing tide seemed to stifle all other sounds.&nbsp;
+Past the other huts they went in silence, then came a precipitous path
+up the cliff, steps cut in the hard sandy grit, but very crumbling,
+and in places supplemented by a rude ladder of sticks and rope.&nbsp;
+Peregrine went before Anne, Hans behind.&nbsp; Each had hung the lantern
+from his neck, so as to have hands free to draw her, support her, or
+lift her, as might be needful.&nbsp; How it was done she never could
+tell in after years.&nbsp; She might jestingly say that her lightened
+heart bore her up, but in her soul and in her deeper moments she thought
+that truly angels must have had charge over her.&nbsp; Up, up, up!&nbsp;
+At last they had reached standing ground, a tolerably level space, with
+another high cliff seeming to rise behind it.&nbsp; Here it was lighter&mdash;a
+pale streak of dawn was spreading over the horizon, both on sky and
+sea, and the waves still leaping glanced in the light of a golden waning
+moon, while Venus shone in the brightening sky, a daystar of hope.</p>
+<p>Peregrine drew a long breath, and gave an order in a very low voice
+in Dutch to Hans, who placed his boots before him, and went off towards
+a shed.&nbsp; &ldquo;He will bring you a pony,&rdquo; said his master.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Excuse me;&rdquo; and he was withdrawing his hand, when Anne
+clasped it with both hers, and said in a voice of intense feeling&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, how can I thank you and bless you!&nbsp; This <i>is</i>
+putting the Evil Angel to flight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis you that have done it!&nbsp; You see, I cannot
+do the wicked act where you are,&rdquo; he answered gloomily, as he
+turned aside to draw on his boots.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! but you have won the victory over him!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do not be too sure.&nbsp; We are not out of reach of those
+rascals yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was evidently anxious for silence, and Anne said no more.&nbsp;
+Hans presently brought from some unknown quarter, a little stout pony
+bridled and saddled; of course not with a side saddle, but cloaks were
+arranged so as to make a fairly comfortable seat for Anne, and Peregrine
+led the animal on the ascent to St. Catherine&rsquo;s Down.&nbsp; It
+was light enough to dispense with the lanterns, and as they mounted
+higher the glorious sight of daybreak over the sea showed itself&mdash;almost
+due east, the sharp points of the Needles showing up in a flood of pale
+golden light above and below, with gulls flashing white as they floated
+into sunlight, all seeming to Anne&rsquo;s thankful heart to be a new
+radiance of joy and hope after the dark roaring terrors of the Chine.</p>
+<p>As they came out into the open freedom of the down, with crisp silvery
+grass under their feet, the breadth of sea on one side, before them
+fertile fields and hills, and farther away, dimly seen in gray mist,
+the familiar Portsdown outlines, not a sound to be heard but the exulting
+ecstasies of larks, far, far above in the depths of blue, Peregrine
+dared to speak above his breath, with a question whether Anne were at
+ease in her extemporary side saddle, producing at the same time a slice
+of bread and meat, and a flask of wine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, how kind!&nbsp; What care you take of me!&rdquo; she said.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But where are we going?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wherever you command,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;I had thought
+of Carisbrooke.&nbsp; Cutts is there, and it would be the speediest
+way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would it not be the most dangerous for you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I care very little for my life after this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh no, no, you must not say so.&nbsp; After what you are doing
+for me you will be able to make it better than ever it has been.&nbsp;
+This is what I thought.&nbsp; If you would bring me in some place whence
+I could reach Sir Edmund Nutley&rsquo;s house at Parkhurst, his servants
+would help me to do the rest, even if he be not there himself.&nbsp;
+I would never betray you!&nbsp; You know I would not!&nbsp; And you
+would have full time to get away to your place in Normandy with your
+friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You care?&rdquo; asked he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course I do!&rdquo; exclaimed she.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do I not
+feel grateful to you, and like and honour you better than ever I could
+have thought?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do?&rdquo; in a strange choked tone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course I do.&nbsp; You are doing a noble, thankworthy thing.&nbsp;
+It is not only that I thank you for <i>his</i> sake, but it is a grand
+and beautiful deed in itself; and if my dear mother know, she is blessing
+you for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall remember those words,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if&mdash;&rdquo;
+and he passed his hand over his eyes.&nbsp; &ldquo;See here,&rdquo;
+he presently said; &ldquo;I have written out a confession of my identity,
+and explanation that it was I who drew first on Archfield.&nbsp; It
+is enough to save him, and in case my handwriting has altered, as I
+think it has, and there should be further doubt, I shall be found at
+Pilpignon, if I get away.&nbsp; You had better keep it in case of accidents,
+or if you carry out your generous plan.&nbsp; Say whatever you please
+about me, but there is no need to mention Barclay or Burford; and it
+would not be fair to the honest free-traders here to explain where their
+Chine lies.&nbsp; I should have brought you up blindfold, if I could
+have done so with safety, not that <i>I</i> do not trust you, but I
+should be better able to satisfy those fellows if I ever see them again,
+by telling them I have sworn you to secrecy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then he laughed.&nbsp; &ldquo;The gowks!&nbsp; I won all those Indian
+bonds of them last night, but left them in a parcel addressed to them
+as a legacy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne took the required pledge, and ventured to ask, &ldquo;Shall
+I say anything for you to your father?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My poor old father!&nbsp; Let him know that I neither would
+nor could disturb Robert in his inheritance, attainted traitor as the
+laws esteem me.&nbsp; For the rest, mayhap I shall write to him if the
+good angel you talk of will help me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh do!&nbsp; I am sure he would rejoice to forgive.&nbsp;
+He is much softened.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, we must hush, and go warily.&nbsp; I see sheep, and if
+there is a shepherd, I want him not to see us, or point our way.&nbsp;
+It is well these Isle of Wight folk are not early risers.&rdquo;</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIV<br />
+Life For Life</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Follow Light, and do the Right&mdash;for man can
+half-control his doom&mdash;<br />
+Till you find the deathless Angel seated in the vacant tomb.</p>
+<p>Forward, let the stormy moment fly and mingle with the Past.<br />
+I that loathed, have come to love him.&nbsp; Love will conquer at the
+last.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>TENNYSON.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>On they had gone in silence for the most part, avoiding villages,
+but as the morning advanced and they came into more inhabited places,
+they were not able entirely to avoid meeting labourers going out to
+work, who stared at Hans&rsquo;s black face with curiosity.&nbsp; The
+sun was already high when they reached a cross-road whence the massive
+towers of Carisbrooke were seen above the hedges, and another turn led
+to Parkhurst.&nbsp; They paused a moment, and Anne was beginning to
+entreat her escort to leave her to proceed alone, when the sound of
+horses&rsquo; feet galloping was heard behind them.&nbsp; Peregrine
+looked back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Ride on as fast as you can
+towards the castle.&nbsp; You will be all right.&nbsp; I will keep them
+back.&nbsp; Go, I say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And as some figures were seen at the end of the road, he pricked
+the pony with the point of his sword so effectually that it bolted forward,
+quite beyond Anne&rsquo;s power of checking it, and in a second or two
+its speed was quickened by shouts and shots behind.&nbsp; Anne felt,
+but scarcely understood at the moment, a sharp pang and thrill in her
+left arm, as the steed whirled her round the corner of the lane and
+full into the midst of a party of gentlemen on horseback coming down
+from the castle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Help! help!&rdquo; she cried.&nbsp; &ldquo;Down there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Attacks by highwaymen were not uncommon experiences, though scarcely
+at eight o&rsquo;clock in the morning, or so near a garrison, but the
+horsemen, having already heard the shots, galloped forward.&nbsp; Perhaps
+Anne could hardly have turned her pony, but it chose to follow the lead
+of its fellows, and in a few seconds they were in the midst of a scene
+of utter confusion.&nbsp; Peregrine was grappling with Burford trying
+to drag him from his horse.&nbsp; Both fell together, and as the auxiliaries
+came in sight there was another shot and two more men rode off headlong.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Follow them!&rdquo; said a commanding voice.&nbsp; &ldquo;What
+have we here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The two struggling figures both lay still for a moment or two, but
+as some of the riders drew them apart Peregrine sat up, though blood
+was streaming down his breast and arm.&nbsp; &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;I am Peregrine Oakshott, on whose account young Archfield lies
+under sentence of death.&nbsp; If a magistrate will take my affidavit
+while I can make it, he will be safe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then Anne heard a voice exclaiming: &ldquo;Oakshott!&nbsp; Nay&mdash;why,
+this is Mistress Woodford!&nbsp; How came she here?&rdquo; and she knew
+Sir Edmund Nutley.&nbsp; Still it was Peregrine who answered&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I captured her, in the hope of marrying her, but that cannot
+be&mdash;I have brought her back in all safety and honour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir!&nbsp; Sir, indeed he has been very good to me.&nbsp;
+Pray let him be looked to.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let him be carried to the castle,&rdquo; said the commander
+of the party, a tall man sunburnt to a fiery red.&nbsp; &ldquo;Is the
+other alive?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Only stunned, my lord, I think and not much hurt,&rdquo; was
+the answer of an attendant officer; &ldquo;but here is a poor blackamoor
+dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Poor Hans!&nbsp; Best so perhaps,&rdquo; murmured Peregrine,
+as he was lifted.&nbsp; Then in a voice of alarm, &ldquo;Look to the
+lady, she is hurt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is nothing,&rdquo; cried she.&nbsp; &ldquo;O Mr. Oakshott!
+that this should have happened!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord, this is the young gentlewoman I told you of, betrothed
+to poor young Archfield,&rdquo; said Sir Edmund Nutley.</p>
+<p>Lord Cutts, for it was indeed William&rsquo;s favoured &lsquo;Salamander,&rsquo;
+took off his plumed hat in salutation, and both gentlemen perceiving
+that she too was bleeding, she was solicitously invited to the castle,
+to be placed under the charge of the lieutenant-governor&rsquo;s wife.&nbsp;
+She found by this time that she was in a good deal of pain, and thankfully
+accepted the support Sir Edmund offered her, when he dismounted and
+walked beside her pony, while explanations passed between them.&nbsp;
+The weather had prevented any communication with the mainland, so that
+he was totally ignorant of her capture, and did not know what had become
+of Mr. Fellowes.&nbsp; He himself had been just starting with Lord Cutts,
+who was going to join the King for his next campaign, and they were
+to represent the case to the King.&nbsp; Anne told him in return what
+she dared to say, but she was becoming so faint and dazed that she was
+in great fear of not saying what she ought; and indeed she could hardly
+speak, when after passing under the great gateway, she was lifted off
+her horse, at the door of the dwelling-house, and helped upstairs to
+a bedroom, where the wife of the lieutenant-governor, Mrs. Dudley, was
+very tender over her with essences and strong waters, and a surgeon
+of the suite almost immediately came to her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; she exclaimed, &ldquo;you should be with Mr. Oakshott.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The surgeon explained that Mr. Oakshott would have nothing done for
+him till he had fully made and signed his deposition, in case the power
+should afterwards be wanting.</p>
+<p>So Anne submitted to the dressing of her hurt, which was only a flesh
+wound, the bone being happily untouched.&nbsp; Both the surgeon and
+Mrs. Dudley urged her going to bed immediately, but she was unwilling
+to put herself out of reach; and indeed the dressing was scarcely finished
+before Sir Edmund Nutley knocked at the door to ask whether she could
+admit him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lord Cutts is very desirous of speaking with you, if you are
+able,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; &ldquo;Here has this other fellow come round,
+declaring that Oakshott is the Pilpignon who was in the Barclay Plot,
+and besides, the prime leader of the Black Gang, of whom we have heard
+so much.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The traitor!&rdquo; cried Anne.&nbsp; &ldquo;Poor Mr. Oakshott
+was resolved not to betray him!&nbsp; How is he&mdash;Mr. Oakshott,
+I mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The surgeon has him in his hands.&nbsp; We will send another
+from Portsmouth, but it looks like a bad case.&nbsp; He made his confession
+bravely, though evidently in terrible suffering, seeming to keep up
+by force of will till he had totally exonerated Archfield and signed
+the deposition, and then he fainted, so that I thought him dead, but
+I fear he has more to go through.&nbsp; Can you come to the hall, or
+shall I bring Lord Cutts to you?&nbsp; We must hasten in starting that
+we may bring the news to Winchester to-night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Anne much preferred going to the hall, though she felt weak enough
+to be very glad to lean on Sir Edmund&rsquo;s arm.</p>
+<p>Lord Cutts, William&rsquo;s high-spirited and daring officer, received
+her with the utmost courtesy and kindness, inquired after her hurt,
+and lamented having to trouble her, but said that though he would not
+detain her long, her testimony was important, and he begged to hear
+what had happened to her.</p>
+<p>She gave the account of her capture and journey as shortly as she
+could.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whither was she taken?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She paused.&nbsp; &ldquo;I promised Mr. Oakshott for the sake of
+others&mdash;&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You need have no scruples on that score,&rdquo; said Lord
+Cutts.&nbsp; &ldquo;Burford hopes to get off for the murder by turning
+King&rsquo;s evidence, and has told all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; added Sir Edmund; &ldquo;and poor Oakshott managed
+to say, &lsquo;Tell her she need keep nothing back.&nbsp; It is all
+up.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So Anne answered all the questions put to her, and they were the
+fewer both out of consideration for her condition, and because the governor
+wanted to take advantage of the tide to embark on the Medina.</p>
+<p>In a very few hours the Archfields would have no more fears.&nbsp;
+Anne longed to go with Sir Edmund, but she was in no state for a ride,
+and could not be a drag.&nbsp; Sir Edmund said that either his wife
+would come to her at once and take her to Parkhurst, or else her uncle
+would be sure to come for her.&nbsp; She would be the guest of Major
+and Mrs. Dudley, who lived in the castle, the actual Lord Warden only
+visiting it from time to time; and though Major Dudley was a stern man,
+both were very kind to her.</p>
+<p>As a Whig, Major Dudley knew the Oakshott family, and was willing
+to extend his hospitality even to the long-lost Peregrine.&nbsp; The
+Lord Warden, who was evidently very favourably impressed, saying that
+there was no need at present to treat him as a prisoner, but that every
+attention should be paid to him, as indeed he was evidently a dying
+man.&nbsp; Burford and another of his associates were to be carried
+off, handcuffed, with the escort to Winchester jail, but before the
+departure, the soldiers who had been sent to the Chine returned baffled;
+the place was entirely deserted, and Barclay had escaped.</p>
+<p>Anne allowed herself to be put to bed, being indeed completely exhausted,
+and scarcely able to think of anything but the one blessed certainty
+that Charles was safe, and freed from all stigma.&nbsp; When, after
+the pain in her arm lulled enough to allow her to sleep, she had had
+a few hours&rsquo; rest, she inquired for Peregrine, she heard that
+for many hours the surgeon had been trying to extract the balls, and
+that they considered that the second shot had made his case hopeless,
+as it was in the body.&nbsp; He was so much exhausted as to be almost
+unconscious; but the next morning, when Anne, against the persuasions
+of her hostess, had risen and been dressed, though still feeling weak
+and shaken, she received a message, begging her to do him the great
+kindness of visiting him.</p>
+<p>Deadly pale, almost gray, as he looked, lying so propped with pillows
+as to relieve his shattered shoulder, his face had a strange look of
+peace, almost of relief, and he smiled at her as she entered.&nbsp;
+He held out the hand he could use, and his first word was of inquiry
+after her hurt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is nothing&mdash;it will soon be well; I wish it were
+the same with you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, I had rather cheat the hangman.&nbsp; I told those doctors
+yesterday that they were giving themselves and me a great deal of useless
+trouble.&nbsp; The villains, as I told you, could not believe we should
+not betray them, and meant to make an end of us all.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s
+best as it is.&nbsp; My poor faithful Hans would never have had another
+happy moment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you must be better, Peregrine,&rdquo; for his voice, though
+low, was steady.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no living with what I have here,&rdquo; he said,
+laying his hand on his side; &ldquo;and&mdash;I dreamt of your mother
+last night.&rdquo;&nbsp; With the words there was a look of gladness
+exceeding.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! the Evil Angel is gone!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I want your prayers that he may not come back at the last.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Then, as she clasped her hands, and her lips moved, he added, &ldquo;There
+were some things I could only say to you.&nbsp; If they don&rsquo;t
+treat my body as that of an attainted traitor, let me lie at your mother&rsquo;s
+feet.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t disturb the big Scot for me, but let me rest
+at last near her.&nbsp; Then tell Robin &rsquo;tis not out of want of
+regard for him that I have not bequeathed Pilpignon to him, but he could
+do no good with a French estate full of Papists; and there&rsquo;s a
+poor loyal fellow, living ruined at Paris&mdash;a Catholic too&mdash;with
+a wife and children half starved, to whom it will do more good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I meant to ask&mdash;Shall a priest be sent for?&nbsp; Surely
+Major Dudley would consent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know.&nbsp; I have not loved such priests lately.&nbsp;
+I had rather die as near your mother as may be.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Miss Woodford,&rdquo; said a voice at the door, and going
+to it, Anne found herself clasped in her uncle&rsquo;s arms.&nbsp; With
+very few words she led him to the bedside, and the first thing he said
+was &ldquo;God bless you, Peregrine, for what you have done.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again Peregrine&rsquo;s face lighted up, but fell again when he was
+told of the Portsmouth surgeon&rsquo;s arrival at the same time, saying
+with one of his strange looks that it was odd sort of mercy to try to
+cure a man for Jack Ketch, but that he should baffle them yet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do not set your mind on that,&rdquo; said Dr. Woodford, &ldquo;for
+Lord Cutts was so much pleased with you that he would do his utmost
+on your behalf.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Much good that would do me,&rdquo; said poor Peregrine, setting
+his teeth as his tormentor came in.</p>
+<p>Meantime, in Mrs. Dudley&rsquo;s parlour, while that good lady was
+assisting the surgeon at the dressing, Anne and her uncle exchanged
+information.&nbsp; Mr. Fellowes had arrived on foot at about noon, with
+his servant, having only been released after two hours by a traveller,
+and having been deprived both of money and horses, so that he could
+not proceed on his journey; besides that he had given the alarm about
+the abduction, and raised the hue and cry at the villages on his way.&nbsp;
+There had been great distress, riding and searching, and the knowledge
+had been kept from poor Charles Archfield in his prison.&nbsp; Mr. Fellowes
+had gone on to London as soon as possible, and Dr. Woodford had just
+returned from a fruitless attempt to trace his niece, when Sir Edmund
+Nutley and Lord Cutts appeared, with the joyful tidings, which, however,
+could be hardly understood.</p>
+<p>Nothing, Dr. Woodford said, could be more thorough than the vindication
+of Charles Archfield.&nbsp; Peregrine had fully stated that the young
+man had merely interposed to prevent the pursuit of Anne Woodford, that
+it was he himself who had made the first attack, and that his opponent
+had been forced to fight in self-defence.&nbsp; Lord Cutts had not only
+shown his affidavit to Sir Philip, but had paid a visit to the Colonel
+himself in his prison, had complimented him highly on his services in
+the Imperial army, only regretting that they had not been on behalf
+of his own country, and had assured him of equal, if not superior rank,
+in the British army if he would join it on the liberation that he might
+reckon upon in the course of a very few days.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How did you work on the unhappy young man to bring about this
+blessed change?&rdquo; asked the Doctor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, sir, I do not think it was myself.&nbsp; It was first
+the mercy of the Almighty, and then my blessed mother&rsquo;s holy memory
+working on him, revived by the sight of myself.&nbsp; I cannot describe
+to you how gentle, and courteous, and respectful he was to me all along,
+though I am sure those dreadful men mocked at him for it.&nbsp; Do you
+know whether his father has heard?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Robert Oakshott is gone in search of him.&nbsp; He had set
+off to beat up the country, good old man, to obtain signatures to the
+petition in favour of our prisoner, and Robert expected to find him
+with Mr. Chute at the Vine.&nbsp; It is much to that young man&rsquo;s
+credit, niece, he was so eager to see his brother that he longed to
+come with me himself; but he thought that the shock to his father would
+be so great that he ought to bear the tidings himself.&nbsp; And what
+do you think his good wife is about?&nbsp; Perhaps you did not know
+that Sedley Archfield brought away jail fever with him, and Mrs. Oakshott,
+feeling that she was the cause by her hasty action, has taken lodgings
+for him in Winchester, and is nursing him like a sister.&nbsp; No.&nbsp;
+You need not fear for your colonel, my dear maid.&nbsp; Sedley caught
+the infection because he neither was, nor wished to be, secluded from
+the rest of the prisoners, some of whom were, I fear, only too congenial
+society to him.&nbsp; But now tell me the story of your own deliverance,
+which seems to me nothing short of miraculous.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The visit of the Portsmouth surgeon only confirmed Peregrine&rsquo;s
+own impression that it was impossible that he should live, and he was
+only surviving by the strong vitality in his little, spare, wiry frame.&nbsp;
+Dr. Woodford, after hearing Anne&rsquo;s story, thought it well to ask
+him whether he would prefer the ministrations of a Roman Catholic priest;
+but whether justly or unjustly, Peregrine seemed to impute to that Church
+the failure to exorcise the malignant spirit which had led him to far
+worse aberrations than he had confessed to Anne.&nbsp; Though by no
+means deficient in knowledge or controversian theology, as Dr. Woodford
+soon found in conversation with him, his real convictions were all as
+to what personally affected him, and his strong Protestant ingrain education,
+however he might have disavowed it, no doubt had affected his point
+of view.&nbsp; He had admired and been strongly influenced by the sight
+of real devotion and holiness, though as his temptations and hatred
+of monotony recurred, he had more than once swung back again.&nbsp;
+Then, however, he had been revolted by the perception of the concessions
+to popular superstition and the morality of a wicked state of society.&nbsp;
+His real sense of any religion had been infused by Mrs. Woodford, and
+to her belongings, and the faith they involved, he was clinging in these
+last days.</p>
+<p>Dr. Woodford could not but be glad that thus it was, not only on
+the penitent&rsquo;s own account, but on that of the father, who might
+have lost the comfort of finding him truly repentant in the shock of
+finding a Popish priest at his bedside.&nbsp; And indeed the contrition
+seemed to have gathered force in many a past fit of remorse, and now
+was deep but not unhopeful.</p>
+<p>In the evening the father and brother arrived.&nbsp; The Major was
+now an old man, hale indeed, and with the beauty that a pure, self-restrained
+life often sheds on an aged man.&nbsp; He was much shaken, and when
+he came in, with his own white hair on his shoulders, and actually tears
+in his eyes, the look that passed between them was like nothing but
+the spirit of the parable so often, but never too often, repeated.</p>
+<p>Peregrine, who never perhaps had spent a happy or fearless hour with
+him, and had dreaded his coming, felt probably for the first time the
+mysterious sense of home and peace given by the presence of those between
+whom there is the tie of blood.&nbsp; Not many words passed; he was
+hardly in a state for them, but from that time, he was never so happy
+as when his father and brother were beside him; and they seldom left
+him, the Major sitting day and night by his pillow attending to his
+wants, or saying words of prayer.</p>
+<p>The old man had become much softened, by nothing more perhaps than
+watching the way in which his daughter-in-law dealt with the manifestations
+of the Oakshott imp nature in her eldest child.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I had understood,&rdquo; he said to Dr. Woodford.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If I had so treated that poor boy, never would he have been as
+he is now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You acted according to your conscience.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, sir! a man does not grow old without learning that the
+conscience may be blinded, above all by the spirit of opposition and
+party.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will not say there were no mistakes,&rdquo; said the Doctor;
+&ldquo;and yet, sir, the high standard, sound principle, and strong
+faith he learnt from you and your example have prevailed to bear him
+through.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Major answered with a groan, but added, &ldquo;And yet, even
+now, stained as he tells me he is, and cut off in the flower of his
+age, I thank my God and his Saviour, and after Him, you and yours, that
+I am happier about him than I have been these eight and twenty years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With no scruple, Major Oakshott threw his heart into the ministrations
+of Dr. Woodford, which Peregrine declared kept at bay the Evil Angel
+who more than once seemed to his consciousness to be striving to make
+him despair, while friend and father brought him back to the one hope.</p>
+<p>From time to time Anne visited him for a short interval, always to
+his joy and gratitude.&nbsp; There was one visit at last which all knew
+would be the final one, when she shared in his first and last English
+Communion.&nbsp; As she was about to leave him, he held her hand, and
+signed to her to bend down to hear him better.&nbsp; &ldquo;If you can,
+let good Father Seyton at Douai know that peace is come&mdash;the Evil
+One beaten, thanks to Him who giveth us the victory&mdash;and I thank
+them all there&mdash;and ask their prayers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will, I will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Some one at the door said, &ldquo;May I come in?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a sunburnt face, a head with long brown hair, a white coat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Archfield?&rdquo; asked Peregrine.&nbsp; &ldquo;Come, send
+me away with pardon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis yours I need;&rdquo; and as Charles knelt by the
+bed the two faces, one all health, the other gray and deathly, were
+close together.&nbsp; &ldquo;You have given your life for mine, and
+given <i>her</i>.&nbsp; How shall I thank you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Make her happy.&nbsp; She deserves it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charles clasped her hand with a look that was enough.&nbsp; Then
+with a strange smile, half sweetness, half the contortion of a mortal
+pang, the dying man said, &ldquo;May she kiss me once?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And when her lips had touched the cold damp brow&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&mdash;My fourth seven.&nbsp; At last!&nbsp; The change
+is come.&nbsp; Old&mdash;impish&mdash;evil&mdash;self left behind.&nbsp;
+At last!&nbsp; Thanks to Him who treads down Satan under our feet.&nbsp;
+Thanks!&nbsp; Take her away now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Charles took her away, scarce knowing where they went,&mdash;out
+into the spring sunshine, on the slopes above the turf bowling-green,
+where the captive King had beguiled his weary hours.&nbsp; Only then
+would awe and emotion let them speak, though his arm was round her,
+her hand in his, and his first words were, as he looked at the scarf
+that still bore up her arm, &ldquo;And this is what you have borne for
+me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is all but healed.&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t think of it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall all my life!&nbsp; Poor fellow, he might well bid
+me deserve you.&nbsp; I never can.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis to you I owe all.&nbsp;
+I believe, indeed, the ambassador might have claimed me, but he is so
+tardy that probably I should have been hanged long before the proper
+form was ready; and it would have been to exile, and with a tainted
+name.&nbsp; You have won for me the clearing of name and honour&mdash;home,
+parents and child and all, besides your sweet self.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And it was not me, but he whom we so despised and dreaded.&nbsp;
+Had I not been seized, I could only have implored for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know this, that if you had not been what you are, my boy
+would have borne a dishonoured name, and we should never have been together
+as now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was in truth their first meeting in freedom and security as lovers;
+but it could only be in a grave, quiet fashion, under the knowledge
+that he, to whom their re-union was chiefly owing, was breathing out
+the life he had sacrificed for them.&nbsp; Thus they only gently and
+in a low voice went over their past doings and feelings as they walked
+up and down together, till Dr. Woodford came in the sunset to tell them
+that the change so longed for had come in peace, and with a smile that
+told of release from the Evil Angel.</p>
+<p>* * * * * </p>
+<p>Peregrine&rsquo;s wish was fulfilled, and he was buried in Portchester
+Churchyard at Mrs. Woodford&rsquo;s feet.&nbsp; This time it was Mr.
+Horncastle, old as he was, who preached the funeral sermon, the <i>In
+Memoriam</i> of our forefathers; and by special desire of Major Oakshott
+took for his text, &lsquo;At evening time there shall be light.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+He spoke, sometimes in a voice broken, as much by feeling as by age,
+of the childhood blighted by a cruel superstition, and perverted, as
+he freely made confession, by discipline without comprehension, because
+no confidence had been sought.&nbsp; Then ensued a tribute of earnest,
+generous justice to her who had done her best to undo the warp in the
+boy&rsquo;s nature, and whose blessed influence the young man had owned
+to the last, through all the temptations, errors, and frenzies of his
+life.&nbsp; Nor did the good man fail to make this a means of testifying
+to the entire neighbourhood, who had flocked to hear him, all that might
+be desirable to be known respecting the conflict at Portchester, actually
+reading Peregrine&rsquo;s affidavit, as indeed was due to Colonel Archfield,
+so as to prove that this was no mere pardon, though technically it had
+so to stand, but actual acquittal.&nbsp; Nor was the struggle with evil
+at the end forgotten, nor the surrender alike of love and of hatred,
+as well as of his own life, which had been the final conquest, the decisive
+passing from darkness to light.</p>
+<p>It was a strange sermon according to present ideas, but not to those
+who had grown up to the semi-political preaching of the century then
+in its last decade; and it filled many eyes with tears, many hearts
+with a deeper spirit of that charity which hopeth all things.</p>
+<p>* * * * *</p>
+<p>A month later Charles Archfield and Anne Jacobina Woodford were married
+at the little parish church of Fareham.&nbsp; Sir Philip insisted on
+making it a gay and brilliant wedding, in order to demonstrate to the
+neighbourhood that though the maiden had been his grandson&rsquo;s governess,
+she was a welcomed and honoured acquisition to the family.&nbsp; Perhaps
+too he perceived the error of his middle age, when he contrasted that
+former wedding, the work of worldly conventionality, with the present.&nbsp;
+In the first, an unformed, undeveloped lad, unable to understand his
+own true feelings and affections had been passively linked to a shallow,
+frivolous, ill-trained creature, utterly incapable of growing into a
+helpmeet for him; whereas the love and trust of the stately-looking
+pair, in the fresh bloom of manhood and womanhood, had been proved in
+the furnace of trial, so that the troth they plighted had deep foundation
+for the past, and bright hope for the future.</p>
+<p>Nor was anybody more joyous than little Philip, winning his Nana
+for a better mother to him than his own could ever have been</p>
+<p>It was in a blue velvet coat that Colonel Archfield was married.&nbsp;
+He had resigned his Austrian commission; and though the &lsquo;Salamander,&rsquo;
+was empowered to offer him an excellent staff appointment in the English
+army, he decided to refuse.&nbsp; Sir Philip showed signs of having
+been aged and shaken by the troubles of the winter, and required his
+son&rsquo;s assistance in the care of his property, and little Philip
+was growing up to need a father&rsquo;s hand, so that Charles came to
+the conclusion that there was no need to cross the old Cavalier&rsquo;s
+dislike to the new regime, nor to make his mother and wife again suffer
+the anxieties of knowing him on active service, while his duties lay
+at home.</p>
+<p>Sedley Archfield, after a long illness, owed recovery both in body
+and mind to Mrs. Oakshott, and by her arrangement finally obtained a
+fresh commission in a regiment raised for the defence of the possessions
+of the East India Company.&nbsp; And that the poor changeling was still
+tenderly remembered might be proved by the fact that when the bells
+rung for Queen Anne&rsquo;s coronation there was one baby Peregrine
+at Fareham and another at Oakwood.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A REPUTED CHANGELING***</p>
+<pre>
+
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Reputed Changeling, by Charlotte M. Yonge
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: A Reputed Changeling
+
+Author: Charlotte M. Yonge
+
+Release Date: May 26, 2004 [eBook #12449]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A REPUTED CHANGELING***
+
+
+Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+A REPUTED CHANGELING, or, THREE SEVENTH YEARS TWO CENTURIES AGO
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+I do not think I have here forced the hand of history except by
+giving Portchester to two imaginary Rectors, and by a little
+injustice to her whom Princess Anne termed 'the brick-bat woman.'
+
+The trial is not according to present rules, but precedents for its
+irregularities are to be found in the doings of the seventeenth
+century, notably in the trial of Spencer Cowper by the same Judge
+Hatsel, and I have done my best to represent the habits of those
+country gentry who were not infected by the evils of the later
+Stewart reigns.
+
+There is some doubt as to the proper spelling of Portchester, but,
+judging by analogy, the t ought not to be omitted.
+
+C. M. YONGE. 2d May 1889.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I: THE EXPERIENCES OF GOODY MADGE
+
+
+"Dear Madam, think me not to blame;
+Invisible the fairy came.
+Your precious babe is hence conveyed,
+And in its place a changeling laid.
+Where are the father's mouth and nose,
+The mother's eyes as black as sloes?
+See here, a shocking awkward creature,
+That speaks a fool in every feature."
+
+GAY.
+
+"He is an ugly ill-favoured boy--just like Riquet a la Houppe."
+
+"That he is! Do you not know that he is a changeling?"
+
+Such were the words of two little girls walking home from a school
+for young ladies kept, at the Cathedral city of Winchester, by two
+Frenchwomen of quality, refugees from the persecutions preluding the
+Revocation of the Edict of Nantes, and who enlivened the studies of
+their pupils with the Contes de Commere L'Oie.
+
+The first speaker was Anne Jacobina Woodford, who had recently come
+with her mother, the widow of a brave naval officer, to live with
+her uncle, the Prebendary then in residence. The other was Lucy
+Archfield, daughter to a knight, whose home was a few miles from
+Portchester, Dr. Woodford's parish on the southern coast of
+Hampshire.
+
+In the seventeenth century, when roads were mere ditches often
+impassable, and country-houses frequently became entirely isolated
+in the winter, it was usual with the wealthier county families to
+move into their local capital, where some owned mansions and others
+hired prebendal houses, or went into lodgings in the roomy dwellings
+of the superior tradesmen. For the elders this was the season of
+social intercourse, for the young people, of education.
+
+The two girls, who were about eight years old, had struck up a rapid
+friendship, and were walking hand in hand to the Close attended by
+the nurse in charge of Mistress Lucy. This little lady wore a black
+silk hood and cape, trimmed with light brown fur, and lined with
+pink, while Anne Woodford, being still in mourning for her father,
+was wrapped in a black cloak, unrelieved except by the white border
+of her round cap, fringed by fair curls, contrasting with her brown
+eyes. She was taller and had a more upright bearing of head and
+neck, with more promise of beauty than her companion, who was much
+more countrified and would not have been taken for the child of
+higher station.
+
+They had traversed the graveyard of the Cathedral, and were passing
+through a narrow archway known as the Slype, between the south-
+western angle of the Cathedral and a heavy mass of old masonry
+forming part of the garden wall of the present abode of the
+Archfield family, when suddenly both children stumbled and fell,
+while an elfish peal of laughter sounded behind them.
+
+Lucy came down uppermost, and was scarcely hurt, but Anne had fallen
+prone, striking her chin on the ground, so as to make her bite her
+lip, and bruising knees and elbows severely. Nurse detected the
+cause of the fall so as to avoid it herself. It was a cord fastened
+across the archway, close to the ground, and another shout of
+derision greeted the discovery; while Lucy, regaining her feet,
+beheld for a moment a weird exulting grimace on a visage peeping
+over a neighbouring headstone.
+
+"It is he! it is he! The wicked imp! There's no peace for him! I
+say," she screamed, "see if you don't get a sound flogging!" and she
+clenched her little fist as the provoking "Ho! ho! ho!" rang farther
+and farther off. "Don't cry, Anne dear; the Dean and Chapter shall
+take order with him, and he shall be soundly beaten. Are you hurt?
+O nurse, her mouth is all blood."
+
+"I hope she has not broken a tooth," said nurse, who had been
+attending to the sobbing child. "Come in, my lamb, we will wash
+your face, and make you well."
+
+Anne, blinded with tears, jarred, bruised, bleeding, and bewildered,
+submitted to be led by kind nurse the more willingly because she
+knew that her mother, together with all the quality, were at Sir
+Thomas Charnock's. They had dined at the fashionable hour of two,
+and were to stay till supper-time, the elders playing at Ombre, the
+juniors dancing. As a rule the ordinary clergy did not associate
+with the county families, but Dr. Woodford was of good birth and a
+royal chaplain, and his deceased brother had been a favourite
+officer of the Duke of York, and had been so severely wounded by his
+side in the battle of Southwold as to be permanently disabled.
+Indeed Anne Jacobina was godchild to the Duke and his first Duchess,
+whose favoured attendant her mother had been. Thus Mrs. Woodford
+was in great request, and though she had not hitherto gone into
+company since her widowhood, she had yielded to Lady Charnock's
+entreaty that she would come and show her how to deal with that
+strange new Chinese infusion, a costly packet of which had been
+brought to her from town by Sir Thomas, as the Queen's favourite
+beverage, wherewith the ladies of the place were to be regaled and
+astonished.
+
+It had been already arranged that the two little girls should spend
+the evening together, and as they entered the garden before the
+house a rude voice exclaimed, "Holloa! London Nan whimpering. Has
+my fine lady met a spider or a cow?" and a big rough lad of twelve,
+in a college gown, spread out his arms, and danced up and down in
+the doorway to bar the entrance.
+
+"Don't, Sedley," said a sturdy but more gentlemanlike lad of the
+same age, thrusting him aside. "Is she hurt? What is it?"
+
+"That spiteful imp, Peregrine Oakshott," said Lucy passionately.
+"He had a cord across the Slype to trip us up. I heard him laughing
+like a hobgoblin, and saw him too, grinning over a tombstone like
+the malicious elf he is."
+
+The college boy uttered a horse laugh, which made Lucy cry, "Cousin
+Sedley, you are as bad!" but the other boy was saying, "Don't cry,
+Anne None-so-pretty. I'll give it him well! Though I'm younger,
+I'm bigger, and I'll show him reason for not meddling with my little
+sweetheart."
+
+"Have with you then!" shouted Sedley, ready for a fray on whatever
+pretext, and off they rushed, as nurse led little Anne up the broad
+shallow steps of the dark oak staircase, but Lucy stood laughing
+with exultation in the intended vengeance, as her brother took down
+her father's hunting-whip.
+
+"He must be wellnigh a fiend to play such wicked pranks under the
+very Minster!" she said.
+
+"And a rascal of a Whig, and that's worse," added Charles; "but I'll
+have it out of him!"
+
+"Take care, Charley; if you offend him, and he does really belong to
+those--those creatures"--Lucy lowered her voice--"who knows what
+they might do to you?"
+
+Charles laughed long and loud. "I'll take care of that," he said,
+swinging out at the door. "Elf or no elf, he shall learn what it is
+to play off his tricks on _my_ sister and my little sweetheart."
+
+Lucy betook herself to the nursery, where Anne was being comforted,
+her bleeding lip washed with essence, and repaired with a pinch of
+beaver from a hat, and her other bruises healed with lily leaves
+steeped in strong waters.
+
+"Charley is gone to serve him out!" announced Lucy as the sovereign
+remedy.
+
+"Oh, but perhaps he did not mean it," Anne tried to say.
+
+"Mean it? Small question of that, the cankered young slip! Nurse,
+do you think those he belongs to can do Charley any harm if he
+angers them?"
+
+"I cannot say, missie. Only 'tis well we be not at home, or there
+might be elf knots in the horses' manes to-night. I doubt me
+whether _that sort_ can do much hurt here, seeing as 'tis holy
+ground."
+
+"But is he really a changeling? I thought there were no such things
+as--"
+
+"Hist, hist, Missie Anne!" cried the dame; "'tis not good to name
+them."
+
+"Oh, but we are on the Minster ground, nurse," said Lucy, trembling
+a little however, looking over her shoulder, and coming closer to
+the old servant.
+
+"Why do they think so?" asked Anne. "Is it because he is so ugly
+and mischievous and rude? Not like boys in London."
+
+"Prithee, nurse, tell her the tale," entreated Lucy, who had made
+large eyes over it many a time before.
+
+"Ay, and who should tell you all about it save me, who had it all
+from Goody Madge Bulpett, as saw it all!"
+
+"Goody Madge! It was she that came when poor little Kitty was born
+and died," suggested Lucy, as Anne, laying her aching head upon
+nurse's knees, prepared to listen to the story.
+
+"Well, deary darlings, you see poor Madam Oakshott never had her
+health since the Great Fire in London, when she was biding with her
+kinsfolk to be near Major Oakshott, who had got into trouble about
+some of his nonconforming doings. The poor lady had a mortal fright
+before she could be got out of Gracechurch Street as was all of a
+blaze, and she was so afeard of her husband being burnt as he lay in
+Newgate that she could scarce be got away, and whether it was that,
+or that she caught cold lying out in a tent on Highgate Hill, she
+has never had a day's health since."
+
+"And the gentleman--her husband?" asked Anne.
+
+"They all broke prison, poor fellows, as they had need to do, and
+the Major's time was nearly up. He made himself busy in saving and
+helping the folk in the streets; and his brother, Sir Peregrine, who
+was thick with the King, and is in foreign parts now, took the
+chance to speak of the poor lady's plight and say it would be the
+death of her if he could not get his discharge, and his Majesty,
+bless his kind heart, gave the order at once. So they took madam
+home to the Chace, but she has been but an ailing body ever since."
+
+"But the fairy, the fairy, how did she change the babe?" cried Anne.
+
+"Hush, hush, dearie! name them not. I am coming to it all in good
+time. I was telling you how the poor lady failed and pined from
+that hour, and was like to die. My gossip Madge told me how when,
+next Midsummer, this unlucky babe was born they had to take him from
+her chamber at once because any sound of crying made her start in
+her sleep, and shriek that she heard a poor child wailing who had
+been left in a burning house. Moll Owens, the hind's wife, a comely
+lass, was to nurse him, and they had him at once to her in the
+nursery, where was the elder child, two years old, Master Oliver, as
+you know well, Mistress Lucy, a fine-grown, sturdy little Turk as
+ever was."
+
+"Yes, I know him," answered Lucy; "and if his brother's a
+changeling, he is a bear! The Whig bear is what Charley calls him."
+
+"Well, what does that child do but trot out of the nursery, and try
+to scramble down the stairs.--Never tell me but that they you wot of
+trained him out--not that they had power over a Christian child, but
+that they might work their will on the little one. So they must
+needs trip him up, so that he rolled down the stair hollering and
+squalling all the way enough to bring the house down, and his poor
+lady mother, she woke up in a fit. The womenfolk ran, Molly and
+all, she being but a slip of a girl herself and giddy-pated, and
+when they came back after quieting Master Oliver, the babe was
+changed."
+
+"Then they didn't see the--"
+
+"Hush, hush, missie! no one never sees 'em or they couldn't do
+nothing. They cannot, if a body is looking. But what had been as
+likely a child before as you would wish to handle was gone! The
+poor little mouth was all of a twist, and his eyelid drooped, and he
+never ceased mourn, mourn, mourn, wail, wail, wail, day and night,
+and whatever food he took he never was satisfied, but pined and
+peaked and dwined from day to day, so as his little legs was like
+knitting pins. The lady was nigh upon death as it seemed, so that
+no one took note of the child at first, but when Madge had time to
+look at him, she saw how it was, as plain as plain could be, and
+told his father. But men are unbelieving, my dears, and always
+think they know better than them as has the best right, and Major
+Oakshott would hear of no such thing, only if the boy was like to
+die, he must be christened. Well, Madge knew that sometimes they
+flee at touch of holy water, but no; though the thing mourned and
+moaned enough to curdle your blood and screeched out when the water
+touched him, there he was the same puny little canker. So when
+madam was better, and began to fret over the child that was nigh
+upon three months old, and no bigger than a newborn babe, Madge up
+and told her how it was, and the way to get her own again."
+
+"What was that, nurse?"
+
+"There be different ways, my dear. Madge always held to breaking
+five and twenty eggs and have a pot boiling on a good sea-coal fire
+with the poker in it red hot, and then drop the shells in one by
+one, in sight of the creature in the cradle. Presently it will up
+and ask whatever you are about. Then you gets the poker in your
+hand as you says, "A-brewing of egg shells." Then it says, "I'm
+forty hundred years old and odd, and yet I never heard of a-brewing
+of egg shells." Then you ups with the poker and at him to thrust it
+down his ugly throat, and there's a hissing and a whirling, and he
+is snatched away, and the real darling, all plump and rosy, is put
+back in the cradle."
+
+"And did they?"
+
+"No, my dears. Madam was that soft-hearted she could not bring her
+mind to it, though they promised her not to touch him unless he
+spoke. But nigh on two years later, Master Robert was born, as fine
+and lusty and straight-limbed as a chrisom could be, while the other
+could not walk a step, but sat himself about on the floor, a-moaning
+and a-fretting with the legs of him for all the world like the
+drumsticks of a fowl, and his hands like claws, and his face wizened
+up like an old gaffer of a hundred, or the jackanapes that Martin
+Boats'n brought from Barbary. So after a while madam saw the rights
+of it, and gave consent that means should be taken as Madge and
+other wise folk would have it; but he was too old by that time for
+the egg shells, for he could talk, talk, and ask questions enough to
+drive you wild. So they took him out under the privet hedge, Madge
+and her gossip Deborah Clint, and had got his clothes off to flog
+him with nettles till they changed him, when the ill-favoured elf
+began to squall and shriek like a whole litter of pigs, and as ill
+luck would have it, the master was within hearing, though they had
+watched him safe off to one of his own 'venticles, but it seems
+there had been warning that the justices were on the look-out, so
+home he came. And behold, the thing that never knew the use of his
+feet before, ups and flies at him, and lays hold of his leg,
+hollering out, "Sir, father, don't let them," and what not. So then
+it was all over with them, as though that were not proof enow what
+manner of thing it was! Madge tried to put him off with washing
+with yarbs being good for the limbs, but when he saw that Deb was
+there, he saith, saith he, as grim as may be, "Thou shalt not suffer
+a witch to live," which was hard, for she is but a white witch; and
+he stormed and raved at them with Bible texts, and then he vowed
+(men are so headstrong, my dears) that if ever he ketched them at it
+again, he would see Deb burnt for a witch at the stake, and Madge
+hung for the murder of the child, and he is well known to be a man
+of his word. So they had to leave him to abide by his bargain, and
+a sore handful he has of it."
+
+Anne drew a long sigh and asked whether the real boy in fairyland
+would never come back.
+
+"There's no telling, missie dear. Some say they are bound there for
+ever and a day, some that they as holds 'em are bound to bring them
+back for a night once in seven years, and in the old times if they
+was sprinkled with holy water, and crossed, they would stay, but
+there's no such thing as holy water now, save among the Papists, and
+if one knew the way to cross oneself, it would be as much as one's
+life was worth."
+
+"If Peregrine was to die," suggested Lucy.
+
+"Bless your heart, dearie, he'll never die! When the true one's
+time comes, you'll see, if so be you be alive to see it, as Heaven
+grant, he will go off like the flame of a candle and nothing be left
+in his place but a bit of a withered sting nettle. But come, my
+sweetings, 'tis time I got your supper. I'll put some nice rosy-
+cheeked apples down to roast, to be soft for Mistress Woodford's
+sore mouth."
+
+Before the apples were roasted, Charles Archfield and his cousin,
+the colleger Sedley Archfield, a big boy in a black cloth gown, came
+in with news of having--together with the other boys, including
+Oliver and Robert Oakshott--hunted Peregrine all round the Close,
+but he ran like a lapwing, and when they had pinned him up in the
+corner by Dr. Ken's house, he slipped through their fingers up the
+ivy, and grinned at them over the wall like the imp he was. Noll
+said it was always the way, he was no more to be caught than a bit
+of thistledown, but Sedley meant to call out all the college boys
+and hunt and bait him down like a badger on 'Hills.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II: HIGH TREASON
+
+
+"Whate'er it be that is within his reach,
+The filching trick he doth his fingers teach."
+
+Robin Badfellow.
+
+There was often a considerable distance between children and their
+parents in the seventeenth century, but Anne Woodford, as the only
+child of her widowed mother, was as solace, comfort, and companion;
+and on her pillow in early morning the child poured forth in grave
+earnest the entire story of the changeling, asking whether he could
+not be "taken to good Dr. Ken, or the Dean, or the Bishop to be ex--
+ex--what is it, mother? Not whipped with nettles. Oh no! nor burnt
+with red hot pokers, but have holy words said so that the right one
+may come back."
+
+"My dear child, did you really believe that old nurse's tale?"
+
+"O madam, she _knew_ it. The other old woman saw it! I always
+thought fairies and elves were only in tales, but Lucy's nurse knows
+it is true. And _he_ is not a bit like other lads, mamma dear. He
+is lean and small, and his eyes are of different colours, look two
+ways at once, and his mouth goes awry when he speaks, and he laughs
+just like--like a fiend. Lucy and I call him Riquet a la Houppe,
+because he is just like the picture in Mademoiselle's book, with a
+great stubbly bunch of hair sticking out on one side, and though he
+walks a little lame, he can hop and skip like a grasshopper, faster
+than any of the boys, and leap up a wall in a moment, and grin--oh
+most frightfully. Have you ever seen him, mamma?"
+
+"I think so. I saw a poor boy, who seemed to me to have had a
+stroke of some sort when he was an infant."
+
+"But, madam, that would not make him so spiteful and malicious!"
+
+"If every one is against him and treats him as a wicked mischievous
+elf, it is only too likely to make him bitter and spiteful. Nay,
+Anne, if you come back stuffed with old wives' tales, I shall not
+allow you to go home with Lucy Archfield."
+
+The threat silenced Anne, who was a grave and rather silent little
+person, and when she mentioned it to her friend, the answer was,
+"Did you tell your mother? If I had told mine, I should have been
+whipped for repeating lying tales."
+
+"Oh then you don't believe it!"
+
+"It must be true, for Madge knew it. But that's the way always if
+one lets out that one knows more than they think."
+
+"It is not the way with my mother," stoutly said Anne, drawing up
+her dignified little head. And she kept her resolution, for though
+a little excited by her first taste of lively youthful
+companionship, she was naturally a thoughtful reticent child, with a
+character advanced by companionship with her mother as an only
+child, through a great sorrow. Thus she was in every respect more
+developed than her contemporary Lucy, who regarded her with wonder
+as well as affection, and she was the object of the boyish devotion
+of Charley, who often defended her from his cousin Sedley's
+endeavours to put down what he considered upstart airs in a little
+nobody from London. Sedley teased and baited every weak thing in
+his way, and Lucy had been his chief butt till Anne Woodford's
+unconscious dignity and more cultivated manners excited his utmost
+spleen.
+
+Lucy might be incredulous, but she was eager to tell that when her
+cousin Sedley Archfield was going back to 'chambers,' down from the
+Close gate came the imp on his shoulders in the twilight and twisted
+both legs round his neck, holding tight on in spite of plunges,
+pinches, and endeavours to scrape him off against the wall, which
+were frustrated or retaliated by hair pulling, choking, till just
+ere entering the college gateway, where Sedley looked to get his
+revenge among his fellows, he found his shoulders free, and heard
+"Ho! ho! ho!" from the top of a wall close at hand. All the more
+was the young people's faith in the changeling story confirmed, and
+child-world was in those days even more impenetrable to their elders
+than at present.
+
+Changeling or no, it was certain that Peregrine Oakshott was the
+plague of the Close, where his father, an ex-officer of the
+Parliamentary army, had unwillingly hired a house for the winter,
+for the sake of medical treatment for his wife, a sufferer from a
+complication of ailments. Oakwood, his home, was about five miles
+from Dr. Woodford's living of Portchester, and as the families would
+thus be country neighbours, Mrs. Woodford thought it well to begin
+the acquaintance at Winchester. While knocking at the door of the
+house on the opposite side of the Close, she was aware of an elfish
+visage peering from an upper window. There was the queer mop of
+dark hair, the squinting light eyes, the contorted grin crooking the
+mouth, the odd sallow face, making her quite glad to get out of
+sight of the strange grimaces which grew every moment more hideous.
+
+Mrs. Oakshott sat in an arm-chair beside a large fire in a
+wainscotted room, with a folding-screen shutting off the window.
+Her spinning-wheel was near, but it was only too plain that 'feeble
+was the hand, and silly the thread.' She bent her head in its
+wadded black velvet hood, but excused herself from rising, as she
+was crippled by rheumatic pains. She had evidently once been a
+pretty little person, innocent and inane, and her face had become
+like that of a withered baby, piteous in its expression of pain and
+weariness, but otherwise somewhat vacant. At first, indeed, there
+was a look of alarm. Perhaps she expected every visitor to come
+with a complaint of her unlucky Peregrine, but when Mrs. Woodford
+spoke cheerfully of being her neighbour in the country, she was
+evidently relieved and even gratified, prattling in a soft plaintive
+tone about her sufferings and the various remedies, ranging from
+woodlice rolled into natural pills, and grease off the church bells,
+to diamond dust and Goa stones, since, as she said, there was no
+cost to which Major Oakshott would not go for her benefit. He had
+even procured for her a pound of the Queen's new Chinese herb, and
+it certainly was as nauseous as could be wished, when boiled in
+milk, but she was told that was not the way it was taken at my Lady
+Charnock's. She was quite animated when Mrs. Woodford offered to
+show her how to prepare it.
+
+Therewith the master of the house came in, and the aspect of affairs
+changed. He was a tall, dark, grave man, plainly though handsomely
+dressed, and in a gentlemanly way making it evident that visits to
+his wife were not welcome. He said that her health never permitted
+her to go abroad, and that his poor house contained nothing that
+could please a Court lady. Mrs. Oakshott shrank into herself, and
+became shy and silent, and Mrs. Woodford felt constrained to take
+leave, courteously conducted to the door by her unwilling host.
+
+She had not taken many steps before she was startled by a sharp
+shower from a squirt coming sidelong like a blow on her cheek and
+surprising her into a low cry, which was heard by the Major, so that
+he hastened out, exclaiming, "Madam, I trust that you are not hurt."
+
+"Oh no, sir! It is nothing--not a stone--only water!" she said,
+wiping it with her handkerchief.
+
+"I am grieved and ashamed at the evil pranks of my unhappy son, but
+he shall suffer for it."
+
+"Nay, sir, I pray you. It was only childish mischief."
+
+He had not waited to hear her pleadings, and before she was half
+across the Close he had overtaken her, dragging the cowering
+struggling boy in his powerful grasp.
+
+"Now, Peregrine," he commanded, "let me instantly hear you ask the
+lady's pardon for your dastardly trick. Or--!" and his other hand
+was raised for a blow.
+
+"I am sure he is sorry," said Mrs. Woodford, making a motion to ward
+off the stroke, and as the queer eyes glanced up at her in wondering
+inquiry, she laid her hand on the bony shoulder, saying, "I know you
+did not mean to hurt me. You are sorry, are you not?"
+
+"Ay," the boy muttered, and she saw a look of surprise on his
+father's face.
+
+"There," she said, "he has made his amends, and surely that may
+suffice."
+
+"Nay, madam, it would be a weak and ungodly tenderness that would
+spare to drive forth the evil spirit which possesses the child by
+the use of the rod. I should fail in my duty alike to God and man,"
+he added, in reply to a fresh gesture of intercession, "did I not
+teach him what it is to insult a lady at mine own door."
+
+Mrs. Woodford could only go away, heartily sorry for the boy. From
+that time, however, both she and her little daughter were untouched
+by his tricks, though every one else had some complaint. Peas were
+shot from unknown recesses at venerable canons, mice darted out
+before shrieking ladies, frogs' clammy forms descended on the nape
+of their necks, hedgehogs were curled up on their chairs, and though
+Peregrine Oakshott was not often caught in the act, no mischief ever
+took place that was not attributed to him; and it was popularly
+believed in the Close that his father flogged him every morning for
+what he was about to do, and his tutor repeated the castigation
+every evening for what he had done, besides interludes at each
+detection.
+
+Perhaps frequent usage had toughened his skin, or he had become
+expert in wriggling from the full force of the blow, or else, as
+many believed, the elfish nature was impervious; for he was as ready
+as ever for a trick the moment he was released, like, as his brother
+said, the dog Keeper, who, with a slaughtered chick hung round his
+neck in penance, rushed murderously upon the rest of the brood.
+
+Yet Mrs. Woodford, on her way through the Cathedral nave, was aware
+of something leaning against one of the great columns, crouching
+together so that the dark head, supported on the arms, rested
+against the pillar which fluted the pier. The organ was pealing
+softly and plaintively, and the little gray coat seemed to heave as
+with a sob. She stood, impelled to offer to take him with her into
+the choir, but a verger, spying him, began rating him in a tone fit
+for expelling a dog, "Come, master, none of your pranks here! Be
+not you ashamed of yourself to be lying in wait for godly folk on
+their way to prayers? If I catch you here again the Dean shall hear
+of it, and you shall smart for it."
+
+Mrs. Woodford began, "He was only hearkening to the music," but she
+caught such a look of malignity cast upon the verger as perfectly
+appalled her, and in another moment the boy had dashed, head over
+heels, out at the nearest door.
+
+The next report that reached her related how a cloud of lime had
+suddenly descended from a broken arch of the cloister on the solemn
+verger, on his way to escort the Dean to the Minster, powdering his
+wig, whitening his black gown from collar to hem, and not a little
+endangering his eyesight.
+
+The culprit eluded all pursuit on this occasion; but Mrs. Woodford
+soon after was told that the Major had caught Peregrine listening at
+the little south door of the choir, had collared him, and flogged
+him worse than ever, for being seduced by the sounds of the popish
+and idolatrous worship, and had told all his sons that the like
+chastisement awaited them if they presumed to cross the threshold of
+the steeple house.
+
+Nevertheless the Senior Prefect of the college boys, when about to
+come out of the Cathedral on Sunday morning, found his gown pinned
+with a skewer so fast to the seat that he was only set free at the
+expense of a rent. Public opinion decided that the deed had been
+done by the imp of Oakshott, and accordingly the whole of the
+Wykeham scholars set on him with hue and cry the first time they saw
+him outside the Close, and hunted him as far as St. Cross, where he
+suddenly and utterly vanished from their sight.
+
+Mrs. Woodford agreed with Anne that it was a very strange story.
+For how could he have been in the Cathedral at service time when it
+was well known that Major Oakshott had all his family together at
+his own form of worship in his house? Anne, who had been in hopes
+that her mother would be thus convinced of his supernatural powers,
+looked disappointed, but she had afterwards to confess that Charles
+Archfield had found out that it was his cousin Sedley Archfield who
+had played the audacious trick, in revenge for a well-merited
+tunding from the Prefect.
+
+"And then saddled it on young Oakshott?" asked her mother.
+
+"Charley says one such matter more or less makes no odds to the Whig
+ape; but I cannot endure Sedley Archfield, mamma."
+
+"If he lets another lad bear the blame of his malice he cannot
+indeed be a good lad."
+
+"So Charley and Lucy say," returned Anne. "We shall be glad to be
+away from Winchester, for while Peregrine Oakshott torments slyly,
+Sedley Archfield loves to frighten us openly, and to hurt us to see
+how much we can bear, and if Charley tries to stand up for us,
+Sedley calls him a puny wench, and a milksop, and knocks him down.
+But, dear madam, pray do not tell what I have said to her ladyship,
+for there is no knowing what Sedley would do to us."
+
+"My little maid has not known before what boys can be!"
+
+"No; but indeed Charles Archfield is quite different, almost as if
+he had been bred in London. He is a very gentleman. He never is
+rude to any girl, and he is courteous and gentle and kind. He
+gathered walnuts for us yesterday, and cracked all mine, and I am to
+make him a purse with two of the shells."
+
+Mrs. Woodford smiled, but there was a short thrill of anxiety in her
+motherly heart as her glance brought up a deeper colour into Anne's
+cheeks. There was a reserve to bring that glow, for the child knew
+that if she durst say that Charles called her his little sweetheart
+and wife, and that the walnut-shell purse would be kept as a token,
+she should be laughed at as a silly child, perhaps forbidden to make
+it, or else her uncle might hear and make a joke of it. It was not
+exactly disingenuousness, but rather the first dawn of maidenly
+reserve and modesty that reddened her cheek in a manner her mother
+did not fail to observe.
+
+Yet it was with more amusement than misgiving, for children played
+at courtship like other games in mimicry of being grown up, and a
+baronet's only son was in point of fact almost as much out of the
+reach of a sea captain's daughter and clergyman's niece as a prince
+of the blood royal; and Master Archfield would probably be
+contracted long before he could choose for himself, for his family
+were not likely to take into account that if Captain Woodford had
+not been too severely wounded to come forward after the battle of
+Southwold Bay he would have been knighted. On the strength of which
+Anne, as her companions sometimes said, gave herself in consequence
+more airs than Mistress Lucy ever did.
+
+Sedley, a poor cousin, a destitute cavalier's orphan, who had been
+placed on the foundation at Winchester College in hopes that he
+might be provided for in the Church, would have been far more on her
+level, and indeed Lady Archfield, a notable matchmaker, had already
+hinted how suitable such a thing would be. However, the present
+school character of Master Sedley, as well as her own observations,
+by no means inclined Mrs. Woodford towards the boy, large limbed and
+comely faced, but with a bullying, scowling air that did not augur
+well for his wife or his parish.
+
+Whether it were this lad's threats, or more likely, the fact that
+all the Close was on the alert, Peregrine's exploits were less
+frequent there, and began to extend to the outskirts of the city.
+There were some fine yew trees on the southern borders, towards the
+chalk down, with massive dark foliage upon stout ruddy branches,
+among which Peregrine, armed with a fishing-rod, line, and hook, sat
+perched, angling for what might be caught from unconscious
+passengers along a path which led beneath.
+
+From a market-woman's basket he abstracted thus a fowl! His "Ho!
+ho! ho!" startled her into looking up, and seeing it apparently
+resuscitated, and hovering aloft. Full of dismay, she hurried
+shrieking away to tell the story of the bewitched chick at the
+market-cross among her gossips.
+
+His next capture was a chop from a butcher boy's tray, but this
+involved more peril, for with a fierce oath that he would be
+revenged on the Whiggish imp, the lad darted at the tree, in vain,
+however, for Peregrine had dropped down on the other side, and crept
+unseen to another bush, where he lay perdu, under the thick green
+branches, rod and all, while the youth, swearing and growling, was
+shaking his former refuge.
+
+As soon as the coast was clear he went back to his post, and
+presently was aware of three gentlemen advancing over the down,
+pointing, measuring, and surveying. One was small and slight, as
+simply dressed as a gentleman of the period could be; another was
+clad in a gay coat with a good deal of fluttering ribbon and rich
+lace; the third, a tall well-made man, had a plain walking suit,
+surmounted by a flowing periwig and plumed beaver. Coming close
+beneath Peregrine's tree, and standing with their backs to it, they
+eagerly conversed. "Such a cascade will drown the honours of the
+Versailles fountains, if only the water can be raised to such a
+height. Are you sure of it, Wren?"
+
+"As certain as hydraulics can make me, sir," and the lesser man
+began drawing lines with his stick in the dust of the path in
+demonstration.
+
+The opportunity was irresistible, and the hook from above deftly
+caught the band of the feathered hat of the taller man, slowly and
+steadily drawing it up, entirely unperceived by the owner, on whose
+wig it had rested, and who was bending over the dust-traced diagram
+in absorbed attention. Peregrine deferred his hobgoblin laughter,
+for success emboldened him farther. Detaching the hat from his
+hook, and depositing it safely in a fork of the tree, he next
+cautiously let down his line, and contrived to get a strong hold of
+one of the black locks on the top of the wig, just as the wearer was
+observing, "Oliver's Battery, eh? A cupola with a light to be seen
+out at sea? Our sailors will make another St. Christopher of you!
+Ha! what's this'"
+
+For feeling as if a branch were touching the structure on his head,
+he had stepped forward, thus favouring Peregrine's manoeuvres so
+that the wig dangled in the air, suddenly disclosing the bare skull
+of a very dark man, with such marked features that it needed not the
+gentlemen's outcry to show the boy who was the victim of his
+mischief.
+
+"What imp is there?" cried the King, spying up into the tree, while
+his attendant drew his sword, "How now?" as Peregrine half climbed,
+half tumbled down, bringing hat and wig with him, and, whether by
+design or accident, fell at his feet. "Will nothing content you but
+royal game?" he continued laughing, as Sir Christopher Wren helped
+him to resume his wig. "Why, what a shrimp it is! a mere goblin
+sprite! What's thy name, master wag?"
+
+"Peregrine Oakshott, so please you," the boy answered, raising
+himself with a face scared indeed, but retaining its queer
+impishness. "Sir, I never guessed--"
+
+"Young rogue! have you our licence to waylay our loyal subjects?"
+demanded the King, with an affected fierceness. "Know you not 'tis
+rank treason to discrown our sacred Majesty, far more to dishevel or
+destroy our locks? Why! I might behead you on the spot." To his
+great amazement the boy, with an eager face and clasped hands,
+exclaimed, "O sir! Oh, please your Majesty, do so."
+
+"Do so!" exclaimed the King astounded. "Didst hear what I said?"
+
+"Yes, sir! You said it was a beheading matter, and I'm willing,
+sir."
+
+"Of all the petitions that ever were made to me, this is the
+strangest!" exclaimed Charles. "An urchin like this weary of life!
+What next? So," with a wink to his companions, "Peregrine Oakshott,
+we condemn thee for high treason against our most sacred Majesty's
+beaver and periwig, and sentence thee to die by having thine head
+severed from thy body. Kneel down, open thy collar, bare thy neck.
+Ay, so, lay thy neck across that bough. Killigrew, do thy duty."
+
+To the general surprise, the boy complied with all these directions,
+never flinching nor showing sign of fear, except that his lips were
+set and his cheek whitened. As he knelt, with closed eyes, the flat
+cold blade descended on his neck, the tension relaxed, and he sank!
+
+"Hold!" cried the King. "It is gone too far! He has surely not
+carried out the jest by dying on our hands."
+
+"No, no, sir," said Wren, after a moment's alarm, "he has only
+swooned. Has any one here a flask of wine to revive him?"
+
+Several gentlemen had come up, and as Peregrine stirred, some wine
+was held to his lips, and he presently asked in a faint voice, "Is
+this fairyland?"
+
+"Not yet, my lad," said Charles, "whatever it may be when Wren's
+work is done."
+
+The boy opened his eyes, and as he beheld the same face, and the too
+familiar sky and trees, he sighed heavily, and said, "Then it is all
+the same! O sir, would you but have cut off my head in good
+earnest, I might be at home again!"
+
+"Home! what means the elf?"
+
+"An elf! That is what they say I am--changed in the cradle," said
+Peregrine, incited to confidence by the good-natured eyes, "and I
+thought if I were close on death mine own people might take me home,
+and bring back the right one."
+
+"He really believes it!" exclaimed Charles much diverted. "Tell me,
+good Master Elf, who is thy father, I mean not my brother Oberon,
+but him of the right one, as thou sayst."
+
+"Mr. Robert Oakshott of Oakwood, sir," said Peregrine.
+
+"A sturdy squire of the country party," said the King. "I am much
+minded to secure the lad for an elfin page," he added aside to
+Killigrew. "There's a fund of excellent humour and drollery in
+those queer eyes of his! So, Sir Hobgoblin, if you are proof
+against cold steel, I know not what is to be done with you. Get you
+back, and devise some other mode of finding your way home to
+fairyland."
+
+Peregrine said not a word of his adventure, so that the surprise of
+his family was the greater when overtures were made through Sir
+Christopher Wren for his appointment as a royal page.
+
+"I would as soon send my son at once to be a page to Beelzebub,"
+returned Major Oakshott.
+
+And though Sir Christopher did not return the answer exactly in
+those terms, he would not say that the Puritan Major did not judge
+rightly.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III: THE FAIRY KING
+
+
+"She's turned her right and round about,
+ And thrice she blew on a grass-green horn,
+And she sware by the moon and the stars above
+ That she'd gar me rue the day I was born."
+
+Old Ballad of Alison Cross.
+
+Dr. Woodford's parish was Portchester, where stood the fine old
+royal castle at present ungarrisoned, and partly dismantled in the
+recent troubles, on a chalk peninsula, a spur from Portsdown,
+projecting above the alluvial flats, and even into the harbour,
+whose waves at high tide laved the walls. The church and churchyard
+were within the ample circuit of the fortifications, about two
+furlongs distant from the main building, where rose the mighty
+Norman keep, above the inner court, with a gate tower at this date,
+only inhabited by an old soldier as porter with his family. A
+massive square tower at each angle of the huge wall likewise defied
+decay.
+
+It was on Midsummer eve, that nearly about sundown, Dr. Woodford was
+summoned by the severe illness of the gatekeeper's old father, and
+his sister-in-law went with him to attempt what her skill could
+accomplish for the old man's relief.
+
+They were detained there till the sun had long set, though the air,
+saturated with his redness, was full of soft twilight, while the
+moon, scarcely past the full, was just high enough to silver the
+quiet sea, and throw the shadow of the battlements and towers on the
+sward whitened with dew.
+
+After the close atmosphere of the sickroom the freshness was
+welcome, and Mrs. Woodford, once a friend of Katherine Phillips,
+'the Matchless Orinda,' had an eye and a soul to appreciate the
+beauty, and she even murmured the lines of Il Penseroso as she leant
+on the arm of her brother-in-law, who, in his turn, thought of
+Homer.
+
+Suddenly, as they stood in the shadow, they were aware of a small,
+slight, fantastic figure in the midst of the grass-grown court,
+where there was a large green mushroom circle or fairy ring. On the
+borders of this ring it paused with an air of disappointment. Then
+entering it stood still, took off the hat, whose lopsided appearance
+had given so strange an outline, and bowed four times in opposite
+directions, when, as the face was turned towards the spectators,
+invisible in the dark shadow, the lady recognised Peregrine
+Oakshott. She pressed the Doctor's arm, and they both stood still
+watching the boy bathing his hand in the dew, and washing his face
+with it, then kneeling on one knee, and clasping his hands, as he
+cried aloud in a piteous chant--
+
+"Fairy mother, fairy mother! Oh, come, come and take me home! My
+very life is sore to me. They all hate me! My brothers and the
+servants, every one of them. And my father and tutor say I am
+possessed with an evil spirit, and I am beaten daily, and more than
+daily. I can never, never get a good word from living soul! This
+is the second seven years, and Midsummer night! Oh, bring the other
+back again! I'm weary, I'm weary! Good elves, good elves, take me
+home. Fairy mother! Come, come, come!" Shutting his eyes he
+seemed to be in a state of intense expectation. Tears filled Mrs.
+Woodford's eyes. The Doctor moved forward, but no sooner did the
+boy become conscious of human presence than he started up, and fled
+wildly towards a postern door, but no sooner had he disappeared in
+the shadow than there was a cry and a fall.
+
+"Poor child!" exclaimed Dr. Woodford, "he has fallen down the steps
+to the vault. It is a dangerous pitfall."
+
+They both hurried to the place, and found the boy lying on the steps
+leading down to the vault, but motionless, and when they succeeded
+in lifting him up, he was quite unconscious, having evidently struck
+his head against the mouth of the vault.
+
+"We must carry him home between us," said Mrs. Woodford. "That will
+be better than rousing Miles Gateward, and making a coil."
+
+Dr. Woodford, however, took the entire weight, which he declared to
+be very slight. "No one would think the poor child fourteen years
+old," he observed, "yet did he not speak of a second seven?"
+
+"True," said Mrs. Woodford, "he was born after the Great Fire of
+London, which, as I have good cause to know, was in the year '66."
+
+There was still little sign of revival about the boy when he had
+been carried into the Parsonage, undressed and laid in the Doctor's
+own bed, only a few moans when he was handled, and on his thin,
+sharp features there was a piteous look of sadness entirely unlike
+his ordinary expression of malignant fun, and which went to the kind
+hearts of the Doctor and Mrs. Woodford. After exhausting their own
+remedies, as soon as the early daylight was available Dr. Woodford
+called up a couple of servants, and sent one into Portsmouth for a
+surgeon, and another to Oakwood to the parents.
+
+The doctor was the first to arrive, though not till the morning was
+well advanced. He found that three ribs were broken against the
+edge of the stone step, and the head severely injured, and having
+had sufficient experience in the navy to be a reasonably safe
+practitioner, he did nothing worse than bleed the patient, and
+declared that absolute rest was the only hope of recovery.
+
+He was being regaled with cold roast pig and ale when Major Oakshott
+rode up to the door. Four horses were dragging the great lumbering
+coach over Portsdown hill, but he had gone on before, to thank Dr.
+and Mrs. Woodford for their care of his unfortunate son, and to make
+preparations for his transport home under the care of his wife's own
+woman, who was coming in the coach in the stead of the invalid lady.
+
+"Nay, sir. Master Brent here has a word to say to that matter,"
+replied the Doctor.
+
+"Truly, sir, I have," said the surgeon; "in his present state it is
+as much as your son's life is worth to move him."
+
+"Be that as it may seem to man, he is in the hand of Heaven, and he
+ought to be at home, whether for life or death."
+
+"For death it will assuredly be, sir, if he be jolted and shaken
+along the Portsdown roads--yea, I question whether you would get him
+to Oakwood alive," said Brent, with naval roughness.
+
+"Indeed, sir," added Mrs. Woodford, "Mrs. Oakshott may be assured of
+my giving him as tender care as though he were mine own son."
+
+"I am beholden to you, madam," said the Major; "I know your
+kindliness of heart; but in good sooth, the unhappy and rebellious
+lad merits chastisement rather than pity, since what should he be
+doing at this distance from home, where he was shut up for his
+misdemeanours, save fleeing like the Prodigal of the parable, or
+else planning another of his malicious pranks, as I greatly fear, on
+you or your daughter, madam. If so, he hath fallen into the pit
+that he made for others."
+
+The impulse was to tell what had occurred, but the surgeon's
+presence, and the dread of making all worse for the poor boy checked
+both the hosts, and Mrs. Woodford only declared that since the day
+of the apology he had never molested her or her little girl.
+
+"Still," said the Major, "it is not possible to leave him in a
+stranger's house, where at any moment the evil spirit that is in him
+may break forth."
+
+"Come and see him, and judge," said Dr. Woodford.
+
+When the father beheld the deathly face and motionless form, stern
+as he was, he was greatly shocked. His heavy tread caused a moan,
+and when he said "What, Perry, how now?" there was a painful
+shrinking and twitching, which the surgeon greeted as evidence of
+returning animation, but which made him almost drag the Major out of
+the room for fear of immediate consequences.
+
+Major Oakshott, and still more the servant, who had arrived in the
+coach and come upstairs, could not but be convinced that removal was
+not to be thought of. The maid was, moreover, too necessary to her
+mistress to be left to undertake the nursing, much to her master's
+regret, but to the joy of Mrs. Woodford, who felt certain that by
+far the best chance for the poor boy was in his entire separation
+from all associations with the home where he had evidently suffered
+so much.
+
+There was, perhaps, nothing except the pageship at Court that could
+have gone more against Major Oakshott's principles than to leave his
+son in the house of a prelatical minister, but alternative there was
+none, and he could only express how much he was beholden to the Dr.
+and Mrs. Woodford.
+
+All their desire was that he would remain at a distance, for during
+the long and weary watch they had to keep over the half-conscious
+lad, the sound of a voice or even a horse's tread from Oakwood
+occasioned moans and restlessness. The Major rode over, or sent his
+sons, or a servant daily to inquire during the first fortnight,
+except on the Sundays, and on each of these the patient made a step
+towards improvement.
+
+At first he lay in a dull, death-like stupor, only groaning if
+disturbed, but by and by there was a babbling murmur of words, and
+soon the sound of his brother's loud voice at the door, demanding
+from the saddle how it went to-day with Peregrine, caused a shriek
+of terror and such a fit of trembling that Mrs. Woodford had to go
+out and make a personal request that Oliver would never again speak
+under the window. To her great relief, when the balance between
+life and death had decidedly turned, the inquiries became less
+frequent, and could often be forestalled by sending messengers to
+Oakwood.
+
+The boy usually lay still all day in the darkened room, only showing
+pain at light or noise, but at night he often talked and rambled a
+good deal. Sometimes it was Greek or Latin, sometimes whole
+chapters of Scripture, either denunciating portions or genealogies
+from the First Book of Chronicles, the polysyllabic names pouring
+from his mouth whenever he was particularly oppressed or suffering,
+so that when Mrs. Woodford had with some difficulty made out what
+they were, she concluded that they had been set as tasks of penance.
+
+At other times Peregrine talked as if he absolutely believed himself
+in fairyland, accepting a strawberry or cherry as elfin food,
+promising a tester in Anne's shoe when she helped to change his
+pillow, or conversing in the style of Puck, or Robin Goodfellow, on
+intended pranks. Often he fancied himself the lubber fiend resting
+at the fire his hairy strength, and watching for cock-crow as the
+signal for flinging out-of-doors. It was wonderful how in the grim
+and strict Puritanical household he could have imbibed so much fairy
+lore, but he must have eagerly assimilated and recollected whatever
+he heard, holding them as tidings from his true kith and kin; and,
+indeed, when he was running on thus, Mrs. Woodford sometimes felt a
+certain awe and chill, as of the preternatural, and could hardly
+believe that he belonged to ordinary human nature. Either she or
+the Doctor always took the night-watch after the talking mood set
+in, for they could not judge of the effect it might have on any of
+the servants. Indeed they sometimes doubted whether this were not
+the beginning of permanent insanity, as the delusion seemed to
+strengthen with symptoms of recovery.
+
+"Then," said Dr. Woodford, "Heaven help the poor lad!"
+
+For sad indeed was the lot in those days of even the most harmless
+lunatic.
+
+"Yet," said the lady, "I scarcely think anything can be worse than
+what he undergoes at home. When I hear the terror and misery of his
+voice, I doubt whether we did him any true kindness by hindering his
+father from killing him outright by the shaking of his old coach."
+
+"Nay, sister, we strove to do our duty, though it may be we have
+taken on ourselves a further charge."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV: IMP OR NO IMP
+
+
+"But wist I of a woman bold
+ Who thrice my brow durst sign,
+I might regain my mortal mould,
+ As fair a form as thine."
+
+SCOTT.
+
+At last came a wakening with intelligence in the eyes. In the
+summer morning light that streamed through the chinks of the
+shutters Mrs. Woodford perceived the glance of inquiry, and when she
+brought some cool drink, a rational though feeble voice asked those
+first questions, "Who? and where?"
+
+"I am Mrs. Woodford, my dear child. You remember me at Winchester.
+You are at Portchester. You fell down and hurt yourself, but you
+are getting better."
+
+She was grieved to see the look of utter disappointment and
+weariness that overspread the features, and the boy hardly spoke
+again all day. There was much drowsiness, but also depression, and
+more than once Mrs. Woodford detected tears, but at other times he
+received her attentions with smiles and looks of wondering
+gratitude, as though ordinary kindness and solicitude were so new to
+him that he did not know what to make of them, and perhaps was
+afraid of breaking a happy dream by saying too much.
+
+The surgeon saw him, and declared him so much better that he might
+soon be taken home, recommending his sitting up for a little while
+as a first stage. Peregrine, however, seemed far from being
+cheered, and showed himself so unwilling to undergo the fatigue of
+being dressed, even when good Dr. Woodford had brought up his own
+large chair--the only approach to an easy one in the house--that the
+proposal was dropped, and he was left in peace for the rest of the
+day.
+
+In the evening Mrs. Woodford was sitting by the window, letting her
+needlework drop as the light faded, and just beginning to doze, when
+her repose was broken by a voice saying "Madam."
+
+"Yes, Peregrine."
+
+"Come near, I pray. Will you tell no one?"
+
+"No; what is it?"
+
+In so low a tone that she had to bend over him: "Do you know how
+the Papists cross themselves?"
+
+"Yes, I have seen the Queen's confessor and some of the ladies make
+the sign."
+
+"Dear lady, you have been very good to me! If you would only cross
+me thrice, and not be afraid! They could not hurt you!"
+
+"Who? What do you mean?" she asked, for fairy lore had not become a
+popular study, but comprehension came when he said in an awe-
+stricken voice, "You know what I am."
+
+"I know there have been old wives' tales about you, my poor boy, but
+surely you do not believe them yourself."
+
+"Ah! if you will not believe them, there is no hope. I might have
+known. You were so good to me;" and he hid his face.
+
+She took his unwilling hand and said, "Be you what you will, my poor
+child, I am sorry for you, for I see you are very unhappy. Come,
+tell me all."
+
+"Nay, then you would be like the rest," said Peregrine, "and I could
+not bear that," and he wrung her hand.
+
+"Perhaps not," she said gently, "for I know that a story is afloat
+that you were changed in your cradle, and that there are folk
+ignorant enough to believe it."
+
+"They all _know_ it," he said impressively. "My mother and brothers
+and all the servants. Every soul knows it except my father and Mr.
+Horncastle, and they will never hear a word, but will have it that I
+am possessed with a spirit of evil that is to be flogged out of me.
+Goody Madge and Moll Owens, they knew how it was at the first, and
+would fain have forced them--mine own people--to take me home, and
+bring the other back, but my father found it out and hindered them."
+
+"To save your life."
+
+"Much good does my life do me! Every one hates or fears me. No one
+has a word for me. Every mischance is laid on me. When the kitchen
+wench broke a crock, it was because I looked at it. If the keeper
+misses a deer, he swears at Master Perry! Oliver and Robert will
+not let me touch a thing of theirs; they bait me for a moon-calf,
+and grin when I am beaten for their doings. Even my mother quakes
+and trembles when I come near, and thinks I give her the creeps. As
+to my father and tutor, it is ever the rod with them, though I can
+learn my tasks far better than those jolter-heads Noll and Robin. I
+never heard so many kind words in all my life as you have given me
+since I have been lying here!"
+
+He stopped in a sort of awe, for tears fell from her eyes, and she
+kissed his forehead.
+
+"Will you not help me, good madam?" he entreated. "I went down to
+Goody Madge, and she said there was a chance for me every seven
+years. The first went by, but this is my fourteenth year. I had a
+hope when the King spoke of beheading me, but he was only in jest,
+as I might have known. Then methought I would try what Midsummer
+night in the fairy ring would do, but that was in vain; and now you,
+who could cross me if you would, will not believe. Oh, will you not
+make the trial?"
+
+"Alas! Peregrine, supposing I could do it in good faith, would you
+become a mere tricksy sprite, a thing of the elements, and yield up
+your hopes as a Christian soul, a child of God and heir of Heaven?"
+
+"My father says I am an heir of hell."
+
+"No, no, never," she cried, shuddering at his quiet way of saying
+it. "You are flesh and blood, christened, and with the hope set
+before you."
+
+"The christening came too late," he said. "O lady, you who are so
+good and pitiful, let my mother get back her true Peregrine--a
+straight-limbed, comely dullard, such as would be welcome to her.
+She would bless and thank you, and for me, to be a Will-of-the-wisp,
+or what not, would be far better than the life I lead. Never did I
+know what my mother calls peace till I lay here."
+
+"Ah, Peregrine, poor lad, your value for peace and for my poor
+kindness proves that you have a human heart and are no elf."
+
+"Indeed, I meant to flit about and give you good dreams, and keep
+off all that could hurt or frighten you," he said earnestly.
+
+"Only the human soul could feel so, dear boy," she answered
+tenderly.
+
+"And you _really_ disbelieve--the other," he said wistfully.
+
+"This is what I verily believe, my child: that there were causes to
+make you weakly, and that you may have had some palsy stroke or
+convulsive fit perhaps at the moment you were left alone. Such
+would explain much of your oddness of face, which made the ignorant
+nurses deem you changed; and thus it was only your father who, by
+God's mercy, saved you from a miserable death, to become, as I
+trust, a good and true man, and servant of God." Then answering a
+hopeless groan, she added, "Yes, it is harder for you than for many.
+I see that these silly servants have so nurtured you in this belief
+that you have never even thought it worth while to strive for
+goodness, but supposed tricksomeness and waywardness a part of your
+nature."
+
+"The only pleasure in life is paying folk off," said Peregrine, with
+a glitter in his eye. "It serves them right."
+
+"And thus," she said sadly, "you have gone on hating and spiting,
+deeming yourself a goblin without hope or aim; but now you feel that
+you have a Christian soul you will strive with evil, you will so
+love as to win love, you will pray and conquer."
+
+"My father and Mr. Horncastle pray," said Peregrine bitterly. "I
+hate it! They go on for ever, past all bearing; I _must_ do
+something--stand on my head, pluck some one's stool away, or tickle
+Robin with a straw, if I am birched the next moment. That's the
+goblin."
+
+"Yet you love the Minster music."
+
+"Ay! Father calls it rank Popery. I listened many a time he never
+guessed, hid away in the Holy Hole, or within old Bishop Wykeham's
+little house."
+
+"Ah, Peregrine, could an imp of evil brook to lie hidden in the Holy
+Hole behind the very altar?" said Mrs. Woodford. "But I hear Nick
+bringing in supper, and I must leave you for the present. God in
+His mercy bless you, His poor child, and lead you in His ways."
+
+As she went Peregrine muttered, "Is that a prayer? It is not like
+father's."
+
+She was anxious to consult her brother-in-law on the strange mood of
+her patient. She found that he had heard more than he had told her
+of what Major Oakshott deemed the hopeless wickedness of his son,
+the antics at prayers, the hatred of everything good, the spiteful
+tricks that were the family torment. No doubt much was due to the
+boy's entire belief in his own elfship, and these two good people
+seriously considered how to save him from himself.
+
+"If we could only keep him here," said Mrs. Woodford, "I think we
+might bring him to have some faith and love in God and man."
+
+"You could, dear sister," said the Doctor, smiling affectionately;
+"but Major Oakshott would never leave his son in our house. He
+abhors our principles too much, and besides, it is too near home.
+All the servants have heard rumours of this cruel fable, and would
+ascribe the least misadventure to his goblin origin. I must ride
+over to Oakwood and endeavour to induce his father to remove him to
+safe and judicious keeping."
+
+Some days, however, elapsed before Dr. Woodford could do this, and
+in the meantime the good lady did her best to infuse into her poor
+young guest the sense that he had a human soul, responsible for his
+actions, and with hope set before him, and that he was not a mere
+frolicsome and malicious sprite, the creature of unreasoning
+impulse.
+
+It was a matter only to be attempted by gentle hints, for though
+reared in a strictly religious household, Peregrine's ears seemed to
+have been absolutely closed, partly by nursery ideas of his own
+exclusion from the pale of humanity, partly by the harsh treatment
+that he was continually bringing on himself. Preachings and prayers
+to him only meant a time of intolerable restraint, usually ending in
+disgrace and punishment; Scripture and the Westminster Catechism
+contained a collection of tasks more tedious and irksome than the
+Latin and Greek Grammar; Sunday was his worst day of the week, and
+these repugnances, as he had been taught to believe, were so many
+proofs that he was a being beyond the power of grace.
+
+Mrs. Woodford scrupled to leave him to any one else on this first
+Sunday of his recovered consciousness, and in hopes of keeping him
+quiet through fatigue, she contrived that it should be the first day
+of his being dressed, and seated in the arm-chair, resting against
+cushions beside the open window, whence he could watch the church-
+goers, Anne in her little white cap, with her book in one hand, and
+a posy in the other, tripping demurely beside her uncle, stately in
+gown, cassock, and scarlet hood.
+
+Peregrine could not refrain from boasting to his hostess how he had
+once grimaced from outside the church window at Havant, and at the
+women shrieking that the fiend was there. She would not smile, and
+shook her head sadly, so that he said, "I would never do so here."
+
+"Nor anywhere, I hope."
+
+Whereupon, thinking better to please the churchwoman, he related
+how, when imprisoned for popping a toad into the soup, he had
+escaped over the leads, and had beaten a drum outside the barn,
+during a discourse of the godly tinker, John Bunyan, tramping and
+rattling so that all thought the troopers were come, and rushed out,
+tumbling one over the other, while he yelled out his "Ho! ho! ho!"
+from the haystack where he had hidden.
+
+"When you feel how kind and loving God is," said Mrs. Woodford
+gravely, "you will not like to disturb those who are doing Him
+honour."
+
+"Is He kind?" asked Peregrine. "I thought He was all wrath and
+anger."
+
+She replied, "The Lord is loving unto every man, and His mercy is
+over all His works."
+
+He made no answer. If he were sullen, this subsided into
+sleepiness, and when he awoke he found the lady on her knees going
+through the service with her Prayer-book. She encountered his
+wistful eyes, but no remark was made, though on her return from
+fetching him some broth, she found him peeping into her book, which
+he laid down hastily, as though afraid of detection.
+
+She had to go down to the Sunday dinner, where, according to good
+old custom, half a dozen of the poor and aged were regaled with the
+parish priest and his household. There she heard inquiries and
+remarks showing how widely spread and deeply rooted was the notion
+of Peregrine's elfish extraction. If Daddy Hoskins did ask after
+the poor young gentleman as if he were a human being, the three old
+dames present shook their heads, and while the more bashful only
+groaned, Granny Perkins demanded, "Well, now, my lady, do he eat and
+sleep like other folk?"
+
+"Exactly, granny, now that he's mending in health."
+
+"And don't he turn and writhe when there's prayers?"
+
+Mrs. Woodford deposed to having observed no such demonstrations.
+
+"Think of that now! Lauk-a-daisy! I've heard tell by my nevvy
+Davy, as is turnspit at Oak'ood, as how when there's prayers and
+expounding by Master Horncastle, as is a godly man, saving his
+Reverence's presence, he have seen him, have Davy--Master Perry, as
+they calls him, a-twisted round with his heels on the chair, and his
+head where his heels should be, and a grin on his face enough to
+give one a turn."
+
+"Did Davy never see a mischievous boy fidgeting at prayers?" asked
+the Doctor, who was nearer than she thought. "If so, he has been
+luckier than I have been."
+
+There was a laugh, out of deference to the clergyman, but the old
+woman held to her point. "Begging your Reverence's pardon, sir,
+there be more in this than we knows. They says up at Oakwood,
+there's no peace in the place for the spite of him, and when they
+thinks he is safe locked into his chamber, there he be a-clogging of
+the spit, or changing sugar into pepper, or making the stool break
+down under one. Oh, he be a strange one, sir, or summat worse. I
+have heerd him myself hollaing 'Ho! ho! ho!' on the downs enough to
+make one's flesh creep."
+
+"I will tell you what he is, dame," said the Doctor gravely. "He is
+a poor child who had a fit in his cradle, and whom all around have
+joined in driving to folly, evil, and despair through your foolish
+superstitions. He is my guest, and I will have no more said against
+him at my table."
+
+The village gossips might be silenced by awe of the parson, but
+their opinion was unshaken; and Silas Hewlett, a weather-beaten
+sailor with a wooden leg, was bold enough to answer, "Ay, ay, sir,
+you parsons and gentlefolk don't believe naught; but you've not seen
+what I have with my own two bodily eyes--" and this of course was
+the prelude to the history of an encounter with a mermaid, which
+alternated with the Flying Dutchman and a combat with the Moors, as
+regular entertainment at the Sunday meal.
+
+When Mrs. Woodford went upstairs she was met by the servant Nicolas,
+declaring that she might get whom she would to wait on that there
+moon-calf, he would not go neist the spiteful thing, and exhibiting
+a swollen finger, stung by a dead wasp, which Peregrine had
+cunningly disposed on the edge of his empty plate.
+
+She soothed the man's wrath, and healed his wound as best she might,
+ere returning to her patient, who looked at her with an impish grin
+on his lips, and yet human deprecation in his eyes. Feeling
+unprepared for discussion, she merely asked whether the dinner had
+been relished, and sat down to her book; but there was a grave,
+sorrowful expression on her countenance, and, after an interval of
+lying back uneasily in his chair, he exclaimed, "It is of no use; I
+could not help it. It is my nature."
+
+"It is the nature of many lads to be mischievous," she answered;
+"but grace can cure them."
+
+Therewith she began to read aloud. She had bought the Pilgrim's
+Progress (the first part) from a hawker, and she was glad to have at
+hand something that could hardly be condemned as frivolous or
+prelatical. The spell of the marvellous book fell on Peregrine; he
+listened intently, and craved ever to hear more, not being yet able
+to read without pain and dizziness. He was struck by hearing that
+the dream of Christian's adventures had visited that same tinker,
+whose congregation his own wicked practices had broken up.
+
+"He would take me for one of the hobgoblins that beset Master
+Christian."
+
+"Nay," said Mrs. Woodford, "he would say you were Christian
+floundering in the Slough of Despond, and deeming yourself one of
+its efts or tadpoles."
+
+He made no answer, but on the whole behaved so well that the next
+day Mrs. Woodford ventured to bring her little daughter in after
+having extracted a promise that there should be no tricks nor
+teasing, a pledge honourably kept.
+
+Anne did not like the prospect of the interview. "Oh, ma'am, don't
+leave me alone with him!" she said. "Do you know what he did to
+Mistress Martha Browning, his own cousin, you know, who lives at
+Emsworth with her aunt? He put a horsehair slily round her glass of
+wine, and tipped it over her best gray taffeta, and her aunt whipped
+her for the stain. She never would say it was his doing, and yet he
+goes on teasing her the same as ever, though his brother Oliver
+found it out, and thrashed him for it: you know Oliver is to marry
+Mistress Martha."
+
+"My dear child, where did you hear all this?" asked Mrs. Woodford,
+rather overwhelmed with this flood of gossip from her usually quiet
+daughter.
+
+"Lucy told me, mamma. She heard it from Sedley, who says he does
+not wonder at any one serving out Martha Browning, for she is as
+ugly as sin."
+
+"Hush, hush, Anne! Such sayings do not become a young maid. This
+poor lad has scarce known kindness. Every one's hand has been
+against him, and so his hand has been against every one. I want my
+little daughter to be brave enough not to pain and anger him by
+shrinking from him as if he were not like other people. We must
+teach him to be happy before we can teach him to be good."
+
+"Madam, I will try," said the child, with a great gulp; "only if you
+would be pleased not to leave me alone with him the first time!"
+
+This Mrs. Woodford promised. At first the boy lay and looked at
+Anne as if she were a rare curiosity brought for his examination,
+and it took all her resolution, even to a heroic exertion of
+childish fortitude, not to flinch under the gaze of those queer
+eyes. However, Mrs. Woodford diverted the glances by producing a
+box of spillekins, and in the interest of the game the children
+became better acquainted.
+
+Over their next day's game Mrs. Woodford left them, and Anne became
+at ease since Peregrine never attempted any tricks. She taught him
+to play at draughts, the elders thinking it expedient not to doubt
+whether such vanities were permissible at Oakwood.
+
+Soon there was such merriment between them that the kind Doctor said
+it did his heart good to hear the boy's hearty natural laugh in lieu
+of the "Ho! ho! ho!" of malice or derision.
+
+They were odd conversations that used to take place between that boy
+and girl. The King's offer of a pageship had oozed out in the
+Oakshott family, and Peregrine greatly resented the refusal, which
+he naturally attributed to his father's Whiggery and spite at all
+things agreeable, and he was fond of discussing his wrongs and
+longings with Anne, who, from her childish point of view, thought
+the walls of Portchester and the sluggish creek a very bad exchange
+for her enjoyments at Greenwich, where she had lived during her
+father's years of broken health, after he had been disabled at
+Southwold by a wound which had prevented his being knighted by the
+Duke of York for his daring in the excitement of the critical
+moment, a fact which Mistress Anne never forgot, though she only
+knew it by hearsay, as it happened a few weeks after she was born,
+and her father always averred that he was thankful to have missed
+the barren and expensive honour, and that the _worst_ which had come
+of his exploit was the royal sponsorship to his little maid.
+
+Anne had, however, been the pet of her father's old friends, the sea
+captains, had played with the little Evelyns under the yew hedges of
+Says Court, had been taken to London to behold the Lord Mayor's show
+and more than one Court pageant, had been sometimes at the palaces
+as the plaything of the Ladies Mary and Anne of York, had been more
+than once kissed by their father, the Duke, and called a pretty
+little poppet, and had even shared with them a notable game at romps
+with their good-natured uncle the King, when she had actually caught
+him at Blind-man's-buff!
+
+Ignorant as she was of evil, her old surroundings appeared to her
+delightful, and Peregrine, bred in a Puritan home, was at fourteen
+not much more advanced than she was in the meaning of the vices and
+corruptions that he heard inveighed against in general or scriptural
+terms at home, and was only too ready to believe that all that his
+father proscribed must be enchanting. Thus they built castles
+together about brilliant lives at a Court of which they knew as
+little as of that at Timbuctoo.
+
+There was another Court, however, of which Peregrine seemed to know
+all the details, namely, that of King Oberon and Queen Mab. How
+much was village lore picked up from Moll Owens and her kind, or how
+much was the work of his own imagination, no one could tell,
+probably not himself, certainly not Anne. When he appeared on
+intimate terms with Hip, Nip, and Skip, and described catching Daddy
+Long Legs to make a fence with his legs, or dwelt upon a terrible
+fight between two armies of elves mounted on grasshoppers and
+crickets, and armed with lances tipped with stings of bees and
+wasps, she would exclaim, "Is it true, Perry?" and he would wink his
+green eye and look at her with his yellow one till she hardly knew
+where she was.
+
+He would tell of his putting a hornet in a sluttish maid's shoe,
+which was credible, if scarcely meriting that elfish laughter which
+made his auditor shrink, but when he told of dancing over the mud
+banks with a lantern, like a Will-of-the-wisp, till he lured boats
+to get stranded, or horsemen to get stuck, in the hopeless mud, Anne
+never questioned the possibility, but listened with wide open eyes,
+and a restrained shudder, feeling as if under a spell. That
+mysterious childish feeling which dreads even what common sense
+forbids the calmer mind to believe, made her credit Peregrine, for
+the time at least, with strange affinities to the underground folk,
+and kept her under a strange fascination, half attraction, half
+repulsion, which made her feel as if she must obey and follow him if
+he turned those eyes on her, whether she were willing or not.
+
+Nor did she ever tell her mother of these conversations. She had
+been rebuked once for repeating nurse's story of the changeling, and
+again for her shrinking from him; and this was quite enough in an
+essentially reserved, as well as proud and sensitive, nature, to
+prevent further confidences on a subject which she knew would be
+treated as a foolish fancy, bringing both herself and her companion
+into trouble.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V: PEREGRINE'S HOME
+
+
+"For, at a word, be it understood,
+He was always for ill and never for good."
+
+SCOTT.
+
+A week had passed since any of the family from Oakwood had come to
+make inquiries after the convalescent at Portchester, when Dr.
+Woodford mounted his sleek, sober-paced pad, and accompanied by a
+groom, rode over to make his report and tender his counsel to Major
+Oakshott. He arrived just as the great bell was clanging to summon
+the family to the mid-day meal, since he had reckoned on the Squire
+being more amenable as a 'full man,' especially towards a guest, and
+he was well aware that the Major was thoroughly a gentleman in
+behaviour even to those with whom he differed in politics and
+religion.
+
+Accordingly there was a ready welcome at the door of the old red
+house, which was somewhat gloomy looking, being on the north side of
+the hill, and a good deal stifled with trees. In a brief interval
+the Doctor found himself seated beside the pale languid lady at the
+head of the long table, placed in a large hall, wainscotted with the
+blackest of oak, which seemed to absorb into itself all the light
+from the windows, large enough indeed but heavily mullioned, and
+with almost as much of leading as of octagons and lozenges--greenish
+glass--in them, while the coats of arms, repeated in upper portions
+and at the intersections of beams and rafters, were not more
+cheerful, being sable chevrons on an argent field. The crest, a
+horse shoe, was indeed azure, but the blue of this and of the coats
+of the serving-men only deepened the thunderous effect of the black.
+Strangely, however, among these sad-coloured men there moved a
+figure entirely differently. A negro, white turbaned, and with his
+blue livery of a lighter shade, of fantastic make and relieved by a
+great deal of white and shining silver, so as to have an entirely
+different effect.
+
+He placed himself behind the chair of Dr. Woodford's opposite
+neighbour, a shrewd business-like looking gentleman, soberly but
+handsomely dressed, with a certain foreign cut about his clothes,
+and a cravat of rich Flemish lace. He was presented to the Doctor
+as Major Oakshott's brother, Sir Peregrine. The rest of the party
+consisted of Oliver and Robert, sturdy, ruddy lads of fifteen and
+twelve, and their tutor, Mr. Horncastle, an elderly man, who twenty
+years before had resigned his living because he could not bring
+himself to accept all the Liturgy.
+
+While Sir Peregrine courteously relieved his sister-in-law of the
+trouble of carving the gammon of bacon which accompanied the veal
+which her husband was helping, Dr. Woodford informed her of her
+son's progress towards recovery.
+
+"Ah," she said, "I knew you had come to tell us that he is ready to
+be brought home;" and her tone was fretful.
+
+"We are greatly beholden to you, sir," said the Major from the
+bottom of the table. "The boy shall be fetched home immediately."
+
+"Not so, sir, as yet, I beg of you. Neither his head nor his side
+can brook the journey for at least another week, and indeed my good
+sister Woodford will hardly know how to part with her patient."
+
+"She will not long be of that mind after Master Perry gets to his
+feet again," muttered the chaplain.
+
+"Indeed no," chimed in the mother. "There will be no more peace in
+the house when he is come back."
+
+"I assure you, madam," said Dr. Woodford, "that he has been a very
+good child, grateful and obedient, nor have I heard any complaints."
+
+"Your kindness, or else that of Mrs. Woodford, carries you far,
+sir," answered his host.
+
+"What? Is my nephew and namesake so peevish a scapegrace?" demanded
+the visitor.
+
+On which anecdotes broke forth from all quarters. Peregrine had
+greased the already slippery oak stairs, had exchanged Oliver's
+careful exercise for a ribald broadsheet, had filled Mr.
+Horncastle's pipe with gunpowder, and mixed snuff with the chocolate
+specially prepared for the peculiar godly guest Dame Priscilla
+Waller. Every one had something to adduce, even the serving-men
+behind the chairs; and if Oliver and Robert did not add their quota,
+it was because absolute silence at meals was the rule for nonage.
+However, the subject was evidently distasteful to the father, who
+changed the conversation by asking his brother questions about the
+young Prince of Orange and the Grand Pensionary De Witt. For the
+gentleman had been acting as English attache to the Embassy at the
+Hague, whence he had come on affairs of State to London, and after
+being knighted by Charles, had newly arrived at the old home, which
+he had scarcely seen since his brother's marriage. Dr. Woodford
+enjoyed his conversation, and his information on foreign politics,
+and the Major, though now and then protesting, was evidently proud
+of his brother.
+
+When grace had been pronounced by the chaplain the lady withdrew to
+her parlour, the two boys, each with an obeisance and request for
+permission, departed for an hour's recreation, and Dr. Woodford
+intimated that he wished for some conversation with his host
+respecting the boy Peregrine.
+
+"Let us discuss it here," said Major Oakshott, turning towards a
+small table set in the deep bay window, and garnished with wine,
+fruit, and long slender glasses. "Good Mr. Horncastle," he added,
+as he motioned his guest to one of the four seats, "is with me in
+all that concerns my children, and I desire my brother's counsel
+respecting the untoward lad with whom it has pleased Heaven to
+afflict me."
+
+When the glasses had been filled with claret Dr. Woodford uttered a
+diplomatic compliment on the healthful and robust appearance of the
+eldest and youngest sons, and asked whether any cause had been
+assigned for the difference between them and the intermediate
+brother.
+
+"None, sir," returned the father with a sigh, "save the will of the
+Almighty to visit us for our sins with a son who has thus far shown
+himself one of the marred vessels doomed to be broken by the potter.
+It may be in order to humble me and prove me that this hath been
+laid upon me."
+
+The chaplain groaned acquiescence, but there was vexation in the
+brother's face.
+
+"Sir," said the Doctor, "it is my opinion and that of my sister-in-
+law, an excellent, discreet, and devout woman, that the poor child
+would give you more cause for hope if the belief had not become
+fixed in his mind that he is really and truly a fairy elf--yes, in
+very sooth--a changeling!"
+
+All the auditors broke out into exclamations that it was impossible
+that a boy of fourteen could entertain so absurd an idea, and the
+tutor evidently thought it a fresh proof of depravity that he should
+thus have tried to deceive his kind hosts.
+
+In proof that Peregrine veritably believed it himself, Dr. Woodford
+related what he had witnessed on Midsummer night, mentioning how in
+delirium the boy had evidently believed himself in fairyland, and
+how disappointed he had been, on regaining his senses, to find
+himself on common earth; telling also of the adventure with the
+King, which Sir Christopher Wren had described to him, but of which
+Major Oakshott was unaware, though it explained the offer of the
+pageship. He was a good deal struck by these revelations, proving
+misery that he had never suspected, though, as he said, he had often
+pleaded, "Why will ye revolt more and more? ye _will_ be stricken
+more and more."
+
+"Have you ever sought his confidence?" asked the travelled brother,
+a question evidently scarcely understood, for the reply was, "I have
+always required of my sons to speak the truth, nor have they failed
+of late years save this unfortunate Peregrine."
+
+"And," said Sir Peregrine, "if the unlucky lad actually supposes
+himself to be no human being, admonitions and chastisements would
+naturally be vain."
+
+"I cannot believe it," exclaimed the Major. "'Tis true, as I now
+remember, I once came on a couple of beldames, my wife's nurse and
+another, who has since been ducked for witchcraft, and found them
+about to flog the babe with nettles, and lay him in the thorn hedge
+because he was a sickly child, whom, forsooth, they took to be a
+changeling; but I forbade the profane folly to be ever again
+mentioned in my household, nor did I ever hear thereof again."
+
+"There are a good many more things mentioned in a household,
+brother, than the master is wont to hear of," remarked Sir
+Peregrine.
+
+Dr. Woodford then begged as a personal favour for an individual
+examination of the family and servants on their opinion. The master
+was reluctant thus, as he expressed it, to go a-fooling, but his
+brother backed the Doctor up, and further prevented a general
+assembly to put one another to shame, but insisted on the witnesses
+being called in one by one. Oliver, the first summoned, was
+beginning to be somewhat less overawed by his father than in his
+earlier boyhood. To the inquiry what he thought of his brother
+Peregrine, he made a tentative sort of reply, that he was a strange
+fellow, who never could keep out of disgrace.
+
+"That is not the question," said his father. "I am almost ashamed
+to speak it! Do you--nay, have you ever supposed him to be a--" he
+really could not bring out the word.
+
+"A changeling, sir?" returned Oliver. "I do not believe so now,
+knowing that it is impossible, but as a child I always did."
+
+"Who durst possess you with so foolish and profane a falsehood?"
+
+"Every one, sir. I cannot recollect the time when I did not as
+entirely deem Peregrine a changeling elf as that Robin was my own
+brother. He believes so himself."
+
+"You have never striven to disabuse him."
+
+"Indeed, sir, he would scarce have listened to me had I done go;
+besides, to tell the truth, it has only been of late, since I have
+been older, and have studied more, that I have come to perceive the
+folly of it."
+
+Major Oakshott groaned, and bade him call Robert without saying
+wherefore. The little fellow came in, somewhat frightened, and when
+asked the question that had been put to his elder, his face lighted
+up, and he exclaimed, "Oh, have they brought him back again?"
+
+"Whom?"
+
+"Our real brother, sir, who was carried off to fairyland!"
+
+"Who told you so, Robert?"
+
+He looked puzzled, and said, "Sir, they all know it. Molly Owens,
+that was his foster-mother, saw the fairies bear him off on a
+broomstick up the chimney."
+
+"Robert, no lying!"
+
+The boy was only restrained from tears by fear of his father, and
+just managed to say, "'Tis what they all say, and Perry knows."
+
+"Knows!" muttered Major Oakshott in despair, but the uncle, drawing
+Robin towards him, extracted that Perry had been seen flying out of
+the loft window, when he had been locked up--Robin had never seen it
+himself, but the maids had often done so. Moreover, there was proof
+positive, in the mark on Oliver's head, where he had nearly killed
+himself by tumbling downstairs, being lured by the fairies while
+they stole away the babe.
+
+The Major could not listen with patience. "A boy of that age to
+repeat such blasphemous nonsense!" he exclaimed; and Robert,
+restraining with difficulty his sobs of terror, was dismissed to
+fetch the butler.
+
+The old Ironside who now appeared would not avouch his own disbelief
+in the identity of Master Peregrine, being, as he said, a man who
+had studied his Bible, listened to godly preachers, and seen the
+world; but he had no hesitation in declaring that almost every other
+soul in the household believed in it as firmly as in the Gospel,
+certainly all the women, and probably all the men, nor was there any
+doubt that the young gentleman conducted himself more like a goblin
+than the son of pious Christian parents. In effect both the
+clergyman and the Diplomate could not help suspecting that in other
+company the worthy butler's disavowal of all share in the
+superstition might have been less absolute.
+
+"After this," said Major Oakshott with a sigh, "it seems useless to
+carry the inquiry farther."
+
+"What says my sister Oakshott?" inquired Sir Peregrine. "She! Poor
+soul, she is too feeble to be fretted," said her husband. "She has
+never been the same woman since the Fire of London, and it would be
+vain to vex her with questions. She would be of one mind while I
+spoke to her, and another while her women were pouring their tales
+into her ear. Methinks I now understand why she has always seemed
+to shrink from this unfortunate child, and to fear rather than love
+him."
+
+"Even so, sir," added the tutor. "Much is explained that I never
+before understood. The question is how to deal with him under this
+fresh light. I will, so please your honour, assemble the family
+this very night, and expound to them that such superstitions are
+contrary to the very word of Scripture."
+
+"Much good will that do," muttered the knight.
+
+"I should humbly suggest," put in Dr. Woodford, "that the best hope
+for the poor lad would be to place him where these foolish tales
+were unknown, and he could start afresh on the same terms with other
+youths."
+
+"There is no school in accordance with my principles," said the
+Squire gloomily. "Godly men who hold the faith as I do are
+inhibited by the powers that be from teaching in schools."
+
+"And," said his brother, "you hold these principles as more
+important than the causing your son to be bred up a human being
+instead of being pointed at and rendered hopeless as a demon."
+
+"I am bound to do so," said the Major.
+
+"Surely," said Dr. Woodford, "some scholar might be found, either
+here or in Holland, who might share your opinions, and could receive
+the boy without incurring penalties for opening a school without
+license."
+
+"It is a matter for prayer and consideration," said Major Oakshott.
+"Meantime, reverend sir, I thank you most heartily for the goodness
+with which you have treated my untoward son, and likewise for having
+opened my eyes to the root of his freakishness."
+
+The Doctor understood this as dismissal, and asked for his horse,
+intimating, however, that he would gladly keep the boy till some
+arrangement had been decided upon. Then he rode home to tell his
+sister-in-law that he had done his best, and that he thought it a
+fortunate conjunction that the travelled brother had been present.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI: A RELAPSE
+
+
+"A tell-tale in their company
+ They never could endure,
+And whoso kept not secretly
+ Their pranks was punished sure.
+It was a just and Christian deed
+ To pinch such black and blue;
+Oh, how the commonwealth doth need
+ Such justices as you!"
+
+BISHOP CORBETT.
+
+Several days passed, during which there could be no doubt that
+Peregrine Oakshott knew how to behave himself, not merely to grown-
+up people, but to little Anne, who had entirely lost her dread of
+him, and accepted him as a playfellow. He was able to join the
+family meals, and sit in the pleasant garden, shaded by the walls of
+the old castle, as well as by its own apple-trees, and looking out
+on the little bay in front, at full tide as smooth and shining as a
+lake.
+
+There, while Anne did her task of spinning or of white seam, Mrs.
+Woodford would tell the children stories, or read to them from the
+Pilgrim's Progress, a wonderful romance to both. Peregrine, still
+tamed by weakness, would lie on the grass at her feet, in a tranquil
+bliss such as he had never known before, and his fairy romances to
+Anne were becoming mitigated, when one day a big coach came along
+the road from Fareham, with two boys riding beside it, escorting
+Lady Archfield and Mistress Lucy.
+
+The lady was come to study Mrs. Woodford's recipe for preserved
+cherries, the young people, Charles, Lucy, and their cousin Sedley,
+now at home for the summer holidays, to spend an afternoon with
+Mistress Anne.
+
+Great was Lady Archfield's surprise at finding that Major Oakshott's
+cross-grained slip of a boy was still at Portchester.
+
+"If you were forced to take him in for very charity when he was
+hurt," she said, "I should have thought you would have been rid of
+him as soon as he could leave his bed."
+
+"The road to Oakwood is too rough for broken ribs as yet," said Mrs.
+Woodford, "nor is the poor boy ready for discipline."
+
+"Ay, I fancy that Major Oakshott is a bitter Puritan in his own
+house; but no discipline could be too harsh for such a boy as that,
+according to all that I hear," said her ladyship, "nor does he look
+as if much were amiss with him so far as may be judged of features
+so strange and writhen."
+
+"He is nearly well, but not yet strong, and we are keeping him here
+till his father has decided on what is best for him."
+
+"You even trust him with your little maid! And alone! I wonder at
+you, madam."
+
+"Indeed, my lady, I have seen no harm come of it. He is gentle and
+kind with Anne, and I think she softens him."
+
+Still Mrs. Woodford would gladly not have been bound to her colander
+and preserving-pan in her still-room, where her guest's housewifely
+mind found great scope for inquiry and comment, lasting for nearly
+two hours.
+
+When at length the operations were over, and numerous little pots of
+jam tied up as specimens for the Archfield family to taste at home,
+the children were not in sight. No doubt, said Mrs. Woodford, they
+would be playing in the castle court, and the visitor accompanied
+her thither in some anxiety about broken walls and steps, but they
+were not in sight, nor did calls bring them.
+
+The children had gone out together, Anne feeling altogether at ease
+and natural with congenial playmates. Even Sedley's tortures were
+preferable to Peregrine's attentions, since the first were only the
+tyranny of a graceless boy, the other gave her an indescribable
+sense of strangeness from which these ordinary mundane comrades were
+a relief and protection.
+
+However, Charles and Sedley rushed off to see a young colt in which
+they were interested, and Lucy, in spite of her first shrinking,
+found Peregrine better company than she could have expected, when he
+assisted in swinging her and Anne by turns under the old ash tree.
+
+When the other two were seen approaching, the swinging girl hastily
+sprang out, only too well aware what Sedley's method of swinging
+would be. Then as the boys came up followed inquiries why Peregrine
+had not joined them, and jests in schoolboy taste ensued as to elf-
+locks in the horses' manes, and inquiries when he had last ridden to
+a witch's sabbath. Little Anne, in duty bound, made her protest,
+but this only incited Charles to add his word to the teasing, till
+Lucy joined in the laugh.
+
+By and by, as they loitered along, they came to the Doctor's little
+boat, and there was a proposal to get in and rock. Lucy refused,
+out of respect for her company attire, and Anne could not leave her,
+so the two young ladies turned away with arms round each other's
+waists, Lucy demonstratively rejoicing to be quit of the troublesome
+boys.
+
+Before they had gone far an eldritch shout of laughter was responded
+to by a burst of furious dismay and imprecation. The boat with the
+two boys was drifting out to sea, and Peregrine capering wildly on
+the shore, but in another instant he had vanished into the castle.
+
+Anne had presence of mind enough to rush to the nearest fisherman's
+cottage, and send him out to bring them back, and it was at this
+juncture that the two mothers arrived on the scene. There was
+little real danger. A rope was thrown and caught, and after about
+half an hour of watching they were safely landed, but the tide had
+ebbed so far that they had to take off their shoes and stockings and
+wade through the mud. They were open-mouthed against the imp who
+had enticed them to rock in the boat, then in one second had cut the
+painter, bounded out, and sent them adrift with his mocking 'Ho! ho!
+ho!' Sedley Archfield clenched his fists, and gazed round wildly in
+search of the goblin to chastise him soundly, and Charles was ready
+to rush all over the castle in search of him.
+
+"Two to one!" cried Anne, "and he so small; you would never be so
+cowardly."
+
+"As if he were like an honest fellow," said Charley. "A goblin like
+that has his odds against a dozen of us."
+
+"I'd teach him, if I could but catch him," cried Sedley.
+
+"I told you," said Anne, "that he would be good if you would let him
+alone and not plague him."
+
+"Now, Anne," said Charles, as he sat putting on his stockings, "how
+could I stand being cast off for that hobgoblin, that looks as if he
+had been cut out of a root of yew with a blunt knife, and all
+crooked! I that always was your sweetheart, to see you consorting
+with a mis-shapen squinting Whig of a Nonconformist like that."
+
+"Nonconformist! I'll Nonconform him indeed," added Sedley. "I wish
+I had the wringing of his neck."
+
+"Now is not that hard!" said Anne; "a poor lad who has been very
+sick, and that every one baits and spurns."
+
+"Serve him right," said Sedley; "he shall have more of the same
+sauce!"
+
+"I think he has cast his spell on Anne," added Charles, "or how can
+she stand up for him?"
+
+"My mamma bade me be kind to him."
+
+"Kind! I would as lief be kind to a toad!" put in Lucy.
+
+"To see you kind to him makes me sick," exclaimed Charles. "You see
+what comes of it."
+
+"It did not come of my kindness, but of your unkindness," reasoned
+Anne.
+
+"I told you so," said Charles. "You would have been best pleased if
+we had been carried out to sea and drowned!"
+
+Anne burst into tears and disavowed any such intention, and Charles
+was protesting that he would only forgive her on condition of her
+never showing any kindness to Peregrine again, when a sudden shower
+of sand and pebbles descended, one of them hitting Sedley pretty
+sharply on the ear. The boys sprang up with a howl of imprecation
+and vengeance, but no one was to be seen, only 'Ho! ho! ho!'
+resounded from the battlements. Off they rushed headlong, but the
+nearest door was in a square tower a good way off, and when they
+reached it the door defied their efforts of frantic rage, whilst
+another shower descended on them from above, accompanied by the
+usual shout. But while they were dashing off in quest of another
+entrance they were met by a servant sent to summon them to return
+home. Coach and horses were at the door, and Lady Archfield was in
+haste to get them away, declaring that she should not think their
+lives safe near that fiendish monster. Considering that Sedley was
+nearly twice as big as Peregrine, and Charles a strong well-grown
+lad, this was a tribute to his preternatural powers.
+
+Very unwillingly they went, and if Lady Archfield had not kept a
+strict watch from her coach window, they would certainly have turned
+back to revenge the pranks played on them. The last view of them
+showed Sedley turning round shaking his whip and clenching his teeth
+in defiance. Mrs. Woodford was greatly concerned, especially as
+Peregrine could not be found and did not appear at supper.
+
+"Had he run away to sea?" the usual course of refractory lads at
+Portchester, but for so slight a creature only half recovered it did
+not seem probable. It was more likely that he had gone home, and
+that Mrs. Woodford felt as somewhat a mortifying idea. However, on
+looking into his chamber, as she sought her own, she beheld him in
+bed, with his face turned into the pillow, whether asleep or
+feigning slumber there was no knowing.
+
+Later, she heard sounds that induced her to go and look at him. He
+was starting, moaning, and babbling in his sleep. But with morning
+all his old nature seemed to have returned.
+
+There was a hedgehog in Anne's bowl of milk, Mrs. Woodford's poultry
+were cackling hysterically at an unfortunate kitten suspended from
+an apple tree and let down and drawn up among them. The three-
+legged stool of the old waiting-woman 'toppled down headlong' as
+though by the hands of Puck, and even on Anne's arms certain black
+and blue marks of nails were discovered, and when her mother
+examined her on them she only cried and begged not to be made to
+answer.
+
+And while Dr. Woodford was dozing in his chair as usual after the
+noonday dinner Mrs. Woodford actually detected a hook suspended from
+a horsehair descending in the direction of his big horn spectacles,
+and quietly moving across to frustrate the attempt, she unearthed
+Peregrine on a chair angling from behind the window curtain.
+
+She did not speak, but fixed her calm eyes on him with a look of
+sad, grave disappointment as she wound up the line. In a few
+seconds the boy had thrown himself at her feet, rolling as if in
+pain, and sobbing out, "'Tis all of no use! Let me alone."
+
+Nevertheless he obeyed the hushing gesture of her hand, and held his
+breath, as she led him out to the garden-seat, where they had spent
+so many happy quiet hours. Then he flung himself down and repeated
+his exclamation, half piteous, half defiant. "Leave me alone!
+Leave me alone! It has me! It is all of no use."
+
+"What has you, my poor child?"
+
+"The evil spirit. You will have it that I'm not one of--one of
+them--so it must be as my father says, that I am possessed--the evil
+spirit. I was at peace with you--so happy--happier than ever I was
+before--and now--those boys. It has me again--I could not help it--
+I've even hurt her--Mistress Anne. Let me alone--send me home--to
+be scorned, and shunned, and brow-beaten--and as bad as ever--then
+at least she will be safe from me."
+
+All this came out between sobs such that Mrs. Woodford could not
+attempt to speak, but she kept her hand on him, and at last she
+said, when he could hear her: "Every one of us has to fight with an
+evil spirit, and when we are not on our guard he is but too apt to
+take advantage of us."
+
+The boy rather sullenly repeated that it was of no use to fight
+against his.
+
+"Indeed! Nay. Were you ever so much grieved before at having let
+him have the mastery?"
+
+"No--but no one ever was good to me before."
+
+"Yes; all about you lived under a cruel error, and you helped them
+in it. But if you had not a better nature in you, my poor child,
+you would not be happy here and thankful for what we can do for
+you."
+
+"I was like some one else here," said Peregrine, picking a daisy to
+pieces, "but they stirred it all up. And at home I shall be just
+the same as ever I was."
+
+She longed to tell him that there was hope of a change in his life,
+but she durst not till it was more certain, so she said--
+
+"There was One who came to conquer the evil spirit and the evil
+nature, and to give each one of us the power to get the victory.
+The harder the victory, the more glorious!" and her eyes sparkled at
+the thought.
+
+He caught a moment's glow, then fell back. "For those that are
+chosen," he said.
+
+"You are chosen--you were chosen by your baptism. You have the
+stirrings of good within you. You can win and beat back the evil
+side of you in Christ's strength, if you will ask for it, and go on
+in His might."
+
+The boy groaned. Mrs. Woodford knew that the great point with him
+would be to teach him to hope and to pray, but the very name of
+prayer had been rendered so distasteful to him that she scarce durst
+press the subject by name, and her heart sank at the thought of
+sending him home again, but she was glad to be interrupted, and said
+no more.
+
+At night, however, she heard sounds of moaning and stifled babbling
+that reminded her of his times of delirium, and going into his room
+she found him tossing and groaning so that it was manifestly a
+kindness to wake him; but her gentle touch occasioned a scream of
+terror, and he started aside with open glassy eyes, crying, "Oh take
+me not!"
+
+"My dear boy! It is I. Perry, do you not know me?"
+
+"Oh, madam!" in infinite relief, "it is you. I thought--I thought I
+was in elfland and that they were paying me for the tithe to hell;"
+and he still shuddered all over.
+
+"No elf--no elf, dear boy; a christened boy--God's child, and under
+His care;" and she began the 121st Psalm.
+
+"Oh, but I am not under His shadow! The Evil One has had me again!
+He will have me. Aren't those his claws? He will have me!"
+
+"Never, my child, if you will cry to God for help. Say this with
+me, 'Lord, be Thou my keeper.'"
+
+He did so, and grew more quiet, and she began to repeat Dr. Ken's
+evening hymn, which had become known in manuscript in Winchester.
+It soothed him, and she thought he was dropping off to sleep, but no
+sooner did she move than he started with "There it is again--the
+black wings--the claws--" then while awake, "Say it again! Oh, say
+it again. Fold me in your prayers--you can pray." She went back to
+the verse, and he became quiet, but her next attempt to leave him
+caused an entreaty that she would remain, nor could she quit him
+till the dawn, happily very early, was dispelling the terrors of the
+night, and then, when he had himself murmured once--
+
+"Let no ill dreams disturb my rest,
+No powers of darkness me molest,"
+
+he fell asleep at last, with a softer look on his pinched face.
+Poor boy, would that verse be his first step to prayer and
+deliverance from his own too real enemy?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII: THE ENVOY
+
+
+"I then did ask of her, her changeling child."
+
+Midsummer Night's Dream.
+
+Mrs. Woodford was too good a housewife to allow herself any extra
+rest on account of her vigil, and she had just put her Juneating
+apple-tart into the oven when Anne rushed into the kitchen with the
+warning that there was a grand gentleman getting off his horse at
+the gateway, and speaking to her uncle--she thought it must be
+Peregrine's uncle.
+
+Mrs. Woodford was of the same opinion, and asked where Peregrine
+was.
+
+"Fast asleep in the window-seat of the parlour, mother! I did not
+waken him, for he looked so tired."
+
+"That was right, my little maiden," said Mrs. Woodford, hastily
+washing her hands, taking off her cooking apron, letting down her
+black gown from its pocket holes, and arranging her veil-like
+widow's coif, after which, in full trim for company, she sallied out
+to the front door, to avert, if possible, the wakening of the boy,
+whom she wished to appear to the best advantage.
+
+She met in the garden her brother-in-law, and Sir Peregrine
+Oakshott, on being presented to her, made such a bow as had seldom
+been seen in those parts, as he politely said that he was the bearer
+of his brother's thanks for her care of his nephew.
+
+Mrs. Woodford explained that the boy had had so bad a night that it
+would be well not to break his present sleep, and invited the guest
+to walk in the garden or sit in the Doctor's study or in the shade
+of the castle wall.
+
+This last was what he preferred, and there they seated themselves,
+with a green slope before them down to the pale gray creek, and the
+hill beyond lying in the summer sunshine.
+
+"I have been long in coming hither," said the knight, "partly on
+account of letters on affairs of State, and partly likewise because
+I desired to come alone, thinking that I might better understand how
+it is with the lad without the presence of his father or brothers."
+
+"I am very glad you have so done, sir."
+
+"Then, madam, I entreat of you to speak freely and tell me your
+opinion of him without reserve. You need not fear offence by
+speaking of the mode in which they have treated him at home. My
+poor brother has meant to do his duty, but he has stood so far aloof
+from his sons that he has dealt with them in ignorance, and their
+mother, between sickliness and timidity, is a mere prey to the folly
+of her gossips. So speak plainly, madam, I beg of you."
+
+Mrs. Woodford did speak plainly of the boy's rooted belief in his
+own elfish origin, and how when arguing against it she had found the
+alternative even sadder and more hopeless, how well he comported
+himself as long as he was treated as a human and rational being, but
+how the taunts and jests of the young Archfields had renewed all the
+mischief, to the poor fellow's own remorse and despair.
+
+Sir Peregrine listened with only a word of comment, or question now
+and then, like a man of the world well used to hearing all before he
+committed himself, and the description was only just ended when the
+clang of the warning dinner-bell sounded and they rose; but as they
+were passing the window of the dining-parlour a shriek of Anne's
+startled them all, and as they sprang forward, Mrs. Woodford first,
+Peregrine's voice was heard, "No, no, Anne, don't be afraid. It is
+for me he is come; I knew he would."
+
+Something in a strange language was heard. A black face with round
+eyes and gleaming teeth might be seen bending forward. Anne gave
+another shriek, but was heard crying, "No, no! Get away, sir. He
+is our Lord Christ's! He is! You can't! you shan't have him."
+
+And Anne was seen standing over Peregrine, who had dropped
+shuddering and nearly fainting on the floor, while she stood
+valiantly up warding off the advance of him whom she took for the
+Prince of Darkness, and in her excitement not at first aware of
+those who were come to her aid at the window. In one second the
+negro was saying something which his master answered, and sent him
+off. Mrs. Woodford had called out, "Don't be afraid, dear children.
+'Tis Sir Peregrine's black servant"; and the Doctor, "Foolish
+children! What is this nonsense?" A moment or two more and they
+were in the room, Anne, all trembling, flying up to her mother and
+hiding her face against her between fright and shame at not having
+thought of the black servant, and the while they lifted up
+Peregrine, who, as he met his kind friend's eyes, said faintly, "Is
+he gone? Was it the dream again?"
+
+"It was your uncle's blackamoor servant," said Mrs. Woodford. "You
+woke up, and no wonder you were startled. Come with me, both of
+you, and make you ready for dinner."
+
+Peregrine had rather collapsed than fainted, for he was able to walk
+with her hand on his shoulder, and Sir Peregrine understood her sign
+and did not attempt to accost either of the children, though as the
+Doctor took him to his chamber he expressed his admiration of the
+little maiden.
+
+"That's the right woman," he said, "losing herself when there is one
+to guard. Nay, sir, she needs no excuse. Such a spirit may well
+redeem a child's mistake."
+
+Mrs. Woodford had reassured the children, so that they were more
+than half ashamed, though scarce willing to reappear when she had
+made Peregrine wash his face and hands, smooth the hair ruffled in
+his nap, freshly tying his little cravat and the ribbons on his
+shoes and at his knees. To make his hair into anything but elf
+locks, or to obliterate the bristly tuft that made him like Riquet,
+was impossible, illness had made him additionally lean and sallow,
+and his keen eyes, under their black contracted brows and dark
+lashes, showed all the more the curious variation in their tints,
+and with an obliquity that varied according to the state of the
+nerves. There was a satirical mischievous cast in the mould of the
+face, though individually the features were not amiss except for
+their thinness, and in fact the unpleasantness of the expression had
+insensibly been softened during this last month, and there was
+nothing repellent, though much that was quaint, in the slight
+figure, with the indescribably one-sided air, and stature more
+befitting ten than fourteen years. What would the visitor think of
+him? The Doctor called to him, "Come, Peregrine, your uncle, Sir
+Peregrine Oakshott, has been good enough to come over to see you."
+
+Peregrine had been well trained enough in that bitter school of home
+to make a correct bow, though his feelings were betrayed by his
+yellow eye going almost out of sight.
+
+"My namesake--your father will not let me say my godson," said Sir
+Peregrine smiling. "We ought to be good friends."
+
+The boy looked up. Perhaps he had never been greeted in so human a
+manner before, and there was something confiding in the way those
+bony fingers of his rested a moment in his uncle's clasp.
+
+"And this is your little daughter, madam, Peregrine's kind playmate?
+You may well be proud of her valour," said the knight, while Anne
+made her courtesy, which he, in the custom of the day, returned with
+a kiss; and she, who had been mortally ashamed of her terror,
+marvelled at his praise.
+
+The pair of fowls were by this time on the table, and good manners
+required silence on the part of the children, but while Sir
+Peregrine explained that he had been appointed by his Majesty as
+Envoy to the Elector of Brandenburg, and gave various interesting
+particulars of foreign life, Mrs. Woodford saw that he was keeping a
+quiet watch over his nephew's habits at table, and she was thankful
+that when unmoved by any wayward spirit of mischief they were quite
+beyond reproach. Something of the refinement of his poor mother's
+tastes must have been inherited by Peregrine, for a certain
+daintiness of taste and habit had probably added to his discomforts
+in the austere, not to say rude simplicity imposed upon the children
+of the family.
+
+When the meal was over the children were dismissed to the garden,
+but bidden to keep within call, in case Sir Peregrine should wish to
+see his nephew again. The others repaired again to the garden seat,
+with wine and fruit, but the knight begged Mrs. Woodford not to
+leave them.
+
+"I am satisfied," he said. "The boy shows gentle blood and
+breeding. There was cause enough for fright without cowardice, and
+there is not, what I was led to fear, such uncouthness or
+ungainliness as should hinder me from having him with me."
+
+"Oh, sir, is that your purpose?" cried the lady, almost as eagerly
+as if it had been high preferment for her own child.
+
+"I had thought thereon," said the envoy. "There is reason that he
+should be my charge, and my brother is like to give a ready consent,
+since he is sorely perplexed what to do with this poor untoward
+slip."
+
+"He would be less untoward were he happier," said Mrs. Woodford.
+"Indeed, sir, I do not think you will repent it, if--" and she
+paused.
+
+"What would you say, madam?"
+
+"If only all your honour's household are absolutely ignorant of all
+these tales."
+
+"That can well be, madam. I have only one body-servant with me,
+this unlucky blackamoor, who speaks nothing save Dutch. I had
+already thought of leaving my grooms here, and returning to London
+by sea, and this could well be done, and would cut off all channels
+of gossiping. The boy is, the chaplain tells me, quick-witted, and
+a fair scholar for his years, and I can find good schooling for
+him."
+
+"When his head is able to bear it," said Mrs. Woodford.
+
+"Truly, sir," added the Doctor, "you are doing a good work, and I
+trust that the boy will requite you worthily."
+
+"I tell your reverence," said Sir Peregrine, "crooked stick though
+they term him, I had ten times rather have the dealing with him than
+with those comely great lubbers his brothers! The question now is,
+shall I tell him what is in store for him?"
+
+"I should say," returned Dr. Woodford, "that provided it is certain
+that the intention can be carried out, nothing would be so good for
+him as hope. Do you not say so, sister?"
+
+"Indeed I do," she replied. "I believe that he would be a very
+different boy if he were relieved from the misery he suffers at home
+and requites by mischievous pranks. I do not say he will or can be
+a good lad at once, but if your honour can have patience with him, I
+do believe there is that in him which can be turned to good. If he
+only can believe in the better nature and higher guidings, and pray,
+and not give himself up in despair." She had tears in her eyes.
+
+"My good madam, I can believe it all," said Sir Peregrine. "Short
+of being supposed an elf, I have gone through the same, and it was
+not my good father's fault that I did not loathe the very name of
+preaching or prayer. But I had a mother who knew how to deal with
+me, whereas this poor child's mother, I am sure, believes in her
+secret heart that he is none of hers, though she has enough sense
+not to dare to avow it. Alas! I cannot give the boy the woman's
+tending by which you have already wrought so much," and Mrs.
+Woodford remembered to have heard that his wife had died at
+Rotterdam, "but I can treat him like a human being, I hope indeed as
+a son; and, at any rate, there will be no one to remind him of these
+old wives' tales."
+
+"I can only say that I am heartily rejoiced," said Mrs. Woodford.
+
+So Peregrine was summoned, and shambled up, his eyes showing that he
+expected a trying interview, and, moreover, with a certain twinkle
+of mischief or perverseness in their corners.
+
+"Soh! my lad, we ought to be better acquainted," said the uncle.
+"D'ye know what our name means?"
+
+"Peregrinus, a vagabond," responded the boy.
+
+"Eh! The translation may be correct, but 'tis scarce the most
+complimentary. I wonder now if you, like me, were born on a
+Wednesday. 'Wednesday's child has far to go.'"
+
+"No. I was born on a Sunday, and if to see goblins and oafs--"
+
+"Nay, I read it, 'Sunday's child is full of grace.'"
+
+Peregrine's mouth twitched ironically, but his uncle continued,
+"Look you, my boy, what say you to fulfilling the augury of your
+name with me. His Majesty has ordered me off again to represent the
+British name to the Elector of Brandenburg, and I have a mind to
+carry you with me. What do you say?"
+
+If any one expected Peregrine to be overjoyed his demeanour was
+disappointing. He shuffled with his feet, and after two or three
+"Ehs?" from his uncle, he mumbled, "I don't care," and then shrank
+together, as one prepared for the stripe with the riding-whip which
+such a rude answer merited: but his uncle had, as a diplomate,
+learnt a good deal of patience, and he said, "Ha! don't care to
+leave home and brothers. Eh?"
+
+Peregrine's chin went down, and there was no answer; his hair
+dropped over his heavy brow.
+
+"See, boy, this is no jest," said his uncle. "You are too big to be
+told that 'I'll put you into my pocket and carry you off.' I am in
+earnest."
+
+Peregrine looked up, and with one sudden flash surveyed his uncle.
+His lips trembled, but he did not speak.
+
+"It is sudden," said the knight to the other two. "See, boy, I am
+not about to take you away with me now. In a week or ten days' time
+I start for London; and there we will fit you out for Konigsberg or
+Berlin, and I trust we shall make a man of you, and a good man.
+Your tutor tells me you have excellent parts, and I mean that you
+shall do me credit."
+
+Dr. Woodford could not help telling the lad that he ought to thank
+his uncle, whereat he scowled; but Sir Peregrine said, "He is not
+ready for that yet. Wait till he feels he has something to thank me
+for."
+
+So Peregrine was dismissed, and his friends exclaimed with some
+wonder and annoyance that the boy who had been willing to be
+decapitated to put an end to his wretchedness, should be so
+reluctant to accept such an offer, but Sir Peregrine only laughed,
+and said--
+
+"The lad has pith in him! I like him better than if he came like a
+spaniel to my foot. But I will say no more till I fully have my
+brother's consent. No one knows what crooks there may be in folks'
+minds."
+
+He took his leave, and presently Mrs. Woodford had a fresh surprise.
+She found this strange boy lying flat on the grass, sobbing as if
+his heart would break, and when she tried to soothe and comfort him
+it was very hard to get a word from him; but at last, as she asked,
+"And does it grieve you so much to leave home?" the answer was--
+
+"No, no! not home!"
+
+"What is it, then? What are you sorry to leave?"
+
+"Oh, _you_ don't know! you and Anne--the only ones that ever were
+good to me--and drove away--_it_."
+
+"Nay, my dear boy. Your uncle means to be good to you."
+
+"No, no. No one ever will be like you and Anne. Oh, let me stay
+with you, or they will have me at last!"
+
+He was too much shaken, in his still half-recovered state, by the
+events of these last days, to be reasoned with. Mrs. Woodford was
+afraid he would work himself into delirium, and could only soothe
+him into a calmer state. She found from Anne that the children had
+some vague hopes of his being allowed to remain at Portchester, and
+that this was the ground of his disappointment, since he seemed to
+be attaching himself to them as the first who had ever touched his
+heart or opened to him a gleam of better things.
+
+By the next day, however, he was in a quieter and more reasonable
+state, and Mrs. Woodford was able to have a long talk with him. She
+represented that the difference of opinions made it almost certain
+that his father would never consent to his remaining under her roof,
+and that even if this were possible, Portchester was far too much
+infected with the folly from which he had suffered so much; and his
+uncle would take care that no one he would meet should ever hear of
+it.
+
+"There's little good in that," said the boy moodily. "I'm a thing
+they'll jibe at and bait any way."
+
+"I do not see that, if you take pains with yourself. Your uncle
+said you showed blood and breeding, and when you are better dressed,
+and with him, no one will dare to mock his Excellency's nephew.
+Depend upon it, Peregrine, this is the fresh start that you need."
+
+"If you were there--"
+
+"My boy, you must not ask for what is impossible. You must learn to
+conquer in God's strength, not mine."
+
+All, however, that passed may not here be narrated, and it
+apparently left that wayward spirit unconvinced. Nevertheless, when
+on the second day Major Oakshott himself came over with his brother,
+and informed Peregrine that his uncle was good enough to undertake
+the charge of him, and to see that he was bred up in godly ways in a
+Protestant land, free from prelacy and superstition, the boy seemed
+reconciled to his fate. Major Oakshott spoke more kindly than usual
+to him, being free from fresh irritation at his misdemeanours; but
+even thus there was a contrast with the gentler, more persuasive
+tones of the diplomatist, and no doubt this tended to increase
+Peregrine's willingness to be thus handed over.
+
+The next question was whether he should go home first, but both the
+uncle and the friends were averse to his remaining there, amid the
+unavoidable gossip and chatter of the household, and it was
+therefore decided that he should only ride over with Dr. Woodford
+for an hour or two to take leave of his mother and brothers.
+
+This settled, Mrs. Woodford found him much easier to deal with. He
+had really, through his midnight invocation of the fairies, obtained
+an opening into a new world, and he was ready to believe that with
+no one to twit him with being a changeling or worse, he could avoid
+perpetual disgrace and punishment and live at peace. Nor was he
+unwilling to promise Mrs. Woodford to say daily, and especially when
+tempted, one or two brief collects and ejaculations which she
+selected to teach him, as being as unlike as possible to the long
+extempore exercises which had made him hate the very name of prayer.
+The Doctor gave him a Greek Testament, as being least connected with
+unpleasant recollections.
+
+"And," entreated Peregrine humbly, in a low voice to Mrs. Woodford
+on his last Sunday evening, "may I not have something of yours, to
+lay hold of, and remember you if--when--the evil spirit tries to lay
+hold of me again?"
+
+She would fain have given him a prayer-book, but she knew that would
+be treason to his father, and with tears in her eyes and something
+of a pang, she gave him a tiny miniature of herself, which had been
+her husband's companion at sea, and hung it round his neck with the
+chain of her own hair that had always held it.
+
+"It will always keep my heart warm," said Peregrine, as he hid it
+under his vest. There was a shade of disappointment on Anne's face
+when he showed it to her, for she had almost deemed it her own.
+
+"Never mind, Anne," he said; "I am coming back a knight like my
+uncle to marry you, and then it will be yours again."
+
+"I--I'm not going to wed you--I have another sweetheart," added Anne
+in haste, lest he should think she scorned him.
+
+"Oh, that lubberly Charles Archfield! No fear of him. He is
+promised long ago to some little babe of quality in London. You may
+whistle for him. So you'd better wait for me."
+
+"It is not true. You only say it to plague me."
+
+"It's as true as Gospel! I heard Sir Philip telling one of the big
+black gowns one day in the Close, when I was sitting up in a tree
+overhead, how they had fixed a marriage between his son and his old
+friend's daughter, who would have ever so many estates. So I'd give
+that"--snapping his fingers--"for your chances of being my Lady
+Archfield in the salt mud at Fareham."
+
+"I shall ask Lucy. It is not kind of you, Perry, when you are just
+going away."
+
+"Come, come, don't cry, Anne."
+
+"But I knew Charley ever so long first, and--"
+
+"Oh, yes. Maids always like straight, comely, dull fellows, I know
+that. But as you can't have Charles Archfield, I mean to have you,
+Anne--for I shall look to you as the only one as can ever make a
+good man of me! Ay--your mother--I'd wed her if I could, but as I
+can't, I mean to have you, Anne Woodford."
+
+"I don't mean to have you! I shall go to Court, and marry some
+noble earl or gentleman! Why do you laugh and make that face,
+Peregrine? you know my father was almost a knight--"
+
+"Nobody is long with you without knowing that!" retorted Peregrine;
+"but a miss is as good as a mile, and you will find the earls and
+the lords will think so, and be fain to take the crooked stick at
+last!"
+
+Mistress Anne tossed her head--and Peregrine returned a grimace.
+Nevertheless they parted with a kiss, and for some time the thought
+of Peregrine haunted the little girl with a strange, fateful
+feeling, between aversion and attraction, which wore off, as a folly
+of her childhood, with her growth in years.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII: THE RETURN
+
+
+"I think he bought his doublet in Italy, his round hose in
+France, his bonnet in Germany, and his behaviour everywhere."
+
+Merchant of Venice.
+
+It was autumn, but in the year 1687, when again Lucy Archfield and
+Anne Jacobina Woodford were pacing the broad gravel walk along the
+south side of the nave of Winchester Cathedral. Lucy, in spite of
+her brocade skirt and handsome gown of blue velvet tucked up over
+it, was still devoid of any look of distinction, but was a round-
+faced, blooming, cheerful maiden, of that ladylike thoroughly
+countrified type happily frequent in English girlhood throughout all
+time.
+
+Anne, or Jacobina, as she tried to be called, towered above her
+head, and had never lost that tincture of courtly grace that early
+breeding had given her, and though her skirt was of gray wool, and
+the upper gown of cherry tabinet, she wore both with an air that
+made them seem more choice and stylish than those of her companion,
+while the simple braids and curls of her brown hair set off an
+unusually handsome face, pale and clear in complexion, with regular
+features, fine arched eyebrows over clear brown eyes, a short chin,
+and a mouth of perfect outline, but capable of looking very
+resolute.
+
+Altogether she looked fit for a Court atmosphere, and perhaps she
+was not without hopes of it, for Dr. Woodford had become a royal
+chaplain under Charles II, and was now continued in the same office;
+and though this was a sinecure as regarded the present King, yet
+Tory and High Church views were as much in the ascendant as they
+could be under a Romanist king, and there were hopes of a canonry at
+Windsor or Westminster, or even higher preferment still, if he were
+not reckoned too staunch an Anglican. That Mrs. Woodford's health
+had been failing for many months past would, her sanguine daughter
+thought, be remedied by being nearer the best physicians in London,
+which had been quitted with regret. Meantime Lucy's first
+experiences of wedding festivities were to be heard. For the
+Archfield family had just returned from celebrating the marriage of
+the heir. Long ago Anne Jacobina had learnt to reckon Master
+Charles's pledges of affection among the sports and follies of
+childhood, and the strange sense of disappointment and shame with
+which she recollected them had perhaps added to her natural reserve,
+and made her feel it due to maidenly dignity to listen with zest to
+the account of the bride, who was to be brought to supper at Doctor
+Woodford's that eve.
+
+"She is a pretty little thing," said Lucy, "but my mother was much
+concerned to find her so mere a child, and would not, if she had
+seen her, have consented to the marriage for two years to come,
+except for the sake of having her in our own hands."
+
+"I thought she was sixteen."
+
+"Barely fifteen, my dear, and far younger than we were at that age.
+She cried because her woman said she must leave her old doll behind
+her; and when my brother declared that she should have anything she
+liked, she danced about, and kissed him, and made him kiss its
+wooden face with half the paint rubbed off."
+
+"He did?"
+
+"Oh, yes! She is like a pretty fresh plaything to him, and they go
+about together just like big Towzer and little Frisk at home. He is
+very much amused with her, and she thinks him the finest possession
+that ever came in her way."
+
+"Well, so he is."
+
+"That is true; but somehow it is scarcely like husband and wife; and
+my mother fears that she may be sickly, for she is so small and
+slight that it seems as if you could blow her away, and so white
+that you would think she had no blood, except when a little heat
+brings the purest rose colour to her cheek, and that, my lady says,
+betokens weakliness. You know, of course, that she is an orphan;
+her father died of a wasting consumption, and her mother not long
+after, when she was a yearling babe. It was her grandfather who was
+my father's friend in the old cavalier days, and wrote to propose
+the contract to my brother not long before his death, when she was
+but five years old. The pity was that she was not sent to us at
+once, for the old lord, her grand-uncle, never heeded or cared for
+her, but left her to servants, who petted her, but understood
+nothing of care of her health or her education, so that the only
+wonder is that she is alive or so sweet and winning as she is. She
+can hardly read without spelling, and I had to make copies for her
+of Alice Fitzhubert, to show her how to sign the book. All she knew
+she learnt from the old steward, and only when she liked. My father
+laughs and is amused, but my lady sighs, and hopes her portion is
+not dearly bought."
+
+"Is not she to be a great heiress?"
+
+"Not of the bulk of the lands--they go to heirs male; but there is
+much besides, enough to make Charles a richer man than our father.
+I wonder what you will think of her. My mother is longing to talk
+her over with Mrs Woodford."
+
+"And my mother is longing to see my lady."
+
+"I fear she is still but poorly."
+
+"We think she will be much better when we get home," said Anne. "I
+am sure she is stronger, for she walked round the Close yesterday,
+and was scarcely tired."
+
+"But tell me, Anne, is it true that poor Master Oliver Oakshott is
+dead of smallpox?"
+
+"Quite true. Poor young gentleman, he was to have married that
+cousin of his mother's, Mistress Martha Browning, living at
+Emsworth. She came on a visit, and they think she brought the
+infection, for she sickened at once, and though she had it
+favourably, is much disfigured. Master Oliver caught it and died in
+three days, and all the house were down with it. They say poor Mrs.
+Oakshott forgot her ailments and went to and fro among them all. My
+mother would have gone to help in their need if she had been as well
+as she used to be."
+
+"How is it with the other son? He was a personable youth enough. I
+saw him at the ship launch in the spring, and thought both lads
+would fain have staid for the dance on board but for their grim old
+father."
+
+"You saw Robert, but he is not the elder."
+
+"What? Is that shocking impish urchin whom we used to call Riquet
+with the tuft, older than he?"
+
+"Certainly he is. He writes from time to time to my mother, and
+seems to be doing well with his uncle."
+
+"I cannot believe he would come to good. Do you remember his
+sending my brother and cousin adrift in the boat?"
+
+"I think that was in great part the fault of your cousin for mocking
+and tormenting him."
+
+"Sedley Archfield was a bad boy! There's no denying that. I am
+afraid he had good reason for running away from college."
+
+"Have you heard of him since?"
+
+"Yes; he has been serving with the Life-guards in Scotland, and
+mayhap he will come home and see us. My father wishes to see
+whether he is worthy to have a troop procured by money or favour for
+him, and if they are recalled to the camp at November it will be an
+opportunity. But see--who is coming through the Slype?"
+
+"My uncle. And who is with him?"
+
+Dr. Woodford advanced, and with him a small slender figure in black.
+As the broad hat with sable plume was doffed with a sweep on
+approaching the ladies, a dark head and peculiar countenance
+appeared, while the Doctor said, "Here is an old acquaintance, young
+ladies, whom I met dismounting at the White Hart, and have brought
+home with me."
+
+"Mr. Peregrine Oakshott!" exclaimed Anne, feeling bound to offer in
+welcome a hand, which he kissed after the custom of the day, while
+Lucy dropped a low and formal courtesy, and being already close to
+the gate of the house occupied by her family, took her leave till
+supper-time.
+
+Even in the few steps before reaching home Anne was able to perceive
+that a being very unlike the imp of seven years ago had returned,
+though still short in stature and very slight, with long dark hair
+hanging straight enough to suggest elf-locks, but his figure was
+well proportioned, and had a finished air of high breeding and
+training. His riding suit was point device, from the ostrich
+feather in his hat, to the toes of his well made boots, and his
+sword knew its place, as well as did those of the gentlemen that
+Anne remembered at the Duke of York's when she was a little child.
+His thin, marked face was the reverse of handsome, but it was keen,
+shrewd, perhaps satirical, and the remarkable eyes were very bright
+under dark eyebrows and lashes, and the thin lips, devoid of hair,
+showed fine white teeth when parted by a smile of gladness--at the
+meeting--though he was concerned to hear that Mrs. Woodford had been
+very ill all the last spring, and had by no means regained her
+former health, and even in the few words that passed it might be
+gathered that Anne was far more hopeful than her uncle.
+
+She did indeed look greatly changed, though her countenance was
+sweeter than ever, as she rose from her seat by the fire and held
+out her arms to receive the newcomer with a motherly embrace, while
+the expression of joy and affection was such as could never once
+have seemed likely to sit on Peregrine Oakshott's features. They
+were left together, for Anne had the final touches to put to the
+supper, and Dr. Woodford was sent for to speak to one of the
+Cathedral staff.
+
+Peregrine explained that he was on his way home, his father having
+recalled him on his brother's death, but he hoped soon to rejoin his
+uncle, whose secretary he now was. They had been for the last few
+months in London, and were thence to be sent on an embassy to the
+young Czar of Muscovy, an expedition to which he looked forward with
+eager curiosity. Mrs. Woodford hoped that all danger of infection
+at Oakwood was at an end.
+
+"There is none for me, madam," he said, with a curious writhed
+smile. "Did you not know that they thought they were rid of me when
+I took the disease at seven years old, and lay in the loft over the
+hen-house with Molly Owens to tend me? and I believe it was thought
+to be fairy work that I came out of it no more unsightly than
+before."
+
+"You are seeking for compliments, Peregrine; you are greatly
+improved."
+
+"Crooked sticks can be pruned and trained," he responded, with a
+courteous bow.
+
+"You are a travelled man. Let me see, how many countries have you
+seen?"
+
+"A year at Berlin and Konigsberg--strange places enough, specially
+the last, two among the scholars and high roofs of Leyden, half a
+year at Versailles and Paris, another year at Turin, whence back for
+another half year to wait on old King Louis, then to the Hague, and
+the last three months at Court. Not much like buying and selling
+cows, or growing wheat on the slopes, or lying out on a cold
+winter's night to shoot a few wild fowl; and I have you to thank for
+it, my first and best friend!"
+
+"Nay, your uncle is surely your best."
+
+"Never would he have picked up the poor crooked stick save for you,
+madam. Moreover, you gave me my talisman," and he laid his hand on
+his breast; "it is your face that speaks to me and calls me back
+when the elf, or whatever it is, has got the mastery of me."
+
+Somewhat startled, Mrs. Woodford would have asked what he meant, but
+that intelligence was brought that Mr. Oakshott's man had brought
+his mail, so that he had to repair to his room. Mrs. Woodford had
+kept up some correspondence with him, for which his uncle's position
+as envoy afforded unusual facilities, and she knew that on the whole
+he had been a very different being from what he was at home. Once,
+indeed, his uncle had written to the Doctor to express his full
+satisfaction in the lad, on whom he seemed to look like a son, but
+from some subsequent letters she had an impression that he had got
+into trouble of some sort while at the University of Leyden, and she
+was afraid that she must accept the belief that the wild elfish
+spirit, as he called it, was by no means extinct in him, any more,
+she said to herself, than temptation is in any human creature. The
+question is, What is there to contend therewith?
+
+The guests were, however, about to assemble. The Doctor, in black
+velvet cap and stately silken cassock, sash, and gown, sailed down
+to receive them, and again greeted Peregrine, who emerged in black
+velvet and satin, delicate muslin cravat and cuffs, dainty silk
+stockings and rosetted shoes, in a style such as made the far taller
+and handsomer Charles Archfield, in spite of gay scarlet coat,
+embroidered flowery vest, rich laced cravat, and thick shining brown
+curls, look a mere big schoolboy, almost bumpkin-like in contrast.
+However, no one did look at anything but the little creature who
+could just reach to hang upon that resplendent bridegroom's arm.
+She was in glistening white brocade, too stiff and cumbrous for so
+tiny a figure, yet together with the diamonds glistening on her head
+and breast giving her the likeness of a fairy queen. The whiteness
+was almost startling, for the neck and arms were like pearl in tint,
+the hair flowing in full curls on her shoulders was like shining
+flax or pale silk just unwound from the cocoon, and the only relief
+of colour was the deep blue of the eyes, the delicate tint of the
+lips, and the tender rosy flush that was called up by her
+presentation to her hosts by stout old Sir Philip, in plum-coloured
+coat and full-bottomed wig, though she did not blush half as much as
+the husband of nineteen in his new character. Indeed, had it not
+been for her childish prettiness, her giggle would have been
+unpleasing to more than Lady Archfield, who, broad and matronly,
+gave a courtesy and critical glance at Peregrine before subsiding
+into a seat beside Mrs. Woodford.
+
+Lucy stood among a few other young people from the Close, watching
+for Anne, who came in, trim and bright, though still somewhat
+reddened in face and arms from her last attentions to the supper--an
+elaborate meal on such occasions, though lighter than the mid-day
+repast. There were standing pies of game, lobster and oyster
+patties, creams, jellies, and other confections, on which Sir Philip
+and his lady highly complimented Anne, who had been engaged on them
+for at least a couple of days, her mother being no longer able to
+assist except by advice.
+
+"See, daughter Alice, you will learn one day to build up a jelly as
+well as to eat it," said Sir Philip good-humouredly, whereat the
+small lady pouted a little and said--
+
+"Bet lets me make shapes of the dough, but I won't stir the pans and
+get to look like a turkey-cock."
+
+"Ah, ha! and you have always done what you liked, my little madam?"
+
+"Of course, sir! and so I shall," she answered, drawing up her
+pretty little head, while Lady Archfield gave hers a boding shake.
+
+"Time, and life, and wifehood teach lessons," murmured Mrs. Woodford
+in consolation, and the Doctor changed the subject by asking
+Peregrine whether the ladies abroad were given to housewifery.
+
+"The German dames make a great ado about their Wirthschaft, as they
+call it," was the reply, "but as to the result! Pah! I know not
+how we should have fared had not Hans, my uncle's black, been an
+excellent cook; but it was in Paris that we were exquisitely
+regaled, and our maitre d'hotel would discourse on ragouts and
+entremets till one felt as if his were the first of the sciences."
+
+"So it is to a Frenchman," growled Sir Philip. "French and
+Frenchifications are all the rage nowadays, but what will your
+father say to your science, my young spark?"
+
+The gesture of head and shoulder that replied had certainly been
+caught at Paris. Mrs. Woodford rushed into the breach, asking about
+the Princess of Orange, whom she had often seen as a child.
+
+"A stately and sightly dame is she, madam," Peregrine answered,
+"towering high above her little mynheer, who outwardly excels her in
+naught save the length of nose, and has the manners of a boor."
+
+"The Prince of Orange is the hope of the country," said Sir Philip
+severely.
+
+Peregrine's face wore a queer satirical look, which provoked Sir
+Philip into saying, "Speak up, sir! what d'ye mean? We don't
+understand French grins here."
+
+"Nor does he, nor French courtesies either," said Peregrine.
+
+"So much the better!" exclaimed the baronet.
+
+Here the little clear voice broke in, "O Mr. Oakshott, if I had but
+known you were coming, you might have brought me a French doll in
+the latest fashion."
+
+"I should have been most happy, madam," returned Peregrine; "but
+unfortunately I am six months from Paris, and besides, his honour
+might object lest a French doll should contaminate the Dutch
+puppets."
+
+"But oh, sir, is it true that French dolls have real hair that will
+curl?"
+
+"Don't be foolish," muttered Charles impatiently; and she drew up
+her head and made an indescribably droll moue of disgust at him.
+
+Supper ended, the party broke up into old and young, the two elder
+gentlemen sadly discussing politics over their tall glasses of wine,
+the matrons talking over the wedding and Lady Archfield's stay in
+London at the parlour fire, and the young folk in a window, waiting
+for the fiddler and a few more of the young people who were to join
+them in the dance.
+
+The Archfield ladies had kissed the hand of the Queen, and agreed
+with Peregrine in admiration of her beauty and grace, though they
+did not go so far as he did, especially when he declared that her
+eyes were as soft as Mistress Anne's, and nearly of the same
+exquisite brown, which made the damsel blush and experience a
+revival of the old feeling of her childhood, as if he put her under
+a spell.
+
+He went on to say that he had had the good fortune to pick up and
+restore to Queen Mary Beatrice a gold and coral rosary which she had
+dropped on her way to St. James's Palace from Whitehall. She
+thanked him graciously, letting him kiss her hand, and asking him if
+he were of the true Church. "Imagine my father's feelings," he
+added, "when she said, 'Ah! but you will be ere long; I give it you
+as a pledge.'"
+
+He produced the rosary, handing it first to Anne, who admired the
+beautiful filigree work, but it was almost snatched from her by Mrs.
+Archfield, who wound it twice on her tiny wrist, tried to get it
+over her head, and did everything but ask for it, till her husband,
+turning round, said roughly, "Give it back, madam. We want no
+Popish toys here."
+
+Lucy put in a hasty question whether Master Oakshott had seen much
+sport, and this led to a spirited description of the homely earnest
+of wild boar hunting under the great Elector of Brandenburg, in
+contrast with the splendours of la chasse aux sangliers at
+Fontainebleau with the green and gold uniforms, the fanfares on the
+curled horns, the ladies in their coaches, forced to attend whether
+ill or well, the very boars themselves too well bred not to conform
+to the sport of the great idol of France. And again, he showed the
+diamond sleeve buttons, the trophies of a sort of bazaar held at
+Marly, where the stalls were kept by the Dauphin, Monsieur, the Duke
+of Maine, Madame de Maintenon, and the rest, where the purchases
+were winnings at Ombre, made not with coin but with nominal sums,
+and other games at cards, and all was given away that was not
+purchased. And again the levees, when the King's wig was handed
+through the curtains on a stick. Peregrine's profane mimicry of the
+stately march of Louis Quatorze, and the cringing obeisances of his
+courtiers, together with their strutting majesty towards their own
+inferiors, convulsed all with merriment; and the bride shrieked out,
+"Do it again! Oh, I shall die of laughing!"
+
+It was very girlish, with a silvery ring, but the elder ladies
+looked round, and the bridegroom muttered 'Mountebank.'
+
+The fiddler arrived at that moment, and the young people paired off,
+the young couple naturally together, and Peregrine, to the surprise
+and perhaps discomfiture of more than one visitor, securing Anne's
+hand. The young lady pupils of Madame knew their steps, and Lucy
+danced correctly, Anne with an easy, stately grace, Charles
+Archfield performed his devoir seriously, his little wife frisked
+with childish glee, evidently quite untaught, but Peregrine's light
+narrow feet sprang, pointed themselves, and bounded with trained
+agility, set off by the tight blackness of his suit. He was like
+one of the grotesque figures shaped in black paper, or as Sir
+Philip, looking in from the dining-parlour, observed, "like a light-
+heeled French fop."
+
+As a rule partners retained one another all the evening, but little
+Mrs. Archfield knew no etiquette, and maybe her husband had pushed
+and pulled her into place a little more authoritatively than she
+quite approved, for she shook him off, and turning round to
+Peregrine exclaimed--
+
+"Now, I will dance with you! You do leap and hop so high and
+trippingly! Never mind her; she is only a parson's niece!"
+
+"Madam!" exclaimed Charles, in a tone of surprised displeasure; but
+she only nodded archly at him, and said, "I must dance with him; he
+can jump so high."
+
+"Let her have her way," whispered Lucy, "she is but a child, and it
+will be better not to make a pother."
+
+He yielded, though with visible annoyance, asking Anne if she would
+put up with a poor deserted swain, and as he led her off muttering,
+"That fellow's friskiness is like to be taken out of him at
+Oakwood."
+
+Meanwhile the small creature had taken possession of her chosen
+partner, who, so far as size went, was far better suited to her than
+any of the other men present. They were dancing something original
+and unpremeditated, with twirls and springs, sweeps and bends,
+bounds and footings, just as the little lady's fancy prompted,
+perhaps guided in some degree by her partner's experience of
+national dances. White and black, they figured about, she with
+floating sheeny hair and glistening robes, he trim and tight and
+jetty, like fairy and imp! It was so droll and pretty that talkers
+and dancers alike paused to watch them in a strange fascination,
+till at last, quite breathless and pink as a moss rosebud, Alice
+dropped upon a chair near her husband. He stood grim, stiff, and
+vexed, all the more because Peregrine had taken her fan and was
+using it so as to make it wave like butterfly's wings, while poor
+Charles looked, as the Doctor whispered to his father, far more
+inclined to lay it about her ears.
+
+Sir Philip laughed heartily, for both he and the Doctor had been so
+much entranced and amused as to be far more diverted at the lad's
+discomfiture than scandalised at the bride's escapade, which they
+viewed as child's play.
+
+Perhaps, however, he was somewhat comforted by her later
+observation, "He is as ugly as Old Nick, and looks like always
+laughing at you; but I wish you could dance like him, Mr. Archfield,
+only then you wouldn't be my dear old great big husband, or so
+beautiful to look at. Oh, yes, to be sure, he is nothing but a
+skipjack such as one makes out of a chicken bone!"
+
+And Anne meanwhile was exclaiming to her mother, "Oh, madam! how
+could they do such a thing? How could they make poor Charley marry
+that foolish ill-mannered little creature?"
+
+"Hush, daughter, you must drop that childish name," said Mrs.
+Woodford gravely.
+
+Anne blushed. "I forgot, madam, but I am so sorry for him."
+
+"There is no reason for uneasiness, my dear. She is a mere child,
+and under such hands as Lady Archfield she is sure to improve. It
+is far better that she should be so young, as it will be the more
+easy to mould her."
+
+"I hope there is any stuff in her to be moulded," sighed the maiden.
+
+"My dear child," returned her mother, "I cannot permit you to talk
+in this manner. Yes, I know Mr. Archfield has been as a brother to
+you, but even his sister ought not to allow herself to discuss or
+dwell on what she deems the shortcomings of his wife."
+
+The mother in her prudence had silenced the girl; but none the less
+did each fall asleep with a sad and foreboding heart. She knew her
+child to be good and well principled, but those early days of notice
+and petting from the young Princesses of the House of York had never
+faded from the childish mind, and although Anne was dutiful,
+cheerful, and outwardly contented, the mother often suspected that
+over the spinning-wheel or embroidery frame she indulged in day
+dreams of heroism, promotion, and grandeur, which might either fade
+away in a happy life of domestic duty or become temptations.
+
+Before going away next morning Peregrine entreated that Mistress
+Anne might have the Queen's rosary, but her mother decidedly
+refused. "It ought to be an heirloom in your family," said she.
+
+He threw up his hands with one of his strange gestures.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX: ON HIS TRAVELS
+
+
+"For Satan finds some mischief still
+For idle hands to do."
+
+ISAAC WATTS.
+
+Peregrine went off in good spirits, promising a visit on his return
+to London, of which he seemed to have no doubt; but no more was
+heard of him for ten days. At the end of that time the Portsmouth
+carrier conveyed the following note to Winchester:--
+
+HONOURED AND REVEREND SIR--Seven years since your arguments and
+intercession induced my father to consent to what I hoped had
+been the rescue of me, body and soul. I know not whether to ask
+of your goodness to make the same endeavour again. My father
+declares that nothing shall induce him again to let me go abroad
+with my uncle, and persists in declaring that the compact has
+been broken by our visits to Papist lands, nor will aught that I
+can say persuade him that the Muscovite abhors the Pope quite as
+much as he can. He likewise deems that having unfortunately
+become his heir, I must needs remain at home to thin the timber
+and watch the ploughmen; and when I have besought him to let me
+yield my place to Robert he replies that I am playing the part of
+Esau. I have written to my uncle, who has been a true father to
+me, and would be loth to part from me for his own sake as well as
+mine but I know not whether he will be able to prevail; and I
+entreat of you, reverend sir, to add your persuasions, for I well
+know that it would be my perdition to remain bound where I am.
+
+Commend me to Mrs. Woodford and Mistress Anne. I trust that the
+former is in better health.--I remain, reverend sir, Your humble
+servant to command, PEREGRINE OAKSHOTT.
+
+Given at Oakwood House,
+This 10th of October 1687.
+
+This was very bad news, but Dr. Woodford knew not how to interfere;
+moreover, being in course at the Cathedral, he could not absent
+himself long enough for an expedition to Oakwood, through wintry
+roads in short days. He could only write an encouraging letter to
+the poor lad, and likewise one to Mr. Horncastle, who under the
+Indulgence had a chapel of his own. The Doctor had kept up the
+acquaintance formed by Peregrine's accident, and had come to regard
+him with much esteem, and as likely to exercise a wholesome
+influence upon his patron. Nothing more was heard for a week, and
+then came another visitor to the Doctor's door, Sir Peregrine
+himself, on his way down, at considerable inconvenience, to
+endeavour to prevail with his brother to allow him to retain his
+nephew in his suite.
+
+"Surely," he said, "my brother had enough of camps in his youth to
+understand that his son will be none the worse squire for having
+gone a little beyond Hampshire bogs, and learnt what the world is
+made of."
+
+"I cannot tell," said Dr. Woodford; "I have my fears that he thinks
+the less known of the world the better."
+
+"That might answer with a heavy clod of a lad such as the poor youth
+who is gone, and such as, for his own sake and my brother's, I trust
+the younger one is, fruges consumere natus; but as for this boy,
+dulness and vacancy are precisely what would be the ruin of him.
+Let my brother keep Master Robert at home, and give him Oakwood; I
+will provide for Perry as I always promised to do."
+
+"If he is wise he will accept the offer," said Dr. Woodford; "but
+'tis hard to be wise for others."
+
+"Nothing harder, sir. I would that I had gone home with Perry, but
+mine audience of his Majesty was fixed for the ensuing week, and my
+brother's summons was peremptory."
+
+"I trust your honour will prevail," said Mrs. Woodford gently. "You
+have effected a mighty change in the poor boy, and I can well
+believe that he is as a son to you."
+
+"Well, madam, yes--as sons go," said the knight in a somewhat
+disappointing tone.
+
+She looked at him anxiously, and ventured to murmur a hope so very
+like an inquiry, and so full of solicitous hope, that it actually
+unlocked the envoy's reserve, and he said, "Ah, madam, you have been
+the best mother that the poor youth has ever had! I will speak
+freely to you, for should I fail in overcoming my brother's
+prejudices, you will be able to do more for him than any one else,
+and I know you will be absolutely secret."
+
+Mrs. Woodford sighed, with forebodings of not long being able to aid
+any one in this world, but still she listened with earnest interest
+and sympathy.
+
+"Yes, madam, you implanted in him that which yet may conquer his
+strange nature. Your name is as it were a charm to conjure up his
+better spirit."
+
+"Of course," she said, "I never durst hope, that he could be tamed
+and under control all at once, but--" and she paused.
+
+"He has improved--vastly improved," said the uncle. "Indeed, when
+first I took him with me, while he was still weak, and moreover much
+overcome by sea-sickness, while all was strange to him, and he was
+relieved by not finding himself treated as an outcast, I verily
+thought him meeker than other urchins, and that the outcry against
+him was unmerited. But no sooner had we got to Berlin, and while I
+was as yet too busy to provide either masters or occupations for my
+young gentleman, than he did indeed make me feel that I had charge
+of a young imp, and that if I did not watch the better, it might be
+a case of war with his Spanish Majesty. For would you believe it,
+his envoy's gardens joined ours, and what must my young master do,
+but sit atop of our wall, making grimaces at the dons and donnas as
+they paced the walks, and pelting them from time to time with
+walnuts. Well, I was mindful of your counsel, and did not flog him,
+nor let my chaplain do so, though I know the good man's fingers
+itched to be at him; but I reasoned with him on the harm he was
+doing me, and would you believe it, the poor lad burst into tears,
+and implored me to give him something to do, to save him from his
+own spirit. I set him to write out and translate a long roll of
+Latin despatches sent up by that pedant Court in Hungary, and I
+declare to you I had no more trouble with him till next he was left
+idle. I gave him tutors, and he studied with fervour, and made
+progress at which they were amazed. He learnt the High Dutch faster
+than any other of my people, and could soon jabber away in it with
+the best of the Elector's folk, and I began to think I had a nephew
+who would do me no small credit. I sent him to perfect his studies
+at Leyden, but shall I confess it to you? it was to find that no
+master nor discipline could keep him out of the riotings and
+quarrels of the worse sort of students. Nay, I found him laid by
+with a rapier thrust in the side from a duel, for no better cause
+than biting his thumb at a Scots law student in chapel, his apology
+being that to sit through a Dutch sermon drove him crazy. 'Tis not
+that he is not trustworthy. Find employment for the restless demon
+that is in him, and all is well with him; moreover, he is full of
+wit and humour, and beguiles a long journey or tedious evening at an
+inn better than any comrade I ever knew, extracting mirth from all
+around, even the very discomforts, and searching to the quick all
+that is to be seen. But if left to himself, the restless demon that
+preys on him is sure to set him to something incalculable. At Turin
+it set him to scraping acquaintance with a Capuchin friar, a dirty
+rogue whom I would have kept on the opposite side of the street.
+That was his graver mood; but what more must he do, but borrow or
+steal, I know not how, the ghastly robes of the Confraternity of
+Death--the white garb and peaked cap with two holes for the eyes,
+wherewith men of all degrees disguise themselves while doing the
+pious work of bearing the dead to the grave. None suspected him,
+for the disguise is complete, and a duke may walk unknown beside a
+water-carrier, bearing the corpse of a cobbler. All would have been
+well, but that at the very brink of the grave the boy's fiend--'tis
+his own word--impelled him to break forth into his wild "Ho! ho!
+ho!" with an eldritch shriek, and slipping out of his cerements,
+dash off headlong over the wall of the cemetery. He was not
+followed. I believe the poor body belonged to a fellow whose
+salvation was more than doubtful in spite of all the priests could
+do, and that the bearers really took him for the foul fiend. It was
+not till a week or two after that the ring of his voice and laugh
+caused him to be recognised by one of the Duke of Savoy's gentlemen,
+happily a prudent man, loth to cause a tumult against one of my
+suite, and he told me all privately in warning. Ay, and when I
+spoke to Peregrine, I found him thoroughly penitent at having
+insulted the dead; he had been unhappy ever since, and had actually
+bestowed his last pocket-piece on the widow. He made handsome
+apologies in good Italian, which he had picked up as fast as the
+German, to the gentleman, who promised that it should go no farther,
+and kept his word. It was the solemnity, Peregrine assured me, that
+brought back all the intolerableness of the preachings at home, and
+awoke the same demon."
+
+"How long ago was this, sir?"
+
+"About eighteen months."
+
+"And has all been well since?"
+
+"Fairly well. He has had fuller and more responsible work to do for
+me, his turn for languages making him a most valuable secretary; and
+in the French Court, really the most perilous of all to a young
+man's virtue, he behaved himself well. It is not debauchery that he
+has a taste for, but he must be doing something, and if wholesome
+occupations do not stay his appetite, he will be doing mischief. He
+brought on himself a very serious rebuke from the Prince of Orange,
+churlishly and roughly given, I allow, but fully merited, for making
+grimaces at his acquaintance among the young officers at a military
+inspection. Heaven help the lad if he be left with his father,
+whose most lively notion of innocent sport is scratching the heads
+of his hogs!"
+
+Nothing could be said in answer save earnest wishes that the knight
+might persuade his brother. Mrs. Woodford wished her brother-in-law
+to go with him to add force to his remonstrance; but on the whole it
+was thought better to leave the family to themselves, Dr. Woodford
+only writing to Major Oakshott, as well as to the youth himself.
+
+The result was anxiously watched for, and in another week, earlier
+in the day than Mrs. Woodford was able to leave her room, Sir
+Peregrine's horses stopped at the door, and as Anne ascertained by a
+peep from the window, he was only accompanied by his servants.
+
+"Yes," he said to the Doctor in his vexation, "one would really
+think that by force of eating Southdown mutton my poor brother had
+acquired the brains of one of his own rams! I declare 'tis a
+piteous sight to see a man resolute on ruining his son and breaking
+his own heart all for conscience sake!"
+
+"Say you so, sir! I had hoped that the sight of what you have made
+of your nephew might have had some effect."
+
+"All the effect it has produced is to make him more determined to
+take him from me. The Hampshire mind abhors foreign breeding, and
+the old Cromwellian spirit thinks good manners sprung from the
+world, and wit from the Evil One!"
+
+"I can quite believe that Peregrine's courtly airs are not welcomed
+here; I could see what our good neighbour, Sir Philip Archfield,
+thought of them; but whereas no power on earth could make the young
+gentleman a steady-going clownish youth after his father's heart,
+methought he might prefer his present polish to impishness."
+
+"So I told him, but I might as well have talked to the horse block.
+It is his duty, quotha, to breed his heir up in godly simplicity!"
+
+"Simplicity is all very well to begin with, but once flown, it
+cannot be restored."
+
+"And that is what my brother cannot see. Well, my poor boy must be
+left to his fate. There is no help for it, and all I can hope is
+that you, sir, and the ladies, will stand his friend, and do what
+may lie in your power to make him patient and render his life less
+intolerable."
+
+"Indeed, sir, we will do what we can; I wish that I could hope that
+it would be of much service."
+
+"My brother has more respect for your advice than perhaps you
+suppose; and to you, madam, the poor lad looks with earnest
+gratitude. Nay, even his mother reaps the benefit of the respect
+with which you have inspired him. Peregrine treats her with a
+gentleness and attention such as she never knew before from her bear
+cubs. Poor soul! I think she likes it, though it somewhat
+perplexes her, and she thinks it all French manners. There is one
+more favour, your reverence, which I scarce dare lay before you.
+You have seen my black boy Hans?"
+
+"He was with you at Oakwood seven years ago."
+
+"Even so. I bought the poor fellow when a mere child from a Dutch
+skipper who had used him scurvily, and he has grown up as faithful
+as a very spaniel, and mightily useful too, not only as body
+servant, but he can cook as well as any French maitre d'hotel, froth
+chocolate, and make the best coffee I ever tasted; is as honest as
+the day, and, I believe, would lay down his life for Peregrine or
+me. I shall be cruelly at a loss without him, but a physician I met
+in London tells me it would be no better than murder to take the
+poor rogue to so cold a country as Muscovy. I would leave him to
+wait on Perry, but they will not hear of it at Oakwood. My sister-
+in-law wellnigh had a fit every time she looked at him when I was
+there before, and I found, moreover, that even when I was at hand,
+the servants jeered at the poor blackamoor, gave him his meals
+apart, and only the refuse of their own, so that he would fare but
+ill if I left him to their mercy. I had thought of offering him to
+Mr. Evelyn of Says Court, who would no doubt use him well, but it
+was Peregrine who suggested that if you of your goodness would
+receive the poor fellow, they could sometimes meet, and that would
+cheer his heart, and he really is far from a useless knave, but is
+worth two of any serving-men I ever saw."
+
+To take an additional man-servant was by no means such a great
+proposal as it would be in most houses at present. Men swarmed in
+much larger proportion than maids in all families of condition, and
+the Doctor was wealthy enough for one--more or less--to make little
+difference, but the question was asked as to what wages Hans should
+receive.
+
+The knight laughed. "Wages, poor lad, what should he do with them?
+He is but a slave, I tell you. Meat, clothes, and fire, that is all
+he needs, and I will so deal with him that he will serve you in all
+faithfulness and obedience. He can speak English enough to know
+what you bid him do, but not enough for chatter with the servants."
+
+So the agreement was made, and poor Hans was to be sent down by the
+Portsmouth coach together with Peregrine's luggage.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X: THE MENAGERIE
+
+
+"The head remains unchanged within,
+ Nor altered much the face,
+It still retains its native grin,
+ And all its old grimace.
+
+"Men with contempt the brute surveyed,
+ Nor would a name bestow,
+But women liked the motley beast,
+ And called the thing a beau."
+
+The Monkies, MERRICK.
+
+The Woodford family did not long remain at Winchester. Anne
+declared the cold to be harming her mother, and became very anxious
+to bring her to the milder sea breezes of Portchester, and though
+Mrs. Woodford had little expectation that any place would make much
+difference to her, she was willing to return to the quiet and repose
+of her home under the castle walls beside the tranquil sea.
+
+Thus they travelled back, as soon as the Doctor's Residence was
+ended, plodding through the heavy chalk roads as well as the big
+horses could drag the cumbrous coach up and down the hills, only
+halting for much needed rest at Sir Philip Archfield's red house,
+round three sides of a quadrangle, the fourth with a low wall backed
+by a row of poplar trees, looking out on the alternate mud and
+sluggish waters of Fareham creek, but with a beautiful garden behind
+the house.
+
+The welcome was hearty. Lady Archfield at once conducted Mrs.
+Woodford to her own bedroom, where she was to rest and be served
+apart, and Anne disrobed her of her wraps, covered her upon the bed,
+and at her hostess's desire was explaining what refreshment would
+best suit her, when there was a shrill voice at the door: "I want
+Mistress Anne! I want to show her my clothes and jewels."
+
+"Coming, child, she is coming when she has attended to her mother,"
+responded the lady. "White wine, or red, did you say, Anne, and a
+little ginger?"
+
+"Is she never coming?" was again the call; and Lady Archfield
+muttering, "Was there ever such an impatient poppet?" released Anne,
+who was instantly pounced upon by young Mrs. Archfield. Linking her
+arm into that of her visitor, and thrusting Lucy into the
+background, the little heiress proceeded to her own wainscotted
+bedroom, bare according to modern views, but very luxurious
+according to those of the seventeenth century, and with the toilette
+apparatus, scanty indeed, but of solid silver, and with a lavish
+amount of perfumery. Her 'own woman' was in waiting to display and
+refold the whole wedding wardrobe, brocade, satin, taffetas,
+cambric, Valenciennes, and point d'Alencon. Anne had to admire each
+in detail, and then to give full meed to the whole casket of jewels,
+numerous and dazzling as befitted a constellation of heirlooms upon
+one small head. They were beautiful, but it was wearisome to repeat
+'Vastly pretty!' 'How exquisite!' 'That becomes you very well,'
+almost mechanically, when Lucy was standing about all the time,
+longing to exchange the girlish confidences that were burning to
+come forth. 'Young Madam,' as every one called her in those times
+when Christian names were at a discount, seemed to be jealous of
+attention to any one else, and the instant she saw the guest attempt
+to converse with her sister-in-law peremptorily interrupted, almost
+as if affronted.
+
+Perhaps if Anne had enjoyed freedom of speech with Lucy she would
+not have learnt as much as did her mother, for the young are often
+more scrupulous as to confidences than their seniors, who view them
+as still children, and freely discuss their affairs among
+themselves.
+
+So Lady Archfield poured out her troubles: how her daughter-in-law
+refused employment, and disdained instruction in needlework,
+housewifery, or any domestic art, how she jangled the spinnet, but
+would not learn music, and was unoccupied, fretful, and exacting, a
+burthen to herself and every one else, and treating Lucy as the
+slave of her whims and humours. As to such discipline as mothers-
+in-law were wont to exercise upon young wives, the least restraint
+or contradiction provoked such a tempest of passion as to shake the
+tiny, delicate frame to a degree that alarmed the good old matron
+for the consequences. Her health was a continual difficulty, for
+her constitution was very frail, every imprudence cost her
+suffering, and yet any check to her impulses as to food, exertion,
+or encountering weather was met by a spoilt child's resentment.
+Moreover, her young husband, and even his father, always thought the
+ladies were hard upon her, and would not have her vexed; and as
+their presence always brightened and restrained her, they never
+understood the full amount of her petulance and waywardness, and
+when they found her out of spirits, or out of temper, they charged
+all on her ailments or on want of consideration from her mother and
+sister-in-law.
+
+Poor Lady Archfield, it was trying for her that her husband should
+be nearly as blind as his son. The young husband was wonderfully
+tender, indulgent, and patient with the little creature, but it
+would not be easy to say whether the affection were not a good deal
+like that for his dog or his horse, as something absolutely his own,
+with which no one else had a right to interfere. It was a relief to
+the family that she always wanted to be out of doors with him
+whenever the weather permitted, nay, often when it was far from
+suitable to so fragile a being; but if she came home aching and
+crying ever so much with chill or fatigue, even if she had to keep
+her bed afterwards, she was equally determined to rush out as soon
+as she was up again, and as angry as ever at remonstrance.
+
+Charles was gone to try a horse; and as the remains of the effects
+of her last imprudence had prevented her accompanying him, the
+arrival of the guests had been a welcome diversion to the monotony
+of the morning.
+
+He was, however, at home again by the time the dinner-bell summoned
+the younger ladies from the inspection of the trinkets and the
+gentlemen from the live stock, all to sit round the heavy oaken
+table draped with the whitest of napery, spun by Lady Archfield in
+her maiden days, and loaded with substantial joints, succeeded by
+delicacies manufactured by herself and Lucy.
+
+As to the horse, Charles was fairly satisfied, but 'that fellow,
+young Oakshott, had been after him, and had the refusal.'
+
+"Don't you be outbid, Mr. Archfield," exclaimed the wife. "What is
+the matter of a few guineas to us?"
+
+"Little fear," replied Charles. "The old Major is scarcely like to
+pay down twenty gold caroluses, but if he should, the bay is his."
+
+"Oh, but why not offer thirty?" she cried.
+
+Charles laughed. "That would be a scurvy trick, sweetheart, and if
+Peregrine be a crooked stick, we need not be crooked too."
+
+"I was about to ask," said the Doctor, "whether you had heard aught
+of that same young gentleman."
+
+"I have seen him where I never desire to see him again," said Sir
+Philip, "riding as though he would be the death of the poor hounds."
+
+"Nick Huntsman swears that he bewitches them," said Charles, "for
+they always lose the scent when he is in the field, but I believe
+'tis the wry looks of him that throw them all out."
+
+"And I say," cried the inconsistent bride, "that 'tis all jealousy
+that puts the gentlemen beside themselves, because none of them can
+dance, nor make a bow, nor hand a cup of chocolate, nor open a gate
+on horseback like him."
+
+"What does a man on horseback want with opening gates?" exclaimed
+Charles.
+
+"That's your manners, sir," said young Madam with a laugh. "What's
+the poor lady to do while her cavalier flies over and leaves her in
+the lurch?"
+
+Her husband did not like the general laugh, and muttered, "You know
+what I mean well enough."
+
+"Yes, so do I! To fumble at the fastening till your poor beast can
+bear it no longer and swerves aside, and I sit waiting a good half
+hour before you bring down your pride enough to alight and open it."
+
+"All because you _would_ send Will home for your mask."
+
+"You would like to have had my poor little face one blister with the
+glare of sun and sea."
+
+"Blisters don't come at this time of the year."
+
+"No, nor to those who have no complexion to lose," she cried, with a
+triumphant look at the two maidens, who certainly had not the lilies
+nor the roses that she believed herself to have, though, in truth,
+her imprudences had left her paler and less pretty than at
+Winchester.
+
+If this were the style of the matrimonial conversations, Anne again
+grieved for her old playfellow, and she perceived that Lucy looked
+uncomfortable; but there was no getting a moment's private
+conversation with her before the coach was brought round again for
+the completion of the journey. All that neighbourhood had a very
+bad reputation as the haunt of lawless characters, prone to
+violence; and though among mere smugglers there was little danger of
+an attack on persons well known like the Woodford family, they were
+often joined by far more desperate men from the seaport, so that it
+was never desirable to be out of doors after dark.
+
+The journey proved to have been too much for Mrs. Woodford's
+strength, and for some days she was so ill that Anne never left the
+house; but she rallied again, and on coming downstairs became very
+anxious that her daughter should not be more confined by attendance
+than was wholesome, and insisted on every opportunity of change or
+amusement being taken.
+
+One day as Anne was in the garden she was surprised by Peregrine
+dashing up on horseback.
+
+"You would not take the Queen's rosary before," he said. "You must
+now, to save it. My father has smelt it out. He says it is
+teraphim! Micah--Rachel, what not, are quoted against it. He would
+have smashed it into fragments, but that Martha Browning said it
+would be a pretty bracelet. I'd sooner see it smashed than on her
+red fist. To think of her giving in to such vanities! But he said
+she might have it, only to be new strung. When he was gone she
+said, 'I don't really want the thing, but it was hard you should
+lose the Queen's keepsake. Can you bestow it safely?' I said I
+could, and brought it hither. Keep it, Anne, I pray."
+
+Anne hesitated, and referred it to her mother upstairs.
+
+"Tell him," she said, "that we will keep it in trust for him as a
+royal gift."
+
+Peregrine was disappointed, but had to be content.
+
+A Dutch vessel from the East Indies had brought home sundry strange
+animals, which were exhibited at the Jolly Mariner at Portsmouth,
+and thus announced on a bill printed on execrable paper, brought out
+to Portchester by some of the market people:--
+
+"An Ellefante twice the Bignesse of an Ocks, the Trunke or Probosces
+whereof can pick up a Needle or roote up an Ellum Tree. Also the
+Royale Tyger, the same as has slaine and devoured seven yonge Gentoo
+babes, three men, and two women at the township at Chuttergong, nie
+to Bombay, in the Eastern Indies. Also the sacred Ape, worshipped
+by the heathen of the Indies, the Dancing Serpent which weareth
+Spectacles, and whose Bite is instantly mortal, with other rare
+Fish, Fowle, Idols and the like. All to be seene at the Charge of
+one Groat per head."
+
+Mrs. Woodford declared herself to be extremely desirous that her
+daughter should see and bring home an account of all these marvels,
+and though Anne had no great inclination to face the tiger with the
+formidable appetite, she could not refuse to accompany her uncle.
+
+The Jolly Mariner stood in one of the foulest and narrowest of the
+streets of the unsavoury seaport, and Dr. Woodford sighed, and
+fumed, and wished for a good pipe of tobacco more than once as he
+hesitated to try to force a way for his niece through the throng
+round the entrance to the stable-yard of the Jolly Mariner,
+apparently too rough to pay respect to gown and cassock. Anne clung
+to his arm, ready to give up the struggle, but a voice said, "Allow
+me, sir. Mistress Anne, deign to take my arm."
+
+It was Peregrine Oakshott with his brother Robert, and she could
+hardly tell how in a few seconds she had been squeezed through the
+crowd, and stood in the inn-yard, in a comparatively free space, for
+a groat was a prohibitory charge to the vulgar.
+
+"Peregrine! Master Oakshott!" They heard an exclamation of
+pleasure, at which Peregrine shrugged his shoulders and looked
+expressively at Anne, before turning to receive the salutations of
+an elderly gentleman and a tall young woman, very plainly but
+handsomely clad in mourning deeper than his own. She was of a tall,
+gaunt, angular figure, and a face that never could have been
+handsome, and now bore evident traces of smallpox in redness and
+pits.
+
+Dr. Woodford knew the guardian Mr. Browning, and his ward Mistress
+Martha and Mistress Anne Jacobina were presented to one another.
+The former gave a good-humoured smile, as if perfectly unconscious
+of her own want of beauty, and declared she had hoped to meet all
+the rest here, especially Mistress Anne Woodford, of whom she had
+heard so much. There was just a little patronage about the tone
+which repelled the proud spirit that was in Anne, and in spite of
+the ordinary dread and repulsion she felt for Peregrine, she was
+naughty enough to have the feeling of a successful beauty when
+Peregrine most manifestly turned away from the heiress in her silk
+and velvet to do the honours of the exhibition to the parson's
+niece.
+
+The elephant was fastened by the leg to a post, which perhaps he
+could have pulled up, had he thought it worth his while, but he was
+well contented to wave his trunk about and extend its clever finger
+to receive contributions of cakes and apples, and he was too well
+amused to resort to any strong measures. The tiger, to Anne's
+relief, proved to be only a stuffed specimen. Peregrine, who had
+seen a good many foreign animals in Holland, where the Dutch
+captains were in the habit of bringing curiosities home for the
+delectation of their families in their Lusthausen, was a very
+amusing companion, having much to tell about bird and beast, while
+Robert stood staring with open mouth. The long-legged secretary and
+the beautiful doves were, however, only stuffed, but Anne was much
+entertained at second hand with the relation of the numerous
+objects, which on the word of a Leyden merchant had been known to
+disappear in the former bird's capacious crop, and with stories of
+the graceful dancing of the cobra, though she was not sorry that the
+present specimen was only visible in a bottle of arrack, where his
+spectacled hood was scarcely apparent. Presently a well known
+shrill young voice was heard. "Yes, yes, I know I shall swoon at
+that terrible tiger! Oh, don't! I can't come any farther."
+
+"Why, you would come, madam," said Charles.
+
+"Yes, yes! but--oh, there's a two-tailed monster! I know it is the
+tiger! It is moving! I shall die if you take me any farther."
+
+"Plague upon your folly, madam! It is only the elephant," said a
+gruffer, rude voice.
+
+"Oh, it is dreadful! 'Tis like a mountain! I can't! Oh no, I
+can't!"
+
+"Come, madam, you have brought us thus far, you must come on, and
+not make fools of us all," said Charles's voice. "There's nothing
+to hurt you."
+
+Anne, understanding the distress and perplexity, here turned back to
+the passage into the court, and began persuasively to explain to
+little Mrs. Archfield that the tiger was dead, and only a skin, and
+that the elephant was the mildest of beasts, till she coaxed forward
+that small personage, who had of course never really intended to
+turn back, supported and guarded as she was by her husband, and
+likewise by a tall, glittering figure in big boots and a handsome
+scarlet uniform and white feather who claimed her attention as he
+strode into the court. "Ha! Mistress Anne and the Doctor on my
+life. What, don't you know me?"
+
+"Master Sedley Archfield!" said the Doctor; "welcome home, sir!
+'Tis a meeting of old acquaintance. You and this gentleman are both
+so much altered that it is no wonder if you do not recognise one
+another at once."
+
+"No fear of Mr. Perry Oakshott not being recognised," said Sedley
+Archfield, holding out his hand, but with a certain sneer in his
+rough voice that brought Peregrine's eyebrows together. "Kenspeckle
+enough, as the fools of Whigs say in Scotland."
+
+"Are you long from Scotland, sir?" asked Dr. Woodford, by way of
+preventing personalities.
+
+"Oh ay, sir; these six months and more. There's not much more sport
+to be had since the fools of Cameronians have been pretty well got
+under, and 'tis no loss to be at Hounslow."
+
+"And oh, what a fright!" exclaimed Mrs. Archfield, catching sight of
+the heiress. "Keep her away! She makes me ill."
+
+They were glad to divert her attention to feeding the elephant, and
+she was coquetting a little about making up her mind to approach
+even the defunct tiger, while she insisted on having the number of
+his victims counted over to her. Anne asked for Lucy, to whom she
+wanted to show the pigeons, but was answered that, "my lady wanted
+Lucy at home over some matter of jellies and blancmanges."
+
+Charles shrugged his shoulders a little and Sedley grumbled to Anne.
+"The little vixen sets her heart on cates that she won't lay a
+finger to make, and poor Lucy is like to be no better than a cook-
+maid, while they won't cross her, for fear of her tantrums."
+
+At that instant piercing screams, shriek upon shriek, rang through
+the court, and turning hastily round, Anne beheld a little monkey
+perched on Mrs. Archfield's head, having apparently leapt thither
+from the pole to which it was chained.
+
+The keeper was not in sight, being in fact employed over a sale of
+some commodities within. There was a general springing to the
+rescue. Charles tried to take the creature off, Sedley tugged at
+the chain fastened to a belt round its body, but the monkey held
+tight by the curls on the lady's forehead with its hands, and
+crossed its legs round her neck, clasping the hands so that the
+effect of the attempts of her husband and his cousin was only to
+throttle her, so that she could no longer scream and was almost in a
+fit, when on Peregrine holding out a nut and speaking coaxingly in
+Dutch, the monkey unloosed its hold, and with another bound was on
+his arm. He stood caressing and feeding it, talking to it in the
+same tongue, while it made little squeaks and chatterings, evidently
+delighted, though its mournful old man's visage still had the same
+piteous expression. There was something most grotesque and almost
+weird in the sight of Peregrine's queer figure toying with its odd
+hands which seemed to be in black gloves, and the strange language
+he talked to it added to the uncanny effect. Even the Doctor felt
+it as he stood watching, and would have muttered 'Birds of a
+feather,' but that the words were spoken more gruffly and plainly by
+Sedley Archfield, who said something about the Devil and his dam,
+which the good Doctor did not choose to hear, and only said to
+Peregrine, "You know how to deal with the jackanapes."
+
+"I have seen some at Leyden, sir. This is a pretty little beast."
+
+Pretty! There was a recoil in horror, for the creature looked to
+the crowd demoniacal. Something the same was the sensation of
+Charles, who, assisted by Anne and Martha, had been rather carrying
+than leading his wife into the inn parlour, where she immediately
+had a fit of hysterics--vapours, as they called it--bringing all the
+women of the inn about her, while Martha and Anne soothed her as
+best they could, and he was reduced to helplessly leaning out at the
+bay window.
+
+When the sobs and cries subsided, under cold water and essences
+without and strong waters within, and the little lady in Martha's
+strong arms, between the matronly coaxing of the fat hostess and the
+kind soothings of the two young ladies, had been restored to
+something of equanimity, Mistress Martha laid her down and said with
+the utmost good humour and placidity to the young husband, "Now I'll
+go, sir. She is better now, but the sight of my face might set her
+off again."
+
+"Oh, do not say so, madam. We are infinitely obliged. Let her
+thank you."
+
+But Martha shook her hand and laughed, turning to leave the room, so
+that he was fain to give her his arm and escort her back to her
+guardian.
+
+Then ensued a scream. "Where's he going? Mr. Archfield, don't
+leave me."
+
+"He is only taking Mistress Browning back to her guardian," said
+Anne.
+
+"Eh? oh, how can he? A hideous fright!" she cried.
+
+To say the truth, she was rather pleased to have had such a dreadful
+adventure, and to have made such a commotion, though she protested
+that she must go home directly, and could never bear the sight of
+those dreadful monsters again, or she should die on the spot.
+
+"But," said she, when the coach was at the door, and Anne had
+restored her dress to its dainty gaiety, "I must thank Master
+Peregrine for taking off that horrible jackanapes."
+
+"Small thanks to him," said Charles crossly. "I wager it was all
+his doing out of mere spite."
+
+"He is too good a beau ever to spite _me_," said Mrs. Alice, her
+head a little on one side.
+
+"Then to show off what he could do with the beast--Satan's imp, like
+himself."
+
+"No, no, Mr. Archfield," pleaded Anne, "that was impossible; I saw
+him myself. He was with that sailor-looking man measuring the
+height of the secretary bird."
+
+"I believe you are always looking after him," grumbled Charles. "I
+can't guess what all the women see in him to be always gazing after
+him."
+
+"Because he is so charmingly ugly," laughed the young wife, tripping
+out in utter forgetfulness that she was to die if she went near the
+beasts again. She met Peregrine half way across the yard with
+outstretched hands, exclaiming--
+
+"O Mr. Oakshott! it was so good in you to take away that nasty
+beast."
+
+"I am glad, madam, to have been of use," said Peregrine, bowing and
+smiling, a smile that might explain something of his fascination.
+"The poor brute was only drawn, as all of our kind are. He wanted
+to see so sweet a lady nearer. He is quite harmless. Will you
+stroke him? See, there he sits, gazing after you. Will you give
+him a cake and make friends?"
+
+"No, no, madam, it cannot be; it is too much," grumbled Charles; and
+though Alice had backed at first, perhaps for the pleasure of
+teasing him, or for that of being the centre of observation,
+actually, with all manner of pretty airs and graces, she let herself
+be led forward, lay a timid hand on the monkey's head, and put a
+cake in its black fingers, while all the time Peregrine held it fast
+and talked Dutch to it; and Charles Archfield hardly contained his
+rage, though Anne endeavoured to argue the impossibility of
+Peregrine's having incited the attack; and Sedley blustered that
+they ought to interfere and make the fellow know the reason why.
+However, Charles had sense enough to know that though he might
+exhale his vexation in grumbling, he had no valid cause for
+quarrelling with young Oakshott, so he contented himself with black
+looks and grudging thanks, as he was obliged to let Peregrine hand
+his wife into her carriage amid her nods and becks and wreathed
+smiles.
+
+They would have taken Dr. Woodford and his niece home in the coach,
+but Anne had an errand in the town, and preferred to return by boat.
+She wanted some oranges and Turkey figs to allay her mother's
+constant thirst, and Peregrine begged permission to accompany them,
+saying that he knew where to find the best and cheapest.
+Accordingly he took them to a tiny cellar, in an alley by the boat
+camber, where the Portugal oranges certainly looked riper and were
+cheaper than any that Anne had found before; but there seemed to be
+an odd sort of understanding between Peregrine and the withered old
+weather-beaten sailor who sold them, such as rather puzzled the
+Doctor.
+
+"I hope these are not contraband," he said to Peregrine, when the
+oranges had been packed in the basket of the servant who followed
+them.
+
+Peregrine shrugged his shoulders.
+
+"Living is hard, sir. Ask no questions."
+
+The Doctor looked tempted to turn back with the fruit, but such
+doubts were viewed as ultra scruples, and would hardly have been
+entertained even by a magistrate such as Sir Philip Archfield.
+
+It was not a time for questions, and Peregrine remained with them
+till they embarked at the point, asking to be commended to Mrs.
+Woodford, and hoping soon to come and see both her and poor Hans, he
+left them.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI: PROPOSALS
+
+
+"Hear me, ye venerable core,
+ As counsel for poor mortals,
+That frequent pass douce Wisdom's door
+ For glaikit Folly's portals;
+I for their thoughtless, careless sakes
+ Would here propose defences,
+Their doucie tricks, their black mistakes,
+ Their failings and mischances."
+
+BURNS.
+
+For seven years Anne Woodford had kept Lucy Archfield's birthday
+with her, and there was no refusing now, though there was more and
+more unwillingness to leave Mrs. Woodford, whose declining state
+became so increasingly apparent that even the loving daughter could
+no longer be blind to it.
+
+The coach was sent over to fetch Mistress Anne to Fareham, and the
+invalid was left, comfortably installed in her easy-chair by the
+parlour fire, with a little table by her side, holding a hand-bell,
+a divided orange, a glass of toast and water, and the Bible and
+Prayer-book, wherein lay her chief studies, together with a little
+needlework, which still amused her feeble hands. The Doctor,
+divided between his parish, his study, and his garden, had promised
+to look in from time to time.
+
+Presently, however, the door was gently tapped, and on her call
+"Come in," Hans, all one grin, admitted Peregrine Oakshott, bowing
+low in his foreign, courteous manner, and entreating her to excuse
+his intrusion, "For truly, madam, in your goodness is my only hope."
+
+Then he knelt on one knee and kissed the hand she held out to him,
+while desiring him to speak freely to her.
+
+"Nay, madam, I fear I shall startle you, when I lay before you the
+only chance that can aid me to overcome the demon that is in me."
+
+"My poor--"
+
+"Call me your boy, as when I was here seven years ago. Let me sit
+at your feet as then and listen to me."
+
+"Indeed I will, my dear boy," and she laid her hand on his dark
+head. "Tell me all that is in your heart."
+
+"Ah, dear lady, that is not soon done! You and Mistress Anne, as
+you well know, first awoke me from my firm belief that I was none
+other than an elf, and yet there have since been times when I have
+doubted whether it were not indeed the truth."
+
+"Nay, Peregrine, at years of discretion you should have outgrown old
+wives' tales."
+
+"Better be an elf at once--a soulless creature of the elements--than
+the sport of an evil spirit doomed to perdition," he bitterly
+exclaimed.
+
+"Hush, hush! You know not what you are saying!"
+
+"I know it too well, madam! There are times when I long and wish
+after goodness--nay, when Heaven seems open to me--and I resolve and
+strive after a perfect life; but again comes the wild, passionate
+dragging, as it were, into all that at other moments I most loathe
+and abhor, and I become no more my own master. Ah!"
+
+There was misery in his voice, and he clutched the long hair on each
+side of his face with his hands.
+
+"St. Paul felt the same," said Mrs. Woodford gently.
+
+"'Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?' Ay, ay! how
+many times have I not groaned that forth! And so, if that Father at
+Turin were right, I am but as Paul was when he was Saul. Madam, is
+it not possible that I was never truly baptized?" he cried eagerly.
+
+"Impossible, Peregrine. Was not Mr. Horncastle chaplain when you
+were born? Yes; and I have heard my brother say that both he and
+your father held the same views as the Church upon baptism."
+
+"So I thought; but Father Geronimo says that at the best it was but
+heretical baptism, and belike hastily and ineffectually performed."
+
+"Put that aside, Peregrine. It is only a temptation and
+allurement."
+
+"It is an allurement you know not how strong," said the poor youth.
+"Could I only bring myself to believe all that Father Geronimo does,
+and fall down before his Madonnas and saints, then could I hope for
+a new nature, and scourge away the old"--he set his teeth as he
+spoke--"till naught remains of the elf or demon, be it what it
+will."
+
+"Ah, Peregrine, scourging will not do it, but grace will, and that
+grace is indeed yours, as is proved by these higher aspirations."
+
+"I tell you, madam, that if I live on as I am doing now, grace will
+be utterly stifled, if it ever abode in me at all. Every hour that
+I live, pent in by intolerable forms and immeasurable dulness, the
+maddening temper gains on me! Nay, I have had to rush out at night
+and swear a dozen round oaths before I could compose myself to sit
+down to the endless supper. Ah, I shock you, madam! but that's not
+the worst I am driven to do."
+
+"Nor the way to bring the better spirit, my poor youth. Oh, that
+you would pray instead of swearing!"
+
+"I cannot pray at Oakwood. My father and Mr. Horncastle drive away
+all the prayers that ever were in me, and I mean nothing, even
+though I keep my word to you."
+
+"I am glad you do that. While I know you are doing so, I shall
+still believe the better angel will triumph."
+
+"How can aught triumph but hatred and disgust where I am pinned
+down? Listen, madam, and hear if good spirits have any chance. We
+break our fast, ere the sun is up, on chunks of yesterday's half-
+dressed beef and mutton. If I am seen seeking for a morsel not half
+raw, I am rated for dainty French tastes; and the same with the sour
+smallest of beer. I know now what always made me ill-tempered as a
+child, and I avoid it, but at the expense of sneers on my French
+breeding, even though my drink be fair water; for wine, look you, is
+a sinful expense, save for after dinner, and frothed chocolate for a
+man is an invention of Satan. The meal is sauced either with blame
+of me, messages from the farm-folk, or Bob's exploits in the chase.
+Then my father goes his rounds on the farm, and would fain have me
+with him to stand knee-deep in mire watching the plough, or feeling
+each greasy and odorous old sheep in turn to see if it be ready for
+the knife, or gloating over the bullocks or swine, or exchanging
+auguries with Thomas Vokes on this or that crop. Faugh! And I am
+told I shall never be good for a country gentleman if I contemn such
+matters! I say I have no mind to be a country gentleman, whereby I
+am told of Esau till I am sick of his very name."
+
+"But surely you have not always to follow on this round?"
+
+"Oh no! I may go out birding with Bob, who is about as lively as an
+old jackass, or meet the country boobies for a hunt, and be pointed
+at as the Frenchman, and left to ride alone; or there's mine own
+chamber, when the maids do not see fit to turn me out with their
+pails and besoms, as they do at least twice a week--I sit there in
+my cloak and furs (by the way, I am chidden for an effeminate fop if
+ever I am seen in them). I would give myself to books, as my uncle
+counselled, but what think you? By ill hap Bob, coming in to ask
+some question, found me studying the Divina Commedia of Dante
+Alighieri, and hit upon one of the engravings representing the
+torments of purgatory. What must he do but report it, and
+immediately a hue and cry arises that I am being corrupted with
+Popish books. In vain do I tell them that their admirable John
+Milton, the only poet save Sternhold and Hopkins that my father
+deems not absolute pagan, knew, loved, and borrowed from Dante. All
+my books are turned over as ruthlessly as ever Don Quixote's by the
+curate and the barber, and whatever Mr. Horncastle's erudition
+cannot vouch for is summarily handed over to the kitchen wench to
+light the fires. The best of it is that they have left me my
+classics, as though old Terence and Lucan were lesser heathens than
+the great Florentine. However, I have bribed the young maid, and
+rescued my Dante and Boiardo with small damage, but I dare not read
+them save with door locked."
+
+Mrs. Woodford could scarcely shake her head at the disobedience, and
+she asked if there were really no other varieties.
+
+"Such as fencing with that lubber Robert, and trying to bend his
+stiff limbs to the noble art of l'escrime. But that is after dinner
+work. There is the mountain of half-raw flesh to be consumed first,
+and then my father, with Mr. Horncastle and Bob discuss on what they
+call the news--happy if a poor rogue has been caught by Tom
+Constable stealing faggots. 'Tis argument for a week--almost equal
+to the price of a fat mutton at Portsmouth. My father and the
+minister nod in due time over their ale-cup, and Bob and I go our
+ways till dark, or till the house bell rings for prayers and
+exposition. Well, dear good lady, I will not grieve you by telling
+you how often they make me wish to be again the imp devoid of every
+shred of self-respect, and too much inured to flogging to heed what
+my antics might bring on me."
+
+"I am glad you have that shred of self respect; I hope indeed it is
+some higher respect."
+
+"Well, I can never believe that Heaven meant to be served by mortal
+dullness. Seven years have only made old Horncastle blow his horn
+to the same note, only more drearily."
+
+"I can see indeed that it is a great trial to one used to the life
+of foreign Courts and to interest in great affairs like you, my poor
+Peregrine; but what can I say but to entreat you to be patient, try
+to find interest, and endeavour to win your father's confidence so
+that he may accord you more liberty? Did I not hear that your
+attention made your mother's life happier?"
+
+Peregrine laughed. "My mother! She has never seen aught but
+boorishness all her life, and any departure therefrom seems to her
+unnatural. I believe she is as much afraid of my courtesy as ever
+she was of my mischief, and that in her secret heart she still
+believes me a changeling. No, Madam Woodford, there is but one way
+to save me from the frenzy that comes over me."
+
+"Your father has already been entreated to let you join your uncle."
+
+"I know it--I know it; but if it were impossible before, that
+discovery of Dante has made it impossibilissimo, as the Italian
+would say, to deal with him now. There is a better way. Give me
+the good angel who has always counteracted the evil one. Give me
+Mistress Anne!"
+
+"Anne, my Anne!" exclaimed Mrs. Woodford in dismay. "O Peregrine,
+it cannot be!"
+
+"I knew that would be your first word," said Peregrine, "but verily,
+madam, I would not ask it but that I know that I should be another
+man with her by my side, and that she would have nothing to fear
+from the evil that dies at her approach."
+
+"Ah, Peregrine! you think so now; but no man can be sure of himself
+with any mere human care. Besides, my child is not of degree to
+match with you. Your father would justly be angered if we took
+advantage of your attachment to us to encourage you in an
+inclination he could never approve."
+
+"I tell you, madam--yes, I must tell you all--my madness and my ruin
+will be completed if I am left to my father's will. I know what is
+hanging over me. He is only waiting till I am of age--at Midsummer,
+and the year of mourning is over for poor Oliver--I am sure no one
+mourns for him more heartily than I--to bind me to Martha Browning.
+If she would only bring the plague, or something worse than
+smallpox, to put an end to it at once!"
+
+"But that would make any such scheme all the more impossible."
+
+"Listen, madam; do but hear me. Even as children the very sight of
+Martha Browning's solemn face"--Peregrine drew his countenance down
+into a portentous length--"her horror at the slightest word or
+sport, her stiff broomstick carriage, all impelled me to the most
+impish tricks. And now--letting alone that pock-marks have seamed
+her grim face till she is as ugly as Alecto--she is a Precisian of
+the Precisians. I declare our household is in her eyes sinfully
+free! If she can hammer out a text of Scripture, and write her name
+in characters as big and gawky as herself, 'tis as far as her
+education has carried her, save in pickling, preserving, stitchery,
+and clear starching, the only arts not sinful in her eyes. If I am
+to have a broomstick, I had rather ride off on one at once to the
+Witches' Sabbath on the Wartburg than be tied to one for life."
+
+"I should think she would scarce accept you."
+
+"There's no such hope. She has been bred up to regard one of us as
+her lot, and she would accept me without a murmur if I were
+Beelzebub himself, horns and tail and all! Why, she ogles me with
+her gooseberry eyes already, and treats me as a chattel of her own."
+
+"Hush, hush, Peregrine! I cannot have you talk thus. If your
+father had such designs, it would be unworthy of us to favour you in
+crossing them."
+
+"Nay, madam, he hath never expressed them as yet. Only my mother
+and brother both refer to his purpose, and if I could show myself
+contracted to a young lady of good birth and education, he cannot
+gainsay; it might yet save me from what I will not and cannot
+endure. Not that such is by any means my chief and only motive. I
+have loved Mistress Anne with all my heart ever since she shone upon
+me like a being from a better world when I lay sick here. She has
+the same power of hushing the wild goblin within me as you have,
+madam. I am another man with her, as I am with you. It is my only
+hope! Give me that hope, and I shall be able to endure patiently.--
+Ah! what have I done? Have I said too much?"
+
+He had talked longer and more eagerly than would have been good for
+the invalid even if the topic had been less agitating, and the
+emotion caused by this unexpected complication, consternation at the
+difficulties she foresaw, and the present difficulty of framing a
+reply, were altogether too much for Mrs. Woodford. She turned
+deadly white, and gasped for breath, so that Peregrine, in terror,
+dashed off in search of the maids, exclaiming that their mistress
+was in a swoon.
+
+The Doctor came out of his study much distressed, and in Anne's
+absence the household was almost helpless in giving the succours in
+which she had always been the foremost. Peregrine lingered about in
+remorse and despair, offering to fetch her or to go for the doctor,
+and finally took the latter course, thereto impelled by the angry
+words of the old cook, an enemy of his in former days.
+
+"No better? no, sir, nor 'tis not your fault if ever she be. You've
+been and frought her nigh to death with your terrifying ways."
+
+Peregrine was Hampshire man enough to know that to terrify only
+meant to tease, but he was in no mood to justify himself to old
+Patience, so he galloped off to Portsmouth, and only returned with
+the doctor to hear that Madam Woodford was in bed, and her daughter
+with her. She was somewhat better, but still very ill, and it was
+plain that this was no moment for pressing his suit even had it not
+been time for him to return home. Going to fetch the doctor might
+be accepted as a valid reason for missing the evening exhortation
+and prayer, but there were mistrustful looks that galled him.
+
+Anne's return was more beneficial to Mrs. Woodford than the doctor's
+visit, and the girl was still too ignorant of all that her mother's
+attacks of spasms and subsequent weakness implied to be as much
+alarmed as to depress her hopes. Yet Mrs. Woodford, lying awake in
+the night, detected that her daughter was restless and unhappy, and
+asked what ailed her, and how the visit had gone off.
+
+"You do not wish me to speak of such things, madam," was the answer.
+
+"Tell me all that is in your heart, my child."
+
+It all came out with the vehemence of a reserved nature when the
+flood is loosed. 'Young Madam' had been more than usually peevish
+and exacting, jealous perhaps at Lucy's being the heroine of the
+day, and fretful over a cold which confined her to the house, how
+she worried and harassed all around her with her whims, megrims and
+complaints could only too well be imagined, and how the entire
+pleasure of the day was destroyed. Lucy was never allowed a
+minute's conversation with her friend without being interrupted by a
+whine and complaints of unkindness and neglect.
+
+Lady Archfield's ill-usage, as the young wife was pleased to call
+every kind of restriction, was the favourite theme next to the
+daughter-in law's own finery, her ailments, and her notions of the
+treatment befitting her.
+
+And young Mr. Archfield himself, while handing his old friend out to
+the carriage that had fetched her, could not help confiding to her
+that he was nearly beside himself. His mother meant to be kind, but
+expected too much from one so brought up, and his wife--what could
+be done for her? She made herself miserable here, and every one
+else likewise. Yet even if his father would consent, she was
+utterly unfit to be mistress of a house of her own; and poor Charles
+could only utter imprecations on the guardians who could have had no
+idea how a young woman ought to be brought up. It was worse than an
+ill-trained hound."
+
+Mrs. Woodford heard what she extracted from her daughter with grief
+and alarm, and not only for her friends.
+
+"Indeed, my dear child," she said, "you must prevent such
+confidences. They are very dangerous things respecting married
+people."
+
+"It was all in a few moments, mamma, and I could not stop him. He
+is so unhappy;" and Anne's voice revealed tears.
+
+"The more reason why you should avoid hearing what he will soon be
+very sorry you have heard. Were he not a mere lad himself, it would
+be as inexcusable as it is imprudent thus to speak of the troubles
+and annoyances that often beset the first year of wedded life. I am
+sorry for the poor youth, who means no harm nor disloyalty, and is
+only treating you as his old companion and playmate; but he has no
+right thus to talk of his wife, above all to a young maiden too
+inexperienced to counsel him, and if he should attempt to do so
+again, promise me, my daughter, that you will silence him--if by no
+other means, by telling him so."
+
+"I promise!" said Anne, choking back her tears and lifting her head.
+"I am sure I never want to go to Fareham again while that Lieutenant
+Sedley Archfield is there. If those be army manners, they are what
+I cannot endure. He is altogether mean and hateful, above all when
+he scoffs at Master Oakshott."
+
+"I am afraid a great many do so, child, and that he often gives some
+occasion," put in Mrs. Woodford, a little uneasy that this should be
+the offence.
+
+"He is better than Sedley Archfield, be he what he will, madam,"
+said the girl. "He never pays those compliments, those insolent
+disgusting compliments, such as he--that Sedley, I mean--when he
+found me alone in the hall, and I had to keep him at bay from trying
+to kiss me, only Mr. Archfield--Charley--came down the stairs before
+he was aware, and called out, 'I will thank you to behave yourself
+to a lady in my father's house.' And then he, Sedley, sneered 'The
+Parson's niece!' with such a laugh, mother, I shall never get it out
+of my ears. As if I were not as well born as he!"
+
+"That is not quite the way to take it, my child. I had rather you
+stood on your maidenly dignity and discretion than on your birth. I
+trust he will soon be away."
+
+"I fear he will not, mamma, for I heard say the troop are coming
+down to be under the Duke of Berwick at Portsmouth."
+
+"Then, dear daughter, it is the less mishap that you should be thus
+closely confined by loving attendance on me. Now, goodnight.
+Compose yourself to sleep, and think no more of these troubles."
+
+Nevertheless mother and daughter lay long awake, side by side, that
+night; the daughter in all the flutter of nerves induced by offended
+yet flattered feeling--hating the compliment, yet feeling that it
+was a compliment to the features that she was beginning to value.
+She was substantially a good, well-principled maiden, modest and
+discreet, with much dignified reserve, yet it was impossible that
+she should not have seen heads turned to look at her in Portsmouth,
+and know that she was admired above her contemporaries, so that even
+if it brought her inconvenience it was agreeable. Besides, her
+heart was beating with pity for the Archfields. The elder ones
+might have only themselves to blame, but it was very hard for poor
+Charles to have been blindly coupled to a being who did not know how
+to value him, still harder that there should be blame for a
+confidence where neither meant any harm--blame that made her blush
+on her pillow with indignant shame.
+
+Perhaps Mrs. Woodford divined these thoughts, for she too meditated
+deeply on the perils of her fair young daughter, and in the morning
+could not leave her room. In the course of the day she heard that
+Master Peregrine Oakshott had been to inquire for her, and was not
+surprised when her brother-in-law sought an interview with her. The
+gulf between the hierarchy and squirearchy was sufficient for a
+marriage to be thought a mesalliance, and it was with a smile at the
+folly as well as with a certain displeased pity that Dr. Woodford
+mentioned the proposal so vehemently pressed upon him by Peregrine
+Oakshott for his niece's hand.
+
+"Poor boy!" said Mrs. Woodford, "it is a great misfortune. You
+forbade him of course to speak of such a thing."
+
+"I told him that I could not imagine how he could think us capable
+of entertaining any such proposal without his father's consent. He
+seems to have hoped that to pledge himself to us might extort
+sanction from his father, not seeing that it would be a highly
+improper measure, and would only incense the Major."
+
+"All the more that the Major wishes to pass on Mistress Martha
+Browning to him, poor fellow."
+
+"He did not tell me so."
+
+Mrs. Woodford related what he had said to her, and the Doctor could
+not but observe: "The poor Major! his whole treatment of that
+unfortunate youth is as if he were resolved to drive him to
+distraction. But even if the Major were ever so willing, I doubt
+whether Master Peregrine be the husband you would choose for our
+little maid."
+
+"Assuredly not, poor fellow! though if she loved him as he loves
+her--which happily she does not--I should scarce dare to stand in
+the way, lest she should be the appointed instrument for his good."
+
+"He assured me that he had never directly addressed her."
+
+"No, and I trust he never will. Not that she is ever like to love
+him, although she does not shrink from him quite as much as others
+do. Yet there is a strain of ambition in my child's nature that
+might make her seek the elevation. But, my good brother, for this
+and other reasons we must find another home for my poor child when I
+am gone. Nay, brother, do not look at me thus; you know as well as
+I do that I can scarcely look to see the spring come in, and I would
+fain take this opportunity of speaking to you concerning my dear
+daughter. No one can be a kinder father to her than you, and I
+would most gladly leave her to cheer and tend you, but as things
+stand around us she can scarce remain here without a mother's
+watchfulness. She is guarded now by her strict attendance on my
+infirmity, but when I am gone how will it be?"
+
+"She is as good and discreet a maiden as parent could wish."
+
+"Good and discreet as far as her knowledge and experience go, but
+that is not enough. On the one hand, there is a certain wild temper
+about that young Master Oakshott such as makes me never know what he
+might attempt if, as he says, his father should drive him to
+desperation, and this is a lonely place, with the sea close at
+hand."
+
+"Lady Archfield would gladly take charge of her."
+
+Mrs. Woodford here related what Anne had said of Sedley's insolence,
+but this the Doctor thought little of, not quite believing in the
+regiment coming into the neighbourhood, and Mrs. Woodford most
+unwillingly was forced to mention her further unwillingness that her
+daughter should be made a party to the troubles caused by the silly
+young wife of her old playfellow.
+
+"What more?" said the Doctor, holding up his hands. "I never
+thought a discreet young maid could be such a care, but I suppose
+that is the price we pay for her good looks. Three of them, eh?
+What is it that you propose?"
+
+"I should like to place her in the household of some godly and
+kindly lady, who would watch over her and probably provide for her
+marriage. That, as you know, was my own course, and I was very
+happy in Lady Sandwich's family, till I made the acquaintance of
+your dear and honoured brother, and my greater happiness began. The
+first day that I am able I will write to some of my earlier friends,
+such as Mrs. Evelyn and Mrs. Pepys, and again there is Mistress
+Eleanor Wall, who, I hear, is married to Sir Theophilus Oglethorpe,
+and who might accept my daughter for my sake. She is a warm,
+loving, open-hearted creature of Irish blood, and would certainly be
+kind to her."
+
+There was no indignity in such a plan. Most ladies of rank or
+quality entertained one or more young women of the clerical or
+professional classes as companions, governesses, or ladies' maids,
+as the case might be. They were not classed with the servants, but
+had their share of the society and amusements of the house, and a
+fair chance of marriage in their own degree, though the comfort of
+their situation varied a good deal according to the amiability of
+their mistress, from that of a confidential friend to a white slave
+and souffre douleur.
+
+Dr. Woodford had no cause to object except his own loss of his
+niece's society and return to bachelor life, after the eight years
+of companionship which he had enjoyed; but such complications as
+were induced by the presence of an attractive young girl were, as he
+allowed, beyond him, and he acquiesced with a sigh in the judgment
+of the mother, whom he had always esteemed so highly.
+
+The letters were written, and in due time received kind replies.
+Mrs. Evelyn proposed that the young gentlewoman should come and stay
+with her till some situation should offer itself, and Lady
+Oglethorpe, a warm-hearted Irishwoman, deeply attached to the Queen,
+declared her intention of speaking to the King or the Princess Anne
+on the first opportunity of the daughter of the brave Captain
+Woodford. There might very possibly be a nursery appointment to be
+had either at the Cockpit or at Whitehall in the course of the year.
+
+This was much more than Mrs. Woodford had desired. She had far
+rather have placed her daughter immediately under some kind matronly
+lady in a private household; but she knew that her good friend was
+always eager to promise to the utmost of her possible power. She
+did not talk much of this to her daughter, only telling her that the
+kind ladies had promised to befriend her, and find a situation for
+her; and Anne was too much shocked to find her mother actually
+making such arrangements to enter upon any inquiries. The
+perception that her mother was looking forward to passing away so
+soon entirely overset her; she would not think about it, would not
+admit the bare idea of the loss. Only there lurked at the bottom of
+her heart the feeling that when the crash had come, and desolation
+had over taken her, it would be more dreary at Portchester than
+anywhere else; and there might be infinite possibilities beyond for
+the King's godchild, almost a knight's daughter.
+
+The next time that Mrs. Woodford heard that Major Oakshott was at
+the door inquiring for her health, she begged as a favour that he
+would come and see her.
+
+The good gentleman came upstairs treading gently in his heavy boots,
+as one accustomed to an invalid chamber.
+
+"I am sorry to see you thus, madam," he said, as she held out her
+wasted hand and thanked him. "Did you desire spiritual
+consolations? There are times when our needs pass far beyond
+prescribed forms and ordinances."
+
+"I am thankful for the prayers of good men," said Mrs. Woodford;
+"but for truth's sake I must tell you that this was not foremost in
+my mind when I begged for this favour."
+
+He was evidently disappointed, for he was producing from his pocket
+the little stout black-bound Bible, which, by a dent in one of the
+lids, bore witness of having been with him in his campaigns; and
+perhaps half-diplomatically, as well as with a yearning for oneness
+of spirit, she gratified him by requesting him to read and pray.
+
+With all his rigidity he was too truly pious a man for his
+ministrations to contain anything in which, Churchwoman as she was,
+she could not join with all her heart, and feel comforting; but ere
+he was about to rise from his knees she said, "One prayer for your
+son, sir."
+
+A few fervent words were spoken on behalf of the wandering sheep,
+while tears glistened in the old man's eyes, and fell fast from
+those of the lady, and then he said, "Ah, madam! have I not wrestled
+in prayer for my poor boy?"
+
+"I am sure you have, sir. I know you have a deep fatherly love for
+him, and therefore I sent to speak to you as a dying woman."
+
+"And I will gladly hear you, for you have always been good to him,
+and, as I confess, have done him more good--if good can be called
+the apparent improvement in one unregenerate--than any other."
+
+"Except his uncle," said Mrs. Woodford. "I fear it is vain to say
+that I think the best hope of his becoming a good and valuable man,
+a comfort and not a sorrow to yourself, would be to let him even now
+rejoin Sir Peregrine."
+
+"That cannot be, madam. My brother has not kept to the
+understanding on which I entrusted the lad to him, but has carried
+him into worldly and debauched company, such as has made the sober
+and godly habits of his home distasteful to him, and has further
+taken him into Popish lands, where he has become infected with their
+abominations to a greater extent than I can yet fathom."
+
+Mrs. Woodford sighed and felt hopeless. "I see your view of the
+matter, sir. Yet may I suggest that it is hard for a young man to
+find wholesome occupation such as may guard him from temptation on
+an estate where the master is active and sufficient like yourself?"
+
+"Protection from temptation must come from within, madam," replied
+the Major; "but I so far agree with you that in due time, when he
+has attained his twenty-first year, I trust he will be wedded to his
+cousin, a virtuous and pious young maiden, and will have the
+management of her property, which is larger than my own."
+
+"But if--if--sir, the marriage were distasteful to him, could it be
+for the happiness and welfare of either?"
+
+"The boy has been complaining to you? Nay, madam, I blame you not.
+You have ever been the boy's best friend according to knowledge; but
+he ought to know that his honour and mine are engaged. It is true
+that Mistress Martha is not a Court beauty, such as his eyes have
+unhappily learnt to admire, but I am acting verily for his true
+good. 'Favour is deceitful, and beauty is vain.'"
+
+"Most true, sir; but let me say one more word. I fear, I greatly
+fear, that all young spirits brook not compulsion."
+
+"That means, they will not bow their stiff necks to the yoke."
+
+"Ah, sir! but on the other hand, 'Fathers, provoke not your children
+to wrath.' Forgive me, sir; I spoke but out of true affection to
+your son, and the fear that what may seem to him severity may not
+drive him to some extremity that might grieve you."
+
+"No forgiveness is needed, madam. I thank you for your interest in
+him, and for your plain speaking according to your lights. I can
+but act according to those vouchsafed unto me."
+
+"And we both agree in praying for his true good," said Mrs.
+Woodford.
+
+And with a mutual blessing they parted, Mrs. Woodford deeply sorry
+for both father and son, for whom she had done what she could.
+
+It was her last interview with any one outside the house. Another
+attack of spasms brought the end, during the east winds of March, so
+suddenly as to leave no time for farewells or last words. When she
+was laid to rest in the little churchyard within the castle walls,
+no one showed such overwhelming tokens of grief as Peregrine
+Oakshott, who lingered about the grave after the Doctor had taken
+his niece home, and was found lying upon it late in the evening,
+exhausted with weeping.
+
+Yet Sedley Archfield, whose regiment had, after all, been sent to
+Portsmouth, reported that he had spent the very next afternoon at a
+cock-fight, ending in a carouse with various naval and military
+officers at a tavern, not drinking, but contributing to the mirth by
+foreign songs, tricks, and jests.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII: THE ONE HOPE
+
+
+ "There's some fearful tie
+Between me and that spirit world, which God
+Brands with His terrors on my troubled mind."
+
+KINGSLEY.
+
+The final blow had fallen upon Anne Woodford so suddenly that for
+the first few days she moved about as one in a dream. Lady
+Archfield came to her on the first day, and showed her motherly
+kindness, and Lucy was with her as much as was possible under the
+exactions of young Madam, who was just sufficiently unwell to resent
+attention being paid to any other living creature. She further
+developed a jealousy of Lucy's affection for any other friend such
+as led to a squabble between her and her husband, and made her
+mother-in-law unwillingly acquiesce in the expediency of Anne's
+being farther off.
+
+And indeed Anne herself felt so utterly forlorn and desolate that an
+impatience of the place came over her. She was indeed fond of her
+uncle, but he was much absorbed in his studies, his parish, and in
+anxious correspondence on the state of the Church, and was scarcely
+a companion to her, and without her mother to engross her love and
+attention, and cut off from the Archfields as she now was, there was
+little to counterbalance the restless feeling that London and the
+precincts of the Court were her natural element. So she wrote her
+letters according to her mother's desire, and waited anxiously for
+the replies, feeling as if anything would be preferable to her
+present unhappiness and solitude.
+
+The answers came in due time. Mrs. Evelyn promised to try to find a
+virtuous and godly lady who would be willing to receive Mistress
+Anne Woodford into her family, and Lady Oglethorpe wrote with vaguer
+promises of high preferment, which excited Anne's imagination during
+those lonely hours that she had to spend while her strict mourning,
+after the custom of the time, secluded her from all visitors.
+
+Meantime, in that anxious spring of 1688, when the Church of England
+was looking to her defences, the Doctor could not be much at home,
+and when he had time to listen to private affairs, he heard reports
+which did not please him of Peregrine Oakshott. That the young men
+in the county all abhorred his fine foreign airs was no serious
+evil, though it might be suspected that his sharp ironical tongue
+had quite as much to do with their dislike as his greater refinement
+of manner.
+
+His father was reported to be very seriously displeased with him,
+for he openly expressed contempt of the precise ways of the
+household, and absented himself in a manner that could scarcely be
+attributed to aught but the licentious indulgences of the time; and
+as he seldom mingled in the amusements of the young country
+gentlemen, it was only too probable that he found a lower grade of
+companions in Portsmouth. Moreover his talk, random though it might
+be, offended all the Whig opinions of his father. He talked with
+the dogmatism of the traveller of the glories of Louis XIV, and
+broadly avowed his views that the grandeur of the nation was best
+established under a king who asked no questions of people or
+Parliament, 'that senseless set of chattering pies,' as he was
+reported to have called the House of Commons.
+
+He sang the praises of the gracious and graceful Queen Mary
+Beatrice, and derided 'the dried-up Orange stick,' as he called the
+hope of the Protestants; nor did he scruple to pronounce Popery the
+faith of chivalrous gentlemen, far preferable to the whining of
+sullen Whiggery. No one could tell how far all this was genuine
+opinion, or simply delight in contradiction, especially of his
+father, who was in a constant state of irritation at the son whom he
+could so little manage.
+
+And in the height of the wrath of the whole of the magistracy at the
+expulsion of their lord-lieutenant, the Earl of Gainsborough, and
+the substitution of the young Duke of Berwick, what must Peregrine
+do but argue in high praise of that youth, whom he had several times
+seen and admired. And when not a gentleman in the neighbourhood
+chose to greet the intruder when he arrived as governor of
+Portsmouth, Peregrine actually rode in to see him, and dined with
+him. Words cannot express the Major's anger and shame at such
+consorting with a person, whom alike, on account of parentage,
+religion, and education, he regarded as a son of perdition. Yet
+Peregrine would only coolly reply that he knew many a Protestant who
+would hardly compare favourably with young Berwick.
+
+It was an anxious period that spring of 1688. The order to read the
+King's Declaration of Indulgence from the pulpit had come as a
+thunder-clap upon the clergy. The English Church had only known
+rest for twenty-eight years, and now, by this unconstitutional
+assumption of prerogative, she seemed about to be given up to be the
+prey of Romanists on the one hand and Nonconformists on the other;
+though for the present the latter were so persuaded that the
+Indulgence was merely a disguised advance of Rome that they were not
+at all grateful, expecting, as Mr. Horncastle observed, only to be
+the last devoured, and he was as much determined as was Dr. Woodford
+not to announce it from his pulpit, whatever might be the
+consequence; the latter thus resigning all hopes of promotion.
+
+News letters, public and private, were eagerly scanned. Though the
+diocesan, Bishop Mew, took no active part in the petition called a
+libel, being an extremely aged man, the imprisonment of Ken, so
+deeply endeared to Hampshire hearts when Canon of Winchester and
+Rector of Brighstone, and with the Bloody Assize and the execution
+of Alice Lisle fresh in men's memories, there could not but be
+extreme anxiety.
+
+In the midst arrived the tidings that a son had been born to the
+king--a son instantly baptized by a Roman Catholic priest, and no
+doubt destined by James to rivet the fetters of Rome upon the
+kingdom, destroying at once the hope of his elder sister's
+accession. Loyal Churchmen like the Archfields still hoped,
+recollecting how many infants had been born in the royal family only
+to die; but at Oakwood the Major and his chaplain shook their heads,
+and spoke of warming pans, to the vehement displeasure of Peregrine,
+who was sure to respond that the Queen was an angel, and that the
+Whigs credited every one with their own sly tricks.
+
+The Major groaned, and things seemed to have reached a pass very
+like open enmity between father and son, though Peregrine still
+lived at home, and reports were rife that the year of mourning for
+his brother being expired, he was, as soon as he came of age, to be
+married to Mistress Martha Browning, and have an establishment of
+his own at Emsworth.
+
+Under these circumstances, it was with much satisfaction that Dr.
+Woodford said to his niece: "Child, here is an excellent offer for
+you. Lady Russell, who you know has returned to live at Stratton,
+has heard you mentioned by Lady Mildmay. She has just married her
+eldest daughter, and needs a companion to the other, and has been
+told of you as able to speak French and Italian, and otherwise well
+trained. What! do you not relish the proposal?"
+
+"Why, sir, would not my entering such a house do you harm at Court,
+and lessen your chance of preferment?"
+
+"Think not of _that_, my child."
+
+"Besides," added Anne, "since Lady Oglethorpe has written, it would
+not be fitting to engage myself elsewhere before hearing from her
+again."
+
+"You think so, Anne. Lady Russell's would be a far safer, better
+home for you than the Court."
+
+Anne knew it, but the thought of that widowed home depressed her.
+It might, she thought, be as dull as Oakwood, and there would be
+infinite chances of preferment at Court. What she said, however,
+was: "It was by my mother's wish that I applied to Lady
+Oglethorpe."
+
+"That is true, child. Yet I cannot but believe that if she had
+known of Lady Russell's offer, she would gladly and thankfully have
+accepted it."
+
+So said the secret voice within the girl herself, but she did not
+yet yield to it. "Perhaps she would, sir," she answered, "if the
+other proposal were not made. 'Tis a Whig household though."
+
+"A Whig household is a safer one than a Popish one," answered the
+Doctor. "Lady Russell is, by all they tell me, a very saint upon
+earth."
+
+Shall it be owned? Anne thought of Oakwood, and was not attracted
+towards a saint upon earth. "How soon was the answer to be given?"
+she asked.
+
+"I believe she would wish you to meet her at Winchester next week,
+when, if you pleased her, you might return with her to Stratton."
+
+The Doctor hoped that Lady Oglethorpe's application might fail, but
+before the week was over she forwarded the definite appointment of
+Mistress Anne Jacobina Woodford as one of the rockers of his Royal
+Highness the Prince of Wales, his Majesty having been graciously
+pleased to remember her father's services and his own sponsorship.
+"If your friends consider the office somewhat beneath you," wrote
+Lady Oglethorpe, "it is still open to you to decline it."
+
+"Oh no; I would certainly not decline it!" cried Anne. "I could not
+possibly do so; could I, sir?"
+
+"Lady Oglethorpe says you might," returned the Doctor; "and for my
+part, niece, I should prefer the office of a gouvernante to that of
+a rocker."
+
+"Ah, but it is to a Prince!" said Anne. "It is the way to something
+further."
+
+"And what may that something further be? That is the question,"
+said her uncle. "I will not control you, my child, for the
+application to this Court lady was by the wish of your good mother,
+who knew her well, but I own that I should be far more at rest on
+your account if you were in a place of less temptation."
+
+"The Court is very different from what it was in the last King's
+time," pleaded Anne.
+
+"In some degree it may be; but on the other hand, the influence
+which may have purified it is of the religion that I fear may be a
+seduction."
+
+"Oh no, never, uncle; nothing could make me a Papist."
+
+"Do not be over confident, Anne. Those who run into temptation are
+apt to be left to themselves."
+
+"Indeed, sir, I cannot think that the course my mother shaped for me
+can be a running into temptation."
+
+"Well, Anne, as I say, I cannot withstand you, since it was your
+mother who requested Lady Oglethorpe's patronage for you, though I
+tell you sincerely that I believe that had the two courses been set
+before her she would have chosen the safer and more private one.
+
+"Nay but, dear sir," still pleaded the maiden, "what would become of
+your chances of preferment if it were known that you had placed me
+with Lord Russell's widow in preference to the Queen?"
+
+"Let not that weigh with you one moment, child. I believe that no
+staunch friend of our Protestant Church will be preferred by his
+Majesty; nay, while the Archbishop and my saintly friend of Bath and
+Wells are persecuted, I should be ashamed to think of promotion.
+Spurn the thought from you, child."
+
+"Nay, 'twas only love for you, dear uncle."
+
+"I know it, child. I am not displeased, only think it over, and
+pray over it, since the post will not go out until to-morrow."
+
+Anne did think, but not quite as her uncle intended. The
+remembrance of the good-natured young Princesses, the large stately
+rooms, the brilliant dresses, the radiance of wax lights, had
+floated before her eyes ever since her removal from Chelsea to the
+quieter regions of Winchester, and she had longed to get back to
+them. She really loved her uncle, and whatever he might say, she
+longed to push his advancement, and thought his unselfish abnegation
+the greater reason for working for him; and in spite of knowing well
+that it was only a dull back-stair appointment, she could look to
+the notice of Princess Anne, when once within her reach, and
+further, with the confidence of youth, believed that she had that
+within her which would make her way upwards, and enable her to
+confer promotion, honour, and dignity, on all her friends. Her
+uncle should be a Bishop, Charles a Peer (fancy his wife being under
+obligations to the parson's niece!), Lucy should have a perfect
+husband, and an appointment should be found for poor Peregrine which
+his father could not gainsay. It was her bounden duty not to throw
+away such advantages; besides loyalty to her Royal godfather could
+not permit his offer to be rejected, and her mother, when writing to
+Lady Oglethorpe, must surely have had some such expectation. Nor
+should she be entirely cut off from her uncle, who was a Royal
+chaplain; and this was some consolation to the good Doctor when he
+found her purpose fixed, and made arrangements for her to travel up
+to town in company with Lady Worsley of Gatcombe, whom she was to
+meet at Southampton on the 1st of July.
+
+Meantime the Doctor did his best to arm his niece against the
+allurements to Romanism that he feared would be held out. Lady
+Oglethorpe and other friends had assured him of the matronly care of
+Lady Powys and Lady Strickland to guard their department from all
+evil; but he did fear these religious influences and Anne, resolute
+to resist all, perhaps not afraid of the conflict, was willing to
+arm herself for defence, and listened readily. She was no less
+anxious to provide for her uncle's comfort in his absence, and many
+small matters of housewifery that had stood over for some time were
+now to be purchased, as well as a few needments for her own outfit,
+although much was left for the counsel of her patroness in the
+matter of garments.
+
+Accordingly her uncle rode in with her to Portsmouth on a shopping
+expedition, and as the streets of the seaport were scarcely safe for
+a young woman without an escort, he carried a little book in his
+pocket wherewith he beguiled the time that she spent in the
+selection of his frying-pans, fire-irons, and the like, and her own
+gloves and kerchiefs. They dined at the 'ordinary' at the inn, and
+there Dr. Woodford met his great friends Mr. Stanbury of Botley, and
+Mr. Worsley of Gatcombe, in the Isle of Wight, who both, like him,
+were opposed to the reading of the Declaration of Indulgence, as
+unconstitutional, and deeply anxious as to the fate of the greatly
+beloved Bishop of Bath and Wells. It was inevitable that they
+should fall into deep and earnest council together, and when dinner
+was over they agreed to adjourn to the house of a friend learned in
+ecclesiastical law to hunt up the rights of the case, leaving Anne
+to await them in a private room at the Spotted Dog, shown to her by
+the landlady.
+
+Anne well knew what such a meeting betided, and with a certain
+prevision, had armed herself with some knotting, wherewith she sat
+down in a bay window overlooking the street, whence she could see
+market-women going home with empty baskets, pigs being reluctantly
+driven down to provision ships in the harbour, barrels of biscuit,
+salt meat, or beer, being rolled down for the same purpose, sailors
+in loose knee-breeches, and soldiers in tall peaked caps and cross-
+belts, and officers of each service moving in different directions.
+She sat there day-dreaming, feeling secure in her loneliness, and
+presently saw a slight figure, daintily clad in gray and black, who
+catching her eye made an eager gesture, doffing his plumed hat and
+bowing low to her. She returned his salute, and thought he passed
+on, but in another minute she was startled to find him at her side,
+exclaiming: "This is the occasion I have longed and sought for,
+Mistress Anne; I bless and thank the fates."
+
+"I am glad to see you once more before I depart," said Anne, holding
+out her hand as frankly as she could to the old playfellow whom she
+always thought ill-treated, but whom she could never meet without a
+certain shudder.
+
+"Then it is true?" he exclaimed.
+
+"Yes; I am to go up with Lady Worsley from Southampton next week."
+
+"Ah!" he cried, "but must that be?" and she felt his strange power,
+so that she drew into herself and said haughtily--
+
+"My dear mother wished me to be with her friends, nor can the King's
+appointment be neglected, though of course I am extremely grieved to
+go."
+
+"And you are dazzled with all these gewgaws of Court life, no
+doubt?"
+
+"I shall not be much in the way of gewgaws just yet," said Anne
+drily. "It will be dull enough in some back room of Whitehall or
+St. James's."
+
+"Say you so. You will wish yourself back--you, the lady of my
+heart--mine own good angel! Hear me. Say but the word, and your
+home will be mine, to say nothing of your own most devoted servant."
+
+"Hush, hush, sir! I cannot hear this," said Anne, anxiously
+glancing down the street in hopes of seeing her uncle approaching.
+
+"Nay, but listen! This is my only hope--my only chance--I must
+speak--you doom me to you know not what if you will not hear me!"
+
+"Indeed, sir, I neither will nor ought!"
+
+"Ought! Ought! Ought you not to save a fellow-creature from
+distraction and destruction? One who has loved and looked to you
+ever since you and that saint your mother lifted me out of the
+misery of my childhood."
+
+Then as she looked softened he went on: "You, you are my one hope.
+No one else can lift me out of the reach of the demon that has beset
+me even since I was born."
+
+"That is profane," she said, the more severe for the growing
+attraction of repulsion.
+
+"What do I care? It is true! What was I till you and your mother
+took pity on the wild imp? My old nurse said a change would come to
+me every seven years. That blessed change came just seven years
+ago. Give me what will make a more blessed--a more saving change--
+or there will be one as much for the worse."
+
+"But--I could not. No! you must see for yourself that I could not--
+even if I would," she faltered, really pitying now, and unwilling to
+give more pain than she could help.
+
+"Could not? It should be possible. I know how to bring it about.
+Give me but your promise, and I will make you mine--ay, and I will
+make myself as worthy of you as man can be of saint-like maid."
+
+"No--no! This is very wrong--you are pledged already--"
+
+"No such thing--believe no such tale. My promise has never been
+given to that grim hag of my father's choice--no, nor should be
+forced from me by the rack. Look you here. Let me take this hand,
+call in the woman of the house, give me your word, and my father
+will own his power to bind me to Martha is at an end."
+
+"Oh, no! It would be a sin--never. Besides--" said Anne, holding
+her hands tightly clasped behind her in alarm, lest against her will
+she should let them be seized, and trying to find words to tell him
+how little she felt disposed to trust her heart and herself to one
+whom she might indeed pity, but with a sort of shrinking as from
+something not quite human. Perhaps he dreaded her 'besides'--for he
+cut her short.
+
+"It would save ten thousand greater sins. See, here are two ways
+before us. Either give me your word, your precious word, go silent
+to London, leave me to struggle it out with my father and your uncle
+and follow you. Hope and trust will be enough to bear me through
+the battle without, and within deafen the demon of my nature, and
+render me patient of my intolerable life till I have conquered and
+can bring you home."
+
+Her tongue faltered as she tried to say such a secret unsanctioned
+engagement would be treachery, but he cut off the words.
+
+"You have not heard me out. There is another way. I know those who
+will aid me. We can meet in early dawn, be wedded in one of these
+churches in all secrecy and haste, and I would carry you at once to
+my uncle, who, as you well know, would welcome you as a daughter.
+Or, better still, we would to those fair lands I have scarce seen,
+but where I could make my way with sword or pen with you to inspire
+me. I have the means. My uncle left this with me. Speak! It is
+death or life to me."
+
+This last proposal was thoroughly alarming, and Anne retreated,
+drawing herself to her full height, and speaking with the dignity
+that concealed considerable terror.
+
+"No, indeed, sir. You ought to know better than to utter such
+proposals. One who can make such schemes can certainly obtain no
+respect nor regard from the lady he addresses. Let me pass"--for
+she was penned up in the bay window--"I shall seek the landlady till
+my uncle returns."
+
+"Nay, Mistress Anne, do not fear me. Do not drive me to utter
+despair. Oh, pardon me! Nothing but utter desperation could drive
+me to have thus spoken; but how can I help using every effort to win
+her whose very look and presence is bliss! Nothing else soothes and
+calms me; nothing else so silences the demon and wakens the better
+part of my nature. Have you no pity upon a miserable wretch, who
+will be dragged down to his doom without your helping hand?"
+
+He flung himself on his knee before her, and tried to grasp her
+hand.
+
+"Indeed, I am sorry for you, Master Oakshott," said Anne,
+compassionate, but still retreating as far as the window would let
+her; "but you are mistaken. If this power be in me, which I cannot
+quite believe--yes, I see what you want to say, but if I did what I
+know to be wrong, I should lose it at once; God's grace can save you
+without me."
+
+"I will not ask you to do what you call wrong; no, nor to transgress
+any of the ties you respect, you, whose home is so unlike mine; only
+tell me that I may have hope, that if I deserve you, I may win you;
+that you could grant me--wretched me--a share of your affection."
+
+This was hardest of all; mingled pity and repugnance, truth and
+compassion strove within the maiden as well as the strange influence
+of those extraordinary eyes. She was almost as much afraid of
+herself as of her suitor. At last she managed to say, "I am very
+sorry for you; I grieve from my heart for your troubles; I should be
+very glad to hear of your welfare and anything good of you, but--"
+
+"But, but--I see--it is mere frenzy in me to think the blighted elf
+can aspire to be aught but loathsome to any lady--only, at least,
+tell me you love no one else."
+
+"No, certainly not," she said, as if his eyes drew it forcibly from
+her.
+
+"Then you cannot hinder me from making you my guiding star--hoping
+that if yet I can--"
+
+"There's my uncle!" exclaimed Anne, in a tone of infinite relief.
+"Stand up, Mr. Oakshott, compose yourself. Of course I cannot
+hinder your thinking about me, if it will do you any good, but there
+are better things to think about which would conquer evil and make
+you happy more effectually."
+
+He snatched her hand and kissed it, nor did she withhold it, since
+she really pitied him, and knew that her uncle was near, and all
+would soon be over.
+
+Peregrine dashed away by another door as Dr. Woodford's foot was on
+the stairs. "I have ordered the horses," he began. "They told me
+young Oakshott was here."
+
+"He was, but he is gone;" and she could not quite conceal her
+agitation.
+
+"Crimson cheeks, my young mistress? Ah, the foolish fellow! You do
+not care for him, I trust?"
+
+"No, indeed, poor fellow. What, did you know, sir?"
+
+"Know. Yes, truly--and your mother likewise, Anne. It was one
+cause of her wishing to send you to safer keeping than mine seems to
+be. My young spark made his proposals to us both, though we would
+not disturb your mind therewith, not knowing how he would have dealt
+with his father, nor viewing him, for all he is heir to Oakwood, as
+a desirable match in himself. I am glad to see you have sense and
+discretion to be of the same mind, my maid."
+
+"I cannot but grieve for his sad condition, sir," replied Anne, "but
+as for anything more--it would make me shudder to think of it--he is
+still too like Robin Goodfellow."
+
+"That's my good girl," said her uncle. "And do you know, child,
+there are the best hopes for the Bishops. There's a gentleman come
+down but now from London, who says 'twas like a triumph as the
+Bishops sat in their barge on the way to the Tower; crowds swarming
+along the banks, begging for their blessing, and they waving it with
+tears in their eyes. The King will be a mere madman if he dares to
+touch a hair of their heads. Well, when I was a lad, Bishops were
+sent to the Tower by the people; I little thought to live to see
+them sent thither by the King."
+
+All the way home Dr. Woodford talked of the trial, beginning perhaps
+to regret that his niece must go to the very focus of Roman
+influence in England, where there seemed to be little scruple as to
+the mode of conversion. Would it be possible to alter her
+destination? was his thought, when he rose the next day, but loyalty
+stood in the way, and that very afternoon another event happened
+which made it evident that the poor girl must leave Portchester as
+soon as possible.
+
+She had gone out with him to take leave of some old cottagers in the
+village, and he finding himself detained to minister to a case of
+unexpected illness, allowed her to go home alone for about a quarter
+of a mile along the white sunny road at the foot of Portsdown, with
+the castle full in view at one end, and the cottage where he was at
+the other. Many a time previously had she trodden it alone, but she
+had not reckoned on two officers coming swaggering from a cross road
+down the hill, one of them Sedley Archfield, who immediately called
+out, "Ha, ha! my pretty maid, no wench goes by without paying toll;"
+and they spread their arms across the road so as to arrest her.
+
+"Sir," said Anne, drawing herself up with dignity, "you mistake--"
+
+"Not a whit, my dear; no exemption here;" and there was a horse
+laugh, and an endeavour to seize her, as she stepped back, feeling
+that in quietness lay her best chance of repelling them, adding--
+
+"My uncle is close by."
+
+"The more cause for haste;" and they began to close upon her. But
+at that moment Peregrine Oakshott, leaping from his horse, was among
+them, with the cry--
+
+"Dastards! insulting a lady."
+
+"Lady, forsooth! the parson's niece."
+
+In a few seconds--very long seconds to her--her flying feet had
+brought her back to the cottage, where she burst in with--"Pardon,
+pardon, sir; come quick; there are swords drawn; there will be
+bloodshed if you do not come."
+
+He obeyed the summons without further query, for when all men wore
+swords the neighbourhood of a garrison were only too liable to such
+encounters outside. There was no need for her to gasp out more;
+from the very cottage door he could see the need of haste, for the
+swords were actually flashing, and the two young men in position to
+fight. Anne shook her head, unable to do more than sign her thanks
+to the good woman of the cottage, who offered her a seat. She leant
+against the door, and watched as her uncle, sending his voice before
+him, called on them to desist.
+
+There was a start, then each drew back and held down his weapon, but
+with a menacing gesture on one side, a shrug of the shoulders on the
+other, which impelled the Doctor to use double speed in the fear
+that the parting might be with a challenge reserved.
+
+He was in time to stand warning, and arguing that if he pardoned the
+slighting words and condoned the insult to his niece, no one had a
+right to exact vengeance; and in truth, whatever were his arguments,
+he so dealt with the two young men as to force them into shaking
+hands before they separated, though with a contemptuous look on
+either side--a scowl from Sedley, a sneer from Peregrine, boding ill
+for the future, and making him sigh.
+
+"Ah! sister, sister, you judged aright. Would that I could have
+sent the maid sooner away rather than that all this ill blood should
+have been bred. Yet I may only be sending her to greater temptation
+and danger. But she is a good maiden; God bless her and keep her
+here and there, now and for evermore, as I trust He keepeth our good
+Dr. Ken in this sore strait. The trial may even now be over. Ah,
+my child, here you are! Frightened were you by that rude fellow?
+Nay, I believe you were almost equally terrified by him who came to
+the rescue. You will soon be out of their reach, my dear."
+
+"Yes, that is one great comfort in going," sighed Anne. One
+comfort--yes--though she would not have stayed had the choice been
+given her now. And shall the thought be told that flashed over her
+and coloured her cheeks with a sort of shame yet of pleasure, "I
+surely must have power over men! I know mother would say it is a
+terrible danger one way, and a great gift another. I will not
+misuse it; but what will it bring me? Or am I only a rustic beauty
+after all, who will be nobody elsewhere?"
+
+Still heartily she wished that her rescuer had been any one else in
+the wide world. It was almost uncanny that he should have sprung
+out of the earth at such a moment.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII: THE BONFIRE
+
+
+"From Eddystone to Berwick bounds,
+ From Lynn to Milford Bay,
+That time of slumber was as
+ Bright and busy as the day;
+For swift to east and swift to west
+ The fiery herald sped,
+High on St. Michael's Mount it shone:
+ It shone on Beachy Head."
+
+MACAULAY.
+
+Doctor Woodford and his niece had not long reached their own door
+when the clatter of a horse's hoofs was heard, and Charles Archfield
+was seen, waving his hat and shouting 'Hurrah!' before he came near
+enough to speak,
+
+"Good news, I see!" said the Doctor.
+
+"Good news indeed! Not guilty! Express rode from Westminster Hall
+with the news at ten o'clock this morning. All acquitted.
+Expresses could hardly get away for the hurrahing of the people.
+Hurrah! hurrah! hurrah!" cried the young man, throwing up his hat,
+while Doctor Woodford, taking off his own, gave graver, deeper
+thanks that justice was yet in England, that these noble and
+honoured confessors were safe, and that the King had been saved from
+further injustice and violence to the Church.
+
+"We are to have a bonfire on Portsdown hill," added Charles. "They
+will be all round the country, in the Island, and everywhere. My
+father is rid one way to spread the tidings, and give orders. I'm
+going on into Portsmouth, to see after tar barrels. You'll be
+there, sir, and you, Anne?" There was a moment's hesitation after
+the day's encounters, but he added, "My mother is going, and my
+little Madam, and Lucy. They will call for you in the coach if you
+will be at Ryder's cottage at nine o'clock. It will not be dark
+enough to light up till ten, so there will be time to get a noble
+pile ready. Come, Anne, 'tis Lucy's last chance of seeing you--so
+strange as you have made yourself of late."
+
+This plea decided Anne, who had been on the point of declaring that
+she should have an excellent view from the top of the keep.
+However, not only did she long to see Lucy again, but the enthusiasm
+was contagious, and there was an attraction in the centre of popular
+rejoicing that drew both her and her uncle, nor could there be a
+doubt of her being sufficiently protected when among the Archfield
+ladies. So the arrangement was accepted, and then there was the
+cry--
+
+"Hark! the Havant bells! Ay! and the Cosham! Portsmouth is pealing
+out. That's Alverstoke. They know it there. A salute! Another."
+
+"Scarce loyal from the King's ships," said the Doctor, smiling.
+
+"Nay, 'tis only loyalty to rejoice that the King can't make a fool
+of himself. So my father says," rejoined Charles.
+
+And that seemed to be the mood of all England. When Anne and her
+uncle set forth in the summer sunset light the great hill above them
+was dark with the multitudes thronging around the huge pyre rising
+in the midst. They rested for some minutes at the cottage indicated
+before the arrival of Sir Philip, who rode up accompanying the coach
+in which his three ladies were seated, and which was quite large
+enough to receive Dr. Woodford and Mistress Anne. Charles was in
+the throng, in the midst of most of the younger gentlemen of the
+neighbourhood, and a good many of the naval and military officers,
+directing the arrangement of the pile.
+
+What a scene it was, as seen even from the windows of the coach
+where the ladies remained, for the multitude of sailors, soldiers,
+town and village people, though all unanimous, were far too
+tumultuous for them to venture beyond their open door, especially as
+little Mrs. Archfield was very far from well, and nothing but her
+eagerness for amusement could have brought her hither, and of course
+she could not be left. Probably she knew as little of the real
+bearings of the case or the cause of rejoicing as did the boys who
+pervaded everything with their squibs, and were only restrained from
+firing them in the faces of the horses by wholesome fear of the big
+whips of the coachman and outriders who stood at the horses' heads.
+
+It was hardly yet dark when the match was put to the shavings, and
+to the sound of the loud 'Hurrahs!' and cries of 'Long live the
+Bishops!' 'Down with the Pope!' the flame kindled, crackled, and
+leapt up, while a responsive fire was seen on St. Catherine's Down
+in the Isle of Wight, and northward, eastward, westward, on every
+available point, each new light greeted by fresh acclamations, as it
+shone out against the summer night sky, while the ships in the
+harbour showed their lights, reflected in the sea, as the sky grew
+darker. Then came a procession of sailors and other rough folk,
+bearing between poles a chair with a stuffed figure with a kind of
+tiara, followed by others with scarlet hats and capes, and with
+reiterated shouts of 'Down with the Pope!' these were hurled into
+the fire with deafening hurrahs, their more gorgeous trappings being
+cleverly twitched off at the last moment, as part of the properties
+for the 5th of November.
+
+Little Mrs. Archfield clapped her hands and screamed with delight as
+each fresh blaze shot up, and chattered with all her might,
+sometimes about some lace and perfumes which she wanted Anne to
+procure for her in London at the sign of the Flower Pot, sometimes
+grumbling at her husband having gone off to the midst of the party
+closest to the fire, "Just like Mr. Archfield, always leaving her to
+herself," but generally very well amused, especially when a group of
+gentlemen, officers, and county neighbours gathered round the open
+door talking to the ladies within.
+
+Peregrine was there with his hands in his pockets, and a queer
+ironical smile writhing his features. He was asked if his father
+and brother were present.
+
+"Not my father," he replied. "He has a logical mind. Martha is up
+here with her guardian, and I am keeping out of her way, and my
+brother is full in the thick of the fray. A bonfire is a bonfire to
+most folks, were it to roast their grandsire!"
+
+"Oh, fie, Mr. Oakshott, how you do talk!" laughed Mrs. Archfield.
+
+"Nay, but you rejoice in the escape of the good Bishops," put in
+Lucy.
+
+"For what?" asked Peregrine. "For refusing to say live and let
+live?"
+
+"Not against letting _live_, but against saying so
+unconstitutionally, my young friend," said Dr. Woodford, "or
+tyrannising over our consciences."
+
+Generally Peregrine was more respectful to Dr. Woodford than to any
+one else; but there seemed to be a reckless bitterness about him on
+that night, and he said, "I marvel with what face those same Eight
+Reverend Seigniors will preach against the French King."
+
+"Sir," thrust in Sedley Archfield, "I am not to hear opprobrious
+epithets applied to the Bishops."
+
+"What was the opprobrium?" lazily demanded Peregrine, and in spite
+of his unpopularity, the laugh was with him. Sedley grew more
+angry.
+
+"You likened them to the French King--"
+
+"The most splendid monarch in Europe," said Peregrine coolly.
+
+"A Frenchman!" quoth one of the young squires with withering
+contempt.
+
+"He has that ill fortune, sir," said Peregrine. "Mayhap he would be
+sensible of the disadvantage, if he evened himself with some of my
+reasonable countrymen."
+
+"Do you mean that for an insult, sir?" exclaimed Sedley Archfield,
+striding forward.
+
+"As you please," said Peregrine. "To me it had the sound of
+compliment."
+
+"Oh la! they'll fight," cried Mrs. Archfield. "Don't let them!
+Where's the Doctor? Where's Sir Philip?"
+
+"Hush, my dear," said Lady Archfield; "these gentlemen would not
+fall out close to us."
+
+Dr. Woodford was out of sight, having been drawn into controversy
+with a fellow-clergyman on the limits of toleration. Anne looked
+anxiously for him, but with provoking coolness Peregrine presently
+said, "There's no crowd near, and if you will step out, the fires on
+the farther hills are to be seen well from the knoll hard by."
+
+He spoke chiefly to Anne, but even if she had not a kind of
+shrinking from trusting herself with him in this strange wild scene,
+she would have been prevented by Mrs. Archfield's eager cry--
+
+"Oh, I'll come, let me come! I'm so weary of sitting here. Thank
+you, Master Oakshott."
+
+Lady Archfield's remonstrance was lost as Peregrine helped the
+little lady out, and there was nothing for it but to follow her, as
+close as might be, as she hung on her cavalier's arm chattering, and
+now and then giving little screams of delight or alarm. Lady
+Archfield and her daughter each was instantly squired, but Mistress
+Woodford, a nobody, was left to keep as near them as she could, and
+gaze at the sparks of light of the beacons in the distance, thinking
+how changed the morrow would be to her.
+
+Presently a figure approached, and Charles Archfield's voice said,
+"Is that you, Anne? Did I hear my wife's voice?"
+
+"Yes, she is there."
+
+"And with that imp of evil! I would his own folk had him!" muttered
+Charles, dashing forward with "How now, madam? you were not to leave
+the coach!"
+
+She laughed exultingly. "Ha, sir! see what comes of leaving me to
+better cavaliers, while you run after your fire! I should have seen
+nothing but for Master Oakshott."
+
+"Come with me now," said Charles; "you ought not to be standing here
+in the dew."
+
+"Ha, ha! what a jealous master," she said; but she put her arm into
+his, saying with a courtesy, "Thank you, Master Oakshott, lords must
+be obeyed. I should have been still buried in the old coach but for
+you."
+
+Peregrine fell back to Anne. "That blaze is at St. Helen's," he
+began. "That--what! will you not wait a moment?"
+
+"No, no! They will want to be going home."
+
+"And have you forgotten that it is only just over Midsummer? This
+is the week of my third seventh--the moment for change. O Anne!
+make it a change for the better. Say the word, and the die will be
+cast. All is ready! Come!"
+
+He tried to take her hand, but the vehemence of his words, spoken
+under his breath, terrified her, and with a hasty "No, no! you know
+not what you talk of," she hastened after her friends, and was glad
+to find herself in the safe haven of the interior of the coach.
+
+Ere long they drove down the hill, and at the place of parting were
+set down, the last words in Anne's ears being Mrs. Archfield's
+injunctions not to forget the orange flower-water at the sign of the
+Flower Pot, drowning Lucy's tearful farewells.
+
+As they walked away in the moonlight a figure was seen in the
+distance.
+
+"Is that Peregrine Oakshott?" asked the Doctor. "That young man is
+in a desperate mood, ready to put a quarrel on any one. I hope no
+harm will come of it."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV: GATHERING MOUSE-EAR
+
+
+"I heard the groans, I marked the tears,
+ I saw the wound his bosom bore."
+
+SCOTT.
+
+After such an evening it was not easy to fall asleep, and Anne
+tossed about, heated, restless, and uneasy, feeling that to remain
+at home was impossible, yet less satisfied about her future
+prospects, and doubtful whether she had not done herself harm by
+attending last night's rejoicings, and hoping that nothing would
+happen to reveal her presence there.
+
+She was glad that the night was not longer, and resolved to take
+advantage of the early morning to fulfil a commission of Lady
+Oglethorpe, whose elder children, Lewis and Theophilus, had the
+whooping-cough. Mouse-ear, namely, the little sulphur-coloured
+hawk-weed, was, and still is, accounted a specific, and Anne had
+been requested to bring a supply--a thing easily done, since it grew
+plentifully in the court of the castle.
+
+She dressed herself in haste, made some of her preparations for the
+journey, and let herself out of the house, going first for one last
+look at her mother's green grave in the dewy churchyard, and
+gathering from it a daisy, which she put into her bosom, then in the
+fair morning freshness, and exhilaration of the rising sun, crossing
+the wide tilt-yard, among haycocks waiting to be tossed, and
+arriving at the court within, filling her basket between the
+churchyard and the gateway tower and keep, when standing up for a
+moment she was extremely startled to see Peregrine Oakshott's
+unmistakable figure entering at the postern of the court.
+
+With vague fears of his intentions, and instinctive terror of
+meeting him alone, heightened by that dread of his power, she flew
+in at the great bailey tower door, hoping that he had not seen her,
+but tolerably secure that even if he had, and should pursue her, she
+was sufficiently superior in knowledge of the stairs and passages to
+baffle him, and make her way along the battlements to the tower at
+the corner of the court nearest the parsonage, where there was a
+turret stair by which she could escape.
+
+Up the broken stairs she went, shutting behind her every available
+door in the chambers and passages, but not as quickly as she wished,
+since attention to her feet was needful in the ruinous state of
+steps and walls. Through those massive walls she could hear nothing
+distinctly, but she fancied voices and a cry, making her seek more
+intricate windings, nor did she dare to look out till she had gained
+a thick screen of bushy ivy at the corner of the turret, where a
+little door opened on the broad summit of the battlemented wall.
+
+Then, what horror was it that she beheld? Or was it a dream? She
+even passed her hands over her face and looked again. Peregrine and
+Charles, yes, it was Charles Archfield, were fighting with swords in
+the court beneath. She gave a shriek, in a wild hope of parting
+them, but at that instant she saw Peregrine fall, and with the
+impulse of rushing to aid she hurried down, impeded however by
+stumbles, and by the doors, she herself had shut, and when she
+emerged, she saw only Charles, standing like one dazed and white as
+death.
+
+"O Mr Archfield! where is he? What have you done?" The young man
+pointed to the opening of the vault. Then, speaking with an effort,
+"He was quite dead; my sword went through him. He forced it on me--
+he was pursuing you. I withstood him--and--"
+
+He gasped heavily as the words came one by one. She trembled
+exceedingly, and would have looked into the vault, with, "Are you
+quite sure?" but he grasped her hand and withheld her.
+
+"Only too sure! Yes, I have done it! It could not be helped. I
+would give myself up at once, but, Anne, there is my wife. They
+tell me any shock would kill her as she is now. I should be double
+murderer. Will you keep the secret, Anne, always my friend? And
+'twas for you."
+
+"Indeed, indeed, I will not betray you. I go away in two hours,"
+said Anne; and he caught her hand. "But oh!" and she pointed to the
+blood on the grass, then with sudden thought, "Heap the hay over
+it," running to fill her arms with the lately-cut grass.
+
+He mechanically did the same, and then they stood for a moment, awe-
+stricken.
+
+"God forgive me!" said the poor young man. "How to hide it I hardly
+know, but for _her_ sake, ah--'twas that brought me here. She could
+not rest last night till I had promised to be here early enough in
+the morning to give you a piece of sarcenet to be matched in London.
+Where is it? Ah! I forget. It seems to be ages ago that she was
+insisting that I should ride over so as to be in time."
+
+"Lucy must write," said Anne, "O Charley! wipe that dreadful sword,
+look like yourself. I am going in a couple of hours. There is no
+fear of me! but oh! that you should have done such a thing! and
+through me!"
+
+"Hush! hush! don't talk. I must be gone ere folks are about. My
+horse is outside." He wrung her hand and kissed it, forgetting to
+give her the pattern, and Anne, still stunned, walked back to the
+parsonage, her one thought how to control herself so as to guard
+Charles's secret.
+
+It must be remembered that in the generation succeeding that which
+had fought a long civil war, and when duels were common assertions
+of honour and self-respect among young gentlemen, homicide was not
+so exceptional and heinous an offence in ordinary eyes as when a
+higher value has come to be set on life, and acts of violence are
+far less frequent.
+
+Charles had drawn his sword in fair fight, and in her own defence,
+and thus it was natural that Anne Woodford should think of his deed,
+certainly with a shudder, but with more of pity than of horror, and
+with gratitude that made her feel bound to do her utmost to guard
+him from the consequences; also there was a sense of relief, and
+perhaps a feeling as if the victim were scarcely a human creature
+like others. It never occurred to her till some time after to
+recollect it would have had an unpleasant sound that she had been
+the occasion of such an 'unseemly brawl' between two young men, one
+of them a married man. When the thought occurred to her it made the
+blood rash hotly to her cheeks.
+
+It was well for her that the pain of leaving home and the bustle of
+preparation concealed that she had suffered a great shock, and
+accounted for her not being able to taste any breakfast beyond a
+draught of milk. Her ears were intent all the time to perceive any
+token whether the haymakers had come into the court and had
+discovered any trace of the ghastly thing in the vault, and she
+hardly heard the kind words of her uncle or the coaxings of his old
+housekeeper. She dreaded especially the sight of Hans, so fondly
+attached to his master's nephew, and it was with a sense of infinite
+relief--instead of the tender grief otherwise natural--that she was
+seated in the boat for Portsmouth, and her uncle believing her to be
+crying, left her undisturbed till she had composed herself to wear
+the front that she knew was needful, however her heart might throb
+beneath it, and as their boat threaded its way through the ships,
+even then numerous, she looked wistfully up at the tall tower of the
+castle, with earnest prayers for the living, and a longing she durst
+not utter, to ask her uncle whether it were right to pray for the
+poor strange, struggling soul, always so cruelly misunderstood, and
+now so summarily dismissed from the world of trial.
+
+Yet presently there was a revulsion of feeling as she was roused
+from her meditations by the coxswain's answer to her uncle, who had
+asked what was a smart, swift little smack, which after receiving
+something from a boat, began stretching her wings and making all
+sail for the Isle of Wight.
+
+The men looked significant and hesitated.
+
+"Smugglers, eh? Traders in French brandy?" asked the Doctor.
+
+"Well, your reverence, so they says. They be a rough lot out there
+by at the back of the Island."
+
+"There would be small harm in letting a poor man get a drink of
+spirits cheap to warm his heart," said one of the other men; "but
+they say as how 'tis a very nest of 'em out there, and that's how no
+one can ever pitch on the highwaymen, such as robbed Farmer Vine
+t'other day a coming home from market."
+
+"They do say," added the other, "that there's them as ought to know
+better that is thick with them. There's that young master up at
+Oakwood--that crooked slip as they used to say was a changeling--
+gets out o' window o' nights and sails with them."
+
+"He has nought to do with the robberies, they say," added the
+coxswain; "but I could tell of many a young spark who has gone out
+with the fair traders for the sport's sake, and because gentle folk
+don't know what to do with their time."
+
+"And they do say the young chap is kept uncommon tight at home."
+
+Here the sight of a vessel of war coming in changed the topic, but
+it had given Anne something more to think of. Peregrine had spoken
+of means arranged for making her his own. Could that smuggling
+yacht have anything to do with them? He could hardly have reckoned
+on meeting her alone in the morning, but he might have attempted to
+find her thus--or failing that, he might have run down the boat. If
+so, she had a great deliverance to be thankful for, and Charles's
+timely appearance had been a great blessing. But Peregrine! poor
+Peregrine! it became doubly terrible that he should have perished on
+the eve of such a deed. It was cruel to entertain such thoughts of
+the dead, yet it was equally impossible not to feel comfort in being
+rid for ever of one who had certainly justified the vague alarm
+which he had always excited in her. She could not grieve for him
+now that the first shock was over, but she must suppress all tokens
+of her extreme anxiety on account of Charles Archfield.
+
+Thus she was landed at Portsmouth, and walked up the street to the
+Spotted Dog, where Lady Worsley was taking an early noonchine before
+starting for London, having crossed from the little fishing village
+of Ryde. Here Anne parted with her uncle, who promised an early
+letter, though she could hardly restrain a shudder at the thought of
+the tidings that it might contain.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV: NEWS FROM FAREHAM
+
+
+"My soul its secret hath, my life too hath its mystery.
+Hopeless the evil is, I have not told its history."
+
+JEAN INGELOW.
+
+Lady Worsley was a handsome, commanding old dame, who soon made her
+charge feel the social gulf between a county magnate and a
+clergyman's niece. She decidedly thought that Mistress Anne
+Jacobina held her head too high for her position, and was, moreover,
+conceited of an unfortunate amount of good looks.
+
+Therefore the good lady did her best to repress these dangerous
+tendencies by making the girl sit on the back seat with two maids,
+and uttering long lectures on humility, modesty, and discretion
+which made the blood of the sea-captain's daughter boil with
+indignation.
+
+Yet she always carried with her the dread of being pursued and
+called upon to accuse Charles Archfield of Peregrine's death. It
+was a perpetual cloud, dispersed, indeed, for a time by the events
+of the day, but returning at night, when not only was the combat
+acted over again, but when she fell asleep it was only to be pursued
+by Peregrine through endless vaulted dens of darkness, or, what was
+far worse, to be trying to hide a stream of blood that could never
+be stanched.
+
+It was no wonder that she looked pale in the morning, and felt so
+tired and dejected as to make her sensible that she was cast loose
+from home and friends when no one troubled her with remarks or
+inquiries such as she could hardly have answered. However, when, on
+the evening of the second day's journey, Anne was set down at Sir
+Theophilus Oglethorpe's house at Westminster, she met with a very
+different reception.
+
+Lady Oglethorpe, a handsome, warm-hearted Irish woman, met her at
+once in the hall with outstretched hands, and a kiss on each cheek.
+
+"Come in, my dear, my poor orphan, the daughter of one who was very
+dear to me! Ah, how you have grown! I could never have thought
+this was the little Anne I recollect. You shall come up to your
+chamber at once, and rest you, and make ready for supper, by the
+time Sir Theophilus comes in from attending the King."
+
+Anne found herself installed in a fresh-smelling wainscotted room,
+where a glass of wine and some cake was ready for her, and where she
+made herself ready, feeling exhilarated in spirits as she performed
+her toilette, putting on her black evening dress, and refreshing the
+curls of her brown hair. It was a simple dress of deep mourning,
+but it became her well, and the two or three gentlemen who had come
+in to supper with Sir Theophilus evidently admired her greatly, and
+complimented her on having a situation at Court, which was all that
+Lady Oglethorpe mentioned.
+
+"Child," she said afterwards, when they were in private, "if I had
+known what you looked like I would have sought a different position
+for you. But, there, to get one's foot--were it but the toe of
+one's shoe--in at Court is the great point after all, the rest must
+come after. I warrant me you are well educated too. Can you speak
+French?"
+
+"Oh yes, madam, and Italian, and dance and play on the spinnet. I
+was with two French ladies at Winchester every winter who taught
+such things."
+
+"Well, well, mayhap we may get you promoted to a sub-governess's
+place--though your religion is against you. You are not a Catholic--
+eh?"
+
+"No, your ladyship."
+
+"That's the only road to favour nowadays, though for the name of the
+thing they may have a Protestant or two. You are the King's
+godchild too, so he will expect it the more from you. However, we
+may find a better path. You have not left your heart in the
+country, eh?"
+
+Anne blushed and denied it.
+
+"You will be mewed up close enough in the nursery," ran on Lady
+Oglethorpe. "Lady Powys keeps close discipline there, and I expect
+she will be disconcerted to see how fine a fish I have brought to
+her net; but we will see--we will see how matters go. But, my dear,
+have you no coloured clothes? There is no appearing in the Royal
+household in private mourning. It might daunt the Prince's spirits
+in his cradle!" and she laughed, though Anne felt much annoyed at
+thus disregarding her mother, as well as at the heavy expense.
+However, there was no help for it; the gowns and laces hidden in the
+bottom of her mails were disinterred, and the former were for the
+most part condemned, so that she had to submit to a fresh outfit, in
+which Lady Oglethorpe heartily interested herself, but which drained
+the purse that the Canon had amply supplied.
+
+These arrangements were not complete when the first letter from home
+arrived, and was opened with a beating heart, and furtive glances as
+of one who feared to see the contents, but they were by no means
+what she expected.
+
+I hope you have arrived safely in London, and that you are not
+displeased with your first taste of life in a Court. Neither
+town nor country is exempt from sorrow and death. I was summoned
+only on the second day after your departure to share in the
+sorrows at Archfield, where the poor young wife died early on
+Friday morning, leaving a living infant, a son, who, I hope, may
+prove a blessing to them, if he is spared, which can scarcely be
+expected. The poor young man, and indeed all the family, are in
+the utmost distress, and truly there were circumstances that
+render the event more than usually deplorable, and for which he
+blames himself exceedingly, even to despair. It appears that the
+poor young gentlewoman wished to add some trifle to the numerous
+commissions with which she was entrusting you on the night of the
+bonfire, and that she could not be pacified except by her husband
+undertaking to ride over to give the patterns and the orders to
+you before your setting forth. You said nothing of having seen
+him--nor do I see how it was possible that you could have done
+so, seeing that you only left your chamber just before the
+breakfast that you never tasted, my poor child. He never
+returned till long after noon, and what with fretting after him,
+and disappointment, that happened which Lady Archfield had always
+apprehended, and the poor fragile young creature worked herself
+into a state which ended before midnight in the birth of a puny
+babe, and her own death shortly after. She wanted two months of
+completing her sixteenth year, and was of so frail a constitution
+that Dr. Brown had never much hope of her surviving the birth of
+her child. It was a cruel thing to marry her thus early, ungrown
+in body or mind, but she had no one to care for her before she
+was brought hither. The blame, as I tell Sir Philip, and would
+fain persuade poor Charles, is really with those who bred her up
+so uncontrolled as to be the victim of her humours; but the
+unhappy youth will listen to no consolation. He calls himself a
+murderer, shuts himself up, and for the most part will see and
+speak to no one, but if forced by his father's command to unlock
+his chamber door, returns at once to sit with his head hidden in
+his arms crossed upon the table, and if father, mother, or sister
+strive to rouse him and obtain answer from him, he will only
+murmur forth, "I should only make it worse if I did." It is
+piteous to see a youth so utterly overcome, and truly I think his
+condition is a greater distress to our good friends than the loss
+of the poor young wife. They asked him what name he would have
+given to his child, but all the answer they could get was, "As
+you will, only not mine;" and in the enforced absence of my
+brother of Fareham I baptized him Philip. The funeral will take
+place to-morrow, and Sir Philip proposes immediately after to
+take his son to Oxford, and there endeavour to find a tutor of
+mature age and of prudence, with whom he may either study at New
+College or be sent on the grand tour. It is the only notion that
+the poor lad has seemed willing to entertain, as if to get away
+from his misery, and I cannot but think it well for him. He is
+not yet twenty, and may, as it were, begin life again the wiser
+and the better man for his present extreme sorrow. Lady
+Archfield is greatly wrapped up in the care of the babe, who, I
+fear, is in danger of being killed by overcare, if by nothing
+else, though truly all is in the hands of God. I have scarce
+quitted the afflicted family since I was summoned to them on
+Friday, since Sir Philip has no one else on whom to depend for
+comfort or counsel; and if I can obtain the services of Mr. Ellis
+from Portsmouth for a few Sundays, I shall ride with him to
+Oxford to assist in the choice of a tutor to go abroad with Mr.
+Archfield.
+
+One interruption however I had, namely, from Major Oakshott, who
+came in great perturbation to ask what was the last I had seen of
+his son Peregrine. It appears that the unfortunate young man
+never returned home after the bonfire on Portsdown Hill, where
+his brother Robert lost sight of him, and after waiting as long
+as he durst, returned home alone. It has become known that after
+parting with us high words passed between him and Lieutenant
+Sedley Archfield, insomuch that after the unhappy fashion of
+these times, blood was demanded, and early in the morning Sedley
+sent the friend who was to act as second to bear the challenge to
+young Oakshott. You can conceive the reception that he was
+likely to receive at Oakwood; but it was then discovered that
+Peregrine had not been in his bed all night, nor had any one seen
+or heard of him. Sedley boasts loudly that the youngster has
+fled the country for fear of him, and truly things have that
+appearance, although to my mind Peregrine was far from wanting in
+spirit or courage. But, as he had not received the cartel, he
+might not have deemed his honour engaged to await it, and I
+incline to the belief that he is on his way to his uncle in
+Muscovy, driven thereto by his dread of the marriage with the
+gentlewoman whom he holds in so much aversion. I have striven to
+console his father by the assurance that such tidings of him will
+surely arrive in due time, but the Major is bitterly grieved, and
+is galled by the accusation of cowardice. "He could not even be
+true to his own maxims of worldly honour," says the poor
+gentleman. "So true it is that only by grace we stand fast."
+The which is true enough, but the poor gentleman unwittingly did
+his best to make grace unacceptable in his son's eyes. I trust
+soon to hear again of you, my dear child. I rejoice that Lady
+Oglethorpe is so good to you, and I hope that in the palace you
+will guard first your faith and then your discretion. And so
+praying always for your welfare, alike spiritual and temporal.--
+Your loving uncle, JNO. WOODFORD.
+
+Truly it was well that Anne had secluded herself to read this
+letter.
+
+So the actual cause for which poor Charles Archfield had entreated
+silence was at an end. The very evil he had apprehended had come to
+pass, and she could well understand how, on his return in a horror-
+stricken, distracted state of mind, the childish petulance of his
+wife had worried him into loss of temper, so that he hardly knew
+what he said. And what must not his agony of remorse be? She could
+scarcely imagine how he had avoided confessing all as a mere relief
+to his mind, but then she reflected that when he called himself a
+murderer the words were taken in another sense, and no questions
+asked, nor would he be willing to add such grief and shame to his
+parents' present burthen, especially as no suspicion existed.
+
+That Peregrine's fate had not been discovered greatly relieved her.
+She believed the vault to go down to a considerable depth after a
+first platform of stone near the opening, and it was generally
+avoided as the haunt of hobgoblins, fairies, or evil beings, so that
+no one was likely to be in its immediate neighbourhood after the hay
+was carried, so that there might have been nothing to attract any
+one to the near neighbourhood and thus lead to the discovery. If
+not made by this time, Charles would be far away, and there was
+nothing to connect him with the deed. No one save herself had even
+known of his having been near the castle that morning. How strange
+that the only persons aware of that terrible secret should be so far
+separated from one another that they could exchange no confidences;
+and each was compelled to absolute silence. For as long as no one
+else was suspected, Anne felt her part must be not to betray
+Charles, though the bare possibility of the accusation of another
+was agony to her.
+
+She wrote her condolences in due form to Fareham, and in due time
+was answered by Lucy Archfield. The letter was full of details
+about the infant, who seemed to absorb her and her mother, and to be
+as likely to live as any child of those days ever was--and it was in
+his favour that his grandmother and her old nurse had better notions
+of management than most of her contemporaries. In spite of all that
+Lucy said of her brother's overwhelming grief, and the melancholy of
+thus parting with him, there was a strain of cheerfulness throughout
+the letter, betraying that the poor young wife of less than a year
+was no very great loss to the peace and comfort of the family. The
+letter ended with--
+
+There is a report that Sir Peregrine Oakshott is dead in Muscovy.
+Nothing has been heard of that unfortunate young man at Oakwood.
+If he be gone in quest of his uncle, I wonder what will become of
+him? However, nurse will have it that this being the third
+seventh year of his life, the fairies have carried off their
+changeling--you remember how she told us the story of his being
+changed as an infant, when we were children at Winchester; she
+believes it as much as ever, and never let little Philip out of
+her sight before he was baptized. I ask her, if the changeling
+be gone, where is the true Peregrine? but she only wags her head
+in answer.
+
+A day or two later Anne heard from her uncle from Oxford. He was
+extremely grieved at the condition of his beloved alma mater, with a
+Roman Catholic Master reigning at University College, a doctor from
+the Sorbonne and Fellows to match, inflicted by military force on
+Magdalen, whose lawful children had been ejected with a violence
+beyond anything that the colleges had suffered even in the time of
+the Rebellion. If things went on as they were, he pronounced Oxford
+would be no better than a Popish seminary: and he had the more
+readily induced his old friend to consent to Charles's desire not to
+remain there as a student, but to go abroad with Mr. Fellowes, one
+of the expelled fellows of Magdalen, a clergyman of mature age, but
+a man of the world, who had already acted as a travelling tutor.
+Considering that the young widower was not yet twenty, and that all
+his wife's wealth would be in his hands, also that his cousin Sedley
+formed a dangerous link with the questionable diversions of the
+garrison at Portsmouth, both father and friend felt that it was well
+that he should be out of reach, and have other occupations for the
+present.
+
+Change of scene had, Dr. Woodford said, brightened the poor youth,
+and he was showing more interest in passing events, but probably he
+would never again be the light-hearted boy they used to know.
+
+Anne could well believe it.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI: A ROYAL NURSERY
+
+
+"The duty that I owe unto your Majesty
+I seal upon the lips of this sweet babe."
+
+King Richard III.
+
+It was not till the Queen had moved from St. James's, where her son
+had been born, to take up her abode at Whitehall, that Lady
+Oglethorpe was considered to be disinfected from her children's
+whooping-cough, and could conduct Mistress Anne Jacobina Woodford to
+her new situation.
+
+Anne remembered the place from times past, as she followed the lady
+up the broad stairs to the state rooms, where the child was daily
+carried for inspection by the nation to whom, it was assumed, he was
+so welcome, but who, on the contrary, regarded him with the utmost
+dislike and suspicion.
+
+Whitehall was, in those days, free to all the world, and though
+sentries in the Life-guards' uniform with huge grenadier caps were
+posted here and there, every one walked up and down. Members of
+Parliament and fine gentlemen in embroidered coats and flowing wigs
+came to exchange news; country cousins came to stare and wonder,
+some to admire, some to whisper their disbelief in the Prince's
+identity; clergy in gown, cassock, and bands came to win what they
+could in a losing cause; and one or two other clergy, who were
+looked at askance, whose dress had a foreign air, and whose tonsure
+could be detected as they threaded their way with quick, gliding
+steps to the King's closet.
+
+Lady Oglethorpe, as one to the manner born, made her way through the
+midst of this throng in the magnificent gallery, and Anne followed
+her closely, conscious of words of admiration and inquiries who she
+was. Into the Prince's presence chamber, in fact his day-nursery,
+they came, and a sweet and gentle-looking lady met them, and
+embraced Lady Oglethorpe, who made known Mistress Woodford to Lady
+Strickland, of Sizergh, the second governess, as the fourth rocker
+who had been appointed.
+
+"You are welcome, Miss Woodford," said the lady, looking at Anne's
+high, handsome head and well-bred action in courtesying, with a
+shade of surprise. "You are young, but I trust you are discreet.
+There is much need thereof."
+
+Following to a kind of alcove, raised by a step or two, Anne found
+herself before a half-circle of ladies and gentlemen round a chair
+of state, in front of which stood a nurse, with an infant in her
+arms, holding him to be caressed and inspected by the lady on the
+throne. Her beautiful soft dark eyes and hair, and an ivory
+complexion, with her dignified and graceful bearing, her long,
+slender throat and exquisite figure, were not so much concealed as
+enhanced by the simple mob cap and 'night-gown,' as it was then the
+fashion to call a morning wrapper, which she wore, and Anne's first
+impression was that no wonder Peregrine raved about her. Poor
+Peregrine! that very thought came like a stab, as, after courtesying
+low, she stood at the end of the long room--silent, and observing.
+
+A few gentlemen waited by the opposite door, but not coming far into
+the apartment, and Lady Oglethorpe was announced by one of them.
+The space was so great that Anne could not hear the words, and she
+only saw the gracious smile and greeting as Lady Oglethorpe knelt
+and kissed the Queen's hand. After a long conversation between the
+mothers, during which Lady Oglethorpe was accommodated with a
+cushion, Anne was beckoned forward, and was named to the Queen, who
+honoured her with an inclination of the head and a few low murmured
+words.
+
+Then there was an announcement of 'His Majesty,' and Anne, following
+the general example of standing back with low obeisances, beheld the
+tall active figure and dark heavy countenance of her Royal
+godfather, under his great black, heavily-curled wig. He returned
+Lady Oglethorpe's greeting, and his face lighted up with a pleasant
+smile that greatly changed the expression as he took his child into
+his arms for a few moments; but the little one began to cry,
+whereupon he was carried off, and the King began to consult Lady
+Oglethorpe upon the water-gruel on which the poor little Prince was
+being reared, and of which she emphatically disapproved.
+
+Before he left the room, however, Lady Oglethorpe took care to
+present to him his god-daughter, Mistress Anne Jacobina Woodford,
+and very low was the girl's obeisance before him, but with far more
+fright and shyness than before the sweet-faced Queen.
+
+"Oh ay!" he said, "I remember honest Will Woodford. He did good
+service at Southwold. I wish he had left a son like him. Have you
+a brother, young mistress?"
+
+"No, please your Majesty, I am an only child."
+
+"More's the pity," he said kindly, and with a smile brightening his
+heavy features. "'Tis too good a breed to die out. You are
+Catholic?"
+
+"I am bred in the English Church, so please your Majesty."
+
+His Majesty was evidently less pleased than before, but he only
+said, "Ha! and my godchild! We must amend that," and waved her
+aside.
+
+The royal interview over, the newcomer was presented to the State
+Governess, the Countess of Powys, a fair and gracious matron, who
+was, however, almost as far removed from her as the Queen. Then she
+was called on to take a solemn oath before the Master of the
+Household, of dutiful loyalty to the Prince.
+
+Mrs. Labadie was head nurse as well as being wife to the King's
+French valet. She was a kindly, portly Englishwoman, who seemed
+wrapped up in her charge, and she greeted her new subordinate in a
+friendly way, which, however, seemed strange in one who at home
+would have been of an inferior degree, expressed hopes of her
+steadiness and discretion, and called to Miss Dunord to show Miss
+Woodford her chamber. The abbreviation Miss sounded familiar and
+unsuitable, but it had just come into use for younger spinsters,
+though officially they were still termed Mistress.
+
+Mistress or Miss Dunord was sallow and gray-eyed, somewhat older
+than Anne, and looking thoroughly French, though her English was
+perfect. She was entirely dressed in blue and white, and had a
+rosary and cross at her girdle. "This way," she said, tripping up a
+steep wooden stair. "We sleep above. 'Tis a huge, awkward place.
+Her Majesty calls it the biggest and most uncomfortable palace she
+ever was in."
+
+Opening a heavy door, she showed a room of considerable size, hung
+with faded frayed tapestry, and containing two huge bedsteads, with
+four heavy posts, and canopies of wood, as near boxes as could well
+be. Privacy was a luxury not ordinarily coveted, and the
+arrangement did not surprise Anne, though she could have wished that
+on that summer day curtains and tapestry had been less fusty. Two
+young women were busy over a dress spread on one of the beds, and
+with French ease and grace the guide said, "Here is our new
+colleague, Miss Jacobina Woodford. Let me present Miss Hester
+Bridgeman and Miss Jane Humphreys."
+
+"Miss Woodford is welcome," said Miss Bridgeman, a keen, brown,
+lively, somewhat anxious-looking person, courtesying and holding out
+her hand, and her example was followed by Jane Humphreys, a stout,
+rosy, commonplace girl.
+
+"Oh! I am glad," this last cried. "Now I shall have a bedfellow."
+
+This Anne was the less sorry for, as she saw that the bed of the
+other two was furnished with a holy water stoup and a little shrine
+with a waxen Madonna. There was only one looking-glass among the
+four, and not much apparatus either for washing or the toilet, but
+Miss Bridgeman believed that they would soon go to Richmond, where
+things would be more comfortable. Then she turned to consult Miss
+Dunord on her endeavour to improve the trimmings of a dress of Miss
+Humphreys.
+
+"Yes, I know you are always in Our Lady's colours, Pauline, but you
+have a pretty taste, and can convince Jane that rose colour and
+scarlet cannot go together."
+
+"My father chose the ribbons," said Jane, as if that were
+unanswerable.
+
+"City taste," said Miss Bridgeman.
+
+"They are pretty, very pretty with anything else," observed Pauline,
+with more tact. "See, now, with your white embroidered petticoat
+and the gray train they are ravishing--and the scarlet coat will
+enliven the black."
+
+There was further a little murmur about what a Mr. Hopkins admired,
+but it was lost in the arrival of Miss Woodford's mails.
+
+They clustered round, as eager as a set of schoolgirls, over Anne's
+dresses. Happily even the extreme of fashion had not then become
+ungraceful.
+
+"Her Majesty will not have the loose drapery that folks used to
+wear," said Hester Bridgeman.
+
+"No," said Pauline; "it was all very well for those who could
+dispose it with an artless negligence, but for some I could name, it
+was as though they had tumbled it on with a hay-fork and had their
+hair tousled by being tickled in the hay."
+
+"Now we have the tight bodice with plenty of muslin and lace, the
+gown open below to show the petticoat," said Hester; "and to my mind
+it is more decorous."
+
+"Decorum was not the vogue then," laughed Pauline, "perhaps it will
+be now. Oh, what lovely lace! real Flanders, on my word! Where did
+you get it, Miss Woodford?"
+
+"It was my mother's."
+
+"And this? Why, 'tis old French point, you should hang it to your
+sleeves."
+
+"My Lady Archfield gave it to me in case I should need it."
+
+"Ah! I see you have good friends and are a person of some
+condition," put in Hester Bridgeman. "I shall be happy to consort
+with you. Let us--"
+
+Anne courtesied, and at the moment a bell was heard, Pauline at once
+crossed herself and fell on her knees before the small shrine with a
+figure of the Blessed Virgin, and Hester, breaking off her words,
+followed her example; but Jane Humphreys stood twisting the corner
+of her apron.
+
+In a very short time, almost before Anne had recovered from her
+bewilderment, the other two were up and chattering again.
+
+"You are not a Catholic?" demanded Miss Bridgeman.
+
+"I was bred in the Church," said Anne.
+
+"And you the King's godchild!" exclaimed Pauline. "But we shall
+soon amend that and make a convert of you like Miss Bridgeman
+there."
+
+Anne shook her head, but was glad to ask, "And what means the bell
+that is ringing now?"
+
+"That is the supper bell. It rings just after the Angelus," said
+Hester. "No, it is not ours. The great folks, Lady Powys, Lady
+Strickland, and the rest sup first. We have the dishes after them,
+with Nurses Labadie and Royer and the rest--no bad ones either.
+They are allowed five dishes and two bottles of wine apiece, and
+they always leave plenty for us, and it is served hot too."
+
+The preparations for going down to the second table now absorbed the
+party.
+
+As Hester said, the fare at this second table was not to be
+despised. It was a formal meal shared with the two nurses and the
+two pages of the backstairs. Not the lads usually associated with
+the term, but men of mature age, and of gentle, though not noble,
+birth and breeding; and there were likewise the attendants of the
+King and Queen of the same grade, such as Mr. Labadie, the King's
+valet, some English, but besides these, Dusian, the Queen's French
+page, and Signer and Signora Turini, who had come with her from
+Modena, Pere Giverlai, her confessor, and another priest. Pere
+Giverlai said grace, and the conversation went on briskly between
+the elders, the younger ones being supposed to hold their peace.
+
+Their dishes went in reversion to the inferior class of servants,
+laundress, sempstress, chambermaids, and the like, who had much more
+liberty than their betters, and not such a lack of occupation as
+Anne soon perceived that she should suffer from.
+
+There was, however, a great muster of all the Prince's
+establishment, who stood round, as many as could, with little
+garments in their hands, while he was solemnly undressed and laid in
+his richly inlaid and carved cradle--over which Pere Giverlai
+pronounced a Latin benediction.
+
+The nursery establishment was then released, except one of the
+nurses, who was to sleep or wake on a couch by his side, and one of
+the rockers. These damsels had, two at a time, to divide the night
+between them, one being always at hand to keep the food warm, touch
+the rocker at need with her foot, or call up the nurse on duty if
+the child awoke, but not presume herself to handle his little Royal
+Highness.
+
+It was the night when Mistresses Dunord and Bridgeman were due, and
+Anne followed Jane Humphreys to her room, asking a little about the
+duties of the morrow.
+
+"We must be dressed before seven," said the girl. "One of us will
+be left on duty while the others go to Mass. I am glad you are a
+Protestant, Miss Woodford, for the Catholics put everything on me
+that they can."
+
+"We must do our best to help and strengthen each other," said Anne.
+
+"It is very hard," said Jane; "and the priests are always at me! I
+would change as Hester Bridgeman has done, but that I know it would
+break my grand-dame's heart. My father might not care so much, if I
+got advancement, but I believe it would kill my grandmother."
+
+"Advancement! oh, but faith comes first," exclaimed Anne, recalling
+the warning.
+
+"Hester says one religion is as good as another to get to Heaven
+by," murmured Jane.
+
+"Not if we deny our own for the world's sake," said Anne. "Is the
+chapel here a Popish one?"
+
+"No; the Queen has an Oratory, but the Popish chapel is at St.
+James's--across the Park. The Protestant one is here at Whitehall,
+and there are daily prayers at nine o'clock, and on Sunday music
+with three fiddlers, and my grandmother says it might almost as well
+be Popish at once."
+
+"Did your grandmother bring you up?"
+
+"Yes. My mother died when I was seven years old, and my grandmother
+bred us all up. You should hear her talk of the good old times
+before the Kings came back and there were no Bishops and no book
+prayers--but my father says we must swim with the stream, or he
+would not have got any custom at his coffee-house."
+
+"Is that his calling?"
+
+"Ay! No one has a better set of guests than in the Golden Lamb.
+The place is full. The great Dr. Hammond sees his patients there,
+and it is all one buzz of the wits. It was because of that that my
+Lord Sunderland made interest, and got me here. How did you come?"
+
+Anne briefly explained, and Jane broke out--
+
+"Then you will be my friend, and we will tell each other all our
+secrets. You are a Protestant too. You will be mine, and not
+Bridgeman's or Dunord's--I hate them."
+
+In point of fact Anne did not feel much attracted by the proffer of
+friendship, and she certainly did not intend to tell Jane Humphreys
+all her secrets, nor to vow enmity to the other colleagues, but she
+gravely answered that she trusted they would be friends and help to
+maintain one another's faith. She was relieved that Miss Bridgeman
+here came in to take her first turn of rest till she was to be
+called up at one o'clock.
+
+As Jane Humphreys had predicted, Mrs. Royer and Anne alone were left
+in charge of the nursling while every one went to morning Mass.
+Then followed breakfast and the levee of his Royal Highness, lasting
+as on the previous day till dinner-time; and the afternoon was as
+before, except that the day was fine enough for the child to be
+carried out with all his attendants behind him to take the air in
+the private gardens.
+
+If this was to be the whole course of life at the palace, Anne began
+to feel that she had made a great mistake. She was by no means
+attracted by her companions, though Miss Bridgeman decided that she
+must know persons of condition, and made overtures of friendship, to
+be sealed by calling one another Oriana and Portia. She did not
+approve of such common names as Princess Anne and Lady Churchill
+used--Mrs. Morley and Mrs. Freeman! They must have something better
+than what was used by the Cockpit folks, and she was sure that her
+dear Portia would soon be of the only true faith.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII: MACHINATIONS
+
+
+"Baby born to woe."
+
+F. T. PALGRAVE.
+
+When Anne Woodford began to wake from the constant thought of the
+grief and horror she had left at Portchester, and to feel more alive
+to her surroundings and less as if they were a kind of dream, in
+which she only mechanically took her part, one thing impressed
+itself on her gradually, and that was disappointment. If the
+previous shock had not blunted all her hopes and aspirations,
+perhaps she would have felt it sooner and more keenly; but she could
+not help realising that she had put herself into an inferior
+position whence there did not seem to be the promotion she had once
+anticipated. Her companion rockers were of an inferior grade to
+herself. Jane Humphreys was a harmless but silly girl, not much
+wiser, though less spoilt, than poor little Madam, and full of
+Cockney vulgarities. Education was unfashionable just then, and
+though Hester Bridgeman was bettor born and bred, being the daughter
+of an attorney in the city, she was not much better instructed, and
+had no pursuits except that of her own advantage. Pauline Dunord
+was by far the best of the three, but she seemed to live a life
+apart, taking very little interest in her companions or anything
+around her except her devotions and the bringing them over to her
+Church. The nursery was quite a separate establishment; there was
+no mingling with the guests of royalty, who were only seen in
+excited peeps from the window, or when solemnly introduced to the
+presence chamber to pay their respects to the Prince. As to books,
+the only secular one that Anne saw while at Whitehall was an odd
+volume of Parthenissa. The late King's summary of the Roman
+controversy was to be had in plenty, and nothing was more evident
+than that the only road to favour or promotion was in being thereby
+convinced.
+
+"Don't throw it down as if it were a hot chestnut," said her Oriana.
+"That's what they all do at first, but they come to it at last."
+
+Anne made no answer, but a pang smote her as she thought of her
+uncle's warnings. Yet surely she might hope for other modes of
+prospering, she who was certainly by far the best looking and best
+educated of all the four, not that this served her much in her
+present company, and those of higher rank did not notice her at all.
+Princess Anne would surely recollect her, and then she might be safe
+in a Protestant household, where her uncle would be happy about her.
+
+The Princess had been at Bath when first she arrived, but at the end
+of a week preparations were made at the Cockpit, a sort of appendage
+to Whitehall, where the Prince and Princess of Denmark lived, and in
+due time there was a visit to the nursery. Standing in full
+ceremony behind Lady Powys, Anne saw the plump face and form she
+recollected in the florid bloom of a young matron, not without a
+certain royal dignity in the pose of the head, though in grace and
+beauty far surpassed by the tall, elegant figure and face of Lady
+Churchill, whose bright blue eyes seemed to be taking in everything
+everywhere. Anne's heart began to beat high at the sight of a once
+familiar face, and with hopes of a really kind word from one who as
+an elder girl had made much of the pretty little plaything. The
+Princess Anne's countenance was, however, less good-natured than
+usual; her mouth was made up to a sullen expression, and when her
+brother was shown to her she did not hold out her arms to him nor
+vouchsafe a kiss.
+
+The Queen looked at her wistfully, asking--
+
+"Is he not like the King?"
+
+"Humph!" returned Princess Anne, "I see no likeness to any living
+soul of our family."
+
+"Nay, but see his little nails," said the Queen, spreading the tiny
+hand over her finger. "See how like your father's they are framed!
+My treasure, you can clasp me!"
+
+"My brother, Edgar! He was the beauty," said the Princess. "_He_
+was exactly like my father; but there's no judging of anything so
+puny as this!"
+
+"He was very suffering last week, the poor little angel," said the
+mother sadly; "but they say this water-gruel is very nourishing, and
+not so heavy as milk."
+
+"It does not look as if it agreed with him," said the Princess.
+"Poor little mammet! Did I hear that you had the little Woodford
+here? Is that you, girl?"
+
+Anne courtesied herself forward.
+
+"Ay, I remember you. I never forget a face, and you have grown up
+fair enough. Where's your mother?"
+
+"I lost her last February, so please your Royal Highness."
+
+"Oh! She was a good woman. Why did she not send you to me? Well,
+well! Come to my toilette to-morrow."
+
+So Princess Anne swept away in her rich blue brocade. Her behest
+was obeyed, of course, though it was evidently displeasing to the
+nursery authorities, and Lady Strickland gave a warning to be
+discreet and to avoid gossip with the Cockpit folks.
+
+Anne could not but be excited. Perhaps the Princess would ask for
+her, and take her into the number of her own attendants, where she
+would no longer be in a Romish household, and would certainly be in
+a higher position. Why, she remembered that very Lady Churchill as
+Sarah Jennings in no better a position than she could justly aspire
+to. Her coming to Court would thus be truly justified.
+
+The Princess sat in a silken wrapper, called a night-gown, in her
+chamber, which had a richly-curtained bed in the alcove, and a
+toilet-table with a splendid Venetian mirror, and a good deal of
+silver sparkling on it, while a strange mixture of perfumes came
+from the various boxes and bottles. Ladies and tirewomen stood in
+attendance; a little black boy in a turban and gold-embroidered
+dress held a salver with her chocolate cup; a cockatoo soliloquised
+in low whispers in the window; a monkey was chained to a pole at a
+safe distance from him; a French friseur was manipulating the
+Princess's profuse brown hair with his tongs; and a needy-looking,
+pale thin man, in a semi-clerical suit, was half-reading, half-
+declaiming a poem, in which 'Fair Anna' seemed mixed up with Juno,
+Ceres, and other classical folk, but to which she was evidently
+paying very little attention.
+
+"Ah! there you are, little one. Thank you, Master--what's name;
+that is enough. 'Tis a fine poem, but I never can remember which is
+which of all your gods and goddesses. Oh yes, I accept the
+dedication. Give him a couple of guineas, Ellis; it will serve him
+for board and lodging for a fortnight, poor wretch!" Then, after
+giving a smooth, well-shaped white hand to be kissed, and inviting
+her visitor to a cushion at her feet, she began a long series of
+questions, kindly ones at first, though of the minute gossiping
+kind, and extending to the Archfields, for poor young Madam had been
+of the rank about which royalty knew everything in those days. The
+inquiries were extremely minute, and the comments what from any one
+else, Anne would have thought vulgar, especially in the presence of
+the hairdresser, but her namesake observed her blush and hesitation,
+and said, "Oh, never mind a creature like that. He is French,
+besides, and does not understand a word we say."
+
+Anne, looking over the Princess's head, feared that she saw a
+twinkle in the man's eye, and could only look down and try to ignore
+him through the catechism that ensued, on when she came to
+Whitehall, on the Prince of Wales's health, the management of him,
+and all the circumstances connected with his birth.
+
+Very glad was Anne that she knew nothing, and had not picked up any
+information as to what had happened before she came to the palace.
+As to the present, Lady Strickland's warning and her own sense of
+honour kept her reticent to a degree that evidently vexed the
+Princess, for she dropped her caressing manner, and sent her away
+with a not very kind, "You may go now; you will be turning Papist
+next, and what would your poor mother say?"
+
+And as Anne departed in backward fashion she heard Lady Churchill
+say, "You will make nothing of her. She is sharper than she
+affects, and a proud minx! I see it in her carriage."
+
+The visit had only dashed a few hopes and done her harm with her
+immediate surroundings, who always disliked and distrusted
+intercourse with the other establishment.
+
+However, in another day the nursery was moved to Richmond. This was
+a welcome move to Anne, who had spent her early childhood near
+enough to be sometimes taken thither, and to know the Park well, so
+that there was a home feeling in the sight of the outline of the
+trees and the scenery of the neighbourhood. The Queen intended
+going to Bath, so that the establishment was only that of the
+Prince, and the life was much quieter on the whole; but there was no
+gratifying any yearning for country walks, for it was not safe nor
+perhaps decorous for one young woman to be out alone in a park open
+to the public and haunted by soldiers from Hounslow--nor could
+either of her fellow-rockers understand her preference for a
+secluded path through the woods. Miss Dunord never went out at all,
+except on duty, when the Prince was carried along the walks in the
+garden, and the other two infinitely preferred the open spaces,
+where tables were set under the horse-chestnut trees for parties who
+boated down from London to eat curds and whey, sometimes bringing a
+fiddler so as to dance under the trees.
+
+Jane Humphreys especially was always looking out for acquaintances,
+and once, with a cry of joy, a stout, homely-looking young woman
+started up, exclaiming, "Sister Jane!" and flew into her arms. Upon
+which Miss Woodford was introduced to 'My sister Coles' and her
+husband, and had to sit down under a tree and share the festivities,
+while there was an overflow of inquiries and intelligence, domestic
+and otherwise. Certainly these were persons whom she would not have
+treated as equals at home.
+
+Besides, it was all very well to hear of the good old grandmother's
+rheumatics, and of little Tommy's teething, and even to see Jane
+hang her head and be teased about remembering Mr. Hopkins; nor was
+it wonderful to hear lamentations over the extreme dulness of the
+life where one never saw a creature to speak to who was not as old
+as the hills; but when it came to inquiries as minute as the
+Princess's about the Prince of Wales, Anne thought the full details
+lavishly poured out scarcely consistent with loyalty to their oaths
+of service and Lady Strickland's warning, and she told Jane so.
+
+She was answered, "Oh la! what harm can it do? You are such a proud
+peat! Grand-dame and sister like to know all about His Royal
+Highness."
+
+This was true; but Anne was far more uncomfortable two or three days
+later. The Prince was ailing, so much so that Lady Powys had sent
+an express for the Queen, who had not yet started for Bath, when
+Anne and Jane, being relieved from duty by the other pair, went out
+for a stroll.
+
+"Oh la!" presently exclaimed Jane, "if that is not Colonel Sands,
+the Princess's equerry. I do declare he is coming to speak to us,
+though he is one of the Cockpit folks."
+
+He was a very fine gentleman indeed, all scarlet and gold, and no
+wonder Jane was flattered and startled, so that she jerked her fan
+violently up and down as he accosted her with a wave of his cocked
+hat, saying that he was rejoiced to meet these two fair ladies,
+having been sent by the Princess of Denmark to inquire for the
+health of the Prince. She was very anxious to know more than could
+be learnt by formal inquiry, he said, and he was happy to have met
+the young gentlewomen who could gratify him.
+
+The term 'gentlewoman' highly flattered Miss Humphreys, who blushed
+and bridled, and exclaimed, "Oh la, sir!" but Anne thought it
+needful to say gravely--
+
+"We are in trust, sir, and have no right to speak of what passes
+within the royal household."
+
+"Madam, I admire your discretion, but to the--(a-hem)--sister of
+the--(a-hem)--Prince of Wales it is surely uncalled for."
+
+"Miss Woodford is so precise," said Jane Humphreys, with a giggle;
+"I do not know what harm can come of saying that His Royal Highness
+peaks and pines just as he did before."
+
+"He is none the better for country air then?"
+
+"Oh no? except that he cries louder. Such a time as we had last
+night! Mrs. Royer never slept a wink all the time I was there, but
+walked about with him all night. You had the best of it, Miss
+Woodford."
+
+"He slept while I was there," said Anne briefly, not thinking it
+needful to state that the tired nurse had handed the child over to
+her, and that he had fallen asleep in her arms. She tried to put an
+end to the conversation by going indoors, but she was vexed to find
+that, instead of following her closely, Miss Humphreys was still
+lingering with the equerry.
+
+Anne found the household in commotion. Pauline met her, weeping
+bitterly, and saying the Prince had had a fit, and all hope was
+over, and in the rockers' room, she found Hester Bridgeman
+exclaiming that her occupation was gone. Water-gruel, she had no
+doubt, had been the death of the Prince. The Queen was come, and
+wellnigh distracted. She had sent out in quest of a wet-nurse, but
+it was too late; he was going the way of all Her Majesty's children.
+
+Going down again together the two girls presently had to stand aside
+as the poor Queen, seeing and hearing nothing, came towards her own
+room with her handkerchief over her face. They pressed each other's
+hands awe-stricken, and went on to the nursery. There Mrs. Labadie
+was kneeling over the cradle, her hood hanging over her face, crying
+bitterly over the poor little child, who had a blue look about his
+face, and seemed at the last gasp, his features contorted by a
+convulsion.
+
+At that moment Jane Humphreys was seen gently opening the door and
+letting in Colonel Sands, who moved as quietly as possible, to give
+a furtive look at the dying child. His researches were cut short,
+however. Lady Strickland, usually the gentlest of women, darted out
+and demanded what he was doing in her nursery.
+
+He attempted to stammer some excuse about Princess Anne, but Lady
+Strickland only answered by standing pointing to the door and he was
+forced to retreat in a very undignified fashion.
+
+"Who brought him?" she demanded, when the door was shut. "Those
+Cockpit folk are not to come prying here, hap what may!"
+
+Miss Humphreys had sped away for fear of questions being asked, and
+attention was diverted by Mrs. Royer arriving with a stout, healthy-
+looking young woman in a thick home-spun cloth petticoat, no
+stockings, and old shoes, but with a clean white cap on her head--a
+tilemaker's wife who had been captured in the village.
+
+No sooner was the suffering, half-starved child delivered over to
+her than he became serene and contented. The water-gruel regime was
+over, and he began to thrive from that time. Even when later in the
+afternoon the King himself brought in Colonel Sands, whom in the joy
+of his heart he had asked to dine with him, the babe lay tranquilly
+on the cradle, waving his little hands and looking happy.
+
+The intrusion seemed to have been forgotten, but that afternoon
+Anne, who had been sent on a message to one of the Queen's ladies,
+more than suspected that she saw Jane in a deep recess of a window
+in confabulation with the Colonel. And when they were alone at bed-
+time the girl said--
+
+"Is it not droll? The Colonel cannot believe that 'tis the same
+child. He has been joking and teasing me to declare that we have a
+dead Prince hidden somewhere, and that the King showed him the
+brick-bat woman's child."
+
+"How can you prattle in that mischievous way--after what Lady
+Strickland said, too? You do not know what harm you may do!"
+
+"Oh lack, it was all a jest!"
+
+"I am not so sure that it was."
+
+"But you will not tell of me, dear friend, you will not. I never
+saw Lady Strickland like that; I did not know she could be in such a
+rage."
+
+"No wonder, when a fellow like that came peeping and prying like a
+raven to see whether the poor babe was still breathing," cried Anne
+indignantly. "How could you bring him in?"
+
+"Fellow indeed! Why he is a colonel in the Life-guards, and the
+Princess's equerry; and who has a right to know about the child if
+not his own sister--or half-sister?"
+
+"She is not a very loving sister," replied Anne. "You know well,
+Jane, how many would not be sorry to make out that it is as that man
+would fain have you say."
+
+"Well, I told him it was no such thing, and laughed the very notion
+to scorn."
+
+"It were better not to talk with him at all."
+
+"But you will not speak of it. If I were turned away my father
+would beat me. Nay, I know not what he might not do to me. You
+will not tell, dear darling Portia, and I will love you for ever."
+
+"I have no call to tell," said Anne coldly, but she was disgusted
+and weary, and moreover not at all sure that she, as the other
+Protestant rocker, and having been in the Park on that same day, was
+not credited with some of the mischievous gossip that had passed.
+
+"There, Portia, that is what you get by walking with that stupid
+Humphreys," said Oriana. "She knows no better than to blab to any
+one who will be at the trouble to seem sweet upon her, though she
+may get nothing by it."
+
+"Would it be better if she did?" asked Anne.
+
+"Oh well, we must all look out for ourselves, and I am sure there is
+no knowing what may come next. But I hear we are to move to Windsor
+as soon as the child is strong enough, so as to be farther out of
+reach of the Cockpit tongues."
+
+This proved to be true, but the Prince and his suite were not lodged
+in the Castle itself, a house in the cloisters being thought more
+suitable, and here the Queen visited her child daily, for since that
+last alarm she could not bear to be long absent from him. Such
+emissaries as Colonel Sands did not again appear, but after that
+precedent Lady Strickland had become much more unwilling to allow
+any of those under her authority to go out into any public place,
+and the rockers seldom got any exercise except as swelling the
+Prince's train when he was carried out to take the air.
+
+Anne looked with longing eyes at the Park, but a ramble there was a
+forbidden pleasure. She could not always even obtain leave to
+attend St. George's Chapel; the wish was treated as a sort of
+weakness, or folly, and she was always the person selected to stay
+at home when any religious ceremony called away the rest of the
+establishment.
+
+As the King's god-daughter it was impressed on her that she ought to
+conform to his Church, and one of the many priests about the Court
+was appointed to instruct her. In the dearth of all intellectual
+intercourse, and the absolute deficiency of books, she could not but
+become deeply interested in the arguments. Her uncle had forearmed
+her with instruction, and she wrote to him on any difficulty which
+arose, and this became the chief occupation of her mind, distracting
+her thoughts from the one great cloud that hung over her memory.
+Indeed one of the foremost bulwarks her feelings erected to fortify
+her conscience against the temptations around, was the knowledge
+that she would have, though of course under seal of confession, to
+relate that terrible story to a priest.
+
+Hester Bridgeman could not imagine how her Portia could endure to
+hear the old English Prayer-book droned out. For her part, she
+liked one thing or the other, either a rousing Nonconformist sermon
+in a meeting-house or a splendid Mass.
+
+"But, after all," as Anne overheard her observing to Miss Dunord,
+"it may be all the better for us. What with her breeding and her
+foreign tongues, she would be sure to be set over our heads as
+under-governess, or the like, if she were not such an obstinate
+heretic, and keeping that stupid Humphreys so. We could have
+converted her long ago, if it were not for that Woodford and for her
+City grand-dame! Portia is the King's godchild, too, so it is just
+as well that she does not see what is for her own advantage."
+
+"I do not care for promotion. I only want to save my own soul and
+hers," said Pauline. "I wish she would come over to the true
+Church, for I could love her."
+
+And certainly Pauline Dunord's gentle devotional example, and her
+perfect rest and peace in the practice of her religion, were strong
+influences with Anne. She was waiting till circumstances should
+make it possible to her to enter a convent, and in the meantime she
+lived a strictly devout life, abstracted as far as duty and kindness
+permitted from the little cabals and gossipry around.
+
+Anne could not help feeling that the girl was as nearly a saint as
+any one she had ever seen--far beyond herself in goodness.
+Moreover, the Queen inspired strong affection. Mary Beatrice was
+not only a very beautiful person, full of the grace and dignity of
+the House of Este, but she was deeply religious, good and gentle,
+kindly and gracious to all who approached her, and devoted to her
+husband and child. A word or look from her was always a delight,
+and Anne, by her knowledge of Italian, was able sometimes to obtain
+a smiling word or remark.
+
+The little Prince, after those first miserable weeks of his life,
+had begun to thrive, and by and by manifested a decided preference
+not only for his beautiful mother, but for the fresh face, bright
+smile, and shining brown eyes of Miss Woodford. She could almost
+always, with nods and becks, avert a passion of roaring, which
+sometimes went beyond the powers of even his foster-mother, the
+tiler's wife. The Queen watched with delight when he laughed and
+flourished his arms in response, and the King was summoned to see
+the performance, which he requited by taking out a fat gold watch
+set with pearls, and presenting it to Anne, as his grave gloomy face
+lighted up with a smile.
+
+"Are you yet one of us?" he asked, as she received his gift on her
+knee.
+
+"No, sir, I cannot--"
+
+"That must be amended. You have read his late Majesty's paper?"
+
+"I have, sir."
+
+"And seen Father Giverlai?"
+
+"Yes, please your Majesty."
+
+"And still you are not convinced. That must not be. I would gladly
+consider and promote you, but I can only have true Catholics around
+my son. I shall desire Father Crump to see you."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII: HALLOWMAS EVE
+
+
+ "This more strange
+Than such a murder is."
+
+Macbeth.
+
+"Bambino mio, bambino mio," wailed Mary Beatrice, as she pressed her
+child to her bosom, and murmured to him in her native tongue. "And
+did they say he was not his mother's son, his poor mother, whose
+dearest treasure he is! Oime, crudeli, crudelissimi! Even his
+sisters hate him and will not own him, the little jewel of his
+mother's heart!"
+
+Anne, waiting in the window, was grieved to have overheard the words
+which the poor Queen had poured out, evidently thinking no one near
+could understand her.
+
+That evening there were orders to prepare for a journey to Whitehall
+the next morning.
+
+"And," said Hester Bridgeman, "I can tell you why, in all
+confidence, but I have it from a sure hand. The Prince of Orange is
+collecting a fleet and army to come and inquire into certain
+matters, especially into the birth of a certain young gentleman we
+wot of."
+
+"How can he have the insolence?" cried Anne.
+
+"'Tis no great wonder, considering the vipers in the Cockpit," said
+Hester.
+
+"But what will they do to us?" asked Jane Humphreys in terror.
+
+"Nothing to you, my dear, nor to Portia; you are good Protestants,"
+said Hester with a sneer.
+
+"Mrs. Royer told me it was for the christening," said Jane, "and
+then we shall all have new suits. I am glad we are going back to
+town. It cannot be so mortal dull as 'tis here, with all the leaves
+falling--enough to give one the vapours."
+
+There were auguries on either hand in the palace that if the Prince
+came it would be only another Monmouth affair, and this made Anne
+shrink, for she had partaken of the grief and indignation of
+Winchester at the cruel execution of Lady Lisle, and had heard
+rumours enough of the progress of the Assize to make her start in
+horror when called to watch the red-faced Lord Chancellor Jeffreys
+getting out of his coach.
+
+It really seemed for the time as if the royal household were
+confident in this impression, though as soon as they were again
+settled in Whitehall there was a very close examination of the
+witnesses of the Prince's birth, and a report printed of their
+evidence, enough it might be thought to satisfy any one; but Jane
+Humphreys, who went to spend a day at the Golden Lamb, her father's
+warehouse, reported that people only laughed at it.
+
+Anne's spirit burned at the injustice, and warmed the more towards
+the Queen and little Prince, whose pretty responses to her caresses
+could not but win her love. Moreover, Pauline's example continued
+to attract her, and Father Crump was a better controversialist, or
+perhaps a better judge of character, than Pere Giverlai, and took
+her on sides where she was more vulnerable, so as to make her begin
+to feel unsettled, and wonder whether she were not making a vain
+sacrifice, and holding out after all against the better way.
+
+The sense of the possible gain, and disgust at the shallow
+conversions of some around her, helped to keep her back. She could
+not help observing that while Pauline persuaded, Hester had ceased
+to persuade, and seemed rather willing to hinder her. Just before
+the State christening or rather admission into the Church, Lady
+Powys, in the name of the King and Queen, offered her the post of
+sub-governess, which really would mean for the present chief
+playfellow to the little Prince, and would place her on an entirely
+different platform of society from the comparatively menial one she
+occupied, but of course on the condition of conformity to Rome.
+
+To be above the familiarity of Jane and Hester was no small
+temptation, but still she hesitated.
+
+"Madam, I thank you, I thank their Majesties," she said, "but I
+cannot do it thus."
+
+"I see what you mean, Miss Woodford," said Lady Powys, who was a
+truly noble woman. "Your motives must be above suspicion even to
+yourself. I respect you, and would not have made you the offer
+except by express command, but I still trust that when your
+disinterestedness is above suspicion you will still join us."
+
+It was sore mortification when Hester Bridgeman was preferred to the
+office, for which she was far less fitted, being no favourite with
+the babe, and being essentially vulgar in tastes and habits, and
+knowing no language save her own, and that ungrammatically and with
+an accent which no one could wish the Prince to acquire. Yet there
+she was, promoted to the higher grade of the establishment and at
+the christening, standing in the front ranks, while Miss Woodford
+was left far in the rear among the servants.
+
+A report of the Dutch fleet having been destroyed by a storm had
+restored the spirits of the Court; and in the nursery very little
+was known of the feelings of the kingdom at large. Dr. Woodford did
+not venture on writing freely to his niece, lest he should
+compromise her, and she only vaguely detected that he was uneasy.
+
+So came All Saints' Day Eve, when there was to be a special service
+late in the evening at the Romanised Chapel Royal at St. James's,
+with a sermon by a distinguished Dominican, to which all the elder
+and graver members of the household were eager to go. And there was
+another very different attraction at the Cockpit, where good-natured
+Princess Anne had given permission for a supper, to be followed by
+burning of nuts and all the divinations proper to Hallowmas Eve, to
+which were invited all the subordinates of the Whitehall
+establishment who could be spared.
+
+Pauline Dunord was as eager for the sermon as Jane Humphreys was for
+the supper, and Hester Bridgeman was in an odd mood of uncertainty,
+evidently longing after the sports, but not daring to show that she
+did so, and trying to show great desire to hear the holy man preach,
+together with a polite profession of self-denial in giving up her
+place in case there should not be room for all. However, as it
+appeared that even the two chief nurses meant to combine sermon and
+the latter end of the supper, she was at ease. The foster-mother
+and one of the Protestant rockers were supposed to be enough to
+watch over the Prince, but the former, who had been much petted and
+spoilt since she had been at the palace, and was a young creature,
+untrained and wilful, cried so much at the idea of missing the
+merrymaking, that as it was reckoned important to keep her in good
+humour and good spirits, Mrs. Labadie decided on winking at her
+absence from the nursery, since Miss Woodford was quite competent to
+the charge for the short time that both the church-goers and the
+supper-goers would all be absent together.
+
+"But are you not afraid to stay alone?" asked Mrs. Labadie, with a
+little compunction.
+
+"What is there to be afraid of?" asked Anne. "There are the
+sentinels at the foot of the stairs, and what should reach us here?"
+
+"I would not be alone here," said more than one voice. "Nor I!"--
+"Nor I!"
+
+"And on this night of all others!" said Hester.
+
+"But why?"
+
+"They say he walks!" whispered Jane in a voice of awe.
+
+"Who walks?"
+
+"The old King?" asked Hester.
+
+"No; the last King," said Jane.
+
+"No, no: it was Oliver Cromwell--old Noll himself!" put in another
+voice.
+
+"I tell you, no such thing," said Jane. "It was the last King. I
+heard it from them that saw it, at least the lady's cousin. 'Twas
+in the long gallery, in a suit of plain black velvet, with white
+muslin ruffles and cravat quilled very neat. Why do you laugh, Miss
+Woodford?"
+
+This was too much for Anne, who managed to say, "Who was his
+laundress?"
+
+"I tell you I heard it from them that told no lies. The gentleman
+could swear to it. He took a candle to him, and there was nought
+but the wainscot behind. Think of that."
+
+"And that we should be living here!" said another voice. "I never
+venture about the big draughty place alone at night," said the
+laundress.
+
+"No! nor I would not for twenty princes," added the sempstress.
+
+"Nay, I have heard steps," said Mrs. Royer, "and wailing--wailing.
+No wonder after all that has happened here. Oh yes, steps as of the
+guard being turned out!"
+
+"That is like our Squire's manor-house, where--"
+
+Every one contributed a story, and only the announcement of Her
+Majesty's approach put an end to these reminiscences.
+
+Anne held to her purpose. She had looked forward to this time of
+solitude, for she wanted leisure to consider the situation, and
+fairly to revolve the pleas by which Father Crump had shaken her,
+more in feeling than in her reason, and made her question whether
+her allegiance to her mother and uncle, and her disgust at
+interested conversions, were not making her turn aside from what
+might be the only true Church, the Mother of Saints, and therewith
+perversely give up earthly advancement. But, oh! how to write to
+her uncle.
+
+The very intention made her imagination and memory too powerful for
+the consideration of controversy. She went back first to a merry
+Hallowmas Eve long ago, among the Archfield party and other
+Winchester friends, and how the nuts had bounced in a manner which
+made the young ones shout in ecstasy of glee, but seemed to
+displease some of the elders, and had afterwards been the occasion
+of her being told that it was all folly, and therewith informed of
+Charles Archfield's contract to poor little Alice Fitzhubert. Then
+came other scenes. All the various ghostly tales she had heard, and
+as she sat with her knitting in the shaded room with no sound but
+the soft breathing of her little charge in his cradle, no light save
+from a shaded lamp and the fire on the hearth, strange thoughts and
+dreams floated over her; she started at mysterious cracks in the
+wainscotting from time to time, and beheld in the dark corners of
+the great room forms that seemed grotesque and phantom-like till she
+went up to them and resolved them into familiar bits of furniture or
+gowns and caps of Mrs. Labadie. She repeated half aloud numerous
+Psalms and bits of poetry, but in the midst would come some
+disturbing noise, a step or a shout from the street, though the
+chamber being at the back of the house looking into the Park few of
+such sounds penetrated thither. She began to think of King
+Charles's last walk from St. James's to Whitehall, and of the fatal
+window of the Banqueting-hall which had been pointed out to her, and
+then her thoughts flew back again to that vault in the castle yard,
+and she saw only too vividly in memory that open vault, veiled
+partly by nettles and mulleins, which was the unblest, unknown grave
+of the old playfellow who had so loved her mother and herself.
+Perhaps she had hitherto more dwelt on and pitied the living than
+the dead, as one whom fears and prayers still concerned, but now as
+she thought of the lively sprite-like being who had professed such
+affection for her, and for whom her mother had felt so much, and
+recollected him so soon and suddenly cut down and consigned to that
+dreary darkness, the strange yearning spirit dismissed to the
+unknown world, instead of her old terror and repulsion, a great
+tenderness and compunction came over her, and she longed to join
+those who would in two days more be keeping All Souls' Day in
+intercessions for their departed, so as to atone for her past
+dislike; and there was that sort of feeling about her which can only
+be described by the word 'eerie.' To relieve it Anne walked to the
+window and undid a small wicket in the shutter, so as to look out
+into the quiet moonlight park where the trees cast their long
+shadows on the silvery grass, and there was a great calm that seemed
+to reach her heart and spirits.
+
+Suddenly, across the sward towards the palace there came the slight,
+impish, almost one-sided figure, with the peculiar walk, swift
+though suggestive of a limp, the elfish set of the plume, the
+foreign adjustment of short cloak. Anne gazed with wide-stretched
+eyes and beating heart, trying to rally her senses and believe it
+fancy, when the figure crossed into a broad streak of light cast by
+the lamp over the door, the face was upturned for a moment. It was
+deadly pale, and the features were beyond all doubt Peregrine
+Oakshott's.
+
+She sprang back from the window, dropped on her knees, with her face
+hidden in her hands, and was hardly conscious till sounds of the
+others returning made her rally her powers so as to prevent all
+inquiries or surmises. It was Mrs. Labadie and Pauline Dunord, the
+former to see that all was well with the Prince before repairing to
+the Cockpit.
+
+"How pale you are!" she exclaimed. "Have you seen anything?"
+
+"I--It may be nothing. He is dead!" stammered Anne.
+
+"Oh then, 'tis naught but a maid's fancies," said the nurse good-
+humouredly. "Miss Dunord is in no mind for the sports, so she will
+stay with His Highness, and you had best come with me and drive the
+cobwebs out of your brain."
+
+"Indeed, I thank you, ma'am, but I could not," said Anne.
+
+"You had best, I tell you, shake these megrims out of your brain,"
+said Mrs. Labadie; but she was in too great haste not to lose her
+share of the amusements to argue the point, and the two young women
+were left together. Pauline was in a somewhat exalted state, full
+of the sermon on the connection of the Church with the invisible
+world.
+
+"You have seen one of your poor dead," she said. "Oh, may it not be
+that he came to implore you to have pity, and join the Church, where
+you could intercede and offer the Holy Sacrifice for him?"
+
+Anne started. This seemed to chime in with proclivities of poor
+Peregrine's own, and when she thought of his corpse in that
+unhallowed vault, it seemed to her as if he must be calling on her
+to take measures for his rest, both of body and of spirit. Yet
+something seemed to seal her tongue. She could not open her lips on
+what she had seen, and while Pauline talked on, repeating the sermon
+which had so deeply touched her feelings, Anne heard without
+listening to aught besides her own perturbations, mentally debating
+whether she could endure to reveal the story to Father Crump, if she
+confessed to him, or whether she should write to her uncle; and she
+even began to compose the letter in her own mind, with the terrible
+revelation that must commence it, but every moment the idea became
+more formidable. How transfer her own heavy burthen to her uncle,
+who might feel bound to take steps that would cut young Archfield
+off from parents, sister, child, and home. Or supposing Dr.
+Woodford disbelieved the apparition of to-night, the whole would be
+discredited in his eyes, and he might suppose the summer morning's
+duel as much a delusion of her fancy as the autumn evening's
+phantom, and what evidence had she to adduce save Charles's despair,
+Peregrine's absence, and what there might be in the vault?
+
+Yet if all that Father Crump and Pauline said was true, that dear
+uncle might be under a fatal delusion, and it might be the best hope
+for herself--nay, even for that poor restless spirit--to separate
+herself from them. Here was Pauline talking of the blessedness of
+being able to offer prayers on 'All Souls' Day' for all those of
+whose ultimate salvation there were fears, or who might be in a
+state of suffering. It even startled her as she thought of her
+mother, whom she always gave thanks for as one departed in faith and
+fear. Would Father Crump speak of her as one in a state of
+inevitable ignorance to be expiated in the invisible world? It
+shocked the daughter as almost profane. Yet if it were true, and
+prayers and masses could aid her?
+
+Altogether Anne was in a mood on which the voices broke strangely
+returning from the supper full of news. Jane Humphreys was voluble
+on her various experiments. The nuts had burnt quietly together,
+and that was propitious to the Life-guardsman, Mr. Shaw, who had
+shared hers; but on the other hand, the apple-paring thrown over her
+shoulder had formed a P, and he whom she had seen in the vista of
+looking-glasses had a gold chain but neither a uniform nor a P in
+his name, and Mrs. Buss declared that it meant that she should be
+three times married, and the last would be an Alderman, if not Lord
+Mayor; and Mrs. Royer was joking Miss Bridgeman on the I of her
+apple-paring, which could stand for nothing but a certain Incle
+among 'the Cockpit folk,' who was her special detestation.
+
+Princess Anne and her husband had come down to see the nuts flying,
+and had laughed enough to split their sides, till Lord Cornbury came
+in and whispered something to Prince George, who said, "Est il
+possible?" and spoke to the Princess, and they all went away
+together. Yes, and the Bishop of Bath and Wells, who had been
+laughing before looked very grave, and went with them.
+
+"Oh!" exclaimed Anne, "is the Bishop of Bath and Wells here?"
+
+"Yes, in spite of his disgrace. I hear he is to preach in your
+Protestant chapel to-morrow."
+
+Anne had brought a letter of introduction from her uncle in case she
+should have any opportunity of seeing his old fellow canon, who had
+often been kind to her when she was a little girl at Winchester.
+She was in many minds of hope and fear as to the meeting him or
+speaking to him, under the consciousness of the possible defection
+from his Church, and the doubt and dread whether to confide her
+secret and consult him. However, the extreme improbability of her
+being able to do so made the yearning for the sight of a Winchester
+face predominate, and her vigil of the night past made the nursery
+authorities concede that she had fairly earned her turn to go to
+church in the forenoon, since she was obstinate enough to want to
+run after an old heretic so-called Bishop who had so pragmatically
+withstood His Majesty. Jane Humphreys went too, for though she was
+not fond of week-day services, any escape from the nursery was
+welcome, and there was a chance of seeing Lady Churchill's new
+mantle.
+
+In this she was disappointed, for none of the grandees were present,
+indeed it was whispered as the two girls made their way to the
+chapel, that there was great excitement over the Declaration of the
+Prince of Orange, which had arrived last night, that he had been
+invited by the lords spiritual and temporal to take up the cause of
+the liberties of England, and inquire into the evidence of the birth
+of the Prince of Wales.
+
+People shrugged their shoulders, but looked volumes, though it was
+no time nor place for saying more; and when in the chapel, that
+countenance of Bishop Ken, so beautiful in outward form, so
+expressive of strength, sweetness, and devotion, brought back such a
+flood of old associations to Anne, that it was enough to change the
+whole current of her thoughts and make her her own mother's child
+again, even before he opened his mouth. She caught his sweet voice
+in the Psalms, and closing her eyes seemed to be in the Cathedral
+once more among those mighty columns and arches; and when he began
+his sermon, on the text, 'Let the Saints be joyful with glory, let
+them rejoice in their beds,' she found the Communion of Saints in
+Paradise and on earth knit together in one fellowship as truly and
+preciously brought home to her as ever it had been to Pauline, and
+moreover when she thought of her mother, 'the lurid mist' was
+dispelled which had so haunted her the night before.
+
+The longing to speak to him awoke; and as he was quitting the chapel
+in full procession his kindly eye lit upon her with a look of
+recognition; and before she had moved from her place, one of the
+attendant clergy came back by his desire to conduct her to him.
+
+He held out his hand as she courtesied low.
+
+"Mistress Woodford," he said, "my old friend's niece! He wrote to
+me of you, but I have had no opportunity of seeing you before."
+
+"Oh, my Lord! I was so much longing to see and speak with you."
+
+"I am lodging at Lambeth," said the Bishop, "and it is too far to
+take you with me thither, but perhaps my good brother here," turning
+to the chaplain, "can help us to a room where we can be private."
+
+This was done; the chaplain's parlour at the Cockpit was placed at
+their disposal, and there a few kind words from Bishop Ken led to
+the unburthening of her heavy heart. Of Ken's replies to the
+controversial difficulties there is no need to tell. Indeed,
+ambition was far more her temptation than any real difficulties as
+to doctrine. Her dissatisfaction at being unable to answer the
+questions raised by Father Crump was exaggerated as the excuse and
+cover to herself of her craving for escape from her present
+subordinate post; and this the Bishop soon saw, and tenderly but
+firmly drew her to own both this and to confess the ambitious spirit
+which had led her into this scene of temptation. "It was true
+indeed," he said, "that trial by our own error is hardest to
+encounter, but you have repented, and by God's grace, my child, I
+trust you will be enabled to steer your course aright through the
+trials of loyalty to our God and to our King that are coming upon us
+all. Ever remember God and the plain duty first, His anointed next.
+Is there more that you would like to tell me? for you still bear a
+troubled look, and I have full time."
+
+Then Anne told him all the strange adventure of Portchester Castle,
+and even of the apparition of the night before. That gentleness and
+sympathy seemed to draw out all that was in her heart, and to her
+surprise, he did not treat the story of that figure as necessarily a
+delusion. He had known and heard too much of spiritual
+manifestations to the outward senses to declare that such things
+could not be.
+
+What she had seen might be explained by one of four hypotheses. It
+was either a phantom of her brain, and her being fully awake,
+although recently dwelling on the recollection, rendered that idea
+less probable, or the young man had not been killed and she had seen
+him in propria persona.
+
+She had Charles Archfield's word that the death was certain. He had
+never been heard of again, and if alive, the walk before Whitehall
+was the last place where he would be. As to mistaking any one else
+for him, the Bishop remembered enough of the queer changeling elf to
+agree with her that it was not a very probable contingency. And if
+it were indeed a spirit, why should it visit her? There had been
+one good effect certainly in the revival of home thoughts and
+turning her mind from the allurements of favour, but that did not
+seem to account for the spirit seeking her out.
+
+Was it, Anne faltered, a sign that she ought to confess all, for the
+sake of procuring Christian burial for him. Yet how should she,
+when she had promised silence to young Archfield? True, it was for
+his wife's sake, and she was dead; but there were the rest of his
+family and himself to be considered. What should she do?
+
+The Bishop thought a little while, then said that he did not believe
+that she ought to speak without Mr. Archfield's consent, unless she
+saw any one else brought into danger by her silence. If it ever
+became possible, he thought, that she should ascertain whether the
+body were in the vault, and if so, it might be possible to procure
+burial for it, perhaps without identification, or at any rate
+without making known what could only cause hostility and distress
+between the two families, unless the young man himself on his return
+should make the confession. This the Bishop evidently considered
+the sounder, though the harder course, but he held that Anne had no
+right to take the initiative. She could only wait, and bear her
+load alone; but the extreme kindness and compassion with which he
+talked to her soothed and comforted her so much that she felt
+infinitely relieved and strengthened when he dismissed her with his
+blessing, and far happier and more at peace than she had been since
+that terrible summer morning, though greatly humbled, and taught to
+repent of her aspirations after earthly greatness, and to accept her
+present condition as a just retribution, and a trial of constancy.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX: THE DAUGHTER'S SECRET
+
+
+"Thy sister's naught: O Regan, she hath tied
+Sharp-tooth'd unkindness, like a vulture, _here_:
+I can scarce speak to thee."
+
+King Lear.
+
+"Am I--oh! am I going home?" thought Anne. "My uncle will be at
+Winchester. I am glad of it. I could not yet bear to see
+Portchester again. That Shape would be there. Yet how shall I deal
+with what seems laid on me? But oh! the joy of escaping from this
+weary, weary court! Oh, the folly that took me hither! Now that
+the Prince is gone, Lady Strickland will surely speak to the Queen
+for my dismissal."
+
+There had been seventeen days of alarms, reports, and counter-
+reports, and now the King, with the Prince of Denmark, had gone to
+join the army on Salisbury Plain, and at the same time the little
+Prince of Wales had been sent off to his half-brother, the Duke of
+Berwick, at Portsmouth, under charge of Lady Powys, there to be
+embarked for France. Anne had been somewhat disappointed at not
+going with them, hoping that when at Portsmouth or in passing
+Winchester she might see her uncle and obtain her release, for she
+had no desire to be taken abroad; but it was decreed otherwise.
+Miss Dunord went, rejoicing and thankful to be returning to France,
+and the other three rockers remained.
+
+There had already been more than one day of alarms and tumults. The
+Body-guards within were always on duty; the Life-guards without were
+constantly patrolling; and on the 5th of November, when the Prince
+of Orange was known to be near at hand, and was in fact actually
+landing at Torbay, the mob had with difficulty been restrained from
+burning in effigy, not only Guy Fawkes, but Pope, cardinals, and
+mitred bishops, in front of the palace, and actually paraded them
+all, with a figure of poor Sir Edmondbury Godfrey bearing his head
+in his hand, tied on horseback behind a Jesuit, full before the
+windows, with yells of
+
+"The Pope, the Pope,
+Up the ladder and down the rope,"
+
+and clattering of warming-pans.
+
+Jane Humphreys was dreadfully frightened. Anne found her crouching
+close to her bed, with the curtains wrapped round her. "Have they
+got in?" she cried. "O Miss Woodford, how shall we make them
+believe we are good Protestants?"
+
+And when this terror had subsided, and it was well known that the
+Dutch were at Exeter, there was another panic, for one of the Life-
+guardsmen had told her to beware, since if the Royal troops at
+Hounslow were beaten, the Papists would surely take their revenge.
+
+"I am to scream from the windows to Mr. Shaw," she said; but what
+good will that do if the priests and the Frenchmen have strangled
+me? And perhaps he won't be on guard."
+
+"He was only trying to frighten you," suggested Anne.
+
+"Dear me, Miss Woodford, aren't you afraid? You have the stomach of
+a lion."
+
+"Why, what would be the good of hurting us?"
+
+However, Anne was not at all surprised, when on the very evening of
+the Prince's departure, old Mrs. Humphreys, a venerable-looking dame
+in handsome but Puritanically-fashioned garments, came in a hackney
+coach to request in her son's name that her granddaughter might
+return with her, as her occupation was at an end.
+
+Jane was transported with joy.
+
+"Ay, ay," said the grandmother, "look at you now, and think how
+crazy you were to go to the palace, though 'twas always against my
+judgment."
+
+"Ah, I little knew how mortal dull it would be!" said Jane.
+
+"Ye've found it no better than the husks that the swine did eat, eh?
+So much the better and safer for your soul, child."
+
+Nobody wanted to retain Jane, and while she was hastily putting her
+things together, the grandmother turned to Anne: "And you, Mistress
+Woodford, from what I hear, you have been very good in keeping my
+silly child stanch to her religion and true to her duty. If ever on
+a pinch you needed a friend in London, my son and I would be proud
+to serve you--Master Joshua Humphreys, at the Golden Lamb,
+Gracechurch Street, mind you. No one knows what may hap in these
+strange and troublesome times, and you might be glad of a house to
+go to till you can send to your own friends--that is, if we are not
+all murdered by the Papists first."
+
+Though Anne did not expect such a catastrophe as this, she was
+really grateful for the offer, and thought it possible that she
+might avail herself of it, as she had not been able to communicate
+with any of her mother's old friends, and Bishop Ken was not to her
+knowledge still in London.
+
+She watched anxiously for the opportunity of asking Lady Strickland
+whether she might apply for her dismissal, and write to her uncle to
+fetch her home.
+
+"Child," said the lady, "I think you love the Queen."
+
+"Indeed I do, madam."
+
+"It is well that at this juncture all Protestants should not leave
+her. You are a gentlewoman in manner, and can speak her native
+tongue, friends are falling from her, scarcely ladies are left
+enough to make a fit appearance around her; if you are faithful to
+her, remain, I entreat of you."
+
+There was no resisting such an appeal, and Anne remained in the
+rooms now left bare and empty, until a message was brought to her to
+come to the Queen. Mary Beatrice sat in a chair by her fire,
+looking sad and listless, her eyes red with weeping, but she gave
+her sweet smile as the girl entered, and held out her hand, saying
+in her sweet Italian, "You are faithful, Signorina Anna! you remain!
+That is well; but now my son is gone, Anna, you must be mine. I
+make you my reader instead of his rocker."
+
+As Anne knelt on one knee to kiss hands with tears in her eyes, the
+Queen impulsively threw her arms round her neck and kissed her.
+"Ah, you loved him, and he loved you, il mio tesorino?"
+
+Promotion _had_ come--how strangely. She had to enter on her duties
+at once, and to read some chapters of an Italian version of the
+Imitation. A reader was of a higher grade of importance than a
+rocker, and for the ensuing days, when not in attendance on the
+Queen, Anne was the companion of Lady Strickland and Lady
+Oglethorpe. In the absence of the King and Prince, the Queen
+received Princess Anne at her own table, and Lady Churchill and Lady
+Fitzhardinge joined that of her ladies-in-waiting.
+
+Lady Churchill, with her long neck, splendid hair and complexion,
+short chin, and sparkling blue eyes, was beautiful to look at, but
+not at all disposed to be agreeable to the Queen's ladies, whom she
+treated with a sort of blunt scorn, not at all disguised by the
+forms of courtesy. However, she had, to their relief, a good deal
+of leave of absence just then to visit her children, as indeed the
+ladies agreed that she did pretty much as she chose, and that the
+faithful Mrs. Morley was somewhat afraid of the dear Mrs. Freeman.
+
+One evening in coming up some steps Princess Anne entangled her foot
+in her pink taffetas petticoat, nearly fell, and tore a large rent,
+besides breaking the thread of the festoons of seed pearls which
+bordered it, and scattering them on the floor.
+
+"Lack-a-day! Lack-a-day!" sighed she, as after a little screaming
+she gathered herself up again. "That new coat! How shall I ever
+face Danvers again such a figure? She's an excellent tirewoman, but
+she will be neither to have nor to hold when she sees that gown--
+that she set such store by! Nay, I can hardly step for it."
+
+"I think I could repair it, with Her Majesty's and your Royal
+Highness's permission," said Anne, who was creeping about on her
+knees picking up the pearls."
+
+"Oh! do! do! There's a good child, and then Danvers and Dawson need
+know nothing about it," cried the Princess in great glee. "You
+remember Dawson, don't you, little Woodie, as we used to call you,
+and how she used to rate us when we were children if we soiled our
+frocks?"
+
+So, in the withdrawing-room, Anne sat on the floor with needle and
+silk, by the light of the wax candles, deftly repairing the rent,
+and then threading the scattered pearls, and arranging the festoon
+so as to hide the darn. The Princess was delighted, and while the
+poor wife lay back in her chair, thankful that behind her fan she
+could give way to her terrible anxieties about her little son, who
+might be crossing to France, and her husband, suffering from fearful
+nose-bleeding, and wellnigh alone among traitors and deserters, the
+step-daughter, on the other side of the great hearth, chattered away
+complacently to 'little Woodford.'
+
+"Do you recollect old Dawson, and how she used to grumble when I
+went to sup with the Duchess--my own mother--you know, because she
+used to give me chocolate, and she said it made me scream at night,
+and be over fat by day? Ah! that was before you used to come among
+us. It was after I went to France to my poor aunt of Orleans. I
+remember she never would let us kiss her for fear of spoiling her
+complexion, and Mademoiselle and I did so hate living maigre on the
+fast days. I was glad enough to get home at last, and then my
+sister was jealous because I talked French better than she did."
+
+So the Princess prattled on without needing much reply, until her
+namesake had finished her work, with which she was well pleased, and
+promised to remember her. To Anne it was an absolute marvel how she
+could thus talk when she knew that her husband had deserted her
+father in his need, and that things were in a most critical
+position.
+
+The Queen could not refrain from a sigh of relief when her step-
+daughter had retired to the Cockpit; and after seeking her sleepless
+bed, she begged Anne, "if it did not too much incommode her, to read
+to her from the Gospel."
+
+The next day was Sunday, and Anne felt almost as if deserting her
+cause, when going to the English service in Whitehall Chapel Royal,
+now almost emptied except of the Princess's suite, and some of these
+had the bad taste and profanity to cough and chatter all through the
+special prayer drawn up by the Archbishop for the King's safety.
+
+People were not very reverent, and as all stood up at the end of the
+Advent Sunday service to let the Princess sweep by in her glittering
+green satin petticoat, peach-coloured velvet train, and feather-
+crowned head, she laid a hand on Anne's arm, and whispered, "Follow
+me to my closet, little Woodford."
+
+There was no choice but to obey, as the Queen would not require her
+reader till after dinner, and Anne followed after the various
+attendants, who did not seem very willing to forward a private
+interview with a possible rival, though, as Anne supposed, the
+object must be to convey some message to the Queen. By the time she
+arrived and had been admitted to the inner chamber or dressing-room,
+the Princess had thrown off her more cumbrous finery, and sat at
+ease in an arm-chair. She nodded her be-curled head, and said, "You
+can keep a secret, little Woodie?"
+
+"I can, madam, but I do not love one," said Anne, thinking of her
+most burthensome one.
+
+"Well, no need to keep this long. You are a good young maiden, and
+my own poor mother's godchild, and you are handy and notable. You
+deserve better preferment than ever you will get in that Popish
+household, where your religion is in danger. Now, I am not going to
+be in jeopardy here any longer, nor let myself be kept hostage for
+his Highness. Come to my rooms at bedtime. Slip in when I wish the
+Queen good-night, and I'll find an excuse. Then you shall come with
+me to--no, I'll not say where, and I'll make your fortune, only
+mum's the word."
+
+"But--Your Royal Highness is very good, but I am sworn to the Prince
+and Queen. I could not leave them without permission."
+
+"Prince! Prince! Pretty sort of a Prince. Prince of brickbats, as
+Churchill says. Nay, girl, don't turn away in that fashion.
+Consider. Your religion is in danger."
+
+"Nay, madam, my religion would not be served by breaking my oath."
+
+"Pooh! What's your oath to a mere pretender? Besides, consider
+your fortune. Rocker to a puling babe--even if he was what they say
+he is. And don't build on the Queen's favour--even if she remains
+what she is now, she is too much beset with Papists and foreigners
+to do anything for you."
+
+"I do not," Anne began to say, but the Princess gave her no time.
+
+"Besides, pride will have a fall, and if you are a good maid, and
+hold your tongue, and serve me well in this strait, I'll make you my
+maid of honour, and marry you so that you shall put Lady before your
+name. Ay, and get good preferment for your uncle, who has had only
+a poor stall from the King here."
+
+Anne repressed an inclination to say this was not the way in which
+her uncle would wish to get promotion, and only replied, "Your Royal
+Highness is very good, but--"
+
+Whereat the Princess, in a huff, exclaimed, "Oh, very well, if you
+choose to be torn to pieces by the mob, and slaughtered by the
+priests, like poor Godfrey, and burnt by the Papists at last, unless
+you go to Mass, you may stay for aught I care, and joy go with you.
+I thought I was doing you a kindness for my poor mother's sake, but
+it seems you know best. If you like to cast in your lot with the
+Pope, I wash my hands of you."
+
+Accordingly Anne courtesied herself off, not seriously alarmed as to
+the various catastrophes foretold by the Princess, though a little
+shaken in nerves. Here then was another chance of promotion,
+certainly without treason to her profession of faith, but so offered
+that honour could not but revolt against it, though in truth poor
+Princess Anne was neither so foolish nor so heartless a woman as she
+appeared in the excitement to which an uneasy conscience, the
+expectation of a great enterprise, and a certain amount of terror
+had worked her up; but she had high words again in the evening, as
+was supposed, with the Queen. Certainly Anne found her own Royal
+Mistress weeping and agitated, though she only owned to being very
+anxious about the health of the King, who had had a second violent
+attack of bleeding at the nose, and she did not seem consoled by the
+assurances of her elder attendants that the relief had probably
+saved him from a far more dangerous attack. Again Anne read to her
+till a late hour, but next morning was strangely disturbed.
+
+The Royal household had not been long dressed, and breakfast had
+just been served to the ladies, when loud screams were heard, most
+startling in the unsettled and anxious state of affairs. The Queen,
+pale and trembling, came out of her chamber with her hair on her
+shoulders. "Tell me at once, for pity's sake. Is it my husband or
+my son?" she asked with clasped hands, as two or three of the
+Princess's servants rushed forward.
+
+"The Princess, the Princess!" was the cry, "the priests have
+murdered her."
+
+"What have you done with her, madam?" rudely demanded Mrs. Buss, one
+of the lost lady's nurses.
+
+Mary Beatrice drew herself up with grave dignity, saying, "I suppose
+your mistress is where she likes to be. I know nothing of her, but
+I have no doubt that you will soon hear of her."
+
+There was something in the Queen's manner that hushed the outcry in
+her presence, but the women, with Lady Clarendon foremost of them,
+continued to seek up and down the two palaces as if they thought the
+substantial person of the Princess Anne could be hidden in a
+cupboard.
+
+Anne, in the first impulse, exclaimed, "She is gone!"
+
+In a moment Mrs. Royer turned, "Gone, did you say? Do you know it?"
+
+"You knew it and kept it secret!" cried Lady Strickland.
+
+"A traitor too!" said Lady Oglethorpe, in her vehement Irish tone.
+"I would not have thought it of Nanny Moore's daughter!" and she
+turned her eyes in sad reproach on Anne.
+
+"If you know, tell me where she is gone," cried Mrs. Buss, and the
+cry was re-echoed by the other women, while Anne's startled "I
+cannot tell! I do not know!" was unheeded.
+
+Only the Queen raising her hand gravely said, "Silence! What is
+this?"
+
+"Miss Woodford knew."
+
+"And never told!" cried the babble of voices.
+
+"Come hither, Mistress Woodford," said the Queen. "Tell me, do you
+know where Her Highness is?"
+
+"No, please your Majesty," said Anne, trembling from head to foot.
+"I do not know where she is."
+
+"Did you know of her purpose?"
+
+"Your Majesty pardon me. She called me to her closet yesterday and
+pledged me to secrecy before I knew what she would say."
+
+"Only youthful inexperience will permit that pledge to be implied in
+matters of State," said the Queen. "Continue, Mistress Woodford;
+what did she tell you?"
+
+"She said she feared to be made a hostage for the Prince of Denmark,
+and meant to escape, and she bade me come to her chamber at night to
+go with her."
+
+"And wherefore did you not? You are of her religion," said the
+Queen bitterly.
+
+"Madam, how could I break mine oath to your Majesty and His Royal
+Highness?"
+
+"And you thought concealing the matter according to that oath? Nay,
+nay, child, I blame you not. It was a hard strait between your
+honour to her and your duty to the King and to me, and I cannot but
+be thankful to any one who does regard her word. But this desertion
+will be a sore grief to His Majesty."
+
+Mary Beatrice was fairer-minded than the women, who looked askance
+at the girl, Princess Anne's people resenting that one of the other
+household should have been chosen as confidante, and the Queen's
+being displeased that the secret had been kept. But at that moment
+frightful yells and shouts arose, and a hasty glance from the
+windows showed a mass of men, women, and children howling for their
+Princess. They would tear down Whitehall if she were not delivered
+up to them. However, a line of helmeted Life-guards on their heavy
+horses was drawn up between, with sabres held upright, and there
+seemed no disposition to rush upon these. Lord Clarendon, uncle to
+the Princess, had satisfied himself that she had really escaped, and
+he now came out and assured the mob, in a stentorian voice, that he
+was perfectly satisfied of his niece's safety, waving the letter she
+had left on her toilet-table.
+
+The mob shouted, "Bless the Princess! Hurrah for the Protestant
+faith! No warming-pans!" but in a good-tempered mood; and the poor
+little garrison breathed more freely; but Anne did not feel herself
+forgiven. She was in a manner sent to Coventry, and treated as if
+she were on the enemy's side. Never had her proud nature suffered
+so much, and she shed bitter tears as she said to herself, "It is
+very unjust! What could I have done? How could I stop Her Highness
+from speaking? Could they expect me to run in and accuse her? Oh,
+that I were at home again! Mother, mother, you little know! Of
+what use am I now?"
+
+It was the very question asked by Hester Bridgeman, whom she found
+packing her clothes in her room.
+
+"Take care that this is sent after me," she said, "when a messenger
+I shall send calls for it."
+
+"What, you have your dismissal?"
+
+"No, I should no more get it than you have done. They cannot afford
+to let any one go, you see, or they will have to dress up the
+chambermaids to stand behind the Queen's chair. I have settled it
+with my cousin, Harry Bridgeman, I shall mix with the throng that
+come to ask for news, and be off with him before the crowd breaks
+in, as they will some of these days, for the guards are but half-
+hearted. My Portia, why did not you take a good offer, and go with
+the Princess?"
+
+"I thought it would be base."
+
+"And much you gained by it! You are only suspected and accused."
+
+"I can't be a rat leaving a sinking ship."
+
+"That is courteous, but I forgive it, Portia, as I know you will
+repent of your folly. But you never did know which side to look for
+the butter."
+
+Perhaps seeing how ugly desertion and defection looked in others
+made constancy easier to Anne, much as she longed for the Close at
+Winchester, and she even thought with a hope of the Golden Lamb,
+Gracechurch, as an immediate haven sure to give her a welcome.
+
+Her occupation of reading to the Queen was ended by the King's
+return, so physically exhausted by violent nose-bleeding, so
+despondent at the universal desertion, and so broken-hearted at his
+daughter's defection, that his wife was absorbed in attending upon
+him.
+
+Anne began to watch for an opportunity to demand a dismissal, which
+she thought would exempt her from all blame, but she was surprised
+and a little dismayed by being summoned to the King in the Queen's
+chamber. He was lying on a couch clad in a loose dressing-gown
+instead of his laced coat, and a red night-cap replacing his heavy
+peruke, and his face was as white and sallow as if he were
+recovering from a long illness.
+
+"Little godchild," he said, holding out his hand as Anne made her
+obeisance, "the Queen tells me you can read well. I have a fancy to
+hear."
+
+Immensely relieved at the kindness of his tone, Anne courtesied, and
+murmured out her willingness.
+
+"Read this," he said; "I would fain hear this; my father loved it.
+Here."
+
+Anne felt her task a hard one when the King pointed to the third Act
+of Shakespeare's Richard II. She steeled herself and strengthened
+her voice as best she could, and struggled on till she came to--
+
+"I'll give my jewels for a set of beads,
+My gay apparel for an almsman's gown,
+My figured goblets for a dish of wood,
+My sceptre for a palmer's walking-staff,
+My subjects for a pair of carved saints,
+And my large kingdom for a little grave,
+A little, little grave."
+
+There she fairly broke down, and sobbed.
+
+"Little one, little one," said James, you are sorry for poor
+Richard, eh?"
+
+"Oh, sir!" was all she could say.
+
+"And you are in disgrace, they tell me, because my daughter chose to
+try to entice you away," said James, "and you felt bound not to
+betray her. Never mind; it was an awkward case of conscience, and
+there's not too much faithfulness to spare in these days. We shall
+know whom to trust to another time. Can you continue now? I would
+take a lesson how, 'with mine own hands to give away my crown.'"
+
+It was well for Anne that fresh tidings were brought in at that
+moment, and she had to retire, with the sore feeling turned into an
+enthusiastic pity and loyalty, which needed the relief of sobs and
+mental vows of fidelity. She felt herself no longer in disgrace
+with her Royal master and mistress, but she was not in favour with
+her few companions left--all who could not get over her secrecy, and
+thought her at least a half traitor as well as a heretic.
+
+Whitehall was almost in a state of siege, the turbulent mob
+continually coming to shout, 'No Popery!' and the like, though they
+proceeded no farther. The ministers and other gentlemen came and
+went, but the priests and the ladies durst not venture out for fear
+of being recognised and insulted, if not injured. Bad news came in
+from day to day, and no tidings of the Prince of Wales being in
+safety in France. Once Anne received a letter from her uncle, which
+cheered her much.
+
+DEAR CHILD--So far as I can gather, your employment is at an end,
+if it be true as reported that the Prince of Wales is at
+Portsmouth, with the intent that he should be carried to France;
+but the gentlemen of the navy seem strongly disposed to prevent
+such a transportation of the heir of the realm to a foreign
+country. I fear me that you are in a state of doubt and anxiety,
+but I need not exhort your good mother's child to be true and
+loyal to her trust and to the Anointed of the Lord in all things
+lawful at all costs. If you are left in any distress or
+perplexity, go either to Sir Theophilus Oglethorpe's house, or to
+that of my good old friend, the Dean of Westminster; and as soon
+as I hear from you I will endeavour to ride to town and bring you
+home to my house, which is greatly at a loss without its young
+mistress.
+
+The letter greatly refreshed Anne's spirits, and gave her something
+to look forward to, giving her energy to stitch at a set of lawn
+cuffs and bands for her uncle, and think with the more pleasure of a
+return that his time of residence at Winchester lay between her and
+that vault in the castle.
+
+There were no more attempts made at her conversion. Every one was
+too anxious and occupied, and one or more of the chiefly obnoxious
+priests were sent privately away from day to day. While summer
+friends departed, Anne often thought of Bishop Ken's counsel as to
+loyalty to Heaven and man.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX: THE FLIGHT
+
+
+"Storms may rush in, and crimes and woes
+ Deform that peaceful bower;
+They may not mar the deep repose
+ Of that immortal flower.
+Though only broken hearts be found
+ To watch his cradle by,
+No blight is on his slumbers sound,
+ No touch of harmful eye."
+
+KEBLE.
+
+The news was even worse and worse in that palace of despondency and
+terror. Notice had arrived that Lord Dartmouth was withheld from
+despatching the young Prince to France by his own scruples and those
+of the navy; and orders were sent for the child's return. Then came
+a terrible alarm. The escort sent to meet him were reported to have
+been attacked by the rabble on entering London and dispersed, so
+that each man had to shift for himself.
+
+There was a quarter of an hour which seemed many hours of fearful
+suspense, while King and Queen both knelt at their altar, praying in
+agony for the child whom they pictured to themselves in the hands of
+the infuriated mob, too much persuaded of his being an imposture to
+pity his unconscious innocence. No one who saw the blanched cheeks
+and agonised face of Mary Beatrice, or James's stern, mute misery,
+could have believed for a moment in the cruel delusion that he was
+no child of theirs.
+
+The Roman Catholic women were with them. To enter the oratory would
+in those circumstances have been a surrender of principle, but none
+the less did Anne pray with fervent passion in her chamber for pity
+for the child, and comfort for his parents. At last there was a
+stir, and hurrying out to the great stair, Anne saw a man in plain
+clothes replying in an Irish accent to the King, who was supporting
+the Queen with his arm. Happily the escort had missed the Prince of
+Wales. They had been obliged to turn back to London without meeting
+him, and from that danger he had been saved.
+
+A burst of tears and a cry of fervent thanksgiving relieved the
+Queen's heart, and James gave eager thanks instead of the reprimand
+the colonel had expected for his blundering.
+
+A little later, another messenger brought word that Lord and Lady
+Powys had halted at Guildford with their charge. A French
+gentleman, Monsieur de St. Victor, was understood to have undertaken
+to bring him to London--understood--for everything was whispered
+rather than told among the panic-stricken women. No one who knew
+the expectation could go to bed that night except that the King and
+Queen had--in order to disarm suspicion--to go through the
+accustomed ceremonies of the coucher. The ladies sat or lay on
+their beds intently listening, as hour after hour chimed from the
+clocks.
+
+At last, at about three in the morning, the challenge of the
+sentinels was heard from point to point. Every one started up, and
+hurried almost pell-mell towards the postern door. The King and
+Queen were both descending a stair leading from the King's dressing-
+room, and as the door was cautiously opened, it admitted a figure in
+a fur cloak, which he unfolded, and displayed the sleeping face of
+the infant well wrapped from the December cold.
+
+With rapture the Queen gathered him into her arms, and the father
+kissed him with a vehemence that made him awake and cry. St. Victor
+had thought it safer that his other attendants should come in by
+degrees in the morning, and thus Miss Woodford was the only actually
+effective nursery attendant at hand. His food was waiting by the
+fire in his own sleeping chamber, and thither he was carried. There
+the Queen held him on her lap, while Anne fed him, and he smiled at
+her and held out his arms.
+
+The King came, and making a sign to Anne not to move, stood
+watching.
+
+Presently he said, "She has kept one secret, we may trust her with
+another."
+
+"Oh, not yet, not yet," implored the Queen. "Now I have both my
+treasures again, let me rest in peace upon them for a little while."
+
+The King turned away with eyes full of tears while Anne was lulling
+the child to sleep. She wondered, but durst not ask the Queen,
+where was the tiler's wife; but later she learnt from Miss Dunord,
+that the woman had been so terrified by the cries of the multitude
+against the 'pretender,' and still more at the sight of the sea,
+that she had gone into transports of fright, implored to go home,
+and perhaps half wilfully, become useless, so that the weaning
+already commenced had to be expedited, and the fretfulness of the
+poor child had been one of the troubles for some days. However, he
+seemed on his return to have forgotten his troubles, and Anne had
+him in her arms nearly all the next day.
+
+It was not till late in the evening that Anne knew what the King had
+meant. Then, while she was walking up and down the room, amusing
+the little Prince with showing by turns the window and his face in a
+large mirror, the Queen came in, evidently fresh from weeping, and
+holding out her arms for him, said, after looking to see that there
+was no other audience--
+
+"Child, the King would repose a trust in you. He wills that you
+should accompany me to-night on a voyage to France to put this
+little angel in safety."
+
+"As your Majesty will," returned Anne; "I will do my best."
+
+"So the King said. He knew his brave sailor's daughter was worthy
+of his trust, and you can speak French. It is well, for we go under
+the escort of Messieurs de Lauzun and St. Victor. Be ready at
+midnight. Lady Strickland or the good Labadie will explain more to
+you, but do not speak of this to anyone else. You have leave now,"
+she added, as she herself carried the child towards his father's
+rooms.
+
+The maiden's heart swelled at the trust reposed in her, and the
+King's kind words, and she kept back the sense of anxiety and doubt
+as to so vague a future. She found Mrs. Labadie lying on her bed
+awake, but trying to rest between two busy nights, and she was then
+told that there was to be a flight from the palace of the Queen and
+Prince at midnight, Mrs. Labadie and Anne alone going with them,
+though Lord and Lady Powys and Lady Strickland, with the Queen's
+Italian ladies, would meet them on board the yacht which was waiting
+at Gravesend. The nurse advised Anne to put a few necessary
+equipments into a knapsack bound under a cloak, and to leave other
+garments with her own in charge of Mr. Labadie, who would despatch
+them with those of the suite, and would follow in another day with
+the King. Doubt or refusal there could of course be none in such
+circumstances, and a high-spirited girl like Anne could not but feel
+a thrill of heart at selection for such confidential and signal
+service at her age, scarcely seventeen. Her one wish was to write
+to her uncle what had become of her. Mrs. Labadie hardly thought it
+safe, but said her husband would take charge of a note, and if
+possible, post it when they were safe gone, but nothing of the
+King's plans must be mentioned.
+
+The hours passed away anxiously, and yet only too fast. So many had
+quitted the palace that there was nothing remarkable in packing, but
+as Anne collected her properties, she could not help wondering
+whether she should ever see them again. Sometimes her spirit rose
+at the thought of serving her lovely Queen, saving the little
+Prince, and fulfilling the King's trust; at others, she was full of
+vague depression at the thought of being cut off from all she knew
+and loved, with seas between, and with so little notice to her
+uncle, who might never learn where she was; but she knew she had his
+approval in venturing all, and making any sacrifice for the King
+whom all deserted; and she really loved her Queen and little Prince.
+
+The night came, and she and Mrs. Labadie, fully equipped in cloaks
+and hoods, waited together, Anne moving about restlessly, the elder
+woman advising her to rest while she could. The little Prince, all
+unconscious of the dangers of the night, or of his loss of a throne,
+lay among his wraps in his cradle fast asleep.
+
+By and by the door opened, and treading softly in came the King in
+his dressing-gown and night-cap, the Queen closely muffled, Lady
+Strickland also dressed for a journey, and two gentlemen, the one
+tall and striking-looking, the other slim and dark, in their cloaks,
+namely, Lauzun and St. Victor.
+
+It was one of those supreme moments almost beyond speech or
+manifestation of feeling.
+
+The King took his child in his arms, kissed him, and solemnly said
+to Lauzun, "I confide my wife and son to you."
+
+Both Frenchmen threw themselves on their knees kissing his hand with
+a vow of fidelity. Then giving the infant to Mrs. Labadie, James
+folded his wife in his arms in a long mute embrace; Anne carried the
+basket containing food for the child; and first with a lantern went
+St. Victor, then Lauzun, handing the Queen; Mrs. Labadie with the
+child, and Anne following, they sped down the stairs, along the
+great gallery, with steps as noiseless as they could make them, down
+another stair to a door which St. Victor opened.
+
+A sentry challenged, sending a thrill of dismay through the anxious
+hearts, but St. Victor had the word, and on they went into the privy
+gardens, where often Anne had paced behind Mrs. Labadie as the
+Prince took his airing. Startling lights from the windows fell on
+them, illuminating the drops of rain that plashed round them on that
+grim December night, and their steps sounded on the gravel, while
+still the babe, sheltered under the cloak, slept safely. Another
+door was reached, more sentries challenged and passed; here was a
+street whose stones and silent houses shone for a little space as
+St. Victor raised his lantern and exchanged a word with a man on the
+box of a carriage.
+
+One by one they were handed in, the Queen, the child, the nurse,
+Anne, and Lauzun, St. Victor taking his place outside. As if in a
+dream they rattled on through the dark street, no one speaking
+except that Lauzun asked the Queen if she were wet.
+
+It was not far before they stopped at the top of the steps called
+the Horseferry. A few lights twinkled here and there, and were
+reflected trembling in the river, otherwise a black awful gulf, from
+which, on St. Victor's cautious hail, a whistle ascended, and a
+cloaked figure with a lantern came up the steps glistening in the
+rain.
+
+One by one again, in deep silence, they were assisted down, and into
+the little boat that rocked ominously as they entered it. There the
+women crouched together over the child unable to see one another,
+Anne returning the clasp of a hand on hers, believing it Mrs.
+Labadie's, till on Lauzun's exclaiming, "Est ce que j'incommode sa
+Majeste?" the reply showed her that it was the Queen's hand that she
+held, and she began a startled "Pardon, your Majesty," but the sweet
+reply in Italian was, "Ah, we are as sisters in this stress."
+
+The eager French voice of Lauzun went on, in undertones certainly,
+but as if he had not the faculty of silence, and amid the plash of
+the oars, the rush of the river, and the roar of the rain, it was
+not easy to tell what he said, his voice was only another of the
+noises, though the Queen made little courteous murmurs in reply. It
+was a hard pull against wind and tide towards a little speck of
+green light which was shown to guide the rowers; and when at last
+they reached it, St. Victor's hail was answered by Dusions, one of
+the servants, and they drew to the steps where he held a lantern.
+
+"To the coach at once, your Majesty."
+
+"It is at the inn--ready--but I feared to let it stand."
+
+Lauzun uttered a French imprecation under his breath, and danced on
+the step with impatience, only restrained so far as to hand out the
+Queen and her two attendants. He was hotly ordering off Dusions and
+St. Victor to bring the coach, when the former suggested that they
+must find a place for the Queen to wait in where they could find
+her.
+
+"What is that dark building above?"
+
+"Lambeth Church," Dusions answered.
+
+"Ah, your Protestant churches are not open; there is no shelter for
+us there," sighed the Queen.
+
+"There is shelter in the angle of the buttress; I have been there,
+your Majesty," said Dusions.
+
+Thither then they turned.
+
+"What can that be?" exclaimed the Queen, starting and shuddering as
+a fierce light flashed in the windows and played on the wall.
+
+"It is not within, madame," Lauzun encouraged; "it is reflected
+light from a fire somewhere on the other side of the river."
+
+"A bonfire for our expulsion. Ah! why should they hate us so?"
+sighed the poor Queen.
+
+"'Tis worse than that, only there's no need to tell Her Majesty so,"
+whispered Mrs. Labadie, who, in the difficulties of the ascent, had
+been fain to hand the still-sleeping child to Anne. "'Tis the
+Catholic chapel of St. Roque. The heretic miscreants!"
+
+"Pray Heaven no life be lost," sighed Anne.
+
+Sinister as the light was, it aided the poor fugitives at that dead
+hour of night to find an angle between the church wall and a
+buttress where the eaves afforded a little shelter from the rain,
+which slackened a little, when they were a little concealed from the
+road, so that the light need not betray them in case any passenger
+was abroad at such an hour, as two chimed from the clock overhead.
+
+The women kept together close against the wall to avoid the drip of
+the eaves. Lauzun walked up and down like a sentinel, his arms
+folded, and talking all the while, though, as before, his utterances
+were only an accompaniment to the falling rain and howling wind;
+Mary Beatrice was murmuring prayers over the sleeping child, which
+she now held in the innermost corner; Anne, with wide-stretched
+eyes, was gazing into the light cast beyond the buttress by the fire
+on the opposite side, when again there passed across it that form
+she had seen on All Saints' Eve--the unmistakable phantom of
+Peregrine.
+
+It was gone into the darkness in another second; but a violent start
+on her part had given a note of alarm, and brought back the Count,
+whose walk had been in the opposite direction.
+
+"What was it? Any spy?"
+
+"Oh no--no--nothing! It was the face of one who is dead," gasped
+Anne.
+
+"The poor child's nerve is failing her," said the Queen gently, as
+Lauzun drawing his sword burst out--
+
+"If it be a spy it _shall_ be the face of one who is dead;" and he
+darted into the road, but returned in a few moments, saying no one
+had passed except one of the rowers returning after running up to
+the inn to hasten the coach; how could he have been seen from the
+church wall? The wheels were heard drawing up at that moment, so
+that the only thought was to enter it as quickly as might be in the
+same order as before, after which the start was made, along the road
+that led through the marshes of Lambeth; and then came the inquiry--
+an anxious one--whom or what mademoiselle, as Lauzun called her, had
+seen.
+
+"O monsieur!" exclaimed the poor girl in her confusion, her best
+French failing, "it was nothing--no living man."
+
+"Can mademoiselle assure me of that? The dead I fear not, the
+living I would defy."
+
+"He lives not," said she in an undertone, with a shudder.
+
+"But who is he that mademoiselle can be so certain?" asked the
+Frenchman.
+
+"Oh! I know him well enough," said Anne, unable to control her
+voice.
+
+"Mademoiselle must explain herself," said M. de Lauzun. "If he be
+spirit--or phantom--there is no more to say, but if he be in the
+flesh, and a spy--then--" There was a little rattle of his sword.
+
+"Speak, I command," interposed the Queen; "you must satisfy M. le
+Comte."
+
+Thus adjured, Anne said in a low voice of horror: "It was a
+gentleman of our neighbourhood; he was killed in a duel last
+summer!"
+
+"Ah! You are certain?"
+
+"I had the misfortune to see the fight," sighed Anne.
+
+"That accounts for it," said the Queen kindly. "If mademoiselle's
+nerves were shaken by such a remembrance, it is not wonderful that
+it should recur to her at so strange a watch as we have been
+keeping."
+
+"It might account for her seeing this revenant cavalier in any
+passenger," said Lauzun, not satisfied yet.
+
+"No one ever was like him," said Anne. "I could not mistake him."
+
+"May I ask mademoiselle to describe him?" continued the count.
+
+Feeling all the time as if this first mention were a sort of
+betrayal, Anne faltered the words: "Small, slight, almost
+misshapen--with a strange one-sided look--odd, unusual features."
+
+Lauzun's laugh jarred on her. "Eh! it is not a flattering portrait.
+Mademoiselle is not haunted by a hero of romance, it appears, so
+much as by a demon."
+
+"And none of those monsieur has employed in our escape answer to
+that description?" asked the Queen.
+
+"Assuredly not, your Majesty. Crooked person and crooked mind go
+together, and St. Victor would only have trusted to your big honest
+rowers of the Tamise. I think we may be satisfied that the
+demoiselle's imagination was excited so as to evoke a phantom
+impressed on her mind by a previous scene of terror. Such things
+have happened in my native Gascony."
+
+Anne was fain to accept the theory in silence, though it seemed to
+her strange that at a moment when she was for once not thinking of
+Peregrine, her imagination should conjure him up, and there was a
+strong feeling within her that it was something external that had
+flitted across the shadow, not a mere figment of her brain, though
+the notion was evidently accepted, and she could hear a muttering of
+Mrs. Labadie that this was the consequence of employing young
+wenches with their whims and megrims.
+
+The Count de Lauzun did his best to entertain the Queen with stories
+of revenants in Gascony and elsewhere, and with reminiscences of his
+eleven years' captivity at Pignerol, and his intercourse with
+Fouquet; but whenever in aftertimes Anne Woodford tried to recall
+her nocturnal drive with this strange personage, the chosen and very
+unkind husband of the poor old Grande Mademoiselle, she never could
+recollect anything but the fierce glare of his eyes in the light of
+the lamps as he put her to that terrible interrogation.
+
+The talk was chiefly monologue. Mrs. Labadie certainly slept,
+perhaps the Queen did so too, and Anne became conscious that she
+must have slumbered likewise, for she found every one gazing at her
+in the pale morning dawn and asking why she cried, "O Charles,
+hold!"
+
+As she hastily entreated pardon, Lauzun was heard to murmur, "Je
+parie que le revenant se nomme Charles," and she collected her
+senses just in time to check her contradiction, recollecting that
+happily such a name as Charles revealed nothing. The little Prince,
+who had slumbered so opportunely all night, awoke and received
+infinite praise, and what he better appreciated, the food that had
+been provided for him. They were near their journey's end, and it
+was well, for people were awakening and going to their work as they
+passed one of the villages, and once the remark was heard, "There
+goes a coach full of Papists."
+
+However, no attempt was made to stop the party, and as it would be
+daylight when they reached Gravesend, the Queen arranged her
+disguise to resemble, as she hoped, a washerwoman--taking off her
+gloves, and hiding her hair, while the Prince, happily again asleep,
+was laid in a basket of linen. Anne could not help thinking that
+she thus looked more remarkable than if she had simply embarked as a
+lady; but she meant to represent the attendant of her Italian friend
+Countess Almonde, whom she was to meet on board.
+
+Leaving the coach outside a little block of houses, the party
+reached a projecting point of land, where three Irish officers
+received them, and conducted them to a boat. Then, wrapped closely
+in cloaks from the chill morning air, they were rowed to the yacht,
+on the deck of which stood Lord and Lady Powys, Lady Strickland,
+Pauline Dunord, and a few more faithful followers, who had come more
+rapidly. There was no open greeting nor recognition, for the
+captain and crew were unaware whom they were carrying, and, on the
+discovery, either for fear of danger or hope of reward, might have
+captured such a prize.
+
+Therefore all the others, with whispered apologies, were hoisted up
+before her, and Countess Almonde had to devise a special entreaty
+that the chair might be lowered again for her poor laundress as well
+as for the other two women.
+
+The yacht, which had been hired by St. Victor, at once spread her
+sails; Mrs. Labadie conversed with the captain while the countess
+took the Queen below into the stifling crowded little cabin. It was
+altogether a wretched voyage; the wind was high, and the pitching
+and tossing more or less disabled everybody in the suite. The Queen
+was exceedingly ill, so were the countess and Mrs. Labadie. Nobody
+could be the least effective but Signora Turini, who waited on her
+Majesty, and Anne, who was so far seasoned by excursions at
+Portsmouth that she was capable of taking sole care of the little
+Prince, as the little vessel dashed along on her way with her cargo
+of alarm and suffering through the Dutch fleet of fifty vessels,
+none of which seemed to notice her--perhaps by express desire not to
+be too curious as to English fugitives.
+
+Between the care of the little one, who needed in the tossing of the
+ship to be constantly in arms though he never cried and when awake
+was always merry, and the giving as much succour as possible to her
+suffering companions, Anne could not either rest or think, but
+seemed to live in one heavy dazed dream of weariness and endurance,
+hardly knowing whether it were day or night, till the welcome sound
+was heard that Calais was in sight.
+
+Then, as well as they could, the poor travellers crawled from the
+corners, and put themselves in such array as they could contrive,
+though the heaving of the waves, as the little yacht lay to, did not
+conduce to their recovery. The Count de Lauzun went ashore as soon
+as a boat could be lowered to apprise M. Charot, the Governor of
+Calais, of the guest he was to receive, and after an interval of
+considerable discomfort, in full view of the massive fortifications,
+boats came off to bring the Queen and her attendants on shore, this
+time as a Queen, though she refused to receive any honours. Lady
+Strickland, recovering as soon as she was on dry land, resumed her
+Prince, who was fondled with enthusiastic praises for his excellent
+conduct on the voyage.
+
+Anne could not help feebly thinking some of the credit might be due
+to her, since she had held him by land and water nearly ever since
+leaving Whitehall, but she was too much worn out by her nights of
+unrest, and too much battered and beaten by the tossings of her
+voyage, to feel anything except in a languid half-conscious way,
+under a racking headache; and when the curious old house where they
+were to rest was reached, and all the rest were eating with ravenous
+appetites, she could taste nothing, and being conducted by a
+compassionate Frenchwoman in a snow-white towering cap to a straw
+mattress spread on the ground, she slept the twenty-four hours round
+without moving.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI: EXILE
+
+
+"'Oh, who are ye, young man?' she said.
+'What country come ye frae?'
+'I flew across the sea,' he said;
+''Twas but this very day.'"
+
+Old Ballad.
+
+Five months had passed away since the midnight flight from England,
+when Anne Woodford was sitting on a stone bench flanked with statues
+in the stately gardens of the Palace of St. Germain, working away at
+some delicate point lace, destined to cover some of the deficiencies
+of her dress, for her difficulties were great, and these months had
+been far from happy ones.
+
+The King was in Ireland, the Queen spent most of the time of his
+absence in convents, either at Poissy or Chaillot, carrying her son
+with her to be the darling of the nuns, who had for the most part
+never even seen a baby, and to whom a bright lively child of a year
+old was a perfect treasure of delight. Not wishing to encumber the
+good Sisters with more attendants than were needful, the Queen only
+took with her one lady governess, one nurse, and one rocker, and
+this last naturally was Pauline Dunord, both a Frenchwoman and a
+Roman Catholic.
+
+This was in itself no loss to Anne. Her experience of the nunnery
+at Boulogne, where had been spent three days in expectation of the
+King, had not been pleasant. The nuns had shrunk from her as a
+heretic, and kept their novices and pensionnaires from the taint of
+communication with her; and all the honour she might have deserved
+for the Queen's escape seemed to have been forfeited by that moment
+of fear, which in the telling had become greatly exaggerated.
+
+It was true that the Queen had never alluded to it; but probably
+through Mrs. Labadie, it had become current that Miss Woodford had
+been so much alarmed under the churchyard wall that her fancy had
+conjured up a phantom and she had given a loud scream, which but for
+the mercy of the Saints would have betrayed them all.
+
+Anne was persuaded that she had done nothing worse than give an
+involuntary start, but it was not of the least use to say so, and
+she began to think that perhaps others knew better than she did.
+Miss Dunord, who had never been more than distantly polite to her in
+England, was of course more thrown with her at St. Germain, and
+examined her closely. Who was it? What was it? Had she seen it
+before? It was of no use to deny. Pauline knew she had seen
+something on that All Saints' Eve. Was it true that it was a lover
+of hers, and that she had seen him killed in a duel on her account?
+Who would have imagined it in cette demoiselle si sage! Would she
+not say who it was!
+
+But though truth forced more than one affirmative to be pumped out
+of Anne, she clung to that last shred of concealment, and kept her
+own counsel as to the time, place, and persons of the duel, and thus
+she so far offended Pauline as to prevent that damsel from having
+any scruples in regarding her as an obnoxious and perilous rival,
+with a dark secret in her life. Certainly Miss Dunord did earnestly
+assure her that to adopt her Church, invoke the Saints, and have
+Masses for the dead was the only way to lay such ghosts; but Anne
+remained obdurate, and thus was isolated, for there were very few
+Protestants in the fugitive Court, and those were of too high a
+degree to consort with her. Perhaps that undefined doubt of her
+discretion was against her; perhaps too her education and knowledge
+of languages became less useful to the Queen when surrounded by
+French, for she was no longer called upon to act as reader; and the
+little Prince, during his residence in the convent, had time to
+forget her and lose his preference for her. She was not discharged,
+but except for taking her turn as a nursery-maid when the Prince was
+at St. Germain, she was a mere supernumerary, nor was there any
+salary forthcoming. The small amount of money she had with her had
+dwindled away, and when she applied to Lady Strickland, who was
+kinder to her than any one else, she was told that the Queen was far
+too much distressed for money wherewith to aid the King to be able
+to pay any one, and that they must all wait till the King had his
+own again. Her clothes were wearing out, and scarcely in condition
+for attendance on the Prince when he was shown in state to the King
+of France. Worse than all, she seemed entirely cut off from home.
+She had written several times to her uncle when opportunity seemed
+to offer, but had never heard from him, and she did not know whether
+her letters could reach him, or if he were even aware of what had
+become of her. People came with passports from England to join the
+exiled Court, but no one returned thither, or she would even have
+offered herself as a waiting-maid to have a chance of going back.
+Lady Strickland would have forwarded her, but no means or
+opportunity offered, and there was nothing for it but to look to the
+time that everybody declared to be approaching when the King was to
+be reinstated, and they would all go home in triumph.
+
+Meanwhile Anne Woodford felt herself a supernumerary, treated with
+civility, and no more, as she ate her meals with a very feminine
+Court, for almost all the gentlemen were in Ireland with the King.
+She had a room in the entresol to herself, in Pauline's absence, and
+here she could in turn sit and dream, or mend and furbish up her
+clothes--a serious matter now--or read the least scrap of printed
+matter in her way, for books were scarcer than even at Whitehall;
+and though her 'mail' had safely been forwarded by Mr. Labadie, some
+jealous censor had abstracted her Bible and Prayer-book. Probably
+there was no English service anywhere in France at that time, unless
+among the merchants at Bordeaux--certainly neither English nor
+Reformed was within her reach--and she had to spend her Sundays in
+recalling all she could, and going over it, feeling thankful to the
+mother who had made her store Psalms, Gospels, and Collects in her
+memory week by week.
+
+She was so far forgotten that active attempts to convert her had
+been dropped, except by Pauline. Perhaps it was thought that
+isolation would be effectual, but in fact the sight of popular
+Romanism not kept in check by Protestant surroundings shocked her,
+and made her far more averse to change than when she saw it at its
+best at Whitehall. In fine, the end of her ambition had been
+neglect and poverty, and the real service that she had rendered was
+unacknowledged, and marred by that momentary alarm. No wonder she
+felt sore.
+
+She had never once been to Paris, and seldom beyond the gardens,
+which happily were free in the absence of the Queen, and always had
+secluded corners apart from the noble terraces, safe from the
+intrusion of idle gallants. Anne had found a sort of bower of her
+own, shaded by honeysuckles and wild roses, where she could sit
+looking over the slopes and the windings of the Seine and indulge
+her musings and longings.
+
+The lonely life brought before her all the anxieties that had been
+stifled for the time by the agitations of the escape. Again and
+again she lived over the scene in the ruins. Again and again she
+recalled those two strange appearances, and shivering at the thought
+of the anniversary that was approaching in another month, still felt
+sometimes that, alive or dead, Peregrine's would be a home face, and
+framed to herself imaginary scenes in which she addressed him, and
+demanded whether he could not rest in his unhallowed grave. What
+would Bishop Ken say? Sometimes even she recollected the strange
+theory which had made him crave execution from the late King, seven
+years, yes, a little more than seven years ago, and marvel whether
+at that critical epoch he had indeed between life and death been
+snatched away to his native land of faery. Imagination might well
+run riot in the solitary, unoccupied condition to which she was
+reduced; and she also brooded much over the fragments of doubtful
+news which reached her.
+
+Something was said of all loyal clergy being expelled and
+persecuted, and this of course suggested those sufferings of the
+clergy during the Commonwealth, of which she had often heard, making
+her very anxious about her uncle, and earnestly long for wings to
+fly to him. The Archfields too! Had Charles returned, and did that
+secret press upon him as it did upon her? Did Lucy think herself
+utterly forgotten and cast aside, receiving no word or message from
+her friend? "Perhaps," thought Anne, "they fancy me sailing about
+at Court in silks and satins, jewels and curls, and forgetting them
+all, as I remember Lucy said I should when she first heard that I
+was going to Whitehall. Nay, and I even took pleasure in the
+picture of myself so decked out, though I never, never meant to
+forget her. Foolish, worse than foolish, that I was! And to think
+that I might now be safe and happy with good Lady Russell, near my
+uncle and all of them. I could almost laugh to think how my fine
+notions of making my fortune have ended in sitting here, neglected,
+forgotten, banished, almost in rags! I suppose it was all self-
+seeking, and that I must take it meekly as no more than I deserve.
+But oh, how different! how different is this captivity! 'Oh that I
+had wings like a dove, for then would I flee away, and be at rest.'
+Swallow, swallow! you are sweeping through the air. Would that my
+spirit could fly like you! if only for one glimpse to tell me what
+they are doing. Ah! there's some one coming down this unfrequented
+walk, where I thought myself safe. A young gentleman! I must rise
+and go as quietly as I can before he sees me. Nay," as the action
+following the impulse, she was gathering up her work, "'tis an old
+abbe with him! no fear! Abbe? Nay, 'tis liker to an English
+clergyman! Can a banished one have strayed hither? The younger man
+is in mourning. Could it be? No graver, older, more manly--Oh!"
+
+"Anne! Anne! We have found you!"
+
+"Mr. Archfield! You!"
+
+And as Charles Archfield, in true English fashion, kissed her cheek,
+Anne fairly choked with tears of joy, and she ever after remembered
+that moment as the most joyful of her life, though the joy was
+almost agony.
+
+"This is Mistress Anne Woodford, sir," said Charles, the next
+moment. "Allow me, madam, to present Mr. Fellowes, of Magdalen
+College."
+
+Anne held out her hand, and courtesied in response to the bow and
+wave of the shovel hat.
+
+"How did you know that I was here?" she said.
+
+"Doctor Woodford thought it likely, and begged us to come and see
+whether we could do anything for you," said Charles; "and you may
+believe that we were only too happy to do so. A lady to whom we had
+letters, who is half English, the Vicomtesse de Bellaise, was so
+good as to go to the convent at Poissy and discover for us from some
+of the suite where you were."
+
+"My uncle--my dear uncle--is he well?"
+
+"Quite well, when last we heard," said Charles. "That was at
+Florence, nearly a month ago."
+
+"And all at Fareham, are they well?"
+
+"All just as usual," said Charles, "at the last hearing, which was
+at the same time. I hoped to have met letters at Paris, but no
+doubt the war prevents the mails from running."
+
+"Ah! I have never had a single letter," said Anne. "Did my uncle
+know anything of me? Has he never had one of mine?"
+
+"Up to the time when he wrote, last March, that is to say, he had
+received nothing. He had gone to London to make inquiries--"
+
+"Ah! my dear good uncle!"
+
+"And had ascertained that you had been chosen to accompany the Queen
+and Prince in their escape from Whitehall. You have played the
+heroine, Miss Anne."
+
+"Oh! if you knew--"
+
+"And," said Mr. Fellowes, "both he and Sir Philip Archfield
+requested us, if we could make our way home through Paris, to come
+and offer our services to Mistress Woodford, in case she should wish
+to send intelligence to England, or if she should wish to make use
+of our escort to return home."
+
+"Oh sir! oh sir! how can I thank you enough! You cannot guess the
+happiness you have brought me," cried Anne with clasped hands, tears
+welling up again.
+
+"You _will_ come with us then," cried Charles. "I am sure you
+ought. They have not used you well, Anne; how pale and thin you
+have grown."
+
+"That is only pining! I am quite well, only home-sick," she said
+with a smile. "I am sure the Queen will let me go. I am nothing
+but a burthen now. She has plenty of her own people, and they do
+not like a Protestant about the Prince."
+
+"There is Madame de Bellaise," said Mr. Fellowes, "advancing along
+the walk with Lady Powys. Let me present you to her."
+
+"You have succeeded, I see," a kind voice said, as Anne found
+herself making her courtesy to a tall and stately old lady, with a
+mass of hair of the peculiar silvered tint of flaxen mixed with
+white.
+
+"I am sincerely glad," said Lady Powys, "that Miss Woodford has met
+her friends."
+
+"Also," said Madame de Bellaise, "Lady Powys is good enough to say
+that if mademoiselle will honour me with a visit, she gives
+permission for her to return with me to Paris."
+
+This was still greater joy, except for that one recollection,
+formidable in the midst of her joy, of her dress. Did Madame de
+Bellaise divine something? for she said, "These times remind me of
+my youth, when we poor cavalier families well knew what sore straits
+were. If mademoiselle will bring what is most needful, the rest can
+be sent afterwards."
+
+Making her excuses for the moment, Anne with light and gladsome foot
+sped along the stately alley, up the stairs to her chamber, round
+which she looked much as if it had been a prison cell, fell on her
+knees in a gush of intense thankfulness, and made her rapid
+preparations, her hands trembling with joy, and a fear that she
+might wake to find all again a dream. She felt as if this
+deliverance were a token of forgiveness for her past wilfulness, and
+as if hope were opened to her once more. Lady Powys met her as she
+came down, and spoke very kindly, thanking her for her services, and
+hoping that she would enjoy the visit she was about to make.
+
+"Does your ladyship think Her Majesty will require me any longer?"
+asked Anne timidly.
+
+"If you wish to return to the country held by the Prince of Orange,"
+said the Countess coldly, "you must apply for dismissal to Her
+Majesty herself."
+
+Anne perceived from the looks of her friends that it was no time for
+discussing her loyalty, and all taking leave, she was soon seated
+beside Madame de Bellaise, while the coach and four rolled down the
+magnificent avenue, and scene after scene disappeared, beautiful and
+stately indeed, but which she was as glad to leave behind her as if
+they had been the fetters and bars of a dungeon, and she almost
+wondered at the words of admiration of her companions.
+
+Madame de Bellaise sat back, and begged the others to speak English,
+saying that it was her mother tongue, and she loved the sound of it,
+but really trying to efface herself, while the eager conversation
+between the two young people went on about their homes.
+
+Charles had not been there more recently than Anne, and his letters
+were at least two months old, but the intelligence in them was as
+water to her thirsty soul. All was well, she heard, including the
+little heir of Archfield, though the young father coloured a little,
+and shuffled over the answers to the inquiries with a rather sad
+smile. Charles was, however, greatly improved. He had left behind
+him the loutish, unformed boy, and had become a handsome, courteous,
+well-mannered gentleman. The very sight of him handing Madame de
+Bellaise in and out of her coach was a wonder in itself when Anne
+recollected how he had been wont to hide himself in the shrubbery to
+prevent being called upon for such services, and how uncouthly in
+the last extremity he would perform them.
+
+Madame de Bellaise was inhabiting her son's great Hotel de
+Nidemerle. He was absent in garrison, and she was presiding over
+the family of grandchildren, their mother being in bad health. So
+much Anne heard before she was conducted to a pleasant little
+bedroom, far more home-like and comfortable than in any of the
+palaces she had inhabited. It opened into another, whence merry
+young voices were heard.
+
+"That is the apartment of my sister's youngest daughter," said
+Madame de Bellaise, "Noemi Darpent. I borrowed her for a little
+while to teach her French and dancing, but now that we are gone to
+war, they want to have her back again, and it will be well that she
+should avail herself of the same escort as yourself. All will then
+be selon les convenances, which had been a difficulty to me," she
+added with a laugh.
+
+Then opening the door of communication she said; "Here, Noemi, we
+have found your countrywoman, and I put her under your care. Ah!
+you two chattering little pies, I knew the voices were yours. This
+is my granddaughter, Marguerite de Nidemerle, and my niece--a la
+mode de Bretagne--Cecile d'Aubepine, all bestowing their chatter on
+their cousin."
+
+Noemi Darpent was a tall, fair, grave-faced maiden, some years over
+twenty, and so thoroughly English that it warmed Anne's heart to
+look at her, and the other two were bright little Frenchwomen--
+Marguerite a pretty blonde, Cecile pale, dark, and sallow, but full
+of life. Both were at the age at which girls were usually in
+convents, but as Anne learnt, Madame de Bellaise was too English at
+heart to give up the training of her grandchildren, and she had an
+English governess for them, daughter to a Romanist cavalier ruined
+by sequestration.
+
+She was evidently the absolute head of the family. Her daughter-in-
+law was a delicate little creature, who scarcely seemed able to bear
+the noise of the family at the long supper-table, when all talked
+with shrill French voices, from the two youths and their abbe tutor
+down to the little four-year-old Lolotte in her high chair. But to
+Anne, after the tedious formality of the second table at the palace,
+stiff without refinement, this free family life was perfectly
+delightful and refreshing, though as yet she was too much cramped,
+as it were, by long stiffness, silence, and treatment as an inferior
+to join, except by the intelligent dancing of her brown eyes, and
+replies when directly addressed.
+
+After Mrs. Labadie's homeliness, Pauline's exclusive narrowness,
+Jane's petty frivolity, Hester's vulgar worldliness, and the general
+want of cultivation in all who treated her on an equality, it was
+like returning to rational society; and she could not but observe
+that Mr. Archfield altogether held his own in conversation with the
+rest, whether in French or English. Little more than a year ago he
+would hardly have opened his mouth, and would have worn the true
+bumpkin look of contemptuous sheepishness. Now he laughed and made
+others laugh as readily and politely as--Ah! With whom was she
+comparing him? Did the thought of poor Peregrine dwell on his mind
+as it did upon hers? But perhaps things were not so terrible to a
+man as to a woman, and he had not seen those apparitions! Indeed,
+when not animated, she detected a certain thoughtful melancholy on
+his brow which certainly had not belonged to former times.
+
+Mr. Fellowes early made known to Anne that her uncle had asked him
+to be her banker, and the first care of her kind hostess was to
+assist her in supplying the deficiencies of her wardrobe, so that
+she was able to go abroad without shrinking at her own shabby
+appearance.
+
+The next thing was to take her to Poissy to request her dismissal
+from the Queen, without which it would be hardly decorous to depart,
+though in point of fact, in the present state of affairs, as Noemi
+said, there was nothing to prevent it.
+
+"No," said Mr. Fellowes; "but for that reason Miss Woodford would
+feel bound to show double courtesy to the discrowned Queen."
+
+"And she has often been very kind to me--I love her much," said
+Anne.
+
+"Noemi is a little Whig," said Madame de Bellaise. "I shall not
+take her with us, because I know her father would not like it, but
+to me it is only like the days of my youth to visit an exiled queen.
+Will these gentlemen think fit to be of the party?"
+
+"Thank you, madam, not I," said the Magdalen man. "I am very sorry
+for the poor lady, but my college has suffered too much at her
+husband's hands for me to be very anxious to pay her my respects;
+and if my young friend will take my advice, neither will he. It
+might be bringing his father into trouble."
+
+To this Charles agreed, so M. L'Abbe undertook to show them the
+pictures at the Louvre, and Anne and Madame de Bellaise were the
+only occupants of the carriage that conveyed them to the great old
+convent of Poissy, the girl enjoying by the way the comfort of the
+kindness of a motherly woman, though even to her there could be no
+confiding of the terrible secret that underlay all her thoughts.
+Madame de Bellaise, however, said how glad she was to secure this
+companionship for her niece. Noemi had been more attached than her
+family realised to Claude Merrycourt, a neighbour who had had the
+folly, contrary to her prudent father's advice, to rush into
+Monmouth's rebellion, and it had only been by the poor girl's agony
+when he suffered under the summary barbarities of Kirke that her
+mother had known how much her heart was with him. The depression of
+spirits and loss of health that ensued had been so alarming that
+when Madame de Bellaise, after some months, paid a long visit to her
+sister in England, Mrs. Darpent had consented to send the girl to
+make acquaintance with her French relations, and try the effect of
+change of scene. She had gone, indifferent, passive, and broken-
+hearted, but her aunt had watched over her tenderly, and she had
+gradually revived, not indeed into a joyous girl, but into a calm
+and fairly cheerful woman.
+
+When she had left home, France and England were only too closely
+connected, but now they were at daggers drawn, and probably would be
+so for many years, and the Revolution had come so suddenly that
+Madame de Bellaise had not been able to make arrangements for her
+niece's return home, and Noemi was anxiously waiting for an
+opportunity of rejoining her parents.
+
+The present plan was this. Madame de Bellaise's son, the Marquis de
+Nidemerle, was Governor of Douai, where his son, the young Baron de
+Ribaumont, with his cousin, the Chevalier d'Aubepine, were to join
+him with their tutor, the Abbe Leblanc. The war on the Flemish
+frontier was not just then in an active state, and there were often
+friendly relations between the commandants of neighbouring
+garrisons, so that it might be possible to pass a party on to the
+Spanish territory with a flag of truce, and then the way would be
+easy. This passing, however, would be impossible for Noemi alone,
+since etiquette would not permit of her thus travelling with the two
+young gentlemen, nor could she have proceeded after reaching Douai,
+so that the arrival of the two Englishmen and the company of Miss
+Woodford was a great boon. Madame de Bellaise had already
+despatched a courier to ask her son whether he could undertake the
+transit across the frontier, and hoped to apply for passports as
+soon as his answer was received. She told Anne her niece's history
+to prevent painful allusions on the journey.
+
+"Ah, madame!" said Anne, "we too have a sad day connected with that
+unfortunate insurrection. We grieved over Lady Lisle, and burnt
+with indignation."
+
+"M. Barillon tells me that her judge, the Lord Chancellor, was
+actually forced to commit himself to the Tower to escape being torn
+to pieces by the populace, and it is since reported that he has
+there died of grief and shame. I should think his prison cell must
+have been haunted by hundreds of ghosts."
+
+"I pray you, madame! do you believe that there are apparitions?"
+
+"I have heard of none that were not explained by some accident, or
+else were the produce of an excited brain;" and Anne said no more on
+that head, though it was a comfort to tell of her own foolish
+preference for the chances of Court preferment above the security of
+Lady Russell's household, and Madame de Bellaise smiled, and said
+her experience of Courts had not been too agreeable.
+
+And thus they reached Poissy, where Queen Mary Beatrice had separate
+rooms set apart for visitors, and thus did not see them from behind
+the grating, but face to face.
+
+"You wish to leave me, signorina," she said, using the appellation
+of their more intimate days, as Anne knelt to kiss her hand. "I
+cannot wonder. A poor exile has nothing wherewith to reward the
+faithful."
+
+"Ah! your Majesty, that is not the cause; if I were of any use to
+you or to His Royal Highness."
+
+"True, signorina; you have been faithful and aided me to the best of
+your power in my extremity, but while you will not embrace the true
+faith I cannot keep you about the person of my son as he becomes
+more intelligent. Therefore it may be well that you should leave
+us, until such time as we shall be recalled to our kingdom, when I
+hope to reward you more suitably. You loved my son, and he loved
+you--perhaps you would like to bid him farewell."
+
+For this Anne was very grateful, and the Prince was sent for by the
+mother, who was too proud of him to miss any opportunity of
+exhibiting him to an experienced mother and grandmother like the
+vicomtesse. He was a year old, and had become a very beautiful
+child, with large dark eyes like his mother's, and when Mrs. Labadie
+carried him in, he held out his arms to Anne with a cry of glad
+recognition that made her feel that if she could have been allowed
+the charge of him she could hardly have borne to part with him. And
+when the final leave-taking came, the Queen made his little hand
+present her with a little gold locket, containing his soft hair,
+with a J in seed pearls outside, in memory, said Mary Beatrice, of
+that night beneath the church wall.
+
+"Ah, yes, you had your moment of fear, but we were all in terror,
+and you hushed him well."
+
+Thus with another kiss to the white hand, returned on her own
+forehead, ended Anne Jacobina's Court life. Never would she be
+Jacobina again--always Anne or sweet Nancy! It was refreshing to be
+so called, when Charles Archfield let the name slip out, then
+blushed and apologised, while she begged him to resume it, which he
+was now far too correct to do in public. Noemi quite readily
+adopted it.
+
+"I am tired of fine French names," she said: "an English voice is
+quite refreshing; and do you call me Naomi, not Noemi. I did not
+mind it so much at first, because my father sometimes called me so,
+after his good old mother, who was bred a Huguenot, but it is like
+the first step towards home to hear Naomi--Little Omy, as my
+brothers used to shout over the stairs."
+
+That was a happy fortnight. Madame de Bellaise said it would be a
+shame to let Anne have spent a half year in France and have seen
+nothing, so she took the party to the theatre, where they saw the
+Cid with extreme delight. She regretted that the season was so far
+advanced that the winter representations of Esther, at St. Cyr by
+the young ladies, were over, but she invited M. Racine for an
+evening, when Mr. Fellowes took extreme pleasure in his
+conversation, and he was prevailed on to read some of the scenes.
+She also used her entree at Court to enable them to see the
+fountains at Versailles, which Winchester was to have surpassed but
+for King Charles's death.
+
+"Just as well otherwise," remarked Charles to Anne. "These fine
+feathers and flowers of spray are beautiful enough in themselves,
+but give me the clear old Itchen not tortured into playing tricks,
+with all the trout killed; and the open down instead of all these
+terraces and marble steps where one feels as cramped as if it were a
+perpetual minuet. And look at the cost! Ah! you will know what I
+mean when we travel through the country."
+
+Another sight was from a gallery, whence they beheld the King eat
+his dinner alone at a silver-loaded table, and a lengthy ceremony it
+was. Four plates of soup to begin with, a whole capon with ham,
+followed by a melon, mutton, salad, garlic, pate de foie gras,
+fruit, and confitures. Charles really grew so indignant, that, in
+spite of his newly-acquired politeness, Anne, who knew his
+countenance, was quite glad when she saw him safe out of hearing.
+
+"The old glutton!" he said; "I should like to put him on a diet of
+buckwheat and sawdust like his poor peasants for a week, and then
+see whether he would go on gormandising, with his wars and his
+buildings, starving his poor. It is almost enough to make a Whig of
+a man to see what we might have come to. How can you bear it,
+madame?"
+
+"Alas! we are powerless," said the Vicomtesse. "A seigneur can do
+little for his people, but in Anjou we have some privileges, and our
+peasants are better off than those you have seen, though indeed I
+grieved much for them when first I came among them from England."
+
+She was perhaps the less sorry that Paris was nearly emptied of
+fashionable society since her guest had the less chance of uttering
+dangerous sentiments before those who might have repeated them, and
+much as she liked him, she was relieved when letters came from her
+son undertaking to expedite them on their way provided they made
+haste to forestall any outbreak of the war in that quarter.
+
+Meantime Naomi and Anne had been drawn much nearer together by a
+common interest. The door between their rooms having some
+imperfection in the latch swung open as they were preparing for bed,
+and Anne was aware of a sound of sobbing, and saw one of the white-
+capped, short-petticoated femmes de chambre kneeling at Naomi's
+feet, ejaculating, "Oh, take me! take me, mademoiselle! Madame is
+an angel of goodness, but I cannot go on living a lie. I shall do
+something dreadful."
+
+"Poor Suzanne! poor Suzanne!" Naomi was answering: "I will do what
+I can, I will see if it is possible--"
+
+They started at the sound of the step, Suzanne rising to her feet in
+terror, but Naomi, signing to Anne and saying, "It is only
+Mademoiselle Woodford, a good Protestant, Suzanne. Go now; I will
+see what can be done; I know my aunt would like to send a maid with
+us."
+
+Then as Suzanne went out with her apron to her eyes, and Anne would
+have apologised, she said, "Never mind; I must have told you, and
+asked your help. Poor Suzanne, she is one of the Rotrous, an old
+race of Huguenot peasants whom my aunt always protected; she would
+protect any one, but these people had a special claim because they
+sheltered our great-grandmother, Lady Walwyn, when she fled after
+the S. Barthelemi. When the Edict of Nantes was revoked, the two
+brothers fled. I believe she helped them, and they got on board
+ship, and brought a token to my father; but the old mother was
+feeble and imbecile, and could not move, and the monks and the
+dragoons frightened and harassed this poor wench into what they
+called conforming. When the mother died, my aunt took Suzanne and
+taught her, and thought she was converted; and indeed if all Papists
+were like my aunt it would not be so hard to become one."
+
+"Oh yes! I know others like that."
+
+"But this poor Suzanne, knowing that she only was converted out of
+terror, has always had an uneasy conscience, and the sight of me has
+stirred up everything. She says, though I do not know if it be
+true, that she was fast drifting into bad habits, when finding my
+Bible, though it was English and she could not read it, seems to
+have revived everything, and recalled the teaching of her good old
+father and pastor, and now she is wild to go to England with us."
+
+"You will take her?" exclaimed Anne.
+
+"Of course I will. Perhaps that is what I was sent here for. I
+will ask her of my aunt, and I think she will let me have her. You
+will keep her secret, Anne."
+
+"Indeed I will."
+
+Madame de Bellaise granted Suzanne to her niece without difficulty,
+evidently guessing the truth, but knowing the peril of the situation
+too well to make any inquiry. Perhaps she was disappointed that her
+endeavours to win the girl to her Church had been ineffectual, but
+to have any connection with one 'relapsed' was so exceedingly
+perilous that she preferred to ignore the whole subject, and merely
+let it be known that Suzanne was to accompany Mademoiselle Darpent,
+and this was only disclosed to the household on the very last
+morning, after the passports had been procured and the mails packed,
+and she hushed any remark of the two English girls in such a decided
+manner as quite startled them by the manifest need of caution.
+
+"We should have come to that if King James were still allowed to
+have his own way," said Naomi.
+
+"Oh no! we are too English," said Anne.
+
+"Our generation might not see it," said Naomi; "but who can be safe
+when a Popish king can override law? Oh, I shall breathe more
+freely when I am on the other side of the Channel. My aunt is much
+too good for this place, and they don't approve of her, and keep her
+down."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII: REVENANTS
+
+
+"But soft, behold! lo, where it comes again!
+I'll cross it, though it blast me."
+
+Hamlet.
+
+Floods of tears were shed at the departure of the two young officers
+of sixteen and seventeen. The sobs of the household made the
+English party feel very glad when it was over and the cavalcade was
+in motion. A cavalcade it was, for each gentleman rode and so did
+his body-servant, and each horse had a mounted groom. The two young
+officers had besides each two chargers, requiring a groom and horse
+boy, and each conducted half a dozen fresh troopers to join the
+army. A coach was the regulation mode of travelling for ladies, but
+both the English girls had remonstrated so strongly that Madame de
+Bellaise had consented to their riding, though she took them and
+Suzanne the first day's journey well beyond the ken of the Parisians
+in her own carriage, as far as Senlis, where there was a fresh
+parting with the two lads, fewer tears, and more counsel and
+encouragement, with many fond messages to her son, many to her
+sister in England, and with affectionate words to her niece a
+whisper to her to remember that she would not be in a Protestant
+country till she reached Holland or England.
+
+The last sight they had of the tall dignified figure of the old lady
+was under the arch of the cathedral, where she was going to pray for
+their safety. Suzanne was to ride on a pillion behind the Swiss
+valet of Mr. Fellowes, whom Naomi had taken into her confidence, and
+the two young ladies each mounted a stout pony. Mr. Fellowes had
+made friends with the Abbe Leblanc, who was of the old Gallican
+type, by no means virulently set against Anglicanism, and also a
+highly cultivated man, so that they had many subjects in common,
+besides the question of English Catholicity. The two young cousins,
+Ribaumont and D'Aubepine, were chiefly engaged in looking out for
+sport, setting their horses to race with one another, and the like,
+in which Charles Archfield sometimes took a share, but he usually
+rode with the two young ladies, and talked to them very pleasantly
+of his travels in Italy, the pictures and antiquities which had made
+into an interesting reality the studies that he had hated when a
+boy, also the condition of the country he had seen with a mind which
+seemed to have opened and enlarged with a sudden start beyond the
+interests of the next fox-hunt or game at bowls. All were, as he
+had predicted, greatly shocked at the aspect of the country through
+which they passed: the meagre crops ripening for harvest, the hay-
+carts, sometimes drawn by an equally lean cow and woman, the haggard
+women bearing heavy burthens, and the ragged, barefooted children
+leading a wretched cow or goat to browse by the wayside, the gaunt
+men toiling at road-mending with their poor starved horses, or at
+their seigneur's work, alike unpaid, even when drawn off from their
+own harvests. And in the villages the only sound buildings were the
+church and presbytere by its side, the dwellings being miserable
+hovels, almost sunk into the earth, an old crone or two, marvels of
+skinniness, spinning at the door, or younger women making lace, and
+nearly naked children rushing out to beg. Sometimes the pepper-box
+turrets of a chateau could be seen among distant woods, or the walls
+of a cloister, with a taper spire in the midst, among greener
+fields; and the towns were approached through long handsome avenues,
+and their narrow streets had a greater look of prosperity, while
+their inns, being on the way to the place of warfare, were almost
+luxurious, with a choice of dainty meats and good wines. Everywhere
+else was misery, and Naomi said it was the vain endeavour to reform
+the source of these grievances that had forced her father to become
+an exile from his native country, and that he had much apprehended
+that the same blight might gradually be brought over his adopted
+land, on which Charles stood up for the constitution, and for the
+resolute character of Englishmen, and Anne, as in duty bound, for
+the good intentions of her godfather. Thus they argued, and Anne
+not only felt herself restored to the company of rational beings,
+but greatly admired Charles's sentiments and the ability with which
+he put them forward, and now and then the thought struck her, and
+with a little twinge of pain of which she was ashamed, would Naomi
+Darpent be the healer of the wound nearly a year old, and find in
+him consolation for the hero of her girlhood? Somehow there would
+be a sense of disappointment in them both if so it were.
+
+At length the spires and towers of Douai came in sight, fenced in by
+stern lines of fortification according to the science of Vauban--
+smooth slopes of glacis, with the terrible muzzles of cannon peeping
+out on the summits of the ramparts, and the line of salient angle
+and ravelin with the moat around, beautiful though formidable. The
+Marquis de Nidemerle had sent a young officer and sergeant's party
+to meet the travellers several miles off, and bring them
+unquestioned through the outposts of the frontier town, so closely
+watched in this time of war, and at about half a mile from the gates
+he himself, with a few attendants, rode out all glittering and
+clanking in their splendid uniforms and accoutrements. He doffed
+his hat with the heavy white plume, and bowed his greeting to the
+ladies and clergymen, but both the young Frenchmen, after a military
+salute, hastily dismounted and knelt on one knee, while he sprang
+from his horse, and then, making the sign of the Cross over his son,
+raised him, and folding him in his arms pressed him to his breast
+and kissed him on each cheek, not without tears, then repeated the
+same greeting with young D'Aubepine. He then kissed the hand of his
+belle cousine, whom, of course, he knew already, and bowed almost to
+the ground on being presented to Mademoiselle Woodford, a little
+less low to Monsieur Archfield, who was glad the embracing was not
+to be repeated, politely received Mr. Fellowes, and honoured the
+domestic abbe with a kindly word and nod. The gradation was
+amusing, and he was a magnificent figure, with his noble horse and
+grand military dress, while his fine straight features, sunburnt
+though naturally fair, and his tall, powerful frame, well became his
+surroundings--'a true white Ribaumont,' as Naomi said, as she looked
+at the long fair hair drawn back and tied with ribbon. "He is just
+like the portrait of our great-grandfather who was almost killed on
+the S. Barthelemi!" However, Naomi had no more time to talk _of_
+him, for he rode by her side inquiring for his mother, wife, and
+children, but carefully doing the honours to the stranger lady and
+gentleman.
+
+Moat and drawbridge there were at Portsmouth, and a sentry at the
+entrance, but here there seemed endless guards, moats, bridges, and
+gates, and there was a continual presenting of arms and
+acknowledging of salutes as the commandant rode in with the
+travellers. It was altogether a very new experience in life. They
+were lodged in the governor's quarters in the fortress, where the
+accommodation for ladies was of the slenderest, and M. de Nidemerle
+made many apologies, though he had evidently given up his own
+sleeping chamber to the two ladies, who would have to squeeze into
+his narrow camp-bed, with Suzanne on the floor, and the last was to
+remain there entirely, there being no woman with whom she could have
+her meals. The ladies were invited to sup with the staff, and
+would, as M. de Nidemerle assured them, be welcomed with the
+greatest delight. So Naomi declared that they must make their
+toilette do as much justice as possible to their country; and though
+full dress was not attainable, they did their best with ribbons and
+laces, and the arrangement of her fair locks and Anne's brown ones,
+when Suzanne proved herself an adept; the ladies meantime finding no
+small amusement in the varieties of swords, pistols, spurs, and
+other accoutrements, for which the marquis had apologised, though
+Naomi told him that they were the fittest ornaments possible.
+
+"And my cousin Gaspard is a really good man," she said, indicating
+to her friend the little shrine with holy-water stoup, ivory
+crucifix, print of the Madonna, two or three devotional books, and
+the miniatures of mother, wife, and children hung not far off; also
+of two young cavaliers, one of whom Naomi explained to be the young
+father whom Gaspard could not recollect, the other, that of the
+uncle Eustace, last Baron Walwyn and Ribaumont, of whom her own
+mother talked with such passionate affection, and whose example had
+always been a guiding star to the young marquis.
+
+He came to their door to conduct them down to supper, giving his arm
+to Miss Woodford as the greatest stranger, while Miss Darpent was
+conducted by a resplendent ducal colonel. The supper-room was in
+festal guise, hung round with flags, and the table adorned with
+flowers; a band was playing, and never had either Anne or Naomi been
+made so much of. All were eagerly talking, Charles especially so,
+and Anne thought, with a thrill, "Did he recollect that this was the
+very anniversary of that terrible 1st of July?"
+
+It was a beautiful summer evening, and the supper taking place at
+five o'clock there was a considerable time to spare afterwards, so
+that M. de Nidemerle proposed to show the strangers the place, and
+the view from the ramparts.
+
+"In my company you can see all well," he said, "but otherwise there
+might be doubts and jealousies."
+
+He took them through the narrow Flemish streets of tall houses with
+projecting upper stories, and showed them that seminary which was
+popularly supposed in England to be the hotbed of truculent plots,
+but where they only saw a quiet academic cloister and an exquisite
+garden, green turf, roses and white lilies in full perfection, and
+students flitting about in cassocks and square caps, more like an
+Oxford scene, as Mr. Fellowes said, than anything he had yet seen.
+He was joined by an English priest from his own original
+neighbourhood. The Abbe Leblanc found another acquaintance, and
+these two accompanied their friends to the ramparts. The marquis
+had a great deal to hear from his cousin about his home, and thus it
+happened that Charles Archfield and Anne found themselves more
+practically alone together than they had yet been. As they looked
+at the view over the country, he told her of a conversation that he
+had had with an officer now in the French army, but who had served
+in the Imperial army against the Turks, and that he had obtained
+much useful information.
+
+"Useful?" asked Anne.
+
+"Yes. I have been watching for the moment to tell you, Anne; I have
+resolved what to do. I intend to make a few campaigns there against
+the enemy of Christendom."
+
+"O Mr. Archfield!" was all she could say.
+
+"See here, I have perceived plainly that to sink down into my lady's
+eldest son is no wholesome life for a man with all his powers about
+him. I understand now what a set of oafs we were to despise the
+poor fellow you wot of, because he was not such a lubber as
+ourselves. I have no mind to go through the like."
+
+"You are so different; it could not be the same."
+
+"Not quite; but remember there is nothing for me to do. My father
+is still an active man, and I am not old enough to take my part in
+public affairs, even if I loved greatly either the Prince of Orange
+or King James. I could not honestly draw my sword for either. I
+have no estate to manage, my child's inheritance is all in money,
+and it would drive me mad, or worse, to go home to be idle. No; I
+will fight against the common enemy till I have made me a name, and
+won reputation and standing; or if I should not come back, there's
+the babe at home to carry on the line."
+
+"Oh, sir! your father and mother--Lucy--all that love you. What
+will they say?"
+
+"It would only put them to needless pain to ask them. I shall not.
+I shall write explaining all my motives--all except one, and that
+you alone know, Anne."
+
+She shuddered a little, and felt him press her arm tightly. They
+had fallen a good deal behind the marquis and his cousin, and were
+descending as twilight fell into a narrow, dark, lonely street, with
+all the houses shut up. "No one has guessed, have they?" she
+faltered.
+
+"Not that I know of. But I cannot--no! I can_not_ go home, to have
+that castle near me, and that household at Oakwood. I see enough in
+my dreams without that."
+
+"See! Ah, yes!"
+
+"Then, Anne, you have suffered then too--guiltless as you are in
+keeping my terrible secret! I have often thought and marvelled
+whether it were so with you."
+
+She was about to tell him what she had seen, when he began, "There
+is one thing in this world that would sweeten and renew my life--and
+that?"
+
+Her heart was beating violently at what was so suddenly coming on
+her, when at that instant Charles broke off short with "Good
+Heavens! What's that?"
+
+On the opposite side of the street, where one of the many churches
+stood some way back, making an opening, there was a figure,
+essentially the same that Anne had seen at Lambeth, but bare-headed,
+clad apparently in something long and white, and with a pale bluish
+light on the ghastly but unmistakable features.
+
+She uttered a faint gasping cry scarcely audible, Charles's impulse
+was to exclaim, "Man or spirit, stand!" and drawing his sword to
+rush across the street; but in that second all had vanished, and he
+only struck against closed doors, which he shook, but could not
+open.
+
+"Mr. Archfield! Oh, come back! I have seen it before," entreated
+Anne; and he strode back, with a gesture of offering her support,
+and trembling, she clung to his arm. "It does not hurt," she said.
+"It comes and goes--"
+
+"You have seen it before!"
+
+"Twice."
+
+No more could be said, for through the gloom the white plume and
+gold-laced uniform of the marquis were seen. He had missed them,
+and come back to look for them, beginning to apologise.
+
+"I am confounded at having left Mademoiselle behind.--Comment!"--as
+the sound betrayed that Charles was sheathing his sword. "I trust
+that Monsieur has met with no unpleasant adventure from my people."
+
+"Oh, no, Monsieur," was the answer, as he added--
+
+"One can never be sure as to these fiery spirits towards an
+Englishman in the present state of feeling, and I blame myself
+extremely for having permitted myself to lose sight of Monsieur and
+Mademoiselle."
+
+"Indeed, sir, we have met with no cause of complaint," said Charles,
+adding as if casually, "What is that church?"
+
+"'Tis the Jesuits' Church," replied the governor. "There is the
+best preaching in the town, they say, and Jansenists as we are, I
+was struck with the Lenten course."
+
+Anne went at once to her room on returning to the house. Naomi, who
+was there already, exclaimed at her paleness, and insisted on
+administering a glass of wine from what the English called the rere
+supper, the French an encas, the substantial materials for which had
+been left in the chamber. Then Anne felt how well it had been for
+her that her fellows at the palace had been so uncongenial, for she
+could hardly help disclosing to Naomi the sight she had seen, and
+the half-finished words she had heard. It was chiefly the feeling
+that she could not bear Naomi to know of the blood on Charles's hand
+which withheld her in her tumult of feeling, and made her only
+entreat, "Do not ask me, I cannot tell you." And Naomi, who was
+some years older, and had had her own sad experience, guessed
+perhaps at one cause for her agitation, and spared her inquiries,
+though as Anne, tired out by the long day, and forced by their close
+quarters to keep herself still, dropped asleep, strange mutterings
+fell from her lips about "The vault--the blood--come back. There he
+is. The secret has risen to forbid. O, poor Peregrine!"
+
+Between the July heat, the narrow bed, and the two chamber fellows,
+Anne had little time to collect her thoughts, except for the general
+impression that if Charles finished what he had begun to say, the
+living and the dead alike must force her to refuse, though something
+within foreboded that this would cost her more than she yet durst
+perceive, and her heart was ready to spring forth and enclose him as
+it were in an embrace of infinite tenderness, above all when she
+thought of his purpose of going to those fearful Hungarian wars.
+
+But after the hot night, it was a great relief to prepare for an
+early start. M. de Nidemerle had decided on sending the travellers
+to Tournay, the nearest Spanish town, on the Scheldt, since he had
+some acquaintance with the governor, and when no campaign was
+actually on foot the courtesies of generous enemies passed between
+them. He had already sent an intimation of his intention of
+forwarding an English kinswoman of his own with her companions, and
+bespoken the good offices of his neighbour, and they were now to set
+off in very early morning under the escort of a flag of truce, a
+trumpeter, and a party of troopers, commanded by an experienced old
+officer with white moustaches and the peaked beard of the last
+generation, contrasting with a face the colour of walnut wood.
+
+The marquis himself and his son, however, rode with the travellers
+for their first five miles, through a country where the rich green
+of the natural growth showed good soil, all enamelled with flowers
+and corn crops run wild; but the villages looked deserted, the
+remains of burnt barns and houses were frequent, and all along that
+frontier, it seemed as if no peaceful inhabitants ventured to
+settle, and only brigands often rendered such by misery might prowl
+about. The English party felt as if they had never understood what
+war could be.
+
+However, in a melancholy orchard run wild, under the shade of an
+apple-tree laden with young fruit, backed by a blackened gable half
+concealed by a luxuriant untrimmed vine, the avant couriers of the
+commandant had cleared a space in the rank grass, and spread a
+morning meal, of cold pate, fowl and light wines, in which the
+French officers drank to the good journey of their friends, and then
+when the horses had likewise had their refreshment the parting took
+place with much affection between the cousins. The young Ribaumont
+augured that they should meet again when he had to protect Noemi in
+a grand descent on Dorsetshire in behalf of James, and she merrily
+shook her fist at him and defied him, and his father allowed that
+they were a long way from that.
+
+M. de Nidemerle hinted to Mr. Archfield that nobody could tell him
+more about the war with the Turks than M. le Capitaine Delaune, who
+was, it appeared, a veteran Swiss who had served in almost every
+army in Europe, and thus could give information by no means to be
+neglected. So that, to Anne's surprise and somewhat to her
+mortification, since she had no knowledge of the cause, she saw
+Charles riding apart with this wooden old veteran, who sat as
+upright as a ramrod on his wiry-looking black horse, leaving her to
+the company of Naomi and Mr. Fellowes. Did he really wish not to
+pursue the topic which had brought Peregrine from his grave? It
+would of course be all the better, but it cost her some terrible
+pangs to think so.
+
+There were far more formalities and delays before the travellers
+could cross the Tournay bridge across the Scheldt. They were
+brought to a standstill a furlong off, and had to wait while the
+trumpeter rode forward with the white flag, and the message was
+referred to the officer on guard, while a sentry seemed to be
+watching over them. Then the officer came to the gateway of the
+bridge, and Captain Delaune rode forward to him, but there was still
+a long weary waiting in the sun before he came back, after having
+shown their credentials to the governor, and then he was accompanied
+by a Flemish officer, who, with much courtesy, took them under his
+charge, and conducted them through all the defences, over the
+bridge, and to the gate where their baggage had to be closely
+examined. Naomi had her Bible in her bosom, or it would not have
+escaped; Anne heartily wished she had used the same precaution on
+her flight from England, but she had not, like her friend, been
+warned beforehand.
+
+When within the city there was more freedom, and the Fleming
+conducted the party to an inn, where, unlike English inns, they
+could not have a parlour to themselves, but had to take their meals
+in common with other guests at a sort of table d'hote, and the
+ladies had no refuge but their bedroom, where the number of beds did
+not promise privacy. An orderly soon arrived with an invitation to
+Don Carlos Arcafila to sup with the Spanish governor, and of course
+the invitation could not be neglected. The ladies walked about a
+little in the town with Mr. Fellowes, looking without appreciation
+at the splendid five-towered cathedral, but recollecting with due
+English pride that the place had been conquered by Henry VIII.
+Thence they were to make for Ostend, where they were certain of
+finding a vessel bound for England.
+
+It was a much smaller party that set forth from Tournay than from
+Paris, and soon they fell into pairs, Mr. Fellowes and Naomi riding
+together, sufficiently out of earshot of the others for Charles to
+begin--
+
+"I have not been able to speak to you, Anne, since that strange
+interruption--if indeed it were not a dream."
+
+"Oh, sir, it was no dream! How could it be?"
+
+"How could it, indeed, when we both saw it, and both of us awake and
+afoot, and yet I cannot believe my senses."
+
+"Oh, I can believe it only too truly! I have seen him twice before.
+I thought you said you had."
+
+"Merely in dreams, and that is bad enough."
+
+"Are you sure? for I was up and awake."
+
+"Are _you_ sure? I might ask again. I was asleep in bed, and glad
+enough to shake myself awake. Where were you?"
+
+"Once on Hallowmas Eve, looking from the window at Whitehall; once
+when waiting with the Queen under the wall of Lambeth Church, on the
+night of our flight."
+
+"Did others see him then?"
+
+"I was alone the first time. The next time when he flitted across
+the light, no one else saw him; but they cried out at my start. Why
+should he appear except to us?"
+
+"That is true," muttered Charles.
+
+"And oh, sir, those two times he looked as he did in life--not
+ghastly as now. There can be no doubt now that--"
+
+"What, sweet Anne?"
+
+"Sir, I must tell you! I could bear it no longer, and I _did_
+consult the Bishop of Bath and Wells."
+
+"Any more?" he asked in a somewhat displeased voice.
+
+"No one, not a soul, and he is as safe as any of the priests here;
+he regards a confession in the same way. Mr. Archfield, forgive me.
+He seemed divinely sent to me on that All Saints' day! Oh, forgive
+me!" and tears were in her eyes.
+
+"He is Dr. Ken--eh? I remember him. I suppose he is as safe as any
+man, and a woman must have some relief. You have borne enough
+indeed," said Charles, greatly touched by her tears. "What did he
+say?"
+
+"He asked, was I certain of the--death," said she, bringing out the
+word with difficulty; "but then I had only seen _it_ at Whitehall;
+and these other appearances, in such places too, take away all hope
+that it is otherwise!"
+
+"Assuredly," said Charles; "I had not the least doubt at the moment.
+I know I ran my sword through his body, and felt a jar that I
+believe was his backbone," he said with a shudder, "and he fell
+prone and breathless; but since I have seen more of fencing, and
+heard more of wounds, the dread has crossed me that I acted as an
+inexperienced lad, and that I ought to have tried whether the life
+was in him, or if he could be recovered. If so, I slew him twice,
+by launching him into that pit. God forgive me!"
+
+"Is it so deep?" asked Anne, shuddering. "I know there is a sort of
+step at the top; but I always shunned the place, and never looked
+in."
+
+"There are two or three steps at the top, but all is broken away
+below. Sedley and I once threw a ball down, and I am sure it
+dropped to a depth down which no man could fall and _live_. I
+believe there once were underground passages leading to the harbour
+on one hand, and out to Portsdown Hill on the other, but that the
+communication was broken away and the openings destroyed when Lord
+Goring was governor of Portsmouth, to secure the castle. Be that as
+it may, he could not have been living after he reached that floor.
+I heard the thud, and the jingle of his sword, and it will haunt me
+to my dying day."
+
+"And yet you never intended it. You did it in defence of me. You
+did not mean to strike thus hard. It was an accident."
+
+"Would that I could so feel it!" he sighed. "Nay, of course I had
+no evil design when my poor little wife drove me out to give you her
+rag of ribbon, or whatever it was; but I hated as well as despised
+the fellow. He had angered me with his scorn--well deserved, as now
+I see--of our lubberly ways. She had vexed me with her teasing
+commendations--out of harmless mischief, poor child. I hated him
+more every time you looked at him, and when I had occasion to strike
+him I was glad of it. There was murder in my heart, and I felt as
+if I were putting a rat or a weasel out of the way when I threw him
+down that pit. God forgive me! Then, in my madness, I so acted
+that in a manner I was the death of that poor young thing."
+
+"No, no, sir. Your mother had never thought she would live."
+
+"So they say; but her face comes before me in reproach. There are
+times when I feel myself a double murderer. I have been on the
+point of telling all to Mr. Fellowes, or going home to accuse
+myself. Only the thought of my father and mother, and of leaving
+such a blight on that poor baby, has withheld me; but I cannot go
+home to face the sight of the castle."
+
+"No," said Anne, choked with tears.
+
+"Nor is there any suspicion of the poor fellow's fate," he added.
+
+"Not that I ever heard."
+
+"His family think him fled, as was like enough, considering the way
+in which they treated him," said Charles. "Nor do I see what good
+it would do them to know the truth."
+
+"It would only be a grief and bitterness to all."
+
+"I hope I have repented, and that God accepts my forgiveness," said
+Charles sadly. "I am banishing myself from all I love, and there is
+a weight on me for life; but, unless suspicion falls on others, I do
+not feel bound to make it worse for all by giving myself up. Yet
+those appearances--to you, to me, to us both! At such a moment,
+too, last night!"
+
+"Can it be because of his unhallowed grave?" said Anne, in a low
+voice of awe.
+
+"If it were!" said Charles, drawing up his horse for a moment in
+thought. "Anne, if there be one more appearance, the place shall be
+searched, whether it incriminate me or not. It would be adding to
+all my wrongs towards the poor fellow, if that were the case."
+
+"Even if he were found," said Anne, "suspicion would not light on
+you. And at home it will be known if he haunts the place. I will--
+"
+
+"Nay, but, Anne, he will not interrupt me now. I have much more to
+say. I want you to remember that we were sweethearts ere ever I, as
+a child of twelve, knew that I was contracted to that poor babe, and
+bidden to think only of her. Poor child! I honestly did my best to
+love her, so far as I knew how, and mayhap we could have rubbed on
+through life passably well as things go. But--but--It skills not
+talking of things gone by, except to show that it is a whole heart--
+not the reversion of one that is yours for ever, mine only love."
+
+"Oh, but--but--I am no match for you."
+
+"I've had enough of grand matches."
+
+"Your father would never endure it."
+
+"My father would soon rejoice. Besides, if we are wedded here--say
+at Ostend--and you make me a home at Buda, or Vienna, or some place
+at our winter quarters, as my brave wench will, my father will be
+glad enough to see us both at home again."
+
+"No; it cannot be. It would be plain treachery to your parents; Mr.
+Fellowes would say so. I am sure he would not marry us."
+
+"There are English chaplains. Is that all that holds you back?"
+
+"No, sir. If the Archbishop of Canterbury were here himself, it
+could not make it other than a sin, and an act of mean ingratitude,
+for me, the Prince's rocker, to take advantage of their goodness in
+permitting you to come and bring me home--to do what would be pain,
+grief, and shame to them."
+
+"Never shame."
+
+"What is wrong is shame! Cannot you see how unworthy it would be in
+me, and how it would grieve my uncle that I should have done such a
+thing?"
+
+"Love would override scruples."
+
+"Not _true_ love."
+
+"True! Then you own to some love for me, Anne."
+
+"I do--not--know. I have guarded--I mean--cast away--I mean--never
+entertained any such thought ever since I was old enough to know how
+wicked it would be."
+
+"Anne! Anne!" (in an undertone very like rapture), "you have
+confessed all! It is no sin _now_. Even you cannot say so."
+
+She hung her head and did not answer, but silence was enough for
+him.
+
+"It is enough!" he said; "you will wait. I shall know you are
+waiting till I return in such sort that nothing can be denied me.
+Let me at least have that promise."
+
+"You need not fear," murmured Anne. "How could I need? The secret
+would withhold me, were there nothing else."
+
+"And there is something else? Eh, sweetheart? Is that all I am to
+be satisfied with?"
+
+"Oh sir!--Mr. Archfield, I mean--O Charles!" she stammered.
+
+Mr. Fellowes turned round to consult his pupil as to whether the
+halt should be made at the village whose peaked roofs were seen over
+the fruit trees.
+
+But when Anne was lifted down from the steed it was with no grasp of
+common courtesy, and her hand was not relinquished till it had been
+fervently kissed.
+
+Charles did not again torment her with entreaties to share his
+exile. Mayhap he recognised, though unwillingly, that her judgment
+had been right, but there was no small devotion in his whole
+demeanour, as they dined, rode, and rested on that summer's day amid
+fields of giant haycocks, and hostels wreathed with vines, with long
+vistas of sleek cows and plump dappled horses in the sheds behind.
+The ravages of war had lessened as they rode farther from the
+frontier, and the rich smiling landscape lay rejoicing in the summer
+sunshine; the sturdy peasants looked as if they had never heard of
+marauders, as they herded their handsome cattle and responded
+civilly when a draught of milk was asked for the ladies.
+
+There was that strange sense of Eden felicity that sometimes comes
+with the knowledge that the time is short for mutual enjoyment in
+full peace. Charles and Anne would part, their future was
+undefined; but for the present they reposed in the knowledge of each
+other's hearts, and in being together. It was as in their
+childhood, when by tacit consent he had been Anne's champion from
+the time she came as a little Londoner to be alarmed at rough
+country ways, and to be easily scared by Sedley. It had been then
+that Charles had first awakened to the chivalry of the better part
+of boyhood's nature, instead of following his cousin's lead, and
+treating girls as creatures meant to be bullied. Many a happy
+reminiscence was shared between the two as they rode together, and
+it was not till the pale breadth of sea filled their horizon, broken
+by the tall spires and peaked gables and many-windowed steep roofs
+of Ostend, that the future was permitted to come forward and trouble
+them. Then Anne's heart began to feel that persistence in her
+absolute refusal was a much harder thing than at the first, when the
+idea was new and strange to her. And there were strange yearnings
+that Charles should renew the proposal, mixed with dread of herself
+and of her own resolution in case of his doing so. As her
+affections embraced him more and more she pictured him sick,
+wounded, dying, out of reach of all, among Germans, Hungarians,
+Turks,--no one at hand to comfort him or even to know his fate.
+
+There was even disappointment in his acquiescence, though her better
+mind told her that it was in accordance with her prayer against
+temptation. Moreover, he was of a reserved nature, not apt to
+discuss what was once fixed, and perhaps it showed that he respected
+her judgment not to try to shake her decision. Though for once love
+had carried him away, he might perhaps be grateful to her for
+sparing him the perplexities of dragging her about with him and of
+giving additional offence to his parents. The affection born of
+lifelong knowledge is not apt to be of the vehement character that
+disregards all obstacles or possible miseries to the object thereof.
+Yet enough feeling was betrayed to make Naomi whisper at night,
+"Sweet Nan, are you not some one else's sweet?"
+
+And Anne, now with another secret on her heart, only replied with
+embraces, and, "Do not talk of it! I cannot tell how it is to be.
+I cannot tell you all."
+
+Naomi was discreet enough only to caress.
+
+With strict formalities at outworks, moat, drawbridge, and gates,
+and the customary inquisitorial search of the luggage, the
+travellers were allowed to repair to a lofty inn, with the Lion of
+Flanders for its sign, and a wide courtyard, the successive outside
+galleries covered with luxuriant vines. Here, as usual, though the
+party of females obtained one bedroom together, the gentlemen had to
+share one vast sleeping chamber with a variety of merchants, Dutch,
+Flemish, Spanish, and a few English. Meals were at a great table
+d'hote in the public room, opening into the court, and were shared
+by sundry Spanish, Belgic, and Swiss officers of the garrison, who
+made this their mess-room. Two young English gentlemen, like
+Charles Archfield, making the grand tour, whom he had met in Italy,
+were delighted to encounter him again, and still more so at the
+company of English ladies.
+
+"No wonder the forlorn widower has recovered his spirits!" Anne
+heard one say with a laugh that made her blush and turn away; and
+there was an outcry that after a monopoly of the fair ones all the
+way from Paris, the seats next to them must be yielded.
+
+Anne was disappointed, and could not bring herself to be agreeable
+to the obtrusive cavalier with the rich lace cravat and perfumed
+hair, both assumed in her honour.
+
+The discussion was respecting the vessels where a passage might be
+obtained. The cavaliers were to sail in a couple of days for
+London, but another ship would go out of harbour with the tide on
+the following day for Southampton, and this was decided on by
+acclamation by the Hampshire party, though no good accommodation was
+promised them.
+
+There was little opportunity for a tete-a-tetes, for the young men
+insisted on escorting the ladies to the picture galleries, palaces,
+and gardens, and Charles did not wish to reawaken the observations
+that, according to the habits of the time, might not be of the
+choicest description. Anne watched him under her eyelashes, and
+wondered with beating heart whether after all he intended to return
+home, and there plead his cause, for he gave no token of intending
+to separate from the rest.
+
+The Hampshire Hog was to sail at daybreak, so the passengers went on
+board over night, after supper, when the summer twilight was sinking
+down and the far-off west still had a soft golden tint.
+
+Anne felt Charles's arm round her in the boat and grasping her hand,
+then pulling off her glove and putting a ring on her finger--all in
+silence. She still felt that arm on the deck in the confusion of
+men, ropes, and bales of goods, and the shouts and hails on all
+sides that nearly deafened her. There was imminent danger of being
+hurled down, if not overboard, among the far from sober sailors, and
+Mr. Fellowes urged the ladies to go below at once, conducting Miss
+Darpent himself as soon as he could ascertain where to go. Anne
+felt herself almost lifted down. Then followed a strong embrace, a
+kiss on brow, lips, and either cheek, and a low hoarse whisper--"So
+best! Mine own! God bless you,"--and as Suzanne came tumbling aft
+into the narrow cabin, Anne found herself left alone with her two
+female companions, and knew that these blissful days were over.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII: FRENCH LEAVE
+
+
+"When ye gang awa, Jamie,
+ Far across the sea, laddie,
+When ye gang to Germanie
+ What will ye send to me, laddie?"
+
+Huntingtower.
+
+Fides was the posy on the ring. That was all Anne could discover,
+and indeed only this much with the morning light of the July sun
+that penetrated the remotest corners. For the cabin was dark and
+stifling, and there was no leaving it, for both Miss Darpent and her
+attendant were so ill as to engross her entirely.
+
+She could hardly leave them when there was a summons to a meal in
+the captain's cabin, and there she found herself the only passenger
+able to appear, and the rest of the company, though intending
+civility, were so rough that she was glad to retreat again, and
+wretched as the cabin was, she thought it preferable to the deck.
+
+Mr. Fellowes, she heard, was specially prostrated, and jokes were
+passing round that it was the less harm, since it might be the worse
+for him if the crew found out that there was a parson on board.
+
+Thus Anne had to forego the first sight of her native land, and only
+by the shouts above and the decreased motion of the vessel knew when
+she was within lee of the Isle of Wight, and on entering the Solent
+could encourage her companions that their miseries were nearly over,
+and help them to arrange themselves for going upon deck.
+
+When at length they emerged, as the ship lay-to in sight of the red
+roofs and white steeples of Southampton, and of the green mazes of
+the New Forest, Mr. Fellowes was found looking everywhere for the
+pupil whom he had been too miserable to miss during the voyage.
+Neither Charles Archfield nor his servant was visible, but Mr.
+Fellowes's own man coming forward, delivered to the bewildered tutor
+a packet which he said that his comrade had put in his charge for
+the purpose. In the boat, on the way to land, Mr. Fellowes read to
+himself the letter, which of course filled him with extreme
+distress. It contained much of what Charles had already explained
+to Anne of his conviction that in the present state of affairs it
+was better for so young a man as himself, without sufficient
+occupation at home, to seek honourable service abroad, and that he
+thought it would spare much pain and perplexity to depart without
+revisiting home. He added full and well-expressed thanks for all
+that Mr. Fellowes had done for him, and for kindness for which he
+hoped to be the better all his life. He enclosed a long letter to
+his father, which he said would, he hoped, entirely exonerate his
+kind and much-respected tutor from any remissness or any
+participation in the scheme which he had thought it better on all
+accounts to conceal till the last.
+
+"And indeed," said poor Mr. Fellowes, "if I had had any inkling of
+it, I should have applied to the English Consul to restrain him as a
+ward under trust. But no one would have thought it of him. He had
+always been reasonable and docile beyond his years, and I trusted
+him entirely. I should as soon have thought of our President giving
+me the slip in this way. Surely he came on board with us."
+
+"He handed me into the boat," said Miss Darpent. "Who saw him last?
+Did you, Miss Woodford?"
+
+Anne was forced to own that she had seen him on board, and her
+cheeks were in spite of herself such tell-tales that Mr. Fellowes
+could not help saying, "It is not my part to rebuke you, madam, but
+if you were aware of this evasion, you will have a heavy reckoning
+to pay to the young man's parents."
+
+"Sir," said Anne, "I knew indeed that he meant to join the Imperial
+army, but I knew not how nor when."
+
+"Ah, well! I ask no questions. You need not justify yourself to
+me, young lady; but Sir Philip and Lady Archfield little knew what
+they did when they asked us to come by way of Paris. Not that I
+regret it on all accounts," he added, with a courteous bow to Naomi
+which set her blushing in her turn. He avoided again addressing
+Miss Woodford, and she thought with consternation of the prejudice
+he might excite against her. It had been arranged between the two
+maidens that Naomi should be a guest at Portchester Rectory till she
+could communicate with Walwyn, and her father or brother could come
+and fetch her.
+
+They landed at the little wharf, among the colliers, and made their
+way up the street to an inn, where, after ordering a meal to satisfy
+the ravenous sea-appetite, Mr. Fellowes, after a few words with
+Naomi, left the ladies to their land toilet, while he went to hire
+horses for the journey.
+
+Then Naomi could not help saying, "O Anne! I did not think you
+would have done this. I am grieved!"
+
+"You do not know all," said Anne sadly, "or you would not think so
+hardly."
+
+"I saw you had an understanding with him. I see you have a new ring
+on your finger; but how could I suppose you would encourage an only
+son thus to leave his parents?"
+
+"Hush, hush, Naomi!" cried Anne, as the uncontrollable tears broke
+out. "Don't you believe that it is quite as hard for me as for them
+that he should have gone off to fight those dreadful blood-thirsty
+Turks? Indeed I would have hindered him, but that--but that--I know
+it is best for him. No! I can't tell you why, but I _know_ it is;
+and even to the very last, when he helped me down the companion-
+ladder, I hoped he might be coming home first."
+
+"But you are troth-plight to him, and secretly?"
+
+"I am not troth-plight; I know I am not his equal, I told him so,
+but he thrust this ring on me in the boat, in the dark, and how
+could I give it back!"
+
+Naomi shook her head, but was more than half-disarmed by her
+friend's bitter weeping. Whether she gave any hint to Mr. Fellowes
+Anne did not know, but his manner remained drily courteous, and as
+Anne had to ride on a pillion behind a servant she was left in a
+state of isolation as to companionship, which made her feel herself
+in disgrace, and almost spoilt the joy of dear familiar recognition
+of hill, field, and tree, after her long year's absence, the longest
+year in her life, and substituted the sinking of heart lest she
+should be returning to hear of misfortune and disaster, sickness or
+death.
+
+Her original plan had been to go on with Naomi to Portchester at
+once, if by inquiry at Fareham she found that her uncle was at home,
+but she perceived that Mr. Fellowes decidedly wished that Miss
+Darpent should go first to the Archfields, and something within her
+determined first to turn thither in spite of all there was to
+encounter, so that she might still her misgivings by learning
+whether her uncle was well. So she bade the man turn his horse's
+head towards the well-known poplars in front of Archfield House.
+
+The sound of the trampling horses brought more than one well-known
+old 'blue-coated serving-man' into the court, and among them a woman
+with a child in her arms. There was the exclamation, "Mistress
+Anne! Sure Master Charles be not far behind," and the old groom ran
+to help her down.
+
+"Oh! Ralph, thanks. All well? My uncle?"
+
+"He is here, with his Honour," and in scarcely a moment more Lucy,
+swift of foot, had flown out, and had Anne in her embrace, and
+crying out--
+
+"Ah, Charles! my brother! I don't see him."
+
+Anne was glad to have no time to answer before she was in her
+uncle's arms. "My child, at last! God bless thee! Safe in soul
+and body!"
+
+Sir Philip was there too, greeting Mr. Fellowes, and looking for his
+son, and with the cursory assurance that Mr. Archfield was well, and
+that they would explain, a hasty introduction of Miss Darpent was
+made, and all moved in to where Lady Archfield, more feeble and slow
+of movement, had come into the hall, and the nurse stood by with the
+little heir to be shown to his father, and Sedley Archfield stood in
+the background. It was a cruel moment for all, when the words came
+from Mr. Fellowes, "Sir, I have to tell you, Mr. Archfield is not
+here. This letter, he tells me, is to explain."
+
+There was an outburst of exclamation, during which Sir Philip
+withdrew into a window with his spectacles to read the letter, while
+all to which the tutor or Anne ventured to commit themselves was
+that Mr. Archfield had only quitted them without notice on board the
+Hampshire Hog.
+
+The first tones of the father had a certain sound of relief, "Gone
+to the Imperialist army to fight the Turks in Hungary!"
+
+Poor Lady Archfield actually shrieked, and Lucy turned quite pale,
+while Anne caught a sort of lurid flush of joy on Sedley Archfield's
+features, and he was the first to exclaim, "Undutiful young dog!"
+
+"Tut! tut!" returned Sir Philip, "he might as well have come home
+first, and yet I do not know but that it is the best thing he could
+do. There might have been difficulties in the way of getting out
+again, you see, my lady, as things stand now. Ay! ay! you are in
+the right of it, my boy. It is just as well to let things settle
+themselves down here before committing himself to one side or the
+other. 'Tis easy enough for an old fellow like me who has to let
+nothing go but his Commission of the Peace, but not the same for a
+stirring young lad; and he is altogether right as to not coming back
+to idle here as a rich man. It would be the ruin of him. I am glad
+he has the sense to see it. I was casting about to obtain an estate
+for him to give him occupation."
+
+"But the wars," moaned the mother; "if he had only come home we
+could have persuaded him."
+
+"The wars, my lady! Why, they will be a feather in his cap; and may
+be if he had come home, the Dutchman would have claimed him for his,
+and let King James be as misguided as he may, I cannot stomach
+fighting against his father's son for myself or mine. No, no; it
+was the best thing there was for the lad to do. You shall hear his
+letter, it does him honour, and you, too, Mr. Fellowes. He could
+not have written such a letter when he left home barely a year ago."
+
+Sir Philip proceeded to read the letter aloud. There was a full
+explanation of the motives, political and private, only leaving out
+one, and that the most powerful of all of those which led Charles
+Archfield to absent himself for the present. He entreated pardon
+for having made the decision without obtaining permission from his
+father on returning home; but he had done so in view of possible
+obstacles to his leaving England again, and to the belief that a
+brief sojourn at home would cause more grief and perplexity than his
+absence. He further explained, as before, his reasons for secrecy
+towards his travelling companion, and entreated his father not to
+suppose for a moment that Mr. Fellowes had been in any way culpable
+for what he could never have suspected; warmly affectionate messages
+to mother and sister followed, and an assurance of feeling that 'the
+little one' needed for no care or affection while with them.
+
+Lady Archfield was greatly disappointed, and cried a great deal,
+making sure that the poor dear lad's heart was still too sore to
+brook returning after the loss of his wife, who had now become the
+sweetest creature in the world; but Sir Philip's decision that the
+measure was wise, and the secrecy under the circumstances so
+expedient as to be pardonable, prevented all public blame; Mr.
+Fellowes, however, was drawn apart, and asked whether he suspected
+any other motive than was here declared, and which might make his
+pupil unwilling to face the parental brow, and he had declared that
+nothing could have been more exemplary than the whole demeanour of
+the youth, who had at first gone about as one crushed, and though
+slowly reviving into cheerfulness, had always been subdued, until
+quite recently, when the meeting with his old companion had
+certainly much enlivened his spirits. Poor Mr. Fellowes had been
+rejoicing in the excellent character he should have to give, when
+this evasion had so utterly disconcerted him, and it was an infinite
+relief to him to find that all was thought comprehensible and
+pardonable.
+
+Anne might be thankful that none of the authorities thought of
+asking her the question about hidden motives; and Naomi, looking
+about with her bright eyes, thought she had perhaps judged too
+hardly when she saw the father's approval, and that the mother and
+sister only mourned at the disappointment at not seeing the beloved
+one.
+
+The Archfields would not hear of letting any of the party go on to
+Portchester that evening. Dr. Woodford, who had ridden over for
+consultation with Sir Philip, must remain, he would have plenty of
+time for his niece by and by, and she and Miss Darpent must tell
+them all about the journey, and about Charles; and Anne must tell
+them hundreds of things about herself that they scarcely knew, for
+not one letter from St. Germain had ever reached her uncle.
+
+How natural it all looked! the parlour just as when she saw it last,
+and the hall, with the long table being laid for supper, and the hot
+sun streaming in through the heavy casements. She could have
+fancied it yesterday that she had left it, save for the plump rosy
+little yearling with flaxen curls peeping out under his round white
+cap, who had let her hold him in her arms and fondle him all through
+that reading of his father's letter. Charles's child! He was her
+prince indeed now.
+
+He was taken from her and delivered over to Lady Archfield to be
+caressed and pitied because his father would not come home 'to see
+his grand-dame's own beauty,' while Lucy took the guests upstairs to
+prepare for supper, Naomi and her maid being bestowed in the best
+guest-chamber, and Lucy taking her friend to her own, the scene of
+many a confabulation of old.
+
+"Oh, how I love it!" cried Anne, as the door opened on the well-
+known little wainscotted abode. "The very same beau-pot. One would
+think they were the same clove gillyflowers as when I went away."
+
+"O Anne, dear, and you are just the same after all your kings and
+queens, and all you have gone through;" and the two friends were
+locked in another embrace.
+
+"Kings and queens indeed! None of them all are worth my Lucy."
+
+"And now, tell me all; tell me all, Nancy, and first of all about my
+brother. How does he look, and is he well?"
+
+"He looks! O Lucy, he is grown such a noble cavalier; most like the
+picture of that uncle of yours who was killed, and that Sir Philip
+always grieves for."
+
+"My father always hoped Charley would be like him," said Lucy. "You
+must tell him that. But I fear he may be grave and sad."
+
+"Graver, but not sad now."
+
+"And you have seen him and talked to him, Anne? Did you know he was
+going on this terrible enterprise?"
+
+"He spoke of it, but never told me when."
+
+"Ah! I was sure you knew more about it than the old tutor man. You
+always were his little sweetheart before poor little Madam came in
+the way, and he would tell you anything near his heart. Could you
+not have stopped him?"
+
+"I think not, Lucy; he gave his reasons like a man of weight and
+thought, and you see his Honour thinks them sound ones."
+
+"Oh yes; but somehow I cannot fancy our Charley doing anything for
+grand, sound, musty reasons, such as look well marshalled out in a
+letter."
+
+"You don't know how much older he is grown," said Anne, again, with
+the tell-tale colour in her cheeks. "Besides, he cannot bear to
+come home."
+
+"Don't tell me that, Nan. My mother does not see it; but though he
+was fond of poor little Madam in a way, and tried to think himself
+more so, as in duty bound, she really was fretting and wearing the
+very life--no, perhaps not the life, but the temper--out of him.
+What I believe it to be the cause is, that my father must have been
+writing to him about that young gentlewoman in the island that he is
+so set upon, because she would bring a landed estate which would
+give Charles something to do. They say that Peregrine Oakshott ran
+away to escape wedding his cousin; Charley will banish himself for
+the like cause."
+
+"He said nothing of it," said Anne.
+
+"O Anne, I wish you had a landed estate! You would make him happier
+than any other, and would love his poor little Phil! Anne! is it
+so? I have guessed!" and Lucy kissed her on each cheek.
+
+"Indeed, indeed I have not promised. I know it can never, never be--
+and that I am not fit for him. Do not speak of it, Lucy? He spoke
+of it once as we rode together--"
+
+"And you could not be so false as to tell him you did not love him?
+No, you could not?" and Lucy kissed her again.
+
+"No," faltered Anne; "but I would not do as he wished. I have given
+him no troth-plight. I told him it would never be permitted. And
+he said no more, but he put this ring on my finger in the boat
+without a word. I ought not to wear it; I shall not."
+
+"Oh yes, you shall. Indeed you shall. No one need understand it
+but myself, and it makes us sisters. Yes, Anne, Charley was right.
+My father will not consent now, but he will in due time, if he does
+not hear of it till he wearies to see Charles again. Trust it to
+me, my sweet sister that is to be."
+
+"It is a great comfort that you know," said Anne, almost moved to
+tell her the greater and more perilous secret that lay in the
+background, but withheld by receiving Lucy's own confidence that she
+herself was at present tormented by her cousin Sedley's courtship.
+He was still, more's the pity, she said, in garrison at Portsmouth,
+but there were hopes of his regiment being ere long sent to the Low
+Countries, since it was believed to be more than half inclined to
+King James. In the meantime he certainly had designs on Lucy's
+portion, and as her father never believed half the stories of his
+debaucheries that were rife, and had a kindness for his only
+brother's orphan, she did not feel secure against his yielding so as
+to provide for Sedley without continuance in the Dutch service.
+
+"I could almost follow the example of running away!" said Lucy.
+
+"I suppose," Anne ventured to say, faltering, "that nothing has been
+heard of poor Mr. Oakshott."
+
+"Nothing at all. His uncle's people, who have come home from
+Muscovy, know nothing of him, and it is thought he may have gone off
+to the plantations. The talk is that Mistress Martha is to be
+handed on to the third brother, but that she is not willing." It
+was clear that there could have been no spectres here, and Lucy went
+on, "But you have told me nothing yet of yourself and your doings,
+my Anne. How well you look, and more than ever the Court lady, even
+in your old travelling habit. Is that the watch the King gave you?"
+
+In private and in public there was quite enough to tell on that
+evening for intimate friends who had not met for a year, and one of
+whom had gone through so many vicissitudes. Nor were the other two
+guests by any means left out of the welcome, and the evening was a
+very happy one.
+
+Mr. Fellowes intimated his intention of going himself to Walwyn with
+the news of Miss Darpent's arrival, and Naomi accepted the
+invitation to remain at Portchester till she could be sent for from
+home.
+
+It was not till the next morning that Anne Woodford could be alone
+with her uncle. As she came downstairs in the morning she saw him
+waiting for her; he held out his hands, and drew her out with him
+into the walled garden that lay behind the house.
+
+"Child! dear child!" said he, "you are welcome to my old eyes. May
+God bless you, as He has aided you to be faithful alike to Him and
+to your King through much trial."
+
+"Ah, sir! I have sorely repented the folly and ambition that would
+not heed your counsel."
+
+"No doubt, my maid; but the spirit of humility and repentance hath
+worked well in you. I fear me, however, that you are come back to
+further trials, since probably Portchester may be no longer our
+home."
+
+"Nor Winchester?"
+
+"Nor Winchester."
+
+"Then is this new King going to persecute as in the old times you
+talk of? He who was brought over to save the Church!"
+
+"He accepts the English Church, my maid, so far as it accepts him.
+All beneficed clergy are required to take the oath of allegiance to
+him before the first of August, now approaching, under pain of
+losing their preferments. Many of my brethren, even our own Bishop
+and Dean, think this merely submission to the powers that be, and
+that it may be lawfully done; but as I hear neither the Archbishop
+himself, nor my good old friends Doctors Ken and Frampton can
+reconcile it to their conscience, any more than my brother Stanbury,
+of Botley, nor I, to take this fresh oath, while the King to whom we
+have sworn is living. Some hold that he has virtually renounced our
+allegiance by his flight. I cannot see it, while he is fighting for
+his crown in Ireland. What say you, Anne, who have seen him; did he
+treat his case as that of an abdicated prince?"
+
+"No, sir, certainly not. All the talk was of his enjoying his own
+again."
+
+"How can I then, consistently with my duty and loyalty, swear to
+this William and Mary as my lawful sovereigns? I say not 'tis
+incumbent on me to refuse to live under them a peaceful life, but
+make oath to them as my King and Queen I cannot, so long as King
+James shall live. True, he has not been a friend to the Church, and
+has wofully trampled on the rights of Englishmen, but I cannot hold
+that this absolves me from my duty to him, any more than David was
+freed from duty to Saul. So, Anne, back must we go to the poverty
+in which I was reared with your own good father."
+
+Anne might grieve, but she felt the gratification of being talked to
+by her uncle as a woman who could understand, as he had talked to
+her mother.
+
+"The first of August!" she repeated, as if it were a note of doom.
+
+"Yes; I hear whispers of a further time of grace, but I know not
+what difference that should make. A Christian man's oath may not be
+broken sooner or later. Well, poverty is the state blessed by our
+Lord, and it may be that I have lived too much at mine ease; but I
+could wish, dear child, that you were safely bestowed in a house of
+your own."
+
+"So do not I," said Anne, "for now I can work for you."
+
+He smiled faintly, and here Mr. Fellowes joined them; a good man
+likewise, but intent on demonstrating the other side of the
+question, and believing that the Popish, persecuting King had
+forfeited his rights, so that there need be no scruple as to
+renouncing what he had thrown up by his flight. It was an endless
+argument, in which each man could only act according to his own
+conscience, and endeavour that this conscience should be as little
+biassed as possible by worldly motives or animosity.
+
+Mr. Fellowes started at once with his servant for Walwyn, and Naomi
+accompanied the two Woodfords to Portchester. In spite of the
+cavalier sentiments of her family, Naomi had too much of the spire
+of her Frondeur father to understand any feeling for duty towards
+the King, who had so decidedly broken his covenant with his people,
+and moreover had so abominably treated the Fellows of Magdalen
+College; and her pity for Anne as a sufferer for her uncle's whim
+quite angered her friend into hot defence of him and his cause.
+
+The dear old parsonage garden under the gray walls, the honeysuckle
+and monthly roses trailing over the porch, the lake-like creek
+between it and green Portsdown Hill, the huge massive keep and
+towers, and the masts in the harbour, the Island hills sleeping in
+blue summer haze--Anne's heart clave to them more than ever for the
+knowledge that the time was short and that the fair spot must be
+given up for the right's sake. Certainly there was some trepidation
+at the thought of the vault, and she had made many vague schemes for
+ascertaining that which her very flesh trembled at the thought of
+any one suspecting; but these were all frustrated, for since the war
+with France had begun, the bailey had been put under repair and
+garrisoned by a detachment of soldiers, the vault had been covered
+in, there was a sentry at the gateway of the castle, and the postern
+door towards the vicarage was fastened up, so that though the parish
+still repaired to church through the wide court solitary wanderings
+there were no longer possible, nor indeed safe for a young woman,
+considering what the soldiery of that period were.
+
+The thought came over her with a shudder as she gazed from her
+window at the creek where she remembered Peregrine sending Charles
+and Sedley adrift in the boat.
+
+The tide was out, the mud glistened in the moonlight, but nothing
+was to be seen more than Anne had beheld on many a summer night
+before, no phantom was evoked before her eyes, no elfin-like form
+revealed his presence, nor did any spirit take shape to upbraid her
+with his unhallowed grave, so close at hand.
+
+No, but Naomi Darpent, yearning for sympathy, came to her side,
+caressed her on that summer night, and told her that Mr. Fellowes
+had gone to ask her of her father, and though she could never love
+again as she had once loved, she thought if her parents wished it,
+she could be happy with so good a man.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV: IN THE MOONLIGHT
+
+
+I have had a dream this evening,
+While the white and gold were fleeting,
+But I need not, need not tell it.
+Where would be the good?
+
+Requiescat in Pace.--JEAN INGELOW.
+
+Anne Woodford sat, on a sultry summer night, by the open window in
+Archfield House at Fareham, busily engaged over the tail of a kite,
+while asleep in a cradle in the corner of the room lay a little boy,
+his apple-blossom cheeks and long flaxen curls lying prone upon his
+pillow as he had tossed when falling asleep in the heat.
+
+The six years since her return had been eventful. Dr. Woodford had
+adhered to his view that his oath of allegiance could not be
+forfeited by James's flight; and he therefore had submitted to be
+ousted from his preferments, resigning his pleasant prebendal house,
+and his sea-side home, and embracing poverty for his personal oath's
+sake, although he was willing to acquiesce in the government of
+William and Mary, and perhaps to rejoice that others had effected
+what he would not have thought it right to do.
+
+Things had been softened to him as regarded his flock by the
+appointment of Mr. Fellowes to Portchester, which was a Crown
+living, though there had been great demur at thus slipping into a
+friend's shoes, so that Dr. Woodford had been obliged to asseverate
+that nothing so much comforted him as leaving the parish in such
+hands, and that he blamed no man for seeing the question of Divine
+right as he did in common with the Non-jurors. The appointment
+opened the way to the marriage with Naomi Darpent, and the pair were
+happily settled at Portchester.
+
+Dr. Woodford and his niece found a tiny house at Winchester, near
+the wharf, with the clear Itchen flowing in front and the green
+hills rising beyond, while in the rear were the ruins of Wolvesey,
+and the buildings of the Cathedral and College. They retained no
+servant except black Hans, poor Peregrine's legacy, who was an
+excellent cook, and capable of all that Anne could not accomplish in
+her hours of freedom.
+
+It was a fall indeed from her ancient aspirations, though there was
+still that bud of hope within her heart. The united means of uncle
+and niece were so scanty that she was fain to offer her services
+daily at Mesdames Reynaud's still flourishing school, where the
+freshness of her continental experiences made her very welcome.
+
+Dr. Woodford occasionally assisted some student preparing for the
+university, but this was not regular occupation, and it was poorly
+paid, so that it was well that fifty pounds a year went at least
+three times as far as it would do in the present day. Though his
+gown and cassock lost their richness and lustre, he was as much
+respected as ever. Bishop Mews often asked him to Wolvesey, and
+allowed him to assist the parochial clergy when it was not necessary
+to utter the royal name, the vergers marshalled him to his own stall
+at daily prayers, and he had free access to Bishop Morley's
+Cathedral library.
+
+The Archfield family still took a house in the Close for the winter
+months, and there a very sober-minded and conventional courtship of
+Lucy took place by Sir Edmund Nutley, a worthy and well-to-do
+gentleman settled on the borders of Parkhurst Forest, in the Isle of
+Wight.
+
+Anne, with the thought of her Charles burning within her heart, was
+a little scandalised at the course of affairs. Sir Edmund was a
+highly worthy man, but not in his first youth, and ponderous--a
+Whig, moreover, and an intimate friend of the masterful governor of
+the island, Lord Cutts, called the "Salamander." He had seen Miss
+Archfield before at the winter and spring Quarter Sessions, and
+though her father was no longer in the Commission of the Peace, the
+residence at Winchester gave him opportunities, and the chief
+obstacle seemed to be the party question. He was more in love than
+was the lady, but she was submissive, and believed that he would be
+a kind husband. She saw, too, that her parents would be much
+disappointed and displeased if she made any resistance to so
+prosperous a settlement, and she was positively glad to be out of
+reach of Sedley's addresses. Such an entirely unenthusiastic
+acceptance was the proper thing, and it only remained to provide for
+Lady Archfield's comfort in the loss of her daughter.
+
+For this the elders turned at once to Anne Woodford. Sir Philip
+made it his urgent entreaty that the Doctor and his niece would take
+up their abode with him, and that Anne would share with the
+grandmother the care of the young Philip, a spirited little fellow
+who would soon be running wild with the grooms, without the
+attention that his aunt had bestowed on him.
+
+Dr. Woodford himself was much inclined to accept the office of
+chaplain to his old friend, who he knew would be far happier for his
+company; and Anne's heart bounded at the thought of bringing up
+Charles's child, but that very start of joy made her blush and
+hesitate, and finally surprise the two old gentlemen by saying, with
+crimson cheeks--
+
+"Sir, your Honour ought to know what might make you change your
+mind. There have been passages between Mr. Archfield and me."
+
+Sir Philip laughed. "Ah, the rogue! You were always little
+sweethearts as children. Why, Anne, you should know better than to
+heed what a young soldier says."
+
+"No doubt you have other views for your son," said Dr. Woodford,
+"and I trust that my niece has too much discretion and sense of
+propriety to think that they can be interfered with on her account."
+
+"Passages!" repeated Sir Philip thoughtfully. "Mistress Anne, how
+much do you mean by that? Surely there is no promise between you?"
+
+"No, sir," said Anne; "I would not give any; but when we parted in
+Flanders he asked me to--to wait for him, and I feel that you ought
+to know it."
+
+"Oh, I understand!" said the baronet. "It was only natural to an
+old friend in a foreign land, and you have too much sense to dwell
+on a young man's folly, though it was an honourable scruple that
+made you tell me, my dear maid. But he is not come or coming yet,
+more's the pity, so there is no need to think about it at present."
+
+Anne's cheeks did not look as if she had attained that wisdom; but
+her conscience was clear, since she had told the fact, and the
+father did not choose to take it seriously. To say how she herself
+loved Charles would have been undignified and nothing to the
+purpose, since her feelings were not what would be regarded, and
+there was no need to mention her full and entire purpose to wed no
+one else. Time enough for that if the proposal were made.
+
+So the uncle and niece entered on their new life, with some loss of
+independence, and to the Doctor a greater loss in the neighbourhood
+of the Cathedral and its library; for after the first year or two,
+as Lady Archfield grew rheumatic, and Sir Philip had his old friend
+to play backgammon and read the Weekly Gazette, they became
+unwilling to make the move to Winchester, and generally stayed at
+home all the winter.
+
+Before this, however, Princess Anne had been at the King's House at
+Winchester for a short time; and Lady Archfield paid due respects to
+her, with Anne in attendance. With the royal faculty of remembering
+everybody, the Princess recognised her namesake, gave her hand to be
+kissed, and was extremely gracious. She was at the moment in the
+height of a quarrel with her sister, and far from delighted with the
+present regime. She sent for Miss Woodford, and, to Anne's
+surprise, laughed over her own escape from the Cockpit, adding, "You
+would not come, child. You were in the right on't. There's no
+gratitude among them! Had I known how I should be served I would
+never have stirred a foot! So 'twas you that carried off the child!
+Tell me what he is like."
+
+And she extracted by questions all that Anne could tell her of the
+life at St. Germain, and the appearance of her little half-brother.
+It was impossible to tell whether she asked from affectionate
+remorse or gossiping interest, but she ended by inquiring whether
+her father's god-daughter were content with her position, or desired
+one--if there were a vacancy--in her own household, where she might
+get a good husband.
+
+Anne declined courteously and respectfully, and was forced to hint
+at an engagement which she could not divulge. She had heard
+Charles's expressions of delight at the arrangement which gave his
+boy to her tender care, warming her heart.
+
+Lady Archfield had fits of talking of finding a good husband for
+Anne Woodford among the Cathedral clergy, but the maiden was so
+necessary to her, and so entirely a mother to little Philip, that
+she soon let the idea drop. Perhaps it was periodically revived,
+when, about three times a year, there arrived a letter from Charles.
+He wrote in good spirits, evidently enjoying his campaigns, and with
+no lack of pleasant companions, English, Scotch, and Irish
+Jacobites, with whom he lived in warm friendship and wholesome
+emulation. He won promotion, and the county Member actually came
+out of his way to tell Sir Philip what he had heard from the
+Imperial ambassador of young Archfield's distinguished services at
+the battle of Salankamen, only regretting that he was not fighting
+under King William's colours. Little Philip pranced about cutting
+off Turks' heads in the form of poppies, 'like papa,' for whose
+safety Anne taught him to pray night and morning.
+
+Pride in his son's exploits was a compensation to the father, who
+declared them to be better than vegetating over the sheepfolds, like
+Robert Oakshott, or than idling at Portsmouth, like Sedley
+Archfield.
+
+That young man's regiment had been ordered to Ireland during the
+campaign that followed the battle of Boyne Water. He had suddenly
+returned from thence, cashiered: by his own story, the victim of
+the enmity of the Dutch General Ginkel; according to another
+version, on account of brutal excesses towards the natives and
+insolence to his commanding officer. Courts-martial had only just
+been introduced, and Sir Philip could believe in a Whig invention
+doing injustice to a member of a loyal family, so that his doors
+were open to his nephew, and Sedley haunted them whenever he had no
+other resource; but he spent most of his time between Newmarket and
+other sporting centres, and contrived to get a sort of maintenance
+by bets at races, cock-fights, and bull-baitings, and by extensive
+gambling. Evil reports of him came from time to time, but Sir
+Philip was loth to think ill of the son of his brother, or to
+forbode that as his grandson grew older, such influence might be
+dangerous.
+
+In his uncle's presence Sedley was on his good behaviour; but if he
+caught Miss Woodford without that protection, he attempted rude
+compliments, and when repelled by her dignified look and manner,
+sneered at the airs of my lady's waiting-woman, and demanded how
+long she meant to mope after Charley, who would never look so low.
+"She need not be so ungracious to a poor soldier. She might have to
+put up with worse."
+
+Moreover, he deliberately incited Philip to mischief, putting foul
+words into the little mouth, and likewise giving forbidden food and
+drink, lauding evil sports, and mocking at obedience to any
+authority, especially Miss Woodford's. Philip was very fond of his
+Nana, and in general good and obedient; but what high-spirited boy
+is proof against the allurements of the only example before him of
+young manhood, assuring him that it was manly not to mind what the
+women said, nor to be tied to the apron-strings of his grand-dame's
+abigail?
+
+The child had this summer thus been actually taken to the outskirts
+of a bull-fight, whence he had been brought home in great disgrace
+by Ralph, the old servant who had been charged to look after his
+out-door amusements, and to ride with him. The grandfather was
+indeed more shocked at the danger and the vulgarity of the sport
+than its cruelty, but Philip had received his first flogging, and
+his cousin had been so sharply rebuked that--to the great relief of
+Anne and of Lady Archfield--he had not since appeared at Fareham
+House.
+
+The morrow would be Philip's seventh birthday, a stage which would
+take him farther out of Anne's power. He was no longer to sleep in
+her chamber, but in one of his own with Ralph for his protector, and
+he was to begin Latin with Dr. Woodford. So great was his delight
+that he had gone to bed all the sooner in order to bring the great
+day more quickly, and Anne was glad of the opportunity of finishing
+the kite, which was to be her present, for Ralph to help him fly
+upon Portsdown Hill.
+
+That great anniversary, so delightful to him, with pony and whip
+prepared for him--what a day of confusion, distress, and
+wretchedness did it not recall to his elders? Anne could not choose
+but recall the time, as she sat alone in the window, looking out
+over the garden, the moon beginning to rise, and the sunset light
+still colouring the sky in the north-west, just as it had done when
+she returned home after the bonfire. The events of that sad morning
+had faded out of the foreground. The Oakshott family seemed to have
+resigned themselves to the mystery of Peregrine's fate. Only his
+mother had declined from the time of his disappearance. When it was
+ascertained that his uncle had died in Russia, and that nothing had
+been heard of him there, it seemed to bring on a fresh stage of her
+illness, and she had expired at last in Martha Browning's arms, her
+last words being a blessing not only to Robert, but to Peregrine,
+and a broken entreaty to her husband to forgive the boy, for he
+might have been better if they had used him well.
+
+Martha was then found to hold out against the idea of his being
+dead. Little affection and scant civility as she had received from
+him, her dutiful heart had attached itself to her destined lord, and
+no doubt her imagination had been excited by his curious abilities,
+and her compassion by the persecution he suffered at home. At any
+rate, when, after a proper interval, the Major tried to transfer her
+to his remaining son, she held out against it for a long interval,
+until at last, after full three years, the desolation and
+disorganisation of Oakwood without a mistress, a severe illness of
+the Major, and the distress of his son, so worked upon her feelings
+that she consented to the marriage with Robert, and had ever since
+been the ruling spirit at Oakwood, and a very different one from
+what had been expected--sensible, kindly, and beneficent, and
+allowing the young husband more liberty and indulgence than he had
+ever known before.
+
+The remembrance of Peregrine seemed to have entirely passed away,
+and Anne had been troubled with no more apparitions, so that though
+she thought over the strange scene of that terrible morning, the
+rapid combat, the hasty concealment, the distracted face of the
+unhappy youth, it was with the thought that time had been a healer,
+and that Charles might surely now return home. And what then?
+
+She raised her eyes to the open window, and what did she behold in
+the moonlight streaming full upon the great tree rose below? It was
+the same face and figure that had three times startled her before,
+the figure dark and the face very white in the moonlight, but like
+nothing else, and with that odd, one-sided feather as of old. It
+had flitted ere she could point its place--gone in a single flash--
+but she was greatly startled! Had it come to protest against the
+scheme she had begun to indulge in on that very night of all nights,
+or had it merely been her imagination? For nothing was visible,
+though she leant from the window, no sound was to be heard, though
+when she tried to complete her work, her hands trembled and the
+paper rustled, so that Philip showed symptoms of wakening, and she
+had to defer her task till early morning.
+
+She said nothing of her strange sight, and Phil had a happy
+successful birthday, flying the kite with a propitious wind, and
+riding into Portsmouth on his new pony with grandpapa. But there
+was one strange event. The servants had a holiday, and some of them
+went into Portsmouth, black Hans, who never returned, being one.
+The others had lost sight of him, but had not been uneasy, knowing
+him to be perfectly well able to find his way home; but as he never
+appeared, the conclusion was that he must have been kidnapped by
+some ship's crew to serve as a cook. He had not been very happy
+among the servants at Fareham, who laughed at his black face and
+Dutch English, and he would probably have gone willingly with
+Dutchmen; but Anne and her uncle were grieved, and felt as if they
+had failed in the trust that poor Sir Peregrine had left them.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV: TIDINGS FROM THE IRON GATES
+
+
+"He has more cause to be proud. Where is he wounded?"
+
+Coriolanus.
+
+It was a wet autumn day, when the yellow leaves of the poplars in
+front of the house were floating down amid the misty rain; Dr.
+Woodford had gone two days before to consult a book in the Cathedral
+library, and was probably detained at Winchester by the weather;
+Lady Archfield was confined to her bed by a sharp attack of
+rheumatism. Sir Philip was taking his after-dinner doze in his arm-
+chair; and little Philip was standing by Anne, who was doing her
+best to keep him from awakening his grandfather, as she partly read,
+partly romanced, over the high-crowned hatted fishermen in the
+illustrations to Izaak Walton's Complete Angler.
+
+He had just, caught by the musical sound, made her read to him a
+second time Marlowe's verses,
+
+'Come live with me and be my love,'
+
+and informed her that his Nana was his love, and that she was to
+watch him fish in the summer rivers, when the servant who had been
+sent to meet His Majesty's mail and extract the Weekly Gazette came
+in, bringing not only that, but a thick, sealed packet, the aspect
+of which made the boy dance and exclaim, "A packet from my papa!
+Oh! will he have written an answer to my own letter to him?"
+
+But Sir Philip, who had started up at the opening of the door, had
+no sooner glanced at the packet than he cried out, "'Tis not his
+hand!" and when he tried to break the heavy seals and loosen the
+string, his hands shook so much that he pushed it over to Anne,
+saying, "You open it; tell me if my boy is dead."
+
+Anne's alarm took the course of speed. She tore off the wrapper,
+and after one glance said, "No, no, it cannot be the worst; here is
+something from himself at the end. Here, sir."
+
+"I cannot! I cannot," said the poor old man, as the tears dimmed
+his spectacles, and he could not adjust them. "Read it, my dear
+wench, and let me know what I am to tell his poor mother."
+
+And he sank into a chair, holding between his knees his little
+grandson, who stood gazing with widely-opened blue eyes.
+
+"He sends love, duty, blessing. Oh, he talks of coming home, so do
+not fear, sir!" cried Anne, a vivid colour on her cheeks.
+
+"But what is it?" asked the father. "Tell me first--the rest
+after."
+
+"It is in the side--the left side," said Anne, gathering up in her
+agitation the sense of the crabbed writing as best she could. "They
+have not extracted the bullet, but when they have, he will do well."
+
+"God grant it! Who writes?"
+
+"Norman Graham of Glendhu--captain in his K. K. Regiment of
+Volunteer Dragoons. That's his great friend! Oh, sir, he has
+behaved so gallantly! He got his wound in saving the colours from
+the Turks, and kept his hands clutched over them as his men carried
+him out of the battle."
+
+Philip gave another little spring, and his grandfather bade Anne
+read the letter to him in detail.
+
+It told how the Imperial forces had met a far superior number of
+Turks at Lippa, and had sustained a terrible defeat, with the loss
+of their General Veterani, how Captain Archfield had received a
+scimitar wound in the cheek while trying to save his commander, but
+had afterwards dashed forward among the enemy, recovered the colours
+of the regiment, and by a desperate charge of his fellow-soldiers,
+who were devotedly attached to him, had been borne off the field
+with a severe wound on the left side. Retreat had been immediately
+necessary, and he had been taken on an ammunition waggon along rough
+roads to the fortress called the Iron Gates of Transylvania, whence
+this letter was written, and sent by the messenger who was to summon
+the Elector of Saxony to the aid of the remnant of the army. It had
+not yet been possible to probe the wound, but Charles gave a
+personal message, begging his parents not to despond but to believe
+him recovering, so long as they did not see his servant return
+without him, and he added sundry tender and dutiful messages to his
+parents, and a blessing to his son, with thanks for the pretty
+letter he had not been able to answer (but which, his friend said,
+was lying spread on his pillow, not unstained with blood), and he
+also told his boy always to love and look up to her who had ever
+been as a mother to him. Anne could hardly read this, and the scrap
+in feeble irregular lines she handed to Sir Philip. It was--
+
+With all my heart I entreat pardon for all the errors that have
+grieved you. I leave you my child to comfort you, and mine own
+true love, whom yon will cherish. She will cherish you as a
+daughter, as she will be, with your consent, if God spares me to
+come home. The love of all my soul to her, my mother, sister,
+and you."
+
+There was a scrawl for conclusion and signature, and Captain Graham
+added--
+
+Writing and dictating have greatly exhausted him. He would have
+said more, but he says the lady can explain much, and he repeats
+his urgent entreaties that you will take her to your heart as a
+daughter, and that his son will love and honour her.
+
+There was a final postscript--
+
+The surgeon thinks him better for having disburthened his mind.
+
+"My child," said Sir Philip, with a long sigh, looking up at Anne,
+who had gathered the boy into her arms, and was hiding her face
+against his little awe-struck head, "my child, have you read?"
+
+"No," faltered Anne.
+
+"Read then." And as she would have taken it, he suddenly drew her
+into his embrace and kissed her as the eyes of both overflowed. "My
+poor girl!" he said, "this is as hard to you as to us! Oh, my brave
+boy!" and he let her lay her head on his shoulder and held her hand
+as they wept together, while little Phil stared for a moment or two
+at so strange a sight and then burst out with a great cry--
+
+"You shall not cry! you shall not! my papa is not dead!" and he
+stamped his little foot. "No, he isn't. He will get well; the
+letter said so, and I will go and tell grandmamma."
+
+The need of stopping this roused them both; Sir Philip, heavily
+groaning, went away to break the tidings to his wife, and Anne went
+down on her knees on the hearth to caress the boy, and help him to
+understand his father's state and realise the valorous deeds that
+would always be a crown to him, and which already made the little
+fellow's eye flash and his fair head go higher.
+
+By and by she was sent for to Lady Archfield's room, and there she
+had again to share the grief and the fears and try to dwell on the
+glory and the hopes. When in a calmer moment the parents
+interrogated her on what had passed with Charles, it was not in the
+spirit of doubt and censure, but rather as dwelling on all that was
+to be told of one whom alike they loved, and finally Sir Philip
+said, "I see, dear child, I would not believe how far it had gone
+before, though you tried to tell me. Whatever betide, you have won
+a daughter's place."
+
+It was true that naturally a far more distinguished match would have
+been sought for the heir, and he could hardly have carried out his
+purpose without more opposition than under their present feelings,
+his parents supposed themselves likely to make, but they really
+loved Anne enough to have yielded at last; and Lady Nutley, coming
+home with a fuller knowledge of her brother's heart, prevented any
+reaction, and Anne was allowed full sympathies as a betrothed
+maiden, in the wearing anxiety that continued in the absence of all
+intelligence. On the principle of doing everything to please him,
+she was even encouraged to write to Charles in the packet in which
+he was almost implored to recover, though all felt doubts whether he
+were alive even while the letters were in hand, and this doubt
+lasted long and long. It was all very well to say that as long as
+the servant did not return his master must be safe--perhaps himself
+on the way home; but the journey from Transylvania was so long, and
+there were so many difficulties in the way of an Englishman, that
+there was little security in this assurance. And so the winter set
+in while the suspense lasted; and still Dr. Woodford spoke Charles's
+name in the intercessions in the panelled household chapel, and his
+mother and Anne prayed together and separately, and his little son
+morning and evening entreated God to "Bless papa, and make him well,
+and bring him home."
+
+Thus passed more than six weeks, during which Sir Philip's attention
+was somewhat diverted from domestic anxieties by an uninvited visit
+to Portchester from Mr. Charnock, who had once been a college mate
+of Mr. Fellowes, and came professing anxiety, after all these years,
+to renew the friendship which had been broken when they took
+different sides on the election of Dr. Hough to the Presidency of
+Magdalen College. From his quarters at the Rectory Mr. Charnock had
+gone over to Fareham, and sounded Sir Philip on the practicability
+of a Jacobite rising, and whether he and his people would join it.
+The old gentleman was much distressed, his age would not permit him
+to exert himself in either cause, and he had been too much disturbed
+by James's proceedings to feel desirous of his restoration, though
+his loyal heart would not permit of his opposing it, and he had
+never overtly acknowledged William of Orange as his sovereign.
+
+He could only reply that in the present state of his family he
+neither could nor would undertake anything, and he urgently pleaded
+against any insurrection that could occasion a civil war.
+
+There was reason to think that Sedley had no hesitation in promising
+to use all his influence over his uncle's tenants, and considerably
+magnifying their extremely small regard to him--nay, probably,
+dwelling on his own expectations.
+
+At any rate, even when Charnock was gone, Sedley continued to talk
+big of the coming changes and his own distinguished part in them.
+Indeed one very trying effect of the continued alarm about Charles
+was that he took to haunting the place, and report declared that he
+had talked loudly and coarsely of his cousin's death and his uncle's
+dotage, and of his soon being called in to manage the property for
+the little heir--insomuch that Sir Edmund Nutley thought it
+expedient to let him know that Charles, on going on active service
+soon after he had come of age, had sent home a will, making his son,
+who was a young gentleman of very considerable property on his
+mother's side, ward to his grandfather first, and then to Sir Edmund
+Nutley himself and to Dr. Woodford.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI: THE LEGEND OF PENNY GRIM
+
+
+"O dearest Marjorie, stay at hame,
+ For dark's the gate ye have to go,
+For there's a maike down yonder glen
+ Hath frightened me and many me."
+
+HOGG.
+
+"Nana," said little Philip in a meditative voice, as he looked into
+the glowing embers of the hall fire, "when do fairies leave off
+stealing little boys?"
+
+"I do not believe they ever steal them, Phil."
+
+"Oh, yes they do;" and he came and stood by her with his great
+limpid blue eyes wide open. "Goody Dearlove says they stole a
+little boy, and his name was Penny Grim."
+
+"Goody Dearlove is a silly old body to tell my boy such stories,"
+said Anne, disguising how much she was startled.
+
+"Oh, but Ralph Huntsman says 'tis true, and he knew him."
+
+"How could he know him when he was stolen?"
+
+"They put another instead," said the boy, a little puzzled, but too
+young to make his story consistent. "And he was an elf--a cross
+spiteful elf, that was always vexing folk. And they stole him again
+every seven years. Yes--that was it--they stole him every seven
+years."
+
+"Whom, Phil; I don't understand--the boy or the elf?" she said,
+half-diverted, even while shocked at the old story coming up in such
+a form.
+
+"The elf, I think," he said, bending his brows; "he comes back, and
+then they steal him again. Yes; and at last they stole him quite--
+quite away--but it is seven years, and Goody Dearlove says he is to
+be seen again!"
+
+"No!" exclaimed Anne, with an irrepressible start of dismay. "Has
+any one seen him, or fancied so?" she added, though feeling that her
+chance of maintaining her rational incredulity was gone.
+
+"Goody Dearlove's Jenny did," was the answer. "She saw him stand
+out on the beach at night by moonlight, and when she screamed out,
+he was gone like the snuff of a candle."
+
+"Saw him? What was he like?" said Anne, struggling for the
+dispassionate tone of the governess, and recollecting that Jenny
+Dearlove was a maid at Portchester Rectory.
+
+"A little bit of a man, all twisty on one side, and a feather
+sticking out. Ralph said they always were like that;" and Phil's
+imitation, with his lithe, graceful little figure, of Ralph's clumsy
+mimicry was sufficient to show that there was some foundation for
+this story, and she did not answer at once, so that he added, "I am
+seven, Nana; do you think they will get me?"
+
+"Oh no, no, Phil, there's no fear at all of that. I don't believe
+fairies steal anybody, but even old women like Goody Dearlove only
+say they steal little tiny babies if they are left alone before they
+are christened."
+
+The boy drew a long breath, but still asked, "Was Penny Grim a
+little baby?"
+
+"So they said," returned Anne, by no means interfering with the
+name, and with a quailing heart as she thought of the child's ever
+knowing what concern his father had in that disappearance. She was
+by no means sorry to have the conversation broken off by Sir
+Philip's appearance, booted and buskined, prepared for an expedition
+to visit a flock of sheep and their lambs under the shelter of
+Portsdown Hill, and in a moment his little namesake was frisking
+round eager to go with grandpapa.
+
+"Well, 'tis a brisk frost. Is it too far for him, think you,
+Mistress Anne?"
+
+"Oh no, sir; he is a strong little man and a walk will only be good
+for him, if he does not stand still too long and get chilled. Run,
+Phil, and ask nurse for your thick coat and stout shoes and
+leggings."
+
+"His grandmother only half trusts me with him," said Sir Philip,
+laughing. "I tell her she was not nearly so careful of his father.
+I remember him coming in crusted all over with ice, so that he could
+hardly get his clothes off, but she fancies the boy may have some of
+his poor mother's weakliness about him."
+
+"I see no tokens of it, sir."
+
+"Grand-dames will be anxious, specially over one chick. Heigho!
+Winter travelling must be hard in Germany, and posts do not come.
+How now, my man! Are you rolled up like a very Russian bear? The
+poor ewes will think you are come to eat up their lambs."
+
+"I'll growl at them," said Master Philip, uttering a sound
+sufficient to disturb the nerves of any sheep if he were permitted
+to make it, and off went grandfather and grandson together, Sir
+Philip only pausing at the door to say--
+
+"My lady wants you, Anne; she is fretting over the delay. I fear,
+though I tell her it bodes well."
+
+Anne watched for a moment the hale old gentleman briskly walking on,
+the merry child frolicking hither and thither round him, and the
+sturdy body-servant Ralph, without whom he never stirred, plodding
+after, while Keeper, the only dog allowed to follow to the
+sheepfolds, marched decorously along, proud of the distinction.
+Then she went up to Lady Archfield, who could not be perfectly easy
+as to the precious grandchild being left to his own devices in the
+cold, while Sir Philip was sure to run into a discussion with the
+shepherd over the turnips, which were too much of a novelty to be
+approved by the Hampshire mind. It was quite true that she could
+not watch that little adventurous spirit with the same absence of
+anxiety as she had felt for her own son in her younger days, and
+Anne had to devote herself to soothing and diverting her mind, till
+Dr. Woodford knocked at the door to read and converse with her.
+
+The one o'clock dinner waited for the grandfather and grandson, and
+when they came at last, little Philip looked somewhat blue with cold
+and more subdued than usual, and his grandfather observed severely
+that he had been a naughty boy, running into dangerous places,
+sliding where he ought not, and then muttered under his breath that
+Sedley ought to have known better than to have let him go there.
+
+Discipline did not permit even a darling like little Phil to speak
+at dinner-time; but he fidgeted, and the tears came into his eyes,
+and Anne hearing a little grunt behind Sir Philip's chair, looked
+up, and was aware that old Ralph was mumbling what to her ears
+sounded like: 'Knew too well.' But his master, being slightly
+deaf, did not hear, and went on to talk of his lambs and of how
+Sedley had joined them on the road, but had not come back to dinner.
+
+Phil was certainly quieter than usual that afternoon, and sat at
+Anne's feet by the fire, filling little sacks with bran to be loaded
+on his toy cart to go to the mill, but not chattering as usual. She
+thought him tired, and hearing a sort of sigh took him on her knee,
+when he rested his fair little head on her shoulder, and presently
+said in a low voice--
+
+"I've seen him."
+
+"Who? Not your father? Oh, my child!" cried Anne, in a sudden
+horror.
+
+"Oh no--the Penny Grim thing."
+
+"What? Tell me, Phil dear, how or where?"
+
+"By the end of the great big pond; and he threw up his arms, and
+made a horrid grin." The boy trembled and hid his face against her.
+
+"But go on, Phil. He can't hurt you, you know. Do tell me. Where
+were you?"
+
+"I was sliding on the ice. Grandpapa was ever so long talking to
+Bill Shepherd, and looking at the men cutting turnips, and I got
+cold and tired, and ran about with Cousin Sedley till we got to the
+big pond, and we began to slide, and the ice was so nice and hard--
+you can't think. He showed me how to take a good long slide, and
+said I might go out to the other end of the pond by the copse, by
+the great old tree. And I set off, but before I got there, out it
+jumped, out of the copse, and waved its arms, and made _that_ face."
+
+He cowered into her bosom again and almost cried. Anne knew the
+place, and was ready to start with dismay in her turn. It was such
+a pool as is frequent in chalk districts--shallow at one end, but
+deep and dangerous with springs at the other.
+
+"But, Phil dear," she said, "it was well you were stopped; the ice
+most likely would have broken at that end, and then where would
+Nana's little man have been?"
+
+"Cousin Sedley never told me not," said the boy in self-defence; "he
+was whistling to me to go on. But when I tumbled down Ralph and
+grandpapa and all _did_ scold me so--and Cousin Sedley was gone.
+Why did they scold me, Nana? I thought it was brave not to mind
+danger--like papa."
+
+"It is brave when one can do any good by it, but not to slide on bad
+ice, when one must be drowned," said Anne. "Oh, my dear, dear
+little fellow, it was a blessed thing you saw _that_, whatever it
+was! But why do you call it Pere--Penny Grim?"
+
+"It was, Nana! It was a little man--rather. And one-sided looking,
+with a bit of hair sticking out, just like the picture of Riquet-
+with-a-tuft in your French fairy-book."
+
+This last was convincing to Anne that the child must have seen the
+phantom of seven years ago, since he was not repeating the popular
+description he had given her in the morning, but one quite as
+individual. She asked if grandpapa had seen it.
+
+"Oh no; he was in the shed, and only came out when he heard Ralph
+scolding me. Was it a wicked urchin come to steal me, Nana?"
+
+"No, I think not," she answered. "Whatever it was, I think it came
+because God was taking care of His child, and warning him from
+sliding into the deep pool. We will thank him, Phil. 'He shall
+give his angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy ways.'"
+And to that verse she soothed the tired child till he fell asleep,
+and she could lay him on the settle, and cover him with a cloak,
+musing the while on the strange story, until presently she started
+up and repaired to the buttery in search of the old servant.
+
+"Ralph, what is this Master Philip tells me?" she asked. "What has
+he seen?"
+
+"Well, Mistress Anne, that is what I can't tell--no, not I; but I
+knows this, that the child has had a narrow escape of his precious
+life, and I'd never trust him again with that there Sedley--no, not
+for hundreds of pounds."
+
+"You _really_ think, Ralph--?"
+
+"What can I think, ma'am? When I finds he's been a-setting that
+there child to slide up to where he'd be drownded as sure as he's
+alive, and you see, if we gets ill news of Master Archfield (which
+God forbid), there's naught but the boy atween him and this here
+place--and he over head and ears in debt. Be it what it might that
+the child saw, it saved the life of him."
+
+"Did you see it?"
+
+"No, Mistress Anne; I can't say as I did. I only heard the little
+master cry out as he fell. I was in the shed, you see, taking a
+pipe to keep me warm. And when I took him up, he cried out like one
+dazed. 'Twas Penny Grim, Ralph! Keep me. He is come to steal me."
+But Sir Philip wouldn't hear nothing of it, only blamed Master Phil
+for being foolhardy, and for crying for the fall, and me for letting
+him out of sight."
+
+"And Mr. Sedley--did he see it?"
+
+"Well, mayhap he did, for I saw him as white as a sheet and his eyes
+staring out of his head; but that might have been his evil
+conscience."
+
+"What became of him?"
+
+"To say the truth, ma'am, I believe he be at the Brocas Arms, a-
+drowning of his fright--if fright it were, with Master Harling's
+strong waters."
+
+"But this apparition, this shape--or whatever it is? What put it
+into Master Philip's head? What has been heard of it?"
+
+Ralph looked unwilling. "Bless you, Mistress Anne, there's been
+some idle talk among the women folk, as how that there crooked slip
+of Major Oakshott's, as they called Master Perry or Penny, and said
+was a changeling, has been seen once and again. Some says as the
+fairies have got him, and 'tis the seven year for him to come back
+again. And some says that he met with foul play, and 'tis the ghost
+of him, but I holds it all mere tales, and I be sure 'twere nothing
+bad as stopped little master on that there pond. So I be."
+
+Anne could not but be of the same mind, but her confusion, alarm,
+and perplexity were great. It seemed strange, granting that this
+were either spirit or elf connected with Peregrine Oakshott, that it
+should interfere on behalf of Charles Archfield's child, and on the
+sweet hypothesis that a guardian angel had come to save the child,
+it was in a most unaccountable form.
+
+And more pressing than any such mysterious idea was the tangible
+horror of Ralph's suggestion, too well borne out by the boy's own
+unconscious account of the adventure. It was too dreadful, too real
+a peril to be kept to herself, and she carried the story to her
+uncle on his return, but without speaking of the spectral warning.
+Not only did she know that he would not attend to it, but the hint,
+heard for the first time, that Peregrine was supposed to have met
+with foul play, sealed her lips, just when she still was hoping
+against hope that Charles might be on the way home. But that Ralph
+believed, and little Philip's own account confirmed, that his cousin
+had incited the little heir to the slide that would have been fatal
+save for his fall, she told with detail, and entreated that the
+grandfather might be warned, and some means be found of ensuring the
+safety of her darling, the motherless child!
+
+To her disappointment Dr. Woodford was not willing to take alarm.
+He did not think so ill of Sedley as to believe him capable of such
+a secret act of murder, and he had no great faith in Ralph's
+sagacity, besides that he thought his niece's nerves too much
+strained by the long suspense to be able to judge fairly. He
+thought it would be cruel to the grandparents, and unjust to Sedley,
+to make such a frightful suggestion without further grounds during
+their present state of anxiety, and as to the boy's safety, which
+Anne pleaded with an uncontrollable passion of tears, he believed
+that it was provided for by watchfulness on the part of his two
+constant guardians, as well as himself, since, even supposing the
+shocking accusation to be true, Sedley would not involve himself in
+danger of suspicion, and it was already understood that he was not a
+fit companion for his little cousin to be trusted with. Philip had
+already brought home words and asked questions that distressed his
+grandmother, and nobody was willing to leave him alone with the ex-
+lieutenant. So again the poor maiden had to hold her peace under an
+added burthen of anxiety and many a prayer.
+
+When the country was ringing with the tidings of Sir George
+Barclay's conspiracy for the assassination of William III, it was
+impossible not to hope that Sedley's boastful tongue might have
+brought him sufficiently under suspicion to be kept for a while
+under lock and key; but though he did not appear at Fareham, there
+was reason to suppose that he was as usual haunting the taverns and
+cockpits of Portsmouth.
+
+No one went much abroad that winter. Sir Philip, perhaps from
+anxiety and fretting, had a fit of the gout, and Anne kept herself
+and her charge within the garden or the street of the town. In fact
+there was a good deal of danger on the roads. The neighbourhood of
+the seaport was always lawless, and had become more so since Sir
+Philip had ceased to act as Justice of the Peace, and there were
+reports of highway robberies of an audacious kind, said to be
+perpetrated by a band calling themselves the Black Gang, under a
+leader known as Piers Pigwiggin, who were alleged to be half
+smuggler, half Jacobite, and to have their headquarters somewhere in
+the back of the Isle of Wight, in spite of the Governor, the
+terrible Salamander, Lord Cutts, who was, indeed, generally absent
+with the army.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII: THE VAULT
+
+
+"Heaven awards the vengeance due."
+
+COWPER.
+
+The weary days had begun to lengthen before the door of the hall was
+flung open, and little Phil, forgetting his bow at the door, rushed
+in, "Here's a big packet from foreign parts! Harry had to pay ever
+so much for it."
+
+"I have wellnigh left off hoping," sighed the poor mother. "Tell me
+the worst at once."
+
+"No fear, my lady," said her husband. "Thank God! 'Tis our son's
+hand."
+
+There was the silence for a moment of intense relief, and then the
+little boy was called to cut the silk and break the seals.
+
+Joy ineffable! There were three letters--for Master Philip
+Archfield, for Mistress Anne Jacobina Woodford, and for Sir Philip
+himself. The old gentleman glanced over it, caught the words
+'better,' and 'coming home,' then failed to read through tears of
+joy as before through tears of sorrow, and was fain to hand the
+sheet to his old friend to be read aloud, while little Philip,
+handling as a treasure the first letter he had ever received, though
+as yet he was unable to decipher it, stood between his grandfather's
+knees listening as Dr. Woodford read--
+
+DEAR AND HONOURED SIR--I must ask your pardon for leaving you
+without tidings so long, but while my recovery still hung in
+doubt I thought it would only distress you to hear of the
+fluctuations that I went through, and the pain to which the
+surgeons put me for a long time in vain. Indeed frequently I had
+no power either to think or speak, until at last with much
+difficulty, and little knowledge or volition of my own, my
+inestimable friend Graham brought me to Vienna, where I have at
+length been relieved from my troublesome companion, and am
+enjoying the utmost care and kindness from my friend's mother, a
+near kinswoman, as indeed he is himself, of the brave and
+lamented Viscount Dundee. My wound is healing finally, as I
+hope, and though I have not yet left my bed, my friends assure me
+that I am on the way to full and complete recovery, for which I
+am more thankful to the Almighty than I could have been before I
+knew what suffering and illness meant. As soon as I can ride
+again, which they tell me will be in a fortnight or three weeks,
+I mean to set forth on my way home. I cannot describe to you how
+I am longing after the sight of you all, nor how home-sick I have
+become. I never had time for it before, but I have lain for
+hours bringing all your faces before me, my father's, and
+mother's, my sister's, and that of her whom I hope to call my
+own; and figuring to myself that of the little one. I have
+thought much over my past life, and become sensible of much that
+was amiss, and while earnestly entreating your forgiveness,
+especially for having absented myself all these years, I hope to
+return so as to be more of a comfort than I was in the days of my
+rash and inconsiderate youth. I am of course at present
+invalided, but I want to consult you, honoured sir, before
+deciding whether it be expedient for me to resign my commission.
+How I thank and bless you for the permission you have given me,
+and the love you bear to my own heart's joy, no words can tell.
+It shall be the study of my life to be worthy of her and of you.--
+And so no more from your loving and dutiful son, CHARLES
+ARCHFIELD.
+
+Having drunk in these words with her ears, Anne left Phil to have
+his note interpreted by his grandparents, and fled away to enjoy her
+own in her chamber, yet it was as short as could be and as sweet.
+
+Mine own, mine own sweet Anne, sweetheart of good old days, your
+letter gave me strength to go through with it. The doctors could
+not guess why I was so much better and smiled through all their
+torments. These are our first, I hope our last letters, for I
+shall soon follow them home, and mine own darling will be mine.--
+Thine own, C. A.
+
+She had but short time to dwell on it and kiss it, for little Philip
+was upon her, waving his letter, which he already knew by heart; and
+galloping all over the house to proclaim the good news to the old
+servants, who came crowding into the hall, trembling with joy, to
+ask if there were indeed tidings of Mr. Archfield's return,
+whereupon the glad father caused his grandson to carry each a full
+glass of wine to drink to the health of the young master.
+
+Anne had at first felt only the surpassing rapture of the
+restoration of Charles, but there ensued another delight in the
+security his recovery gave to the life of his son. Sedley Archfield
+would not be likely to renew his attempt, and if only on that
+account the good news should be spread as widely as possible. She
+was the first to suggest the relief it would be to Mr. Fellowes, who
+had never divested himself of the feeling that he ought to have
+divined his pupil's intention.
+
+Dr. Woodford offered to ride to Portchester with the news, and Sir
+Philip, in the gladness of his heart, proposed that Anne should go
+with him and see her friend.
+
+Shall it be told how on the way Anne's mind was assailed by feminine
+misgivings whether three and twenty could be as fair in her
+soldier's eyes as seventeen had been? Old maidenhood came earlier
+then than in these days, and Anne knew that she was looked upon as
+an old waiting-gentlewoman or governess by the belles of Winchester.
+Her glass might tell her that her eyes were as softly brown, her
+hair as abundant, her cheek as clear and delicately moulded as ever,
+but there was no one to assure her that the early bloom had not
+passed away, and that she had not rather gained than lost in dignity
+of bearing and the stately poise of the head, which the jealous
+damsels called Court airs. "And should he be disappointed, I shall
+see it in his eyes," she said to herself, "and then his promise
+shall not bind him, though it will break my heart, and oh! how hard
+to resign my Phil to a strange stepmother." Still her heart was
+lighter than for many a long year, as she cantered along in the
+brisk March air, while the drops left by the departing frost
+glistened in the sunshine, and the sea lay stretched in a delicate
+gray haze. The old castle rose before her in its familiar home-like
+massiveness as they turned towards the Rectory, where in that
+sheltered spot the well-known clusters of crocuses were opening
+their golden hearts to the sunshine, and recalling the days when
+Anne was as sunny-hearted as they, and she felt as if she could be
+as bright again.
+
+In Mrs. Fellowes's parlour they found an unexpected guest, no other
+than Mrs. Oakshott.
+
+'Gadding about' not being the fashion of the Archfield household,
+Anne had not seen the lady for several years, and was agreeably
+surprised by her appearance. Perhaps the marks of smallpox had
+faded, perhaps motherhood had given expression, and what had been
+gaunt ungainliness in the maiden had rounded into a certain
+importance in the matron, nor had her dress, though quiet, any of
+the Puritan rigid ugliness that had been complained of, and though
+certainly not beautiful, she was a person to inspire respect.
+
+It was explained that she was waiting for her husband, who was gone
+with Mr. Fellowes to speak to the officer in command of the soldiers
+at the castle. "For," said she, "I am quite convinced that there is
+something that ought to be brought to light, and it may be in that
+vault."
+
+Anne's heart gave such a throb as almost choked her.
+
+Dr. Woodford asked what the lady meant.
+
+"Well, sir, when spirits and things 'tis not well to talk of are
+starting up and about here, there, and everywhere, 'tis plain there
+must be cause for it."
+
+"I do not quite take your meaning, madam."
+
+"Ah, well! you gentlemen, reverend ones especially, are the last to
+hear such things. There's the poor old Major, he won't believe a
+word of it, but you know, Mistress Woodford. I see it in your face.
+Have you seen anything?"
+
+"Not here, not now," faltered Anne. "You have, Mrs. Fellowes?"
+
+"I have heard of some foolish fright of the maids," said Naomi,
+"partly their own fancy, or perhaps caught from the sentry. There
+is no keeping those giddy girls from running after the soldiers."
+
+Perhaps Naomi hoped by throwing out this hint to conduct her
+visitors off into the safer topic of domestic delinquencies, but
+Mrs. Oakshott was far too earnest to be thus diverted, and she
+exclaimed, "Ah, they saw him, I'll warrant!"
+
+"Him?" the Doctor asked innocently.
+
+"Him or his likeness," said Mrs. Oakshott, "my poor brother-in-law,
+Peregrine Oakshott; you remember him, sir? He always said, poor
+lad, that you and Mrs. Woodford were kinder to him than his own
+flesh and blood, except his uncle, Sir Peregrine. For my part, I
+never did give in to all the nonsense folk talked about his being a
+changeling or at best a limb of Satan. He had more spirit and sense
+than the rest of them, and they led him the life of a dog, though
+they knew no better. If I had had him at Emsworth, I would have
+shown them what he was;" and she sighed heavily. "Well, I did not
+so much wonder when he disappeared, I made sure that he could bear
+it no longer and had run away. I waited as long as there was any
+reason, till there should be tidings of him, and only took his
+brother at last because I found they could not do without me at
+home."
+
+Remarkable frankness! but it struck both the Doctor and Anne that if
+Peregrine could have submitted, his life might have been freer and
+less unhappy than he had expected, though Mrs. Martha spoke the
+broadest Hampshire.
+
+Naomi asked, "Then you no longer think that he ran away?"
+
+"No, madam; I am certain there was worse than that. You remember
+the night of the bonfire for the Bishops' acquittal, Miss Woodford?"
+
+"Indeed I do."
+
+"Well, he was never seen again after that, as you know. The place
+was full of wild folk. There was brawling right and left."
+
+"Were you there?" asked Anne surprised.
+
+"Yes; in my coach with my uncle and aunt that lived with me, though,
+except Robin, none of the young sparks would come near me, except
+some that I knew were after my pockets," said Martha, with a good-
+humoured laugh. "Properly frightened we were too by the brawling
+sailors ere we got home! Now, what could be more likely than that
+some of them got hold of poor Perry? You know he always would go
+about with the rapier he brought from Germany, with amber set in the
+hilt, and the mosaic snuff-box he got in Italy, and what could be
+looked for but that the poor dear lad should be put out of the way
+for the sake of these gewgaws?" This supposition was gratifying to
+Anne, but her uncle must needs ask why Mrs. Oakshott thought so more
+than before.
+
+"Because," she said impressively, "there is no doubt but that he has
+been seen, and not in the flesh, once and again, and always about
+these ruins."
+
+"By whom, madam, may I ask?"
+
+"Mrs. Fellowes's maids, as she knows, saw him once on the beach at
+night, just there. The sentry, who is Tom Hart, from our parish,
+saw a shape at the opening of the old vault before the keep and
+challenged him, when he vanished out of sight ere there was time to
+present a musket. There was once more, when one moonlight night our
+sexton, looking out of his cottage window, saw what he declares was
+none other than Master Perry standing among the graves of our
+family, as if, poor youth, he were asking why he was not among them.
+When I heard that, I said to my husband, 'Depend upon it,' says I,
+'he met with his death that night, and was thrown into some hole,
+and that's the reason he cannot rest. If I pay a hundred pounds for
+it, I'll not give up till his poor corpse is found to have Christian
+burial, and I'll begin with the old vault at Portchester!' My good
+father, the Major, would not hear of it at first, nor my husband
+either, but 'tis my money, and I know how to tackle Robin."
+
+It was with strangely mingled feelings that Anne listened. That
+search in the vault, inaugurated by faithful Martha, was what she
+had always felt ought to be made, and she had even promised to
+attempt it if the apparitions recurred. The notion of the deed
+being attributed to lawless sailors and smugglers or highwaymen, who
+were known to swarm in the neighbourhood, seemed to remove all
+danger of suspicion. Yet she could not divest herself of a vague
+sense of alarm at this stirring up of what had slept for seven
+years. Neither she nor her uncle deemed it needful to mention the
+appearance seen by little Philip, but to her surprise Naomi slowly
+and hesitatingly said it was very remarkable, that her husband
+having occasion to be at the church at dusk one evening just after
+Midsummer, had certainly seen a figure close to Mrs. Woodford's
+grave, and lost sight of it before he could speak of it. He thought
+nothing more of it till these reports began to be spread, but he had
+then recollected that it answered the descriptions given of the
+phantom.
+
+Here the ladies were interrupted by the appearance of Mr. Fellowes
+and Robert Oakshott, now grown into a somewhat heavy but by no means
+foolish-looking young man.
+
+"Well, madam," said he, in Hampshire as broad as his wife's, "you
+will have your will. Not that Captain Henslowe believes a word of
+your ghosts--not he; but he took fire when he heard of queer sights
+about the castle. He sent for the chap who stood sentry, and was
+downright sharp on him for not reporting what he had seen, and he is
+ordering out a sergeant's party to open the vault, so you may come
+and see, if you have any stomach for it."
+
+"I could not but come!" said Madam Oakshott, who certainly did not
+look squeamish, but who was far more in earnest than her husband,
+and perhaps doubted whether without her presence the quest would be
+thorough. Anne was full of dread, and almost sick at the thought of
+what she might see, but she was far too anxious to stay away. Mrs.
+Fellowes made some excuse about the children for not accompanying
+them.
+
+It always thrilled Anne to enter that old castle court, the familiar
+and beloved play-place of her childhood, full of memories of Charles
+and of Lucy, and containing in its wide precincts the churchyard
+where her mother lay. She moved along in a kind of dream, glad to
+be let alone, since Mr. Fellowes naturally attended Mrs. Oakshott,
+and Robert was fully occupied in explaining to the Doctor that he
+only gave in to this affair for the sake of pacifying madam, since
+women folk would have their little megrims. Assuredly that tall,
+solid, resolute figure stalking on in front, looked as little
+subject to megrims as any of her sex. Her determination had brought
+her husband thither, and her determination further carried the day,
+when the captain, after staring at the solid-looking turf, stamping
+on the one stone that was visible, and trampling down the bunch of
+nettles beside it, declared that the entrance had been so thoroughly
+stopped that it was of no use to dig farther. It was Madam Martha
+who demanded permission to offer the four soldiers a crown apiece if
+they opened the vault, a guinea each if they found anything. The
+captain could not choose but grant it, though with something of a
+sneer, and the work was begun. He walked up and down with Robert,
+joining in hopes that the lady would be satisfied before dinner-
+time. The two clergymen likewise walked together, arguing, as was
+their wont, on the credibility of apparitions. The two ladies stood
+in almost breathless watch, as the bricks that had covered in the
+opening were removed, and the dark hole brought to light. Contrary
+to expectation, when the opening had been enlarged, it was found
+that there were several steps of stone, and where they were broken
+away, there was a rude ladder.
+
+A lantern was fetched from the guard-room in the bailey, and after
+much shaking and trying of the ladder, one of the soldiers
+descended, finding the place less deep than was commonly supposed,
+and soon calling out that he was at the bottom. Another followed
+him, and presently there was a shout. Something was found! "A
+rusty old chain, no doubt," grumbled Robert; but his wife shrieked.
+It was a sword in its sheath, the belt rotted, the clasp tarnished,
+but of silver. Mrs. Oakshott seized it at once, rubbed away the
+dust from the handle, and brought to light a glistening yellow piece
+of amber, which she mutely held up, and another touch of her
+handkerchief disclosed on a silver plate in the scabbard an oak-
+tree, the family crest, and the twisted cypher P. O. Her eyes were
+full of tears, and she did not speak. Anne, white and trembling,
+was forced to sink down on the stone, unnoticed by all, while Robert
+Oakshott, convinced indeed, hastily went down himself. The sword
+had been hidden in a sort of hollow under the remains of the broken
+stair. Thence likewise came to light the mouldy remnant of a broad
+hat and the quill of its plume, and what had once been a coat, even
+in its present state showing that it had been soaked through and
+through with blood, the same stains visible on the watch and the
+mosaic snuff-box. That was all; there was no purse, and no other
+garments, though, considering the condition of the coat, they might
+have been entirely destroyed by the rats and mice. There was indeed
+a fragment of a handkerchief, with the cypher worked on it, which
+Mrs. Oakshott showed to Anne with the tears in her eyes: "There! I
+worked that, though he never knew it. No! I know he did not like
+me! But I would have made him do so at last. I would have been so
+good to him. Poor fellow, that he should have been lying there all
+this time!"
+
+Lying there; but where, then, was he? No signs of any corpse were
+to be found, though one after another all the gentlemen descended to
+look, and Mrs. Oakshott was only withheld by her husband's urgent
+representations, and promise to superintend a diligent digging in
+the ground, so as to ascertain whether there had been a hasty burial
+there.
+
+Altogether, Anne was so much astonished and appalled that she could
+hardly restrain herself, and her mind reverted to Bishop Ken's
+theory that Peregrine still lived; but this was contradicted by the
+appearance at Douai, which did not rest on the evidence of her
+single perceptions.
+
+Mrs. Fellowes sent out an entreaty that they would come to dinner,
+and the gentlemen were actually base enough to wish to comply, so
+that the two ladies had no choice save to come with them, especially
+as the soldiers were unwilling to work on without their meal.
+Neither Mrs. Oakshott nor Anne felt as if they could swallow, and
+the polite pressure to eat was only preferable in Anne's eyes to the
+conversation on the discoveries that had been made, especially the
+conclusion arrived at by all, that though the purse and rings had
+not been found, the presence of the watch and snuff-box precluded
+the idea of robbery.
+
+"These would be found on the body," said Mr. Oakshott. "I could
+swear to the purse. You remember, madam, your uncle bantering him
+about French ladies and their finery, asking whose token it was, and
+how black my father looked? Poor Perry, if my father could have had
+a little patience with him, he would not have gone roaming about and
+getting into brawls, and we need not be looking for him in yonder
+black pit."
+
+"You'll never find him there, Master Robert," spoke out the old
+Oakwood servant, behind Mrs. Oakshott's chair, free and easy after
+the manner of the time.
+
+"And wherefore not, Jonadab?" demanded his mistress, by no means
+surprised at the liberty.
+
+"Why, ma'am, 'twas the seven years, you sees, and in course when
+them you wot of had power to carry him off, they could not take his
+sword, nor his hat, not they couldn't."
+
+"How about his purse, then?" put in Dr. Woodford.
+
+"I'll be bound you will find it yet, sir," responded Jonadab, by no
+means disconcerted, "leastways unless some two-legged fairies have
+got it."
+
+At this some of the party found it impossible not to laugh, and this
+so upset poor Martha's composure that she was obliged to leave the
+table, and Anne was not sorry for the excuse of attending her,
+although there were stings of pain in all her rambling lamentations
+and conjectures.
+
+Very tardily, according to the feelings of the anxious women, was
+the dinner finished, and their companions ready to take them out
+again. Indeed, Madam Oakshott at last repaired to the dining-
+parlour, and roused her husband from his glass of Spanish wine to
+renew the search. She would not listen to Mrs. Fellowes's advice
+not to go out again, and Anne could not abstain either from watching
+for what could not be other than grievous and mournful to behold.
+
+The soldiers were called out again by their captain, and reinforced
+by the Rectory servant and Jonadab.
+
+There was an interval of anxious prowling round the opening. Mr.
+Oakshott and the captain had gone down again, and found, what the
+military man was anxious about, that if there were passages to the
+outer air, they had been well blocked up and not re-opened.
+
+Meantime the digging proceeded.
+
+It was just at twilight that a voice below uttered an exclamation.
+Then came a pause. The old sergeant's voice ordered care and a
+pause, somewhere below the opening with, "Sir, the spades have hit
+upon a skull."
+
+There was a shuddering pause. All the gentlemen except Dr.
+Woodford, who feared the chill, descended again. Mrs. Oakshott and
+Anne held each other's hands and trembled.
+
+By and by Mr. Fellowes came up first. "We have found," he said,
+looking pale and grave, "a skeleton. Yes, a perfect skeleton, but
+no more--no remains except a fine dust."
+
+And Robert Oakshott following, awe-struck and sorrowful, added,
+"Yes, there he is, poor Perry--all that is left of him--only his
+bones. No, madam, we must leave him there for the present; we
+cannot bring it up without preparation."
+
+"You need not fear meddling curiosity, madam," said the captain. "I
+will post a sentry here to bar all entrance."
+
+"Thanks, sir," said Robert. "That will be well till I can bury the
+poor fellow with all due respect by my mother and Oliver."
+
+"And then I trust his spirit will have rest," said Martha Oakshott
+fervently. "And now home to your father. How will he bear it,
+sir?"
+
+"I verily believe he will sleep the quieter for knowing for a
+certainty what has become of poor Peregrine," said her husband.
+
+And Anne felt as if half her burthen of secrecy was gone when they
+all parted, starting early because the Black Gang rendered all the
+roads unsafe after dark.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII: THE DISCLOSURE
+
+
+"He looked about as one betrayed,
+What hath he done, what promise made?
+Oh! weak, weak moment, to what end
+Can such a vain oblation tend?"
+
+WORDSWORTH.
+
+For the most part Anne was able to hold her peace and keep out of
+sight while Dr. Woodford related the strange revelations of the
+vault with all the circumstantiality that was desired by two old
+people living a secluded life and concerned about a neighbour of
+many years, whom they had come to esteem by force of a certain
+sympathy in honest opposition. The mystery occupied them entirely,
+for though the murder was naturally ascribed to some of the lawless
+coast population, the valuables remaining with the clothes made a
+strange feature in the case.
+
+It was known that there was to be an inquest held on the remains
+before their removal, and Dr. Woodford, both from his own interest
+in the question, and as family intelligencer, rode to the castle.
+Sir Philip longed to go, but it was a cold wet day, and he had
+threatenings of gout, so that he was persuaded to remain by the
+fireside. Inquests were then always held where the body lay, and
+the court of Portchester Castle was no place for him on such a day.
+
+Dr. Woodford came home just before twilight, looking grave and
+troubled, and, much to Anne's alarm, desired to speak to Sir Philip
+privately in the gun-room. Lady Archfield took alarm, and much
+distressed her by continually asking what could be the meaning of
+the interview, and making all sorts of guesses.
+
+When at last they came together into the parlour the poor lady
+looked so anxious and frightened that her husband went up to her and
+said, "Do not be alarmed, sweetheart. We shall clear him; but those
+foolish fellows have let suspicion fall on poor Sedley."
+
+Nobody looked at Anne, or her deadly paleness must have been
+remarked, and the trembling which she could hardly control by
+clasping her hands tightly together, keeping her feet hard on the
+floor, and setting her teeth.
+
+Lady Archfield was perhaps less fond of the scapegrace nephew than
+was her husband, and she felt the matter chiefly as it affected him,
+so that she heard with more equanimity than he had done; and as they
+sat round the fire in the half-light, for which Anne was thankful,
+the Doctor gave his narration in order.
+
+"I found a large company assembled in the castle court, waiting for
+the coroner from Portsmouth, though the sentry on guard would allow
+no one to go down, in spite of some, even ladies, I am ashamed to
+say, who offered him bribes for the permission. Everything, I
+heard, had been replaced as we found it. The poor Major himself was
+there, looking sadly broken, and much needing the help of his son's
+arm. 'To think that I was blaming my poor son as a mere reprobate,
+and praying for his conversion,' says he, 'when he was lying here,
+cut off without a moment for repentance.' There was your nephew,
+suspecting nothing, Squire Brocas, Mr. Eyre, of Botley Grange, Mr.
+Biden, Mr. Larcom, and Mr. Bargus, and a good many more, besides Dr.
+James Yonge, the naval doctor, and the Mayor of Portsmouth, and more
+than I can tell you. When the coroner came, and the jury had been
+sworn in, they went down and viewed the spot, and all that was
+there. The soldiers had put candles round, and a huge place it is,
+all built up with large stones. Then, as it was raining hard, they
+adjourned to the great room in the keep and took the evidence.
+Robert Oakshott identified the clothes and the watch clearly enough,
+and said he had no doubt that the other remains were Peregrine's;
+but as to swearing to a brother's bones, no one could do that; and
+Dr. Yonge said in my ear that if the deceased were so small a man as
+folks said, the skeleton could scarce be his, for he thought it had
+belonged to a large-framed person. That struck no one else, for
+naturally it is only a chirurgeon who is used to reckon the
+proportion that the bones bear to the body, and I also asked him
+whether in seven years the other parts would be so entirely
+consumed, to which he answered that so much would depend on the
+nature of the soil that there was no telling. However, jury and
+coroner seemed to feel no doubt, and that old seafaring man, Tom
+Block, declared that poor Master Peregrine had been hand and glove
+with a lot of wild chaps, and that the vault had been well known to
+them before the gentlemen had had it blocked up. Then it was asked
+who had seen him last, and Robert Oakshott spoke of having parted
+with him at the bonfire, and never seen him again. There, I fancy,
+it would have ended in a verdict of wilful murder against some
+person or persons unknown, but Robert Oakshott must needs say, "I
+would give a hundred pounds to know who the villain was." And then
+who should get up but George Rackstone, with "Please your Honour, I
+could tell summat." The coroner bade swear him, and he deposed to
+having seen Master Peregrine going down towards the castle somewhere
+about four o'clock that morning after the bonfire when he was
+getting up to go to his mowing. But that was not all. You
+remember, Anne, that his father's cottage stands on the road towards
+Portsmouth. Well, he brought up the story of your running in there,
+frightened, the day before the bonfire, when I was praying with his
+sick mother, calling on me to stop a fray between Peregrine and
+young Sedley, and I had to get up and tell of Sedley's rudeness to
+you, child."
+
+"What was that?" hastily asked Lady Archfield.
+
+"The old story, my lady. The young officer's swaggering attempt to
+kiss the girl he meets on the road. I doubt even if he knew at the
+moment that it was my niece. Peregrine was coming by at the moment,
+and interfered to protect her, and swords were drawn. I could not
+deny it, nor that there was ill blood between the lads; and then
+young Brocas, who was later on Portsdown than we were, remembered
+high words, and had thought to himself that there would be a
+challenge. And next old Goody Spore recollects seeing Master Sedley
+and another soldier officer out on the Portsmouth road early that
+morning. The hay was making in the court then, and Jenny Light
+remembered that when the haymakers came she raked up something that
+looked like a bloody spot, and showed it to one of the others, but
+they told her that most likely a rabbit or a hare had been killed
+there, and she had best take no heed. Probably there was dread of
+getting into trouble about a smugglers' fray. Well, every one was
+looking askance at Master Sedley by this time, and the coroner asked
+him if he had anything to say. He spoke out boldly enough. He
+owned to the dispute with Peregrine Oakshott, and to having parted
+with him that night on terms which would only admit of a challenge.
+He wrote a cartel that night, and sent it by his friend Lieutenant
+Ainslie, but doubting whether Major Oakshott might not prevent its
+delivery, he charged him to try to find Peregrine outside the house,
+and arrange with him a meeting on the hill, where you know the
+duellists of the garrison are wont to transact such encounters.
+Sedley himself walked out part of the way with his friend, but
+neither of them saw Peregrine, nor heard anything of him. So he
+avers, but when asked for his witness to corroborate the story, he
+says that Ainslie, I fear the only person who could have proved an
+alibi--if so it were--was killed at Landen; but, he added, certainly
+with too much of his rough way, it was a mere absurdity to charge it
+upon him. What should a gentleman have to do with private murders
+and robberies? Nor did he believe the bones to be Perry Oakshott's
+at all. It was all a bit of Whiggish spite! He worked himself into
+a passion, which only added to the impression against him; and I own
+I cannot wonder that the verdict has sent him to Winchester to take
+his trial. Why, Anne, child, how now?"
+
+"'Tis a terrible story. Take my essences, child," said Lady
+Archfield, tottering across, and Anne, just saving herself from
+fainting by a long gasp at them, let herself be led from the room.
+The maids buzzed about her, and for some time she was sensible of
+nothing but a longing to get rid of them, and to be left alone to
+face the grievous state of things which she did not yet understand.
+At last, with kind good-nights from Lady Archfield, such as she
+could hardly return, she was left by herself in the darkness to
+recover from the stunned helpless feeling of the first moment.
+
+Sedley accused! Charles to be sacrificed to save his worthless
+cousin, the would-be murderer of his innocent child, who morally
+thus deserved to suffer! Never, never! She could not do so. It
+would be treason to her benefactors, nay, absolute injustice, for
+Charles had struck in generous defence of herself; but Sedley had
+tried to allure the boy to his death merely for his own advantage.
+Should she not be justified in simply keeping silence? Yet there
+was like an arrow in her heart, the sense of guilt in so doing,
+guilt towards God and truth, guilt towards man and justice. She
+should die under the load, and it would be for Charles. Might it
+only be before he came home, then he would know that she had
+perished under his secret to save him. Nay, but would he be
+thankful at being saved at the expense of his cousin's life? If he
+came, how should she meet him?
+
+The sense of the certain indignation of a good and noble human
+spirit often awakes the full perception of what an action would be
+in the sight of Heaven, and Anne began to realise the sin more than
+at first, and to feel the compulsion of truth. If only Charles were
+not coming home she could write to him and warn him, but the thought
+that he might be already on the way had turned from joy to agony.
+"And to think," she said to herself, "that I was fretting as to
+whether he would think me pretty!"
+
+She tossed about in misery, every now and then rising on her knees
+to pray--at first for Charles's safety--for she shrank from asking
+for Divine protection, knowing only too well what that would be.
+Gradually, however, a shudder came over her at the thought that if
+she would not commit her way unto the Lord, she might indeed be the
+undoing of her lover, and then once more the higher sense of duty
+rose on her. She prayed for forgiveness for the thought, and that
+it might not be visited upon him; she prayed for strength to do what
+must be her duty, for safety for him, and comfort to his parents,
+and so, in passing gusts of misery and apprehension, of failing
+heart and recovered resolution, of anguish and of prayer, the long
+night at length passed, and with the first dawn she arose, shaken
+and weak, but resolved to act on her terrible resolution before it
+again failed her.
+
+Sir Philip was always an early riser, and she heard his foot on the
+stairs before seven o'clock. She came out on the staircase, which
+met the flight which he was descending, and tried to speak, but her
+lips seemed too dry to part.
+
+"Child! child! you are ill," said the old gentleman, as he saw her
+blanched cheek; "you should be in bed this chilly morning. Go back
+to your chamber."
+
+"No, no, sir, I cannot. Pray, your Honour, come here, I have
+something to say;" and she drew him to the open door of his justice-
+room, called the gun-room.
+
+"Bless me," he muttered, "the wench does not mean that she has got
+smitten with that poor rogue my nephew!"
+
+"Oh! no, no," said Anne, almost ready for a hysterical laugh, yet
+letting the old man seat himself, and then dropping on her knees
+before him, for she could hardly stand, "it is worse than that, sir;
+I know who it was who did that thing."
+
+"Well, who?" he said hastily; "why have you kept it back so long and
+let an innocent man get into trouble?"
+
+"O Sir Philip! I could not help it. Forgive me;" and with clasped
+hands, she brought out the words, "It was your son, Mr. Archfield;"
+and then she almost collapsed again.
+
+"Child! child! you are ill; you do not know what you are saying. We
+must have you to bed again. I will call your uncle."
+
+"Ah! sir, it is only too true;" but she let him fetch her uncle, who
+was sure to be at his devotions in a kind of oratory on the farther
+side of the hall. She had not gone to him first, from the old
+desire to keep him clear of the knowledge, but she longed for such
+support as he might give her, or at least to know whether he were
+very angry with her.
+
+The two old men quickly came back together, and Dr. Woodford began,
+"How now, niece, are you telling us dreams?" but he broke off as he
+saw the sad earnest of her face.
+
+"Sir, it is too true. He charged me to speak out if any one else
+were brought into danger."
+
+"Come," said Sir Philip, testily; "don't crouch grovelling on the
+floor there. Get up and let us know the meaning of this. Good
+heavens! the lad may be here any day."
+
+Anne had much rather have knelt where she was, but her uncle raised
+her, and placed her in a chair, saying, "Try to compose yourself,
+and tell us what you mean, and why it has been kept back so long."
+
+"Indeed he did not intend it," pleaded Anne; "it was almost an
+accident--to protect me--Peregrine was--pursuing me."
+
+"Upon my word, young mistress," burst out the father, "you seem to
+have been setting all the young fellows together by the ears."
+
+"I doubt if she could help it," said the Doctor. "She tried to be
+discreet, but it was the reason her mother--"
+
+"Well, go on," interrupted poor Sir Philip, too unhappy to remember
+manners or listen to the defence; "what was it? when was it?"
+
+Anne was allowed then to proceed. "It was the morning I went to
+London. I went out to gather some mouse-ear."
+
+"Mouse-ear! mouse-ear!" growled he. "Some one else's ear."
+
+"It was for Lady Oglethorpe."
+
+"It was," said her uncle, "a specific, it seems, for whooping-cough.
+I saw the letter, and knew--"
+
+"Umph! let us hear," said Sir Philip, evidently with the idea of a
+tryst in his mind. "No wonder mischief comes of maidens running
+about at such hours. What next?"
+
+The poor girl struggled on: "I saw Peregrine coming, and hoping he
+would not see me, I ran into the keep, meaning to get home by the
+battlements out of his sight, but when I looked down he and Mr.
+Archfield were fighting. I screamed, but I don't think they heard
+me, and I ran down; but I had fastened all the doors, and I was a
+long time getting out, and by that time Mr. Archfield had dragged
+him to the vault and thrown him in. He was like one distracted, and
+said it must be hidden, or it would be the death of his wife and his
+mother, and what could I do?"
+
+"Is that all the truth?" said Sir Philip sternly. "What brought
+them there--either of them?"
+
+"Mr. Archfield came to bring me a pattern of sarcenet to match for
+poor young Madam in London."
+
+No doubt Sir Philip recollected the petulant anger that this had
+been forgotten, but he was hardly appeased. "And the other fellow?
+Why, he was brawling with my nephew Sedley about you the day
+before!"
+
+"I do not think she was to blame there," said Dr. Woodford. "The
+unhappy youth was set against marrying Mistress Browning, and had
+talked wildly to my sister and me about wedding my niece."
+
+"But why should she run away as if he had the plague, and set the
+foolish lads to fight?"
+
+"Sir, I must tell you," Anne owned, "he had beset me, and talked so
+desperately that I was afraid of what he might do in that lonely
+place and at such an hour in the morning. I hoped he had not seen
+me."
+
+"Umph!" said Sir Philip, much as if he thought a silly girl's
+imagination had caused all the mischief.
+
+"When did he thus speak to you, Anne?" asked her uncle, not
+unkindly.
+
+"At the inn at Portsmouth, sir," said Anne. "He came while you were
+with Mr. Stanbury and the rest, and wanted me to marry him and flee
+to France, or I know not where, or at any rate marry him secretly so
+as to save him from poor Mistress Browning. I could not choose but
+fear and avoid him, but oh! I would have faced him ten times over
+rather than have brought this on--us all. And now what shall I do?
+He, Mr. Archfield, when I saw him in France, said as long as no one
+was suspected, it would only give more pain to say what I knew, but
+that if suspicion fell on any one--" and her voice died away.
+
+"He could not say otherwise," returned Sir Philip, with a groan.
+
+"And now what shall I do? what shall I do?" sighed the poor girl.
+"I must speak truth."
+
+"I never bade you perjure yourself," said Sir Philip sharply, but
+hiding his face in his hands, and groaning out, "Oh, my son! my
+son!"
+
+Seeing that his distress so overcame poor Anne that she could
+scarcely contain herself, Dr. Woodford thought it best to take her
+from the room, promising to come again to her. She could do nothing
+but lie on her bed and weep in a quiet heart-broken way. Sir
+Philip's anger seemed to fill up the measure, by throwing the guilt
+back upon her and rousing a bitter sense of injustice, and then she
+wept again at her cruel selfishness in blaming the broken-hearted
+old man.
+
+She could hardly have come down to breakfast, so heavy were her
+limbs and so sick and faint did every movement render her, and she
+further bethought herself that the poor old father might not brook
+the sight of her under the circumstances. It was a pang to hear
+little Philip prancing about the house, and when he had come to her
+to say his prayers, she sent him down with a message that she was
+not well enough to come downstairs, and that she wanted nothing,
+only to be quiet.
+
+The little fellow was very pitiful, and made her cry again by
+wanting to know whether she had gout like grandpapa or rheumatics
+like grandmamma, and then stroking her face, calling her his dear
+Nana, and telling her of the salad in his garden that his papa was
+to eat the very first day he came home.
+
+By and by Dr. Woodford knocked at her door. He had had a long
+conversation with poor old Sir Philip, who was calmer now than under
+the first blow, and somewhat less inclined to anger with the girl,
+who might indeed be the cause, but surely the innocent cause, of
+all. The Doctor had done his best to show that her going out had no
+connection with any of the youths, and he thought Sir Philip would
+believe it on quieter reflection. He had remembered too, signs of
+self-reproach mixed with his son's grief for his wife, and his
+extreme relief at the plan for going abroad, recollecting likewise
+that Charles had strongly disliked poor Peregrine, and had much
+resented the liking which young Madam had shown for one whose
+attentions might have been partly intended to tease the young
+husband.
+
+"Of course," said Dr. Woodford, "the unhappy deed was no more than
+an unfortunate accident, and if all had been known at first,
+probably it would so have been treated. The concealment was an
+error, but it is impossible to blame either of you for it."
+
+"Oh never mind that, dear uncle! Only tell me! Must he--must
+Charles suffer to save that man? You know what he is, real murderer
+in heart! Oh I know. The right must be done! But it is dreadful!"
+
+"The right must be done and the truth spoken at all costs. No one
+knows that better than our good old patron," said the Doctor; "but,
+my dear child, you are not called on to denounce this young man as
+you seem to imagine, unless there should be no other means of saving
+his cousin, or unless you are so questioned that you cannot help
+replying for truth's sake. Knowing nothing of all this, it struck
+others besides myself at the inquest that the evidence against
+Sedley was utterly insufficient for a conviction, and if he should
+be acquitted, matters will only be as they were before."
+
+"Then you think I am not bound to speak--The truth, the whole truth,
+nothing but the truth," she murmured in exceeding grief, yet firmly.
+
+"You certainly may, nay, _must_ keep your former silence till the
+trial, at the Lent Assizes. I trust you may not be called on as a
+witness to the fray with Sedley, but that I may be sufficient
+testimony to that. I could testify to nothing else. Remember, if
+you are called, you have only to answer what you are asked, nor is
+it likely, unless Sedley have any suspicion of the truth, that you
+will be asked any question that will implicate Mr. Archfield. If
+so, God give you strength my poor child, to be true to Him. But the
+point of the trial is to prove Sedley guilty or not guilty; and if
+the latter, there is no more to be said. God grant it."
+
+"But he--Mr. Archfield?"
+
+"His father is already taking measures to send to all the ports to
+stop him on his way till the trial is over. Thus there will be no
+actual danger, though it is a sore disappointment, and these wicked
+attempts of Charnock and Barclay put us in bad odour, so that it may
+be less easy to procure a pardon than it once would have been. So,
+my dear child, I do not think you need be in terror for his life,
+even if you are obliged to speak out plainly."
+
+And then the good old man knelt with Anne to pray for pardon,
+direction, and firmness, and protection for Charles. She made an
+entreaty after they rose that her uncle would take her away--her
+presence must be so painful to their kind hosts. He agreed with
+her, and made the proposition, but Sir Philip would not hear of it.
+Perhaps he was afraid of any change bringing suspicion of the facts,
+and he might have his fears of Anne being questioned into dangerous
+admissions, besides which, he hoped to keep his poor old wife in
+ignorance to the last. So Anne was to remain at Fareham, and after
+that one day's seclusion she gathered strength to be with the family
+as usual. Poor old Sir Philip treated her with a studied but icy
+courtesy which cut her to the heart; but Lady Archfield's hopes of
+seeing her son were almost worse, together with her regrets at her
+husband's dejection at the situation of his nephew and the family
+disgrace. As to little Philip, his curious inquiries about Cousin
+Sedley being in jail for murdering Penny Grim had to be summarily
+hushed by the assurance that such things were not to be spoken
+about. But why did Nana cry when he talked of papa's coming home?
+
+All the neighbourhood was invited to the funeral in Havant
+Churchyard, the burial-place of the Oakshotts. Major Oakshott
+himself wrote to Dr. Woodford, as having been one of the kindest
+friends of his poor son, adding that he could not ask Sir Philip
+Archfield, although he knew him to be no partner in the guilt of his
+unhappy nephew, who so fully exemplified that Divine justice may be
+slow, but is sure.
+
+Dr. Woodford decided on accepting the invitation, not only for
+Peregrine's sake, but to see how the land lay. Scarcely anything
+remarkable, however, occurred, except that it was painful to
+perceive the lightness of the coffin. A funeral sermon was
+previously preached by a young Nonconformist minister in his own
+chapel, on the text, "Whoso sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his
+blood be shed;" and then the burial took place, watched by a huge
+crowd of people. But just as the procession was starting from the
+chapel for the churchyard, over the wall there came a strange peal
+of wild laughter.
+
+"Oh, would not the unquiet spirit be at rest till it was avenged?"
+thought Anne when she was told of it.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX: THE ASSIZE COURT
+
+
+"O terror! what hath she perceived? O joy,
+What doth she look on? whom hath she perceived?"
+
+WORDSWORTH.
+
+Time wore away, and the Lent Assizes at Winchester had come. Sir
+Philip had procured the best legal assistance for his nephew, but in
+criminal cases, though the prisoner was allowed the advice of
+counsel, the onus of defence rested upon himself. To poor Anne's
+dismay, a subpoena was sent to her, as well as to her uncle, to
+attend as a witness at the trial. Sir Philip was too anxious to
+endure to remain at a distance from Winchester, and they travelled
+in his coach, Sir Edmund Nutley escorting them on horseback, while
+Lucy was left with her mother, both still in blissful ignorance.
+They took rooms at the George Inn. That night was a strange and
+grievous one to Anne, trying hard to sleep so as to be physically
+capable of composure and presence of mind, yet continually wakened
+by ghastly dreams, and then recollecting that the sense of something
+terrible was by no means all a dream.
+
+Very white, very silent, but very composed, she came to the sitting-
+room, and was constrained by her uncle and Sir Philip to eat, much
+as it went against her. On this morning Sir Philip had dropped his
+sternness towards her, and finding a moment when his son-in-law was
+absent, he said, "Child, I know that this is wellnigh, nay, quite as
+hard for you as for me. I can only say, Let no earthly regards hold
+you back from whatever is your duty to God and man. Speak the truth
+whatever betide, and leave the rest to the God of truth. God bless
+you, however it may be;" and he kissed her brow.
+
+The intelligence that the trial was coming on was brought by
+Sedley's counsel, Mr. Simon Harcourt. They set forth for the County
+Hall up the sharply-rising street, thronged with people, who growled
+and murmured at the murderer savagely, Sir Philip, under the care of
+his son-in-law, and Anne with her uncle. Mr. Harcourt was very
+hopeful; he said the case for the prosecution had not a leg to stand
+on, and that the prisoner himself was so intelligent, and had so
+readily understood the line of defence to take, that he ought to
+have been a lawyer. There would be no fear except that it might be
+made a party case, and no stone was likely to be left unturned
+against a gentleman of good loyal family. Moreover Mr. William
+Cowper, whom Robert Oakshott, or rather his wife, had engaged at
+great expense for the prosecution, was one of the most rising of
+barristers, noted for his persuasive eloquence, and unfortunately
+Mr. Harcourt had not the right of reply.
+
+The melancholy party were conducted into court, Sir Philip and Sir
+Edmund to the seats disposed of by the sheriff, beside the judge,
+strangely enough only divided by him from Major Oakshott. The judge
+was Mr. Baron Hatsel, a somewhat weak-looking man, in spite of his
+red robes and flowing wig, as he sat under his canopy beneath King
+Arthur's Round Table. Sedley, perhaps a little thinner since his
+imprisonment, but with the purple red on his face, and his prominent
+eyes so hard and bold that it was galling to know that this was
+really the confidence of innocence.
+
+Mr. Cowper was with great ability putting the case. Here were two
+families in immediate neighbourhood, divided from the first by
+political opinions of the strongest complexion; and he put the
+Oakshott views upon liberty, civil and religious, in the most
+popular light. The unfortunate deceased he described as having been
+a highly promising member of the suite of the distinguished Envoy,
+Sir Peregrine Oakshott, whose name he bore. On the death of the
+eldest brother he had been recalled, and his accomplishments and
+foreign air had, it appeared, excited the spleen of the young
+gentlemen of the county belonging to the Tory party, then in the
+ascendant, above all of the prisoner. There was then little or no
+etiquette as to irrelevant matter, so that Mr. Cowper could dwell at
+length on Sedley's antecedents, as abusing the bounty of his uncle,
+a known bully expelled for misconduct from Winchester College, then
+acting as a suitable instrument in those violences in Scotland which
+had driven the nation finally to extremity, noted for his
+debaucheries when in garrison, and finally broken for
+insubordination in Ireland.
+
+After this unflattering portrait, which Sedley's looks certainly did
+not belie, the counsel went back to 1688, proceeded to mention
+several disputes which had taken place when Peregrine had met
+Lieutenant Archfield at Portsmouth; but, he added with a smile, that
+no dart of malice was ever thoroughly winged till Cupid had added
+his feather; and he went on to describe in strong colours the insult
+to a young gentlewoman, and the interference of the other young man
+in her behalf, so that swords were drawn before the appearance of
+the reverend gentleman her uncle. Still, he said, there was further
+venom to be added to the bolt, and he showed that the two had parted
+after the rejoicings on Portsdown Hill with a challenge all but
+uttered between them, the Whig upholding religious liberty, the Tory
+hotly defending such honour as the King possessed, and both parting
+in anger.
+
+Young Mr. Oakshott was never again seen alive, though his family
+long hoped against hope. There was no need to dwell on the strange
+appearances that had incited them to the search. Certain it was,
+that after seven years' silence, the grave had yielded up its
+secrets. Then came the description of the discovery of the bones,
+and of the garments and sword, followed by the mention of the
+evidence as to the blood on the grass, and the prisoner having been
+seen in the neighbourhood of the castle at that strange hour. He
+was observed to have an amount of money unusual with him soon after,
+and, what was still more suspicious, after having gambled this away,
+he had sold to a goldsmith at Southampton a ruby ring, which both
+Mr. and Mrs. Oakshott could swear to have belonged to the deceased.
+In fact, when Mr. Cowper marshalled the facts, and even described
+the passionate encounter taking place hastily and without witnesses,
+and the subsequent concealment of guilt in the vault, the purse
+taken, and whatever could again be identified hidden, while
+providentially the blocking up of the vault preserved the evidence
+of the crime so long undetected and unavenged, it was hardly
+possible to believe the prisoner innocent.
+
+When the examination of the witnesses began, however, Sedley showed
+himself equal to his own defence. He made no sign when Robert
+Oakshott identified the clothes, sword, and other things, and their
+condition was described; but he demanded of him sharply how he knew
+the human remains to be those of his brother.
+
+"Of course they were," said Robert.
+
+"Were there any remains of clothes with them?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Can you swear to them? Did you ever before see your brother's
+bones?"
+
+At which, and at the witness's hesitating, "No, but--" the court
+began to laugh.
+
+"What was the height of the deceased?"
+
+"He reached about up to my ear," said the witness with some
+hesitation.
+
+"What was the length of the skeleton?"
+
+"Quite small. It looked like a child's."
+
+"My lord," said Sedley, "I have a witness here, a surgeon, whom I
+request may be called to certify the proportion of a skeleton to the
+size of a living man."
+
+Though this was done, the whole matter of size was so vague that
+there was nothing proved, either as to the inches of Peregrine or
+those of the skeleton, but still Sedley made his point that the
+identity of the body was unproved at least in some minds. Still,
+there remained the other articles, about which there was no doubt.
+
+Mr. Cowper proceeded with his examination as to the disputes at
+Portsmouth, but again the prisoner scored a point by proving that
+Peregrine had staked the ring against him at a cock-fight at
+Southampton, and had lost it.
+
+Dr. Woodford was called, and his evidence could not choose but to be
+most damaging as to the conflict on the road at Portsmouth; but as
+he had not seen the beginning, 'Mistress Anne Jacobina Woodford' was
+called for.
+
+There she stood, tall and stately, almost majestic in the stiffness
+of intense self-restraint, in her simple gray dress, her black silk
+hood somewhat back, her brown curls round her face, a red spot in
+each cheek, her earnest brown eyes fixed on the clerk as he gabbled
+out the words so awful to her, "The truth, the whole truth, and
+nothing but the truth;" and her soul re-echoed the words, "So help
+you God."
+
+Mr. Cowper was courteous; he was a gentleman, and he saw she was no
+light-minded girl. He asked her the few questions needful as to the
+attack made on her, and the defence; but something moved him to go
+on and ask whether she had been on Portsdown Hill, and to obtain
+from her the account of the high words between the young men. She
+answered each question in a clear low voice, which still was audible
+to all. Was it over, or would Sedley begin to torture her, when so
+much was in his favour? No! Mr. Cowper--oh! why would he? was
+asking in an affirmative tone, as if to clench the former evidence,
+"And did you ever see the deceased again?"
+
+"Yes." The answer was at first almost choked, then cleared into
+sharpness, and every eye turned in surprise on the face that had
+become as white as her collar.
+
+"Indeed! And when?"
+
+"The next morning," in a voice as if pronouncing her own doom, and
+with hands clinging tight to the front of the witness-box as though
+in anguish.
+
+"Where?" said the counsel, like inexorable fate.
+
+"I will save the gentlewoman from replying to that question, sir;"
+and a gentleman with long brown hair, in a rich white and gold
+uniform, rose from among the spectators. "Perhaps I may be allowed
+to answer for her, when I say that it was at Portchester Castle, at
+five in the morning, that she saw Peregrine Oakshott slain by my
+hand, and thrown into the vault."
+
+There was a moment of breathless amazement in the court, and the
+judge was the first to speak. "Very extraordinary, sir! What is
+your name?"
+
+"Charles Archfield," said the clear resolute voice.
+
+Then came a general movement and sensation, and Anne, still holding
+fast to the support, saw the newcomer start forward with a cry, "My
+father!" and with two or three bounds reach the side of Sir Philip,
+who had sunk back in his seat for a moment, but recovered himself as
+he felt his son's arm round him.
+
+There was a general buzz, and a cry of order, and in the silence
+thus produced the judge addressed the witness:--
+
+"Is what this gentleman says the truth?"
+
+And on Anne's reply, "Yes, my Lord," spoken with the clear ring of
+anguish, the judge added--
+
+"Was the prisoner present?"
+
+"No, my Lord; he had nothing to do with it."
+
+"Then, brother Cowper, do you wish to proceed with the case?"
+
+Mr. Cowper replied in the negative, and the judge then made a brief
+summing-up, and the jury, without retiring, returned a verdict of
+'Not guilty.'
+
+In the meantime Anne had been led like one blinded from the witness-
+box, and almost dropped into her uncle's arms. "Cheer up, cheer up,
+my child," he said. "You have done your part bravely, and after so
+upright a confession no one can deal hardly with the young man. God
+will surely protect him."
+
+The acquittal had been followed by a few words from Baron Hatsel,
+congratulating the late prisoner on his deliverance through this
+gentleman's generous confession. Then there was a moment's
+hesitation, ended by the sheriff asking Charles, who stood up by his
+old father, one arm supporting the trembling form, and the other
+hand clasped in the two aged ones, "Then, sir, do you surrender to
+take your trial?"
+
+"Certainly, sir," said Charles. "I ought to have done so long ago,
+but in the first shock--"
+
+Mr. Harcourt here cautioned him not to say anything that could be
+used against him, adding in a low tone, much to Sir Philip's relief,
+"It may be brought in manslaughter, sir."
+
+"He should be committed," another authority said. "Is there a
+Hampshire magistrate here to sign a warrant?"
+
+Of these there were plenty; and as the clerk asked for his
+description, all eyes turned on the tall and robust form in the
+prime of manhood, with the noble resolute expression on his fine
+features and steadfast eyes, except when, as he looked at his
+father, they were full of infinite pity. The brown hair hung over
+the rich gold-laced white coat, faced with black, and with a broad
+gold-coloured sash fringed with black over his shoulder, and there
+was a look of distinction about him that made his answer only
+natural. "Charles Archfield, of Archfield House, Fareham,
+Lieutenant-Colonel of his Imperial Majesty's Light Dragoons, Knight
+of the Holy Roman Empire. Must I give up my sword like a prisoner
+of war?" he asked, with a smile.
+
+Sir Philip rose to his feet with an earnest trembling entreaty that
+bail might be taken for him, and many voices of gentlemen and men of
+substance made offers of it. There was a little consultation, and
+it was ruled that bail might be accepted under the circumstances,
+and Charles bowed his thanks to the distant and gave his hand to the
+nearer, while Mr. Eyre of Botley Grange, and Mr. Brocas of Roche
+Court, were accepted as sureties. The gentle old face of Mr.
+Cromwell of Hursley, was raised to poor old Sir Philip's with the
+words, spoken with a remnant of the authority of the Protector:
+"Your son has spoken like a brave man, sir; God bless you, and bring
+you well through it."
+
+Charles was then asked whether he wished for time to collect
+witnesses. "No, my lord," he said. "I thank you heartily, but I
+have no one to call, and the sooner this is over the better for
+all."
+
+After a little consultation it was found that the Grand Jury had not
+been dismissed, and could find a true bill against him; and it was
+decided that the trial should take place after the rest of the
+criminal cases were disposed of.
+
+This settled, the sorrowful party with the strangely welcomed son
+were free to return to their quarters at the George. Mr. Cromwell
+pressed forward to beg that they would make use of his coach. It
+was a kind thought, for Sir Philip hung feebly on his son's arm, and
+to pass through the curious throng would have been distressing.
+After helping him in, Charles turned and demanded--
+
+"Where is she, the young gentlewoman, Miss Woodford?"
+
+She was just within, her uncle waiting to take her out till the
+crowd's attention should be called off. Charles lifted her in, and
+Sir Edmund and Dr. Woodford followed him, for there was plenty of
+room in the capacious vehicle.
+
+Nobody spoke in the very short interval the four horses took in
+getting themselves out of the space in front of the County Hall and
+down the hill to the George. Only Charles had leant forward, taken
+Anne's hand, drawn it to his lips, and then kept fast hold of it.
+
+They were all in the room at the inn at last, they hardly knew how;
+indeed, as Charles was about to shut the door there was a smack on
+his back, and there stood Sedley holding out his hand.
+
+"So, Charley, old fellow, you were the sad dog after all. You got
+me out of it, and I owe you my thanks, but you need not have put
+your neck into the noose. I should have come off with flying
+colours, and made them all make fools of themselves, if you had only
+waited."
+
+"Do you think I could sit still and see _her_ put to the torture?"
+said Charles.
+
+"Torture? You are thinking of your barbarous countries. No fear of
+the boot here, nor even in Scotland nowadays."
+
+"That's all the torture you understand," muttered Sir Edmund Nutley.
+
+"Not but what I am much beholden to you all the same," went on
+Sedley. "And look here, sir," turning to his uncle, "if you wish to
+get him let off cheap you had better send up another special
+retainer to Harcourt, without loss of time, as he may be off."
+
+Sir Edmund Nutley concurred in the advice, and they hurried off
+together in search of the family attorney, through whom the great
+man had to be approached.
+
+The four left together could breathe more freely. Indeed Dr.
+Woodford would have taken his niece away, but that Charles already
+had her in his arms in a most fervent embrace, as he said, "My
+brave, my true maid!"
+
+She could not speak, but she lifted up her eyes, with infinite
+relief in all her sorrow, as for a moment she rested against him;
+but they had to move apart, for a servant came up with some wine,
+and Charles, putting her into a chair, began to wait on her and on
+his father.
+
+"I have not quite forgotten my manners," he said lightly, as if to
+relieve the tension of feeling, "though in Germany the ladies serve
+the gentlemen."
+
+It was very hard not to burst into tears at these words, but Anne
+knew that would be the way to distress her companions and to have to
+leave the room and lose these precious moments. Sir Philip, after
+swallowing the wine, succeeded in saying, "Have you been at home?"
+
+Charles explained that he had landed at Gravesend, and had ridden
+thence, sleeping at Basingstoke, and taking the road through
+Winchester in case his parents should be wintering there, and on
+arriving a couple of hours previously and inquiring for them, he had
+heard the tidings that Sir Philip Archfield was indeed there, for
+his nephew was being tried for his life for the wilful murder of
+Major Oakshott's son seven years ago.
+
+"And you had none of my warnings? I wrote to all the ports," said
+his father, "to warn you to wait till all this was over."
+
+No; he had crossed from Sluys, and had met no letter. "I suppose,"
+he said, "that I must not ride home to-morrow. It might make my
+sureties uneasy; but I would fain see them all."
+
+"It would kill your mother to be here," said Sir Philip. "She knows
+nothing of what Anne told me on Sedley's arrest. She is grown very
+feeble;" and he groaned. "But we might send for your sister, if she
+can leave her, and the boy."
+
+"I should like my boy to be fetched," said Charles. "I should wish
+him to remember his father--not as a felon convicted!" Then putting
+a knee to the ground before Sir Philip, he said, "Sir, I ask your
+blessing and forgiveness. I never before thoroughly understood my
+errors towards you, especially in hiding this miserable matter, and
+leaving all this to come on you, while my poor Anne there was left
+to bear all the load. It was a cowardly and selfish act, and I ask
+your pardon."
+
+The old man sobbed with his hand on his son's head. "My dear boy!
+my poor boy! you were distraught."
+
+"I was then. I did it, as I thought, for my poor Alice's sake at
+first, and as it proved, it was all in vain; but at the year's end,
+when I was older, it was folly and wrong. I ought to have laid all
+before you, and allowed you to judge, and I sincerely repent the not
+having so done. And Anne, my sweetest Anne, has borne the burthen
+all this time," he added, going back to her. "Let no one say a
+woman cannot keep secrets, though I ought never to have laid this on
+her."
+
+"Ah! it might have gone better for you then," sighed Sir Philip.
+"No one would have visited a young lad's mischance hardly on a loyal
+house in those days. What is to be done, my son?"
+
+"That we will discuss when the lawyer fellow comes. Is it old Lee?
+Meantime let us enjoy our meeting. So that is Lucy's husband.
+Sober and staid, eh? And my mother is feeble, you say. Has she
+been ill?"
+
+Charles was comporting himself with the cheerfulness that had become
+habitual to him as a soldier, always in possible danger, but it was
+very hard to the others to chime in with his tone, and when a
+message was brought to ask whether his Honour would be served in
+private, the cheery greeting and shake of the hand broke down the
+composure of the old servant who brought it, and he cried, "Oh, sir,
+to see you thus, and such a fine young gentleman!"
+
+Charles, the only person who could speak, gave the orders, but they
+did not eat alone, for Sir Edmund Nutley and Sedley arrived with the
+legal advisers, and it was needful, perhaps even better, to have
+their company. The chief of the conversation was upon Hungarian and
+Transylvanian politics and the Turkish war. Mr. Harcourt seeming
+greatly to appreciate the information that Colonel Archfield was
+able to give him, and the anecdotes of the war, and descriptions of
+scenes therein actually brightened Sir Philip into interest, and
+into forgetting for a moment his son's situation in pride in his
+conduct, and at the distinction he had gained. "We must save him,"
+said Mr. Harcourt to Sir Edmund. "He is far too fine a fellow to be
+lost for a youthful mischance."
+
+The meal was a short one, and a consultation was to follow, while
+Sedley departed. Anne was about to withdraw, when Mr. Lee the
+attorney said, "We shall need Mistress Woodford's evidence, sir, for
+the defence."
+
+"I do not see what defence there can be," returned Charles. "I can
+only plead guilty, and throw myself on the King's mercy, if he
+chooses to extend it to one of a Tory family."
+
+"Not so fast, sir," said Mr. Harcourt; "as far as I have gathered
+the facts, there is every reason to hope you may obtain a verdict of
+manslaughter, and a nominal penalty, although that rests with the
+judge."
+
+On this the discussion began in earnest. Charles, who had never
+heard the circumstances which led to the trial, was greatly
+astonished to hear what remains had been discovered. He said that
+he could only declare himself to have thrown in the body, full
+dressed, just as it was, and how it could have been stripped and
+buried he could not imagine. "What made folks think of looking into
+the vault?" he asked.
+
+"It was Mrs. Oakshott," said Lee, "the young man's wife, she who was
+to have married the deceased. She took up some strange notion about
+stories of phantoms current among the vulgar, and insisted on having
+the vault searched, though it had been walled up for many years
+past."
+
+Charles and Anne looked at each other, and the former said, "Again?"
+
+"Oh yes!" said Anne; "indeed there have been enough to make me
+remember what you bade me do, in case they recurred, only it was
+impossible."
+
+"Phantoms!" said Mr. Harcourt; "what does this mean?"
+
+"Mere vulgar superstitions, sir," said the attorney.
+
+"But very visible," said Charles; "I have seen one myself, of which
+I am quite sure, besides many that may be laid to the account of the
+fever of my wound."
+
+"I must beg to hear," said the barrister. "Do I understand that
+these were apparitions of the deceased?"
+
+"Yes," said Charles. "Miss Woodford saw the first, I think."
+
+"May I beg you to describe it?" said Mr. Harcourt, taking a fresh
+piece of paper to make notes on.
+
+Anne narrated the two appearances in London, and Charles added the
+story of the figure seen in the street at Douai, seen by both
+together, asking what more she knew of.
+
+"Once at night last summer, at the very anniversary, I saw his face
+in the trees in the garden," said Anne; "it was gone in a moment.
+That has been all I have seen; but little Philip came to me full of
+stories of people having seen Penny Grim, as he calls it, and very
+strangely, once it rose before him at the great pond, and his fright
+saved him from sliding to the dangerous part. What led Mrs.
+Oakshott to the examination was that it was seen once on the beach,
+once by the sentry at the vault itself, once by the sexton at Havant
+Churchyard, and once by my mother's grave."
+
+"Seven?" said the counsel, reviewing the notes he jotted down.
+"Colonel Archfield, I should recommend you pleading not guilty, and
+basing your defence, like your cousin, on the strong probability
+that this same youth is a living man."
+
+"Indeed!" said Charles, starting, "I could have hoped it from these
+recent apparitions, but what I myself saw forbids the idea. If any
+sight were ever that of a spirit, it was what we saw at Douai;
+besides, how should he come thither, a born and bred Whig and
+Puritan?"
+
+"There is no need to mention that; you can call witnesses to his
+having been seen within these few months. It would rest with the
+prosecution to disprove his existence in the body, especially as the
+bones in the vault cannot be identified."
+
+"Sir," said Charles, "the defence that would have served my innocent
+cousin cannot serve me, who know what I did to Oakshott. I am _now_
+aware that it is quite possible that the sword might not have killed
+him, but when I threw him into that vault I sealed his fate."
+
+"How deep is the vault?"
+
+Mr. Lee and Dr. Woodford both averred that it was not above twenty
+or twenty-four feet deep, greatly to Charles's surprise, for as a
+lad he had thought it almost unfathomable; but then he owned his
+ideas of Winchester High Street had been likewise far more
+magnificent than he found it. The fall need not necessarily have
+been fatal, especially to one insensible and opposing no resistance,
+but even supposing that death had not resulted, in those Draconian
+days, the intent to murder was equally subject with its full
+accomplishment to capital punishment. Still, as Colonel Archfield
+could plead with all his heart that he had left home with no evil
+intentions towards young Oakshott, the lawyers agreed that to prove
+that the death of the victim was uncertain would reduce the matter
+to a mere youthful brawl, which could not be heavily visited. Mr.
+Harcourt further asked whether it were possible to prove that the
+prisoner had been otherwise employed than in meddling with the body;
+but unfortunately it had been six hours before he came home.
+
+"I was distracted," said Charles; "I rode I knew not whither, till I
+came to my senses on finding that my horse was ready to drop, when I
+led him into a shed at a wayside public-house, bade them feed him,
+took a drink, then I wandered out into the copse near, and lay on
+the ground there till I thought him rested, for how long I know not.
+I think it must have been near Bishops Waltham, but I cannot
+recollect."
+
+Mr. Lee decided on setting forth at peep of dawn the next morning to
+endeavour to collect witnesses of Peregrine's appearances. Sir
+Edmund Nutley intended to accompany him as far as Fareham to fetch
+little Philip and Lady Nutley, if the latter could leave her mother
+after the tidings had been broken to them, and also to try to trace
+whether Charles's arrival at any public-house were remembered.
+
+To her dismay, Anne received another summons from the other party to
+act as witness.
+
+"I hoped to have spared you this, my sweet," said Charles, "but
+never mind; you cannot say anything worse of me than I shall own of
+myself."
+
+The two were left to each other for a little while in the bay
+window. "Oh, sir! can you endure me thus after all?" murmured Anne,
+as she felt his arm round her.
+
+"Can you endure me after all I left you to bear?" he returned.
+
+"It was not like what I brought on you," she said.
+
+But they could not talk much of the future; and Charles told how he
+had rested through all his campaigns in the knowledge that his Anne
+was watching and praying for him, and how his long illness had
+brought before him deeper thoughts than he had ever had before, and
+made him especially dwell on the wrong done to his parents by his
+long absence, and the lightness with which he had treated home
+duties and responsibilities, till he had resolved that if his life
+were then spared, he would neglect them no longer.
+
+"And now," he said, and paused, "all I shall have done is to break
+their hearts. What is that saying, 'Be sure your sin will find you
+out.'"
+
+"Oh, sir! they are sure not to deal hardly with you."
+
+"Perhaps the Emperor's Ambassador may claim me. If so, would you go
+into banishment with the felon, Anne, love? It would not be quite
+so mad as when I asked you before."
+
+"I would go to the ends of the world with you; and we would take
+little Phil. Do you know, he is growing a salad, and learning
+Latin, all for papa?"
+
+And so she told him of little Phil till his father was seen looking
+wistfully at him.
+
+With Sir Philip, Charles was all cheerfulness and hope, taking such
+interest in all there was to hear about the family, estate, and
+neighbourhood that the old gentleman was beguiled into feeling as if
+there were only a short ceremony to be gone through before he had
+his son at home, saving him ease and trouble.
+
+But after Sir Philip had been persuaded to retire, worn out with the
+day's agitations, and Anne likewise had gone to her chamber to weep
+and pray, Charles made his arrangements with Mr. Lee for the future
+for all connected with him in case of the worst; and after the
+lawyer's departure poured out his heart to Dr. Woodford in deep
+contrition, as he said he had longed to do when lying in expectation
+of death at the Iron Gates. "However it may end," he said, "and I
+expect, as I deserve, the utmost, I am thankful for this
+opportunity, though unhappily it gives more pain to those about me
+than if I had died out there. Tell them, when they need comfort,
+how much better it is for me."
+
+"My dear boy, I cannot believe you will have to suffer."
+
+"There is much against me, sir. My foolish flight, the state of
+parties, and the recent conspiracy, which has made loyal families
+suspected and odious. I saw something of that as I came down. The
+crowd fancied my uniform French, and hooted and hissed me.
+Unluckily I have no other clothes to wear. Nor can I from my heart
+utterly disclaim all malice or ill will when I remember the thrill
+of pleasure in driving my sword home. I have had to put an end to a
+Janissary or two more than once in the way of duty, but their black
+eyes never haunted me like those parti-coloured ones. Still I
+trust, as you tell me I may, that God forgives me, for our Blessed
+Lord's sake; but I should like, if I could, to take the Holy
+Sacrament with my love while I am still thus far a free man. I have
+not done so since the Easter before these troubles."
+
+"You shall, my dear boy, you shall."
+
+There were churches at which the custom freshly begun at the
+Restoration was not dropped. The next was St. Matthias's Day, and
+Anne and her uncle had already purposed to go to the quiet little
+church of St. Lawrence, at no great distance, in the very early
+morning. They were joined on their way down the stair into the
+courtyard of the inn by a gentleman in a slouched hat and large dark
+cloak, who drew Anne's arm within his own.
+
+Truly there was peace on that morning, and strength to the brave man
+beyond the physical courage that had often before made him bright in
+the face of danger, and Anne, though weeping, had a sense of respite
+and repose, if not of hope.
+
+Late in the afternoon, little Philip was lifted down from riding
+before old Ralph into the arms of the splendid officer, whose
+appearance transcended all his visions. He fumbled in his small
+pocket, and held out a handful of something green and limp.
+
+"Here's my salad, papa. I brought it all the way for you to eat."
+
+And Colonel Archfield ate every scrap of it for supper, though it
+was much fitter for a rabbit, and all the evening he held on his
+knee the tired child, and responded to his prattle about Nana and
+dogs and rabbits; nay, ministered to his delight and admiration of
+the sheriff's coach, javelin men, and even the judge, with a strange
+mixture of wonder, delight, and with melancholy only in eyes and
+undertones.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX: SENTENCE
+
+
+"I have hope to live, and am prepared to die."
+
+Measure for Measure.
+
+Ralph was bidden to be ready to take his young master home early the
+next morning. At eight o'clock the boy, who had slept with his
+father, came down the stair, clinging to his father's hand, and Miss
+Woodford coming closely with him.
+
+"Yes," said Charles, as he held the little fair fellow in his arms,
+ere seating him on the horse, "he knows all, Ralph. He knows that
+his father did an evil thing, and that what we do in our youth finds
+us out later, and must be paid for. He has promised me to be a
+comfort to the old people, and to look on this lady as a mother.
+Nay, no more, Ralph; 'tis not good-bye to any of you yet. There,
+Phil, don't lug my head off, nor catch my hair in your buttons.
+Give my dutiful love to your grandmamma and to Aunt Nutley, and be a
+good boy to them."
+
+"And when I come to see you again I'll bring another salad," quoth
+Philip, as he rode out of the court; and his father, by way of
+excusing a contortion of features, smoothed the entangled lock of
+hair, and muttered something about, "This comes of not wearing a
+periwig." Then he said--
+
+"And to think that I have wasted the company of such a boy as that,
+all his life except for this mere glimpse!"
+
+"Oh! you will come back to him," was all that could be said.
+
+For it was time for Charles Archfield to surrender himself to take
+his trial.
+
+He had been instructed over and over again as to the line of his
+defence, and cautioned against candour for himself and delicacy
+towards others, till he had more than once to declare that he had no
+intention of throwing his life away; but the lawyers agreed in
+heartily deploring the rules that thus deprived the accused of the
+assistance of an advocate in examining witnesses and defending
+himself. All depended, as they knew and told Sir Edmund Nutley, on
+the judge and jury. Now Mr. Baron Hatsel had shown himself a well-
+meaning but weak and vacillating judge, whose summing up was apt
+rather to confuse than to elucidate the evidence; and as to the
+jury, Mr. Lee scanned their stolid countenances somewhat ruefully
+when they were marshalled before the prisoner, to be challenged if
+desirable. A few words passed, into which the judge inquired.
+
+"I am reminded, my Lord," said Colonel Archfield, bowing, "that I
+once incurred Mr. Holt's displeasure as a mischievous boy by
+throwing a stone which injured one of his poultry; but I cannot
+believe such a trifle would bias an honest man in a question of life
+and death."
+
+Nevertheless the judge put aside Mr. Holt.
+
+"I like his spirit," whispered Mr. Harcourt.
+
+"But," returned Lee, "I doubt if he has done himself any good with
+those fellows by calling it a trifle to kill an old hen. I should
+like him to have challenged two or three more moody old Whiggish
+rascals; but he has been too long away from home to know how the
+land lies."
+
+"Too generous and high-spirited for this work," sighed Sir Edmund,
+who sat with them.
+
+The indictment was read, the first count being "That of malice
+aforethought, by the temptation of the Devil, Charles Archfield did
+wilfully kill and slay Peregrine Oakshott," etc. The second
+indictment was that "By misadventure he had killed and slain the
+said Peregrine Oakshott." To the first he pleaded 'Not guilty;' to
+the second 'Guilty.'
+
+Tall, well-made, manly, and soldierly he stood, with a quiet set
+face, while Mr. Cowper proceeded to open the prosecution, with a
+certain compliment to the prisoner and regret at having to push the
+case against one who had so generously come forward on behalf of a
+kinsman; but he must unwillingly state the circumstances that made
+it doubtful, nay, more than doubtful, whether the prisoner's plea of
+mere misadventure could stand. The dislike to the unfortunate
+deceased existing among the young Tory country gentlemen of the
+county was, he should prove, intensified in the prisoner on account
+of not inexcusable jealousies, as well as of the youthful squabbles
+which sometimes lead to fatal results. On the evening of the 30th
+of June 1688 there had been angry words between the prisoner and the
+deceased on Portsdown Hill, respecting the prisoner's late lady. At
+four or five o'clock on the ensuing morning, the 1st of July, the
+one fell by the sword of the other in the then unfrequented court of
+Portchester Castle. It was alleged that the stroke was fatal only
+through the violence of youthful impetuosity; but was it consistent
+with that supposition that the young gentleman's time was
+unaccounted for afterwards, and that the body should have been
+disposed of in a manner that clearly proved the assistance of an
+accomplice, and with so much skill that no suspicion had arisen for
+seven years and a half, whilst the actual slayer was serving, not
+his own country, but a foreign prince, and had only returned at a
+most suspicious crisis?
+
+The counsel then proceeded to construct a plausible theory. He
+reminded the jury that at that very time, the summer of 1688,
+messages and invitations were being despatched to his present
+Gracious Majesty to redress the wrongs of the Protestant Church, and
+protect the liberties of the English people. The father of the
+deceased was a member of a family of the country party, his uncle a
+distinguished diplomatist, to whose suite he had belonged. What was
+more obvious than that he should be employed in the correspondence,
+and that his movements should be dogged by parties connected with
+the Stewart family? Already there was too much experience of how
+far even the most estimable and conscientious might be blinded by
+the sentiment that they dignified by the title of loyalty. The
+deceased had already been engaged in a struggle with one of the
+Archfield family, who had been acquitted of his actual slaughter;
+but considering the strangeness of the hour at which the two cousins
+were avowedly at or near Portchester, the condition of the clothes,
+stripped of papers, but not of valuables, and the connection of the
+principal witness with the pretended Prince of Wales, he could not
+help thinking that though personal animosity might have added an
+edge to the weapon, yet that there were deeper reasons, to prompt
+the assault and the concealment, than had yet been brought to light.
+
+"He will make nothing of that," whispered Mr. Lee. "Poor Master
+Peregrine was no more a Whig than old Sir Philip there."
+
+"'Twill prejudice the jury," whispered back Mr. Harcourt, "and
+discredit the lady's testimony."
+
+Mr. Cowper concluded by observing that half truths had come to light
+in the former trial, but whole truths would give a different aspect
+to the affair, and show the unfortunate deceased to have given
+offence, not only as a man of gallantry, but as a patriot, and to
+have fallen a victim to the younger bravoes of the so-called Tory
+party. To his (the counsel's) mind, it was plain that the prisoner,
+who had hoped that his crime was undiscovered and forgotten, had
+returned to take his share in the rising against Government so
+happily frustrated. He was certain that the traitor Charnock had
+been received at his father's house, and that Mr. Sedley Archfield
+had used seditious language on several occasions, so that the cause
+of the prisoner's return at this juncture was manifest, and only to
+the working of Providence could it be ascribed that the evidence of
+the aggravated murder should have at that very period been brought
+to light.
+
+There was an evident sensation, and glances were cast at the
+upright, military figure, standing like a sentinel, as if the
+audience expected him to murder them all.
+
+As before, the examination began with Robert Oakshott's
+identification of the clothes and sword, but Mr. Cowper avoided the
+subject of the skeleton, and went on to inquire about the terms on
+which the two young men had lived.
+
+"Well," said Robert, "they quarrelled, but in a neighbourly sort of
+way."
+
+"What do you call a neighbourly way?"
+
+"My poor brother used to be baited for being so queer. But then we
+were as bad to him as the rest," said Robert candidly.
+
+"That is, when you were boys?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"And after his return from his travels?"
+
+"It was the same then. He was too fine a gentleman for any one's
+taste."
+
+"You speak generally. Was there any especial animosity?"
+
+"My brother bought a horse that Archfield was after."
+
+"Was there any dispute over it?"
+
+"Not that I know of."
+
+"Can you give an instance of displeasure manifested by the prisoner
+at the deceased?"
+
+"I have seen him look black when my brother held a gate open for his
+wife."
+
+"Then there were gallant attentions towards Mrs. Archfield?"
+
+Charles's face flushed, and he made a step forward, but Robert
+gruffly answered: "No more than civility; but he had got
+Frenchified manners, and liked to tease Archfield."
+
+"Did they ever come to high words before you?"
+
+"No. They knew better."
+
+"Thank you, Mr. Oakshott," said the prisoner, as it was intimated
+that Mr. Cowper had finished. "You bear witness that only the most
+innocent civility ever passed between your brother and my poor young
+wife?"
+
+"Certainly," responded Robert.
+
+"Nothing that could cause serious resentment, if it excited passing
+annoyance."
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"What were your brother's political opinions?"
+
+"Well"--with some slow consideration--"he admired the Queen as was,
+and could not abide the Prince of Orange. My father was always _at
+him_ for it."
+
+"Would you think him likely to be an emissary to Holland?"
+
+"No one less likely."
+
+But Mr. Cowper started up. "Sir, I believe you are the younger
+brother?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How old were you at the time?"
+
+"Nigh upon nineteen."
+
+"Oh!" as if that accounted for his ignorance.
+
+The prisoner continued, and asked whether search was made when the
+deceased was missed.
+
+"Hardly any."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"He was never content at home, and we believed he had gone to my
+uncle in Muscovy."
+
+"What led you to examine the vault?"
+
+"My wife was disquieted by stories of my brother's ghost being
+seen."
+
+"Did you ever see this ghost?"
+
+"No, never."
+
+That was all that was made of Robert Oakshott, and then again came
+Anne Woodford's turn, and Mr. Cowper was more satirical and less
+considerate than the day before. Still it was a less dreadful
+ordeal than previously, though she had to tell the worst, for she
+knew her ground better, and then there was throughout wonderful
+support in Charles's eyes, which told her, whenever she glanced
+towards him, that she was doing right and as he wished. As she had
+not heard the speech for the prosecution it was a shock, after
+identifying herself a niece to a 'non-swearing' clergyman, to be
+asked about the night of the bonfire, and to be forced to tell that
+Mrs. Archfield had insisted on getting out of the carriage and
+walking about with Mr. Oakshott.
+
+"Was the prisoner present?"
+
+"He came up after a time."
+
+"Did he show any displeasure?"
+
+"He thought it bad for her health."
+
+"Did any words pass between him and the deceased?"
+
+"Not that I remember."
+
+"And now, madam, will you be good enough to recur to the following
+morning, and continue the testimony in which you were interrupted
+the day before yesterday? What was the hour?"
+
+"The church clock struck five just after."
+
+"May I ask what took a young gentlewoman out at such an untimely
+hour? Did you expect to meet any one?"
+
+"No indeed, sir," said Anne hotly. "I had been asked to gather some
+herbs to carry to a friend."
+
+"Ah! And why at that time in the morning?"
+
+"Because I was to leave home at seven, when the tide served."
+
+"Where were you going?"
+
+"To London, sir."
+
+"And for what reason?"
+
+"I had been appointed to be a rocker in the Royal nursery."
+
+"I see. And your impending departure may explain certain strange
+coincidences. May I ask what was this same herb?" in a mocking
+tone.
+
+"Mouse-ear, sir," said Anne, who would fain have called it by some
+less absurd title, but knew no other. "A specific for the whooping-
+cough."
+
+"Oh! Not 'Love in a mist.' Are your sure?"
+
+"My lord," here Simon Harcourt ventured, "may I ask, is this
+regular?"
+
+The judge intimated that his learned brother had better keep to the
+point, and Mr. Cowper, thus called to order, desired the witness to
+continue, and demanded whether she was interrupted in her quest.
+
+"I saw Mr. Peregrine Oakshott enter the castle court, and I hurried
+into the tower, hoping he had not seen me."
+
+"You said before he had protected you. Why did you run from him?"
+
+She had foreseen this, and quietly answered, "He had made me an
+offer of marriage which I had refused, and I did not wish to meet
+him."
+
+"Did you see any one else?"
+
+"Not till I had reached the door opening on the battlements. Then I
+heard a clash, and saw Mr. Archfield and Mr. Oakshott fighting."
+
+"Mr. Archfield! The prisoner? Did he come to gather mouse-ear
+too?"
+
+"No. His wife had sent him over with a pattern of sarcenet for me
+to match in London."
+
+"Early rising and prompt obedience." And there ensued the inquiries
+that brought out the history of what she had seen of the encounter,
+of the throwing the body into the vault, full dressed, and of her
+promise of silence and its reason. Mr. Cowper did not molest her
+further except to make her say that she had been five months at the
+Court, and had accompanied the late Queen to France.
+
+Then came the power of cross-examination on the part of the
+prisoner. He made no attempt to modify what had been said before,
+but asked in a gentle apologetic voice: "Was that the last time you
+ever saw, or thought you saw, Peregrine Oakshott?"
+
+"No." And here every one in court started and looked curious.
+
+"When?"
+
+"The 31st of October 1688, in the evening."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Looking from the window in the palace at Whitehall, I saw him, or
+his likeness, walking along in the light of the lantern over the
+great door."
+
+The appearance at Lambeth was then described, and that in the garden
+at Archfield House. This strange cross-examination was soon over,
+for Charles could not endure to subject her to the ordeal, while she
+equally longed to be able to say something that might not damage
+him, and dreaded every word she spoke. Moreover, Mr. Cowper looked
+exceedingly contemptuous, and made the mention of Whitehall and
+Lambeth a handle for impressing on the jury that the witness had
+been deep in the counsels of the late royal family, and that she was
+escorted from St. Germain by the prisoner just before he entered on
+foreign service.
+
+One of the servants at Fareham was called upon to testify to the
+hour of his young master's return on the fatal day. It was long
+past dinner-time, he said. It must have been about three o'clock.
+
+Charles put in an inquiry as to the condition of his horse. "Hard
+ridden, sir, as I never knew your Honour bring home Black Bess in
+such a pickle before."
+
+After a couple of young men had been called who could speak to some
+outbreaks of dislike to poor Peregrine, in which all had shared, the
+case for the prosecution was completed. Cowper, in a speech that
+would be irregular now, but was permissible then, pointed out that
+the jealousy, dislike, and Jacobite proclivities of the Archfield
+family had been fully made out, that the coincidence of visits to
+the castle at that untimely hour had been insufficiently explained,
+that the condition of the remains in the vault was quite
+inconsistent with the evidence of the witness, Mistress Woodford,
+unless there were persons waiting below unknown to her, and that the
+prisoner had been absent from Fareham from four or five o'clock in
+the morning till nearly three in the afternoon. As to the strange
+story she had further told, he (Mr. Cowper) was neither
+superstitious nor philosophic, but the jury would decide whether
+conscience and the sense of an awful secret were not sufficient to
+conjure up such phantoms, if they were not indeed spiritual,
+occurring as they did in the very places and at the very times when
+the spirit of the unhappy young man, thus summarily dismissed from
+the world, his corpse left in an unblessed den, would be most likely
+to reappear, haunting those who felt themselves to be most
+accountable for his lamentable and untimely end.
+
+The words evidently told, and it was at a disadvantage that the
+prisoner rose to speak in his own defence and to call his witnesses.
+
+"My lord," he said, "and gentlemen of the jury, let me first say
+that I am deeply grieved and hurt that the name of my poor young
+wife has been brought into this matter. In justice to her who is
+gone, I must begin by saying that though she was flattered and
+gratified by the polite manners that I was too clownish and awkward
+to emulate, and though I may have sometimes manifested ill-humour,
+yet I never for a moment took serious offence nor felt bound to
+defend her honour or my own. If I showed displeasure it was because
+she was fatiguing herself against warning. I can say with perfect
+truth, that when I left home on that unhappy morning, I bore no
+serious ill-will to any living creature. I had no political
+purpose, and never dreamt of taking the life of any one. I was a
+heedless youth of nineteen. I shall be able to prove the commission
+of my wife's on which this learned gentleman has thought fit to cast
+a doubt. For the rest, Mistress Anne Woodford was my sister's
+friend and playfellow from early childhood. When I entered the
+castle court I saw her hurrying into the keep, pursued by Oakshott,
+whom I knew her to dread and dislike. I naturally stepped between.
+Angry words passed. He challenged my right to interfere, and in a
+passion drew upon me. Though I was the taller and stronger, I knew
+him to be proud of his skill in fencing, and perhaps I may therefore
+have pressed him the harder, and the dislike I acknowledge made me
+drive home my sword. But I was free from all murderous intention up
+to that moment. In my inexperience I had no doubt but that he was
+dead, and in a terror and confusion which I regret heartily, I threw
+him into the vault, and for the sake of my wife and mother bound
+Miss Woodford to secrecy. I mounted my horse, and scarcely knowing
+what I did, rode till I found it ready to drop. I asked for rest
+for it in the first wayside public-house I came to. I lay down
+meanwhile among some bushes adjoining, and there waited till my
+horse could take me home again. I believe it was at the White
+Horse, near Bishops Waltham, but the place has changed hands since
+that time, so that I can only prove my words, as you have heard, by
+the state of my horse when I came home. For the condition of the
+remains in the vault I cannot account; I never touched the poor
+fellow after throwing him there. My wife died a few hours after my
+return home, where I remained for a week, nor did I suggest flight,
+though I gladly availed myself of my father's suggestion of sending
+me abroad with a tutor. Let me add, to remove misconception, that I
+visited Paris because my tutor, the Reverend George Fellowes, one of
+the Fellows of Magdalen College expelled by the late King, and now
+Rector of Portchester, had been asked to provide for Miss Woodford's
+return to her home, and he is here to testify that I never had any
+concern with politics. I did indeed accompany him to St. Germain,
+but merely to find the young gentlewoman, and in the absence of the
+late King and Queen, nor did I hold intercourse with any other
+person connected with their Court. After escorting her to Ostend, I
+went to Hungary to serve in the army of our ally, the Emperor,
+against the Turks, the enemies of all Christians. After a severe
+wound, I have come home, knowing nothing of conspiracies, and I was
+taken by surprise on arriving here at Winchester at finding that my
+cousin was on his trial for the unfortunate deed into which I was
+betrayed by haste and passion, but entirely without premeditation or
+intent to do more than to defend the young lady. So that I plead
+that my crime does not amount to murder from malicious intent; and
+likewise, that those who charge me with the actual death of
+Peregrine Oakshott should prove him to be dead."
+
+Charles's first witness was Mrs. Lang, his late wife's 'own woman,'
+who spared him many questions by garrulously declaring 'what a work'
+poor little Madam had made about the rose-coloured sarcenet, causing
+the pattern to be searched out as soon as she came home from the
+bonfire, and how she had 'gone on at' her husband till he promised
+to give it to Mistress Anne, and how he had been astir at four
+o'clock in the morning, and had called to her (Mrs. Lang) to look to
+her mistress, who might perhaps get some sleep now that she had her
+will and hounded him out to go over to Portchester about that silk.
+
+Nothing was asked of this witness by the prosecution except the time
+of Mr. Archfield's return. The question of jealousy was passed
+over.
+
+Of the pond apparition nothing was said. Anne had told Charles of
+it, but no one could have proved its identity but Sedley, and his
+share in it was too painful to be brought forward. Three other
+ghost seers were brought forward: Mrs. Fellowes's maid, the sentry,
+and the sexton; but only the sexton had ever seen Master Perry
+alive, and he would not swear to more than that it was something in
+his likeness; the sentry was already bound to declare it something
+unsubstantial; and the maid was easily persuaded into declaring that
+she did not know what she had seen or whether she had seen anything.
+
+There only remained Mr. Fellowes to bear witness of his pupil's
+entire innocence of political intrigues, together with a voluntary
+testimony addressed to the court, that the youth had always appeared
+to him a well-disposed but hitherto boyish lad, suddenly sobered and
+rendered thoughtful by a shock that had changed the tenor of his
+mind.
+
+Mr. Baron Hatsel summed up in his dreary vacillating way. He told
+the gentlemen of the jury that young men would be young men,
+especially where pretty wenches were concerned, and that all knew
+that there was bitterness where Whig and Tory were living nigh
+together. Then he went over the evidence, at first in a tone
+favourable to the encounter having been almost accidental, and the
+stroke an act of passion. But he then added, it was strange, and he
+did not know what to think of these young sparks and the young
+gentlewoman all meeting in a lonely place when honest folks were
+abed, and the hiding in the vault, and the state of the clothes were
+strange matters scarce agreeing with what either prisoner or witness
+said. It looked only too like part of a plot of which some one
+should make a clean breast. On the other hand, the prisoner was a
+fine young gentleman, an only son, and had been fighting the Turks,
+though it would have been better to have fought the French among his
+own countrymen. He had come ingenuously forward to deliver his
+cousin, and a deliberate murderer was not wont to be so generous,
+though may be he expected to get off easily on this same plea of
+misadventure. If it was misadventure, why did he not try to do
+something for the deceased, or wait to see whether he breathed
+before throwing him into this same pit? though, to be sure, a lad
+might be inexperienced. For the rest, as to these same sights of
+the deceased or his likeness, he (the judge) was no believer in
+ghosts, though he would not say there were no such things, and the
+gentlemen of the jury must decide whether it was more likely the
+poor youth was playing pranks in the body, or whether he were
+haunting in the spirit those who had most to do with his untimely
+end. This was the purport, or rather the no-purport, of the charge.
+
+The jury were absent for a very short time, and as it leaked out
+afterwards, their intelligence did not rise above the idea that the
+young gentleman was thick with they Frenchies who wanted to bring in
+murder and popery, warming-pans and wooden shoes. He called stoning
+poultry a trifle, so of what was he not capable? Of course he
+spited the poor young chap, and how could the fact be denied when
+the poor ghost had come back to ask for his blood?
+
+So the awful suspense ended with 'Guilty, my Lord.'
+
+"Of murder or manslaughter?"
+
+"Of murder."
+
+The prisoner stood as no doubt he had faced Turkish batteries.
+
+The judge asked the customary question whether he had any reason to
+plead why he should not be condemned to death.
+
+"No, my lord. I am guilty of shedding Peregrine Oakshott's blood,
+and though I declare before God and man that I had no such purpose,
+and it was done in the heat of an undesigned struggle, I hated him
+enough to render the sentence no unjust one. I trust that God will
+pardon me, if man does not."
+
+The gentlemen around drew the poor old father out of the court so as
+not to hear the final sentence, and Anne, half stunned, was taken
+away by her uncle, and put into the same carriage with him. The old
+man held her hands closely and could not speak, but she found voice,
+"Sir, sir, do not give up hope. God will save him. I know what I
+can do. I will go to Princess Anne. She is friendly with the King
+now. She will bring me to tell him all."
+
+Hurriedly she spoke, her object, as it seemed to be that of every
+one, to keep up such hope and encouragement as to drown the terrible
+sense of the actual upshot of the trial. The room at the George was
+full in a moment of friends declaring that all would go well in the
+end, and consulting what to do. Neither Sir Philip nor Dr. Woodford
+could be available, as their refusal to take the oaths to King
+William made them marked men. The former could only write to the
+Imperial Ambassador, beseeching him to claim the prisoner as an
+officer of the Empire, though it was doubtful whether this would be
+allowed in the case of an Englishman born. Mr. Fellowes undertook
+to be the bearer of the letter, and to do his best through
+Archbishop Tenison to let the King know the true bearings of the
+case. Almost in pity, to spare Anne the misery of helpless waiting,
+Dr. Woodford consented to let her go under his escort, starting very
+early the next morning, since the King might immediately set off for
+the army in Holland, and the space was brief between condemnation
+and execution.
+
+Sir Edmund proposed to hurry to Carisbrooke Castle, being happily on
+good terms with that fiery personage, Lord Cutts, the governor of
+the Isle of Wight as well as a favoured general of the King, whose
+intercession might do more than Princess Anne's. Moreover, a
+message came from old Mr. Cromwell, begging to see Sir Edmund. It
+was on behalf of Major Oakshott, who entreated that Sir Philip might
+be assured of his own great regret at the prosecution and the
+result, and his entire belief that the provocation came from his
+unhappy son. Both he and Richard Cromwell were having a petition
+for pardon drawn up, which Sir Henry Mildmay and almost all the
+leading gentlemen of Hampshire of both parties were sure to sign,
+while the sheriff would defer the execution as long as possible.
+Pardons, especially in cases of duelling, had been marketable
+articles in the last reigns, and there could not but be a sigh for
+such conveniences. Sir Philip wanted to go at once to the jail,
+which was very near the inn, but consented on strong persuasion to
+let his son-in-law precede him.
+
+Anne longed for a few moments to herself, but durst not leave the
+poor old man, who sat holding her hand, and at each interval of
+silence saying how this would kill the boy's mother, or something
+equally desponding, so that she had to talk almost at random of the
+various gleams of hope, and even to describe how the little Duke of
+Gloucester might be told of Philip and sent to the King, who was
+known to be very fond of him. It was a great comfort when Dr.
+Woodford came and offered to pray with them.
+
+By and by Sir Edmund returned, having been making arrangements for
+Charles's comfort. Ordinary prisoners were heaped together and
+miserably treated, but money could do something, and by application
+to the High Sheriff, permission had been secured for Charles to
+occupy a private room, on a heavy fee to the jailor, and for his
+friends to have access to him, besides other necessaries, purchased
+at more than their weight in gold. Sir Edmund brought word that
+Charles was in good heart; sent love and duty to his father, whom he
+would welcome with all his soul, but that as Miss Woodford was--in
+her love and bravery--going so soon to London, he prayed that she
+might be his first visitor that evening.
+
+There was little more to do than to cross the street, and Sir Edmund
+hurried her through the flagged and dirty yard, and the dim, foul
+hall, filled with fumes of smoke and beer, where melancholy debtors
+held out their hands, idle scapegraces laughed, heavy degraded faces
+scowled, and evil sounds were heard, up the stairs to a nail-studded
+door, where Anne shuddered to hear the heavy key turned by the
+coarse, rude-looking warder, only withheld from insolence by the
+presence of a magistrate. Her escort tarried outside, and she saw
+Charles, his rush-light candle gleaming on his gold lace as he wrote
+a letter to the ambassador to be forwarded by his father.
+
+He sprang up with outstretched arms and an eager smile. "My brave
+sweetheart! how nobly you have done. Truth and trust. It did my
+heart good to hear you."
+
+Her head was on his shoulder. She wanted to speak, but could not
+without loosing the flood of tears.
+
+"Faith entire," he went on; "and you are still striving for me."
+
+"Princess Anne is--" she began, then the choking came.
+
+"True!" he said. "Come, do not expect the worst. I have not made
+up my mind to that! If the ambassador will stir, the King will not
+be disobliging, though it will probably not be a free pardon, but
+Hungary for some years to come--and you are coming with me."
+
+"If you will have one who might be--may have been--your death. Oh,
+every word I said seemed to me stabbing you;" and the tears would
+come now.
+
+"No such thing! They only showed how true my love is to God and me,
+and made my heart swell with pride to hear her so cheering me
+through all."
+
+His strength seemed to allow her to break down. She had all along
+had to bear up the spirits of Sir Philip and Lady Archfield, and
+though she had struggled for composure, the finding that she had in
+him a comforter and support set the pent-up tears flowing fast, as
+he held her close.
+
+"Oh, I did not mean to vex you thus!" she said.
+
+"Vex! no indeed! 'Tis something to be wept for. But cheer up, Anne
+mine. I have often been in far worse plights than this, when I have
+ridden up in the face of eight big Turkish guns. The balls went
+over my head then, by God's good mercy. Why not the same now? Ay!
+and I was ready to give all I had to any one who would have put a
+pistol to my head and got me out of my misery, jolting along on the
+way to the Iron Gates. Yet here I am! Maybe the Almighty brought
+me back to save poor Sedley, and clear my own conscience, knowing
+well that though it does not look so, it is better for me to die
+thus than the other way. No, no; 'tis ten to one that you and the
+rest of you will get me off. I only meant to show you that
+supposing it fails, I shall only feel it my due, and much better for
+me than if I had died out there with it unconfessed. I shall try to
+get them all to feel it so, and, after all, now the whole is out, my
+heart feels lighter than it has done these seven years. And if I
+could only believe that poor fellow alive, I could almost die
+content, though that sounds strange. It will quiet his poor
+restless spirit any way."
+
+"You are too brave. Oh! I hoped to come here to comfort you, and I
+have only made you comfort me."
+
+"The best way, sweetest. Now, I will seal and address this letter,
+and you shall take it to Mr. Fellowes to carry to the ambassador."
+
+This gave Anne a little time to compose herself, and when he had
+finished, he took the candle, and saying, "Look here," he held it to
+the wall, and they read, scratched on the rough bricks, "Alice
+Lisle, 1685. This is thankworthy."
+
+"Lady Lisle's cell! Oh, this is no good omen!"
+
+"I call it a goodly legacy even to one who cannot claim to suffer
+wrongfully," said Charles. "There, they knock--one kiss more--we
+shall meet again soon. Don't linger in town, but give me all the
+days you can. Yes, take her back, Sir Edmund, for she must rest
+before her journey. Cheer up, love, and do not lie weeping all
+night, but believe that your prayers to God and man must prevail one
+way or another."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI: ELF-LAND
+
+
+"Three ruffians seized me yestermorn,
+ Alas! a maiden most forlorn;
+They choked my cries with wicked might,
+ And bound me on a palfrey white."
+
+S. T. COLERIDGE.
+
+Yet after the night it was with more hope than despondency, Anne, in
+the February morning, mounted en croupe behind Mr. Fellowes's
+servant, that being decided on as the quickest mode of travelling.
+She saw the sunrise behind St. Catherine's Hill, and the gray mists
+filling the valley of the Itchen, and the towers of the Cathedral
+and College barely peeping beyond them. Would her life rise out of
+the mist?
+
+Through hoar-frosted hedges, deeply crested with white, they rode,
+emerging by and by on downs, becoming dully green above, as the sun
+touched them, but white below. Suddenly, in passing a hollow,
+overhung by two or three yew-trees, they found themselves surrounded
+by masked horsemen. The servant on her horse was felled, she
+herself snatched off and a kerchief covered her face, while she was
+crying, "Oh sir, let me go! I am on business of life and death."
+
+The covering was stuffed into her mouth, and she was borne along
+some little way; then there was a pause, and she freed herself
+enough to say, "You shall have everything; only let me go;" and she
+felt for the money with which Sir Philip had supplied her, and for
+the watch given her by King James.
+
+"We want you; nothing of yours," said a voice. "Don't be afraid.
+No one will hurt you; but we must have you along with us."
+
+Therewith she was pinioned by two large hands, and a bandage was
+made fast over her eyes, and when she shrieked out, "Mr. Fellowes!
+Oh! where are you?" she was answered--
+
+"No harm has been done to the parson. He will be free as soon as
+any one comes by. 'Tis you we want. Now, I give you fair notice,
+for we don't want to choke you; there's no one to hear a squall. If
+there were, we should gag you, so you had best be quiet, and you
+shall suffer no hurt. Now then, by your leave, madam."
+
+She was lifted on horseback again, and a belt passed round her and
+the rider in front of her. Again she strove, in her natural voice,
+to plead that to stop her would imperil a man's life, and to implore
+for release. "We know all that," she was told. It was not rudely
+said. The voice was not that of a clown; it was a gentleman's
+pronunciation, and this was in some ways more inexplicable and
+alarming. The horses were put in rapid motion; she heard the
+trampling of many hoofs, and felt that they were on soft turf, and
+she knew that for many miles round Winchester it was possible to
+keep on the downs so as to avoid any inhabited place. She tried to
+guess, from the sense of sunshine that came through her bandage, in
+what direction she was being carried, and fancied it must be
+southerly. On--on--on--still the turf. It seemed absolutely
+endless. Time was not measurable under such circumstances, but she
+fancied noon must have more than passed, when the voice that had
+before spoken said, "We halt in a moment, and shift you to another
+horse, madam; but again I forewarn you that our comrades here have
+no ears for you, and that cries and struggles will only make it the
+worse for you." Then came the sound as of harder ground and a stop--
+undertones, gruff and manly, could be heard, the peculiar noise of
+horses' drinking; and her captor came up this time on foot, saying,
+"Plaguy little to be had in this accursed hole; 'tis but the choice
+between stale beer and milk. Which will you prefer?"
+
+She could not help accepting the milk, and she was taken down to
+drink it, and a hunch of coarse barley bread was given to her, with
+it the words, "I would offer you bacon, but it tastes as if Old Nick
+had smoked it in his private furnace."
+
+Such expressions were no proof that gentle blood was lacking, but
+whose object could her abduction be--her, a penniless dependent?
+Could she have been seized by mistake for some heiress? In that
+moment's hope she asked, "Sir, do you know who I am--Anne Woodford,
+a poor, portionless maid, not--"
+
+"I know perfectly well, madam," was the reply. "May I trouble you
+to permit me to mount you again?"
+
+She was again placed behind one of the riders, and again fastened to
+him, and off they went, on a rougher horse, on harder ground, and,
+as she thought, occasionally through brushwood. Again a space, to
+her illimitable, went by, and then came turf once more, and by and
+by what seemed to her the sound of the sea.
+
+Another halt, another lifting down, but at once to be gathered up
+again, and then a splashing through water. "Be careful," said the
+voice. A hand, a gentleman's hand, took hers; her feet were on
+boards--on a boat; she was drawn down to sit on a low thwart.
+Putting her hand over, she felt the lapping of the water and tasted
+that it was salt.
+
+"Oh, sir, where are you taking me?" she asked, as the boat was
+pushed off.
+
+"That you will know in due time," he answered.
+
+Some more refreshment was offered her in a decided but not
+discourteous manner, and she partook of it, remembering that
+exhaustion might add to her perils. She perceived that after
+pushing off from shore sounds of eating and low gruff voices mingled
+with the plash of oars. Commands seemed to be given in French, and
+there were mutterings of some strange language. Darkness was coming
+on. What were they doing with her? And did Charles's fate hang
+upon hers?
+
+Yet in spite of terrors and anxieties, she was so much worn out as
+to doze long enough to lose count of time, till she was awakened by
+the rocking and tossing of the boat and loud peremptory commands.
+She became for the first time in her life miserable with sea-
+sickness, for how long it was impossible to tell, and the pitching
+of the boat became so violent that when she found herself bound to
+one of the seats she was conscious of little but a longing to be
+allowed to go to the bottom in peace, except that some great cause--
+she could hardly in her bewildered wretchedness recollect what--
+forbade her to die till her mission was over.
+
+There were loud peremptory orders, oaths, sea phrases, in French and
+English, sometimes in that unknown tongue. Something expressed that
+a light was directing to a landing-place, but reaching it was
+doubtful.
+
+"Unbind her eyes," said a voice; "let her shift for herself."
+
+"Better not."
+
+There followed a fresh upheaval, as if the boat were perpendicular;
+a sudden sinking, some one fell over and bruised her; another
+frightful rising and falling, then smoothness; the rope that held
+her fast undone; the keel grating; hands apparently dragging up the
+boat. She was lifted out like a doll, carried apparently through
+water over shingle. Light again made itself visible; she was in a
+house, set down on a chair, in the warmth of fire, amid a buzz of
+voices, which lulled as the bandage was untied and removed. Her
+eyes were so dazzled, her head so giddy, her senses so faint, that
+everything swam round her, and there that strange vision recurred.
+Peregrine Oakshott was before her. She closed her eyes again, as
+she lay back in the chair.
+
+"Take this; you will be better." A glass was at her lips, and she
+swallowed some hot drink, which revived her so that she opened her
+eyes again, and by the lights in an apparently richly curtained
+room, she again beheld that figure standing by her, the glass in his
+hand.
+
+"Oh!" she gasped. "Are you alive?"
+
+The answer was to raise her still gloved hand with substantial
+fingers to a pair of lips.
+
+"Then--then--he is safe! Thank God!" she murmured, and shut her
+eyes again, dizzy and overcome, unable even to analyse her
+conviction that all would be well, and that in some manner he had
+come to her rescue.
+
+"Where am I?" she murmured dreamily. "In Elf-land?"
+
+"Yes; come to be Queen of it."
+
+The words blended with her confused fancies. Indeed she was hardly
+fully conscious of anything, except that a woman's hands were about
+her, and that she was taken into another room, where her drenched
+clothes were removed, and she was placed in a warm, narrow bed,
+where some more warm nourishment was put into her mouth with a
+spoon, after which she sank into a sleep of utter exhaustion. That
+sleep lasted long. There was a sensation of the rocking of the
+boat, and of aching limbs, through great part of the time; also
+there seemed to be a continual roaring and thundering around her,
+and such strange misty visions, that when she finally awoke, after a
+long interval of deeper and sounder slumber, she was incapable of
+separating the fact from the dream, more especially as head and
+limbs were still heavy, weary, and battered. The strange roaring
+still sounded, and sometimes seemed to shake the bed. Twilight was
+coming in at a curtained window, and showed a tiny chamber, with
+rafters overhead and thatch, a chest, a chair, and table. There was
+a pallet on the floor, and Anne suspected that she had been wakened
+by the rising of its occupant. Her watch was on the chair by her
+side, but it had not been wound, and the dim light did not increase,
+so that there was no guessing the time; and as the remembrance of
+her dreadful adventures made themselves clear, she realised with
+exceeding terror that she must be a prisoner, while the evening's
+apparition relegated itself to the world of dreams.
+
+Being kidnapped to be sent to the plantations was the dread of those
+days. But if such were the case, what would become of Charles? In
+the alarm of that thought she sat up in bed and prepared to rise,
+but could nowhere see her clothes, only the little cloth bag of
+toilet necessaries that she had taken with her.
+
+At that moment, however, the woman came in with a steaming cup of
+chocolate in her hand and some of the garments over her arm. She
+was a stout, weather-beaten, kindly-looking woman with a high white
+cap, gold earrings, black short petticoat, and many-coloured apron.
+"Monsieur veut savoir si mademoiselle va bien?" said she in slow
+careful French, and when questions in that language were eagerly
+poured out, she shook her head, and said, "Ne comprends pas." She,
+however, brought in the rest of the clothes, warm water, and a
+light, so that Anne rose and dressed, exceedingly perplexed, and
+wondering whether she could be in a ship, for the sounds seemed to
+say so, and there was no corresponding motion. Could she be in
+France? Certainly the voyage had seemed interminable, but she did
+not think it _could_ have been long enough for that, nor that any
+person in his senses would try to cross in an open boat in such
+weather. She looked at the window, a tiny slip of glass, too thick
+to show anything but what seemed to be a dark wall rising near at
+hand. Alas! she was certainly a prisoner! In whose hands? With
+what intent? How would it affect that other prisoner at Winchester?
+Was that vision of last night substantial or the work of her
+exhausted brain? What could she do? It was well for her that she
+could believe in the might of prayer.
+
+She durst not go beyond her door, for she heard men's tones,
+suppressed and gruff, but presently there was a knock, and wonder of
+wonders, she beheld Hans, black Hans, showing all his white teeth in
+a broad grin, and telling her that Missee Anne's breakfast was
+ready. The curtain that overhung the door was drawn back, and she
+passed into another small room, with a fire on the open hearth, and
+a lamp hung from a beam, the walls all round covered with carpets or
+stuffs of thick glowing colours, so that it was like the inside of a
+tent. And in the midst, without doubt, stood Peregrine Oakshott, in
+such a dress as was usually worn by gentlemen in the morning--a
+loose wrapping coat, though with fine lace cuffs and cravat, all,
+like the shoes and silk stockings, worn with his peculiar
+daintiness, and, as was usual when full-bottomed wigs were the rule
+in grande tenue, its place supplied by a silken cap. This was olive
+green with a crimson tassel, which had assumed exactly the
+characteristic one-sided Riquet-with-a-tuft aspect. For the rest,
+these years seemed to have made the slight form slighter and more
+wiry, and the face keener, more sallow, and more marked.
+
+He bowed low with the foreign courtesy which used to be so offensive
+to his contemporaries, and offered a delicate, beringed hand to lead
+the young lady to the little table, where grilled fowl and rolls,
+both showing the cookery of Hans, were prepared for her.
+
+"I hope you rested well, and have an appetite this morning."
+
+"Sir, what does it all mean? Where am I?" asked Anne, drawing
+herself up with the native dignity that she felt to be her defence.
+
+"In Elf-land," he said, with a smile, as he heaped her plate.
+
+"Speak in earnest," she entreated. "I cannot eat till I understand.
+It is no time for trifling! Life and death hang on my reaching
+London! If you saved me from those men, let me go free."
+
+"No one can move at present," he said. "See here."
+
+He drew back a curtain, opened first one door and then another, and
+she saw sheets of driving rain, and rising, roaring waves, with surf
+which came beating in on the force of such a fearful gust of wind
+that Peregrine hastily shut the door, not without difficulty.
+"Nobody can stir at present," he said, as they came into the warm
+bright room again. "It is a frightful tempest, the worst known here
+for years, they say. The dead-lights, as they call them, have been
+put in, or the windows would be driven in. Come and taste Hans's
+work; you know it of old. Will you drink tea? Do you remember how
+your mother came to teach mine to brew it, and how she forgave me
+for being graceless enough to squirt at her?"
+
+There was something so gentle and reassuring in the demeanour of
+this strange being that Anne, convinced of the utter hopelessness of
+confronting the storm, as well as of the need of gathering strength,
+allowed herself to be placed in a chair, and to partake of the food
+set before her, and the tea, which was served without milk, in an
+exquisite dragon china cup, but with a saucer that did not match it.
+
+"We don't get our sets perfect," said Peregrine, with a smile, who
+was waiting on her as if she were a princess.
+
+"I entreat you to tell me where we are!" said Anne. "Not in
+France?"
+
+"No, not in France! I wish we were."
+
+"Then--can this be the Island?"
+
+"Yes, the Island it is," said Peregrine, both speaking as South
+Hants folk; "this is the strange cave or chasm called Black Gang
+Chine."
+
+"Black Gang! Oh! the highwaymen, the pirates! You have saved me
+from them. Were they going to send me to the plantations?"
+
+"You need have no fears. No one shall touch you, or hurt you. You
+shall see no one save by your own consent, my queen."
+
+"And when this storm is passed--Oh!" as a more fearful roar and dash
+sounded as if the waves were about to sweep away their frail
+shelter--"you will come with me and save Mr. Archfield's life? You
+cannot know--"
+
+"I know," he interrupted; "but why should I be solicitous for his
+life? That I am here now is no thanks to him, and why should I give
+up mine for the sake of him who meant to make an end of me?"
+
+"You little know how he repented. And your own life? What do you
+mean?"
+
+"People don't haunt the Black Gang Chine when their lives are secure
+from Dutch Bill," he answered. "Don't be terrified, my queen;
+though I cannot lay claim, like Prospero, to having raised this
+storm by my art magic, yet it perforce gives me time to make you
+understand who and what I am, and how I have recovered my better
+angel to give her no mean nor desperate career. It will be better
+thus than with the suddenness with which I might have had to act."
+
+A new alarm seized upon Anne as to his possible intentions, but she
+would not forestall what she so much apprehended, and, sensible that
+self-control alone could guard her, since escape at present was
+clearly impossible, she resigned herself to sit opposite to him by
+the ample hearth of what she perceived to be a fisherman's hut, thus
+fitted up luxuriously with, it might be feared, the spoils of the
+sea.
+
+The story was a long one, and not by any means told consecutively or
+without interruption, and all the time those eyes were upon her, one
+yellow the other green, with the effect she knew so well of old in
+childish days, of repulsion yet compulsion, of terror yet
+attraction, as if irresistibly binding a reluctant will. Several
+times Peregrine was called off to speak to some one outside the
+door, and at noon he begged permission for his friends to dine with
+them, saying that there was no other place where the dinner could be
+taken to them comfortably in this storm.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII: SEVEN YEARS
+
+
+"It was between the night and day,
+ When the Fairy King has power,
+That I sunk down in a sinful fray,
+And 'twixt life and death was snatched away
+ To the joyless Elfin bower."
+
+SCOTT.
+
+This motto was almost the account that the twisted figure, with
+queer contortions of face, yet delicate feet and hands, and dainty
+utterance, might have been expected to give, when Anne asked him,
+"Was it you, really?"
+
+"I--or my double?" he asked. "When?"
+
+She told him, and he seemed amazed.
+
+"So you were there? Well, you shall hear. You know how things
+stood with me--your mother, my good spirit, dead, my uncle away, my
+father bent on driving me to utter desperation, and Martha Browning
+laying her great red hands on me--"
+
+"Oh, sir, she really loved you, and is far wiser and more tolerant
+than you thought her."
+
+"I know," he smiled grimly. "She buried the huge Scot that was
+killed in the great smuggling fray under the Protector, with all
+honours, in our family vault, and had a long-winded sermon preached
+on my untimely end. Ha! ha!" with his mocking laugh.
+
+"Don't, sir! If you had seen your father then! Why did no one come
+forward and explain?"
+
+"Mayhap there were none at hand who knew, or wished to meddle with
+the law," he said. "Well, things were beyond all bearing at home,
+and you were going away, and would not so much as look at me. Now,
+one of the few sports my father did not look askance at was fishing,
+and he would endure my being out at night with, as he thought, poor
+man, old Pete Perring, who was as stern a Puritan as himself; but I
+had livelier friends, and more adventurous. They had connections
+with French free-traders for brandy and silks, and when they found I
+was one with them, my French tongue was a boon to them, till I came
+to have a good many friends among the Norman fishermen, and to know
+the snug hiding-places about the coast. So at last I made up my
+mind to be off with them, and make my way to my uncle in Muscovy. I
+had raised money enough at play and on the jewels one picks up in an
+envoy's service, and there was one good angel whom I meant to take
+with me if I could secure her and bind her wings. Now you know with
+what hopes I saw you gathering flowers alone that morning."
+
+Anne clasped her hands; Charles had truly interfered with good
+cause.
+
+"I had all arranged," he continued; "my uncle would have given you a
+hearty welcome, and made our peace with my father, or if not, he
+would have left us all his goods, and secured my career. What call
+had that great lout, with a wife of his own too, to come thrusting
+between us? I thought I should make short work of him, and give him
+a lesson against meddling--great unlicked cub as he was, while I had
+had the best training at Berlin and Paris in fencing; but somehow
+those big strong fellows, from their very clumsiness, throw one out.
+And he meant mischief--yes, that he did. I saw it in his eyes. I
+suppose his sulky rustic jealousy was a-fire at a few little
+civilities to that poor little wife of his. Any way, when he bore
+me down like the swing of a windmill, he drove his sword home. Talk
+of his being innocent! Why should he never look whether I were dead
+or alive, but fling me headlong into that pit?"
+
+Anne could not but utter her eager defence, but it was met with a
+sinister smile, half of scorn, half of pity, and as she would have
+gone on, "Hush! your pleading only fills up the measure of my
+loathing."
+
+Her heart sank, but she let him go on, listening perhaps less
+attentively as she considered how to take him.
+
+"In fact," he continued, "little as the lubber knew it, 'twas the
+best he could have done for me. For though I never looked for such
+luck as your being out in the court at that hour, I did think the
+chance not to be lost of visiting the garden or the churchyard, and
+there were waiting in the vault a couple of stout Normans, who were
+to come at my whistle. It seems that when I came tumbling down in
+their midst, senseless and bleeding like a calf, they did not take
+it quite so easily as your champion above, but began doing what they
+could for me, and were trying to staunch the wound, when they heard
+a trampling and a rumbling overhead, and being aware that our
+undertaking might look ugly in the sight of the law, and thinking
+this might be pursuers, they carried me off with all speed, not so
+much as stopping to pick up the things that have made such a
+commotion. Was there any pursuit?"
+
+"Oh no; it must have been the haymakers."
+
+"No doubt. The place was in no great favour with our own people;
+they were in awe of the big Scot, who is in comfortable quarters in
+my grave, and the Frenchmen could not have found their way thither,
+so it was let alone till Mistress Martha's researches. So I came to
+myself in the boat in which they took me on board the lugger that
+was waiting for us; and instead of making for Alderney, as I had
+intended, so as to get the knot safely tied to your satisfaction,
+they sailed straight for Havre. They had on board a Jesuit father,
+whom I had met once or twice among the Duke of Berwick's people, but
+who had found Portsmouth too hot to hold him in the frenzy of
+Protestant zeal on the Bishops' account. He had been beset, and
+owed his life, he says, to the fists of the Breton and Norman
+sailors, who had taken him on board. It was well for me, for I
+doubt if ever I was tough enough to have withstood my good friends'
+treatment. He had me carried to a convent in Havre, where the
+fathers nursed me well; and before I was on my legs again, I had
+made up my mind to cast in my lot with them, or rather with their
+Church."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"I had been baulked of winning the one being near whom my devil
+never durst come. And blood-letting had pretty well disposed of
+him. I was as meek and mild as milk under the good fathers.
+Moreover, as my good friend at Turin had told me, and they repeated
+it, such a doubly heretical baptism as mine was probably invalid,
+and accounted for my being as much a vessel of wrath as even my
+father was pleased to call me. There was the Queen's rosary drawing
+me too. Everything else was over with me, and it seemed to open a
+new life. So, bless me, what a soft and pious frame I was in when
+they chastened me, water, oil, salt and all, on what my father raged
+at folks calling Lammas Day, but which it seems really belongs to
+St. Peter in the Fetters. So I was named Pierre or Piers after him,
+thus keeping my own initial."
+
+"Piers! oh! not Piers Pigwiggin?"
+
+"Pierre de Pilpignon, if you please. I have a right to that too;
+but we shall come to it by and by. I can laugh now, or perhaps
+weep, over the fervid state I was in then, as if I had trodden down
+my snake, and by giving up everything--you, estate, career, I could
+keep him down. So it was settled that I would devote myself to the
+priesthood--don't laugh!--and I was ordered off to their seminary in
+London, partly, I believe, for the sake of piloting a couple of
+fathers, who could not speak a word of English. It was, as they
+rightly judged, the last place where my father would think of
+looking for me, but they did not as rightly judge that we should
+long keep possession there. Matters grew serious, and it was not
+over safe in the streets. There was a letter of importance from a
+friend in Holland, carrying the Prince of Orange's hypocritical
+Declaration, which was to be got to Father Petre or the King on the
+night--Hallowmas Eve it was--and I was told off to put on a secular
+dress, which I could wear more naturally than most of them, and
+convey it."
+
+"Ah, that explains!"
+
+"Apparition number one! I guessed you were somewhere in those
+parts, and looked up at the windows, and though I did not see you, I
+believe it was your eyes that first sent a thrill through me that
+boded ill for Roman orders. After that we lived in a continual
+state of rumours and alarms, secret messages and expeditions, until
+I, being strong in the arm and the wind and a feather-weight, was
+one of those honoured by rowing the Queen and Prince across the
+river. M. de St. Victor accepted me. He told me there would be two
+nurses, but never knew or cared who they were, nor did I guess, as
+we sat in the dark, how near I was to you. And only for one second
+did I see your face, as you were entering the carriage, and I
+blessed you the more for what you were doing for Her Majesty."
+
+He proceeded to tell how he had accompanied the Jesuit fathers, on
+their leaving London, to the great English seminary at Douai, and
+being for the time convinced by them that his feelings towards Anne
+were a delusion of the enemy, he had studied with all his might, and
+as health and monotony of life began to have their accustomed effect
+in rousing the restlessness and mischievousness of his nature, with
+all the passions of manhood growing upon him, he strove to force
+them down by fasting and scourging. He told, in a bitter, almost
+savage way, of his endeavours to flog his demon out of himself, and
+of his anger and disappointment at finding Piers Pilgrim in the
+seminary of Douai, quite as subject to his attacks as ever was Perry
+Oakshott under a sermon of Mr. Horncastle's.
+
+Then came the information among the students that the governor of
+the city, the Marquis de Nidemerle, had brought some English
+gentlemen and ladies to visit the gardens. As most of the students
+were of British families there was curiosity as to who they were,
+and thus Peregrine heard that one was young Archfield of the
+Hampshire family, with his tutor, and the lady was Mistress Darpent,
+daughter to a French lawyer, who had settled in England after the
+Fronde. Anne's name had not transpired, for she was viewed merely
+as an attendant. Peregrine had been out on some errand in the town,
+and had a distant view of his enemy as he held him, flaunting about
+with a fine lady on his arm, forgetting the poor little pretty wife
+whom no doubt he had frightened to death."
+
+"Oh! you little know how tenderly he speaks of her."
+
+"Tenderly!--that's the way they speak of me at Oakwood, eh? Human,
+not to say elf, nature, could not withstand giving the fellow a
+start. I sped off, whipped into the Church, popped into a surplice
+I found ready to hand, caught up a candle, and!--Little did I think
+who it was that was hanging on his arm. So little did I know it
+that my heart began to be drawn to St. Germain, where I still
+imagined you. Altogether, after that prank, all broke out again. I
+entertained the lads with a few more freaks, for which I did ample
+penance, but it grew on me that in my case all was a weariness and a
+sham, and that my demon might get a worse hold of me if I got into a
+course of hypocrisy. They were very good to me, those fathers, but
+Jesuits as they were, I doubt whether they ever fathomed me. Any
+way, perhaps they thought I should be a scandal, but they agreed
+with me that their order was not my vocation, and that we had better
+part before my fiend drove me to do so with dishonour. They even
+gave me recommendations to the French officers that were besieging
+Tournay. I knew the Duke of Berwick a little at Portsmouth, and it
+ended in my becoming under-secretary to the Duke of Chartres. A man
+who knows languages has his value among Frenchmen, who despise all
+but their own."
+
+Peregrine did not enter into full details of this stage of his
+career, and Anne was not fully informed of the habits that the young
+Duke of Chartres, the future Regent Duke of Orleans, was already
+developing, but she gathered that, what the young man called his
+demon, had nearly undisputed sway over him, and she had not spent
+eight months at St. Germain without knowing by report of the
+dissolute manners of the substratum of fashionable society at Paris,
+even though outward decorum had been restored by Madame de
+Maintenon. Yet he seemed to have been crossed by fits of vehement
+penitence, and almost the saddest part of the story was the mocking
+tone in which he alluded to these.
+
+He had sought service at the Court in the hope of meeting Miss
+Woodford there, and had been grievously disappointed when he found
+that she had long since returned to England. The sight of the
+gracious and lovely countenance of the exiled Queen seemed always to
+have moved and touched him, as in some inexplicable manner her eyes
+and expression recalled to him those of Mrs. Woodford and Anne; but
+the thought had apparently only stung him into the sense of being
+forsaken and abandoned to his own devices or those of his evil
+spirit.
+
+One incident, occurring some three years previously, he told more
+fully, as it had a considerable effect on his life. "I was
+attending the Duke in the gardens at Versailles," he said, "when we
+were aware of a great commotion. All the gentlemen were standing
+gazing up into the top of a great chestnut tree, the King and all,
+and in the midst stood the Abbe de Fenelon with his little pupils,
+the youngest, the Duke of Anjou, sobbing piteously, and the Duke of
+Burgundy in a furious passion, stamping and raging, and only
+withheld from rolling on the ground by the Abbe's hand grasping his
+shoulder. 'I will not have him killed! He is mine,' he cried. And
+up in the tree, the object of all their gaze, was a monkey with a
+paper fluttering in his hand. Some one had made a present of the
+creature to the King's grandsons; he was the reigning favourite, and
+having broken his chain, had effected an entrance by the window into
+the King's cabinet, where after giving himself the airs of a
+minister of state, on being interrupted, he had made off through the
+window with an important document, which he was affecting to peruse
+at his leisure, only interrupting himself to hurl down leaves or
+unripe chestnuts at those who attempted to pelt him with stones, and
+this only made him mount higher and higher, entirely out of their
+reach, for no one durst climb after him. I believe it was a letter
+from the King of Spain; at any rate the whole Cabinet was in agony
+lest the brute should proceed to tear it into fragments, and a
+musqueteer had been sent for to shoot him down. I remembered my
+success with the monkey on poor little Madam Archfield's back--nay,
+perhaps 'twas the same, my familiar taking shape. I threw myself at
+the King's feet, and desired permission to deal with the beast. By
+good luck it had not been so easy as they supposed to find a musquet
+fit for immediate use, so I had full time. To ascend the tree was
+no more than I had done many times before, and I went high in the
+branches, but cautiously, not to give Monsieur le Singe the idea of
+being pursued, lest he should leap to a bough incapable of
+supporting me. When I had reached a fork tolerably high, and where
+he could see me, I settled myself, took out a letter, which
+fortunately was in my pocket, read it with the greatest
+deliberation, the monkey watching me all the time, and finally I
+proceeded to fold it neatly in all its creases. The creature
+imitated me with its black fingers, little aware, poor thing, that
+the musqueteer had covered him with his weapon, and was waiting for
+the first sign of tearing the letter to pull the trigger, but
+withheld by a sign from the King, who did not wish to sacrifice his
+grandson's pet before his eyes. Finally, after finishing the
+folding, I doubled it a second time, and threw it at the animal. To
+my great joy he returned the compliment by throwing the other at my
+head. I was able to catch it, and moreover, as he was disposed to
+go in pursuit of his plaything, he swung his chain so near me that I
+got hold of it, twisted it round my arm, and made the best of my way
+down the tree, amid the 'Bravos!' started by the royal lips
+themselves, and repeated with ecstasy by all the crowd, who waved
+their hats, and made such a hallooing that I had much ado to get the
+monkey down safely; but finally, all dishevelled, with my best cuffs
+and cravat torn to ribbons, and my wig happily detached, unlike
+Absalom's, for it remained in the tree, I had the honour of
+presenting on my knee the letter to the King, and the monkey to the
+Princes. I kissed His Majesty's hand, the little Duke of Anjou
+kissed the monkey, and the Duke of Burgundy kissed me with arms
+round my neck, then threw himself on his knees before his
+grandfather to ask pardon for his passion. Every one said my
+fortune was made, and that my agility deserved at least the cordon
+bleu. My own Duke of Chartres, who in many points is like his
+cousin, our late King Charles, gravely assured me that a new office
+was to be invented for me, and that I was to be Grand Singier du
+Roi. I believe he pushed my cause, and so did the little Duke of
+Burgundy, and finally I got the pension without the office, and a
+good deal of occasional employment besides, in the way of
+translation of documents. There were moments of success at play.
+Oh yes, quite fairly, any one with wits about him can make his
+profit in the long-run among the Court set. And thus I had enough
+to purchase a pretty little estate and chateau on the coast of
+Normandy, the confiscated property of a poor Huguenot refugee, so
+that it went cheap. It gives the title of Pilpignon, which I
+assumed in kindness to the tongues of my French friends. So you
+see, I have a station and property to which to carry you, my fair
+one, won by myself, though only by catching an ape."
+
+He went on to say that the spot had been chosen advisedly, with a
+view to communication with the opposite coast, where his old
+connection with the smugglers was likely to be useful in the
+Jacobite plots. "As you well know," he said, "my father had done
+his utmost to make Whiggery stink in my nostrils, to say nothing of
+the kindness I have enjoyed from our good Queen; and I was ready to
+do my utmost in the cause, especially after I had stolen a glimpse
+of you, and when Charnock, poor fellow, returning from reconnoitring
+among the loyal, told me that you were still unmarried, and living
+as a dependent in the Archfields' house. Our headquarters were in
+Romney Marsh, but it was as well to have, as it were, a back door
+here, and as it has turned out it has been the saving of some of
+us."
+
+"Oh, sir! you were not in that wicked plot?"
+
+"Nay; surely _you_ are not turned Whig."
+
+"But this was assassination."
+
+"Not at all, if they would have listened to me. The Dutchman is no
+bigger than I am. I could have dropped on him from one of his trees
+at Hampton Court, or through a window, via presto, and we would have
+had him off by the river, given him an interview to beg his uncle's
+pardon, and despatched him for the benefit of his asthma to the
+company of the Iron Mask at St. Marguerite; then back again, the
+King to enjoy his own again, Dr. Woodford, archbishop or bishop of
+whatever you please, and a lady here present to be Marquise de
+Pilpignon, or Countess of Havant, whichever she might prefer. Yes,
+truly those were the hopes with which I renewed my communications
+with the contraband trade on this coast, a good deal more numerous
+since the Dutchman and his wars have raised the duties and driven
+many good men to holes and corners.
+
+"Ever since last spring, when the Princess Royal died, and thus
+extinguished the last spark of forbearance in the King's breast, I
+have been here, there, and everywhere--Romney Marsh, Drury Lane,
+Paris, besides this place and Pilpignon, where I have a snug harbour
+for the yacht, Ma Belle Annik, as the Breton sailors call her. The
+crew are chiefly Breton; it saves gossip; but I have a boat's crew
+of our own English folk here, stout fellows, ready for anything by
+land or sea."
+
+"The Black Gang," said Anne faintly.
+
+"Don't suppose I have meddled in their exploits on the road," he
+said, "except where a King's messenger or a Royal mail was
+concerned, and that is war, you know, for the cause. Unluckily my
+personal charms are not easily disguised, so that I have had to lurk
+in the background, and only make my private investigations in the
+guise of my own ghost."
+
+"Then so it was you saved the dear little Philip?" said Anne.
+
+"The Archfield boy? I could not see a child sent to his destruction
+by that villain Sedley, whoever were his father, for he meant
+mischief if ever man did. 'Twas superhuman scruple not to hold your
+peace and let him swing."
+
+"What was it, then, on his cousin's part?"
+
+Peregrine only answered with a shrug. It appeared further, that as
+long as the conspirators had entertained any expectation of success,
+he had merely kept a watch over Anne, intending to claim her in the
+hour of the triumph of his party, when he looked to enjoy such a
+position as would leave his brother free to enjoy his paternal
+inheritance. In the failure of all their schemes through Mr.
+Pendergrast's denunciation, Sir George Barclay, and one or two
+inferior plotters, had succeeded in availing themselves of the
+assistance of the Black Gang, and had been conducted by Peregrine to
+the hut that he had fitted up for himself. Still trusting to the
+security there, although his name of Piers Pilgrim or de Pilpignon
+had been among those given up to the Privy Council, he had insisted
+on lingering, being resolved that an attempt should be made to carry
+away the woman he had loved for so many years. Captain Burford had
+so disguised himself as to be able to attend the trial, loiter about
+the inn, and collect intelligence, while the others waited on the
+downs. Peregrine had watched over the capture, but being unwilling
+to disclose himself, had ridden on faster and crossed direct,
+traversing the Island on horseback, while the captive was rounding
+it in the boat. "As should never have been done," he said, "could I
+have foretold to what stress of weather you would be exposed while I
+was preparing for your reception. But for this storm--it rages
+louder than ever--we would have been married by a little parson whom
+Burford would have fetched from Portsmouth, and we should have been
+over the Channel, and my people hailing my bride with ecstasy."
+
+"Never!" exclaimed Anne. "Can you suppose I could accept one who
+would leave an innocent man to suffer?"
+
+"People sometimes are obliged to accept," said Peregrine. Then at
+her horrified start, "No, no, fear no violence; but is not something
+due to one who has loved you through exile all these years, and
+would lay down his life for you? you, the only being who overcomes
+his evil angel!"
+
+"This is what you call overcoming it," she said.
+
+"Nay; indeed, Mistress Anne, I would let the authorities know that
+they are hanging a man for murdering one who is still alive if I
+could; but no one would believe without seeing, and I and all who
+could bear witness to my existence would be rushing to an end even
+worse than a simple noose. You were ready enough to denounce him to
+save that worthless fellow."
+
+"Not ready. It tore my heart. But truth is truth. I could not do
+that wickedness. Oh! how can you? This _is_ the prompting of the
+evil spirit indeed, to expect me to join in leaving that innocent,
+generous spirit to die in cruel injustice. Let me go. I will not
+betray where you are. You will be safe in France; but there will
+yet be time for me to bear witness to your life. Write a letter.
+Your father would thankfully swear to your handwriting, and I think
+they would believe me. Only let me go."
+
+"And what then becomes of the hopes of a lifetime?" demanded
+Peregrine. "I, who have waited as long as Jacob, to be defrauded
+now I have you; and for the sake of the fellow who killed me in will
+if not in deed, and then ran away like a poltroon leaving you to
+bear the brunt!"
+
+"He did not act like a poltroon when he saved the life of his
+general, or when he rescued the colours of his regiment, still less
+when he stood up to save me from the pain of bearing witness against
+him, and to save a guiltless man," cried Anne, with flashing eyes.
+
+Before she had finished her indignant words, Hans was coming in from
+some unknown region to lay the cloth for supper, and Peregrine, with
+an imprecation under his breath, had gone to the door to admit his
+two comrades, who came into the narrow entry on a gust of wind as it
+were, struggling out of their cloaks, stamping and swearing.
+
+In the middle of the day, they had been much more restrained in
+their behaviour. There had at that time been a slight clearance in
+the sky, though the wind was as furious as ever, and they were in
+haste to despatch the meal and go out again to endeavour to stand on
+the heights and to watch some vessels that were being tossed by the
+storm. Almost all the conversation had then been on the chances of
+their weathering the tempest, and the probability of its lasting on,
+and they had hurried away as soon as possible. Anne had not then
+known who they were, and only saw that they were fairly civil to
+her, and kept under a certain constraint by Pilpignon, as they
+called their host. Now she fully knew the one who was addressed as
+Sir George to be Barclay, the prime mover in the wicked scheme of
+assassination of which all honest Tories had been so much ashamed,
+and she could see Captain Burford to be one of those bravoes who
+were only too plentiful in those days, attending on dissolute and
+violent nobles.
+
+She was the less inclined to admit their attentions, and shielded
+herself with a grave coldness of stately manners; but their talk was
+far more free than at noon, suggesting the thought that they had
+anticipated the meal with some of the Nantz or other liquors that
+seemed to be in plenty.
+
+They began by low bows of affected reverence, coarser and worse in
+the ruffian of inferior grade, and the knight complimented Pilpignon
+on being a lucky dog, and hoped he had made the best use of his time
+in spite of the airs of his duchess. It was his own fault if he
+were not enjoying such fair society, while they, poor devils, were
+buffeting with the winds, which had come on more violently than
+ever. Peregrine broke in with a question about the vessels in
+sight.
+
+There was an East Indiaman, Dutch it was supposed, laying-to, that
+was the cause of much excitement. "If she drives ashore our fellows
+will neither be to have nor to hold," said Sir George.
+
+"They will obey me," said Peregrine quietly.
+
+"More than the sea will just yet," laughed the captain. "However,
+as soon as this villainous weather is a bit abated, I'll be off
+across the Island to do your little errand, and only ask a kiss of
+the bride for my pains; but if the parson be at Portsmouth there
+will be no getting him to budge till the water is smooth. Never
+mind, madam, we'll have a merry wedding feast, whichever side of the
+water it is. I should recommend the voyage first for my part."
+
+All Anne could do was to sit as upright and still as she could,
+apparently ignoring the man's meaning. She did not know how
+dignified she looked, and how she was daunting his insolence. When
+presently Sir George Barclay proposed as a toast a health to the
+bride of to-morrow, she took her part by raising the glass to her
+lips as well as the gentlemen, and adding, "May the brides be happy,
+wherever they may be."
+
+"Coy, upon my soul," laughed Sir George. "You have not made the
+best of your opportunities, Pil." But with an oath, "It becomes her
+well."
+
+"A truce with fooling, Barclay," muttered Peregrine.
+
+"Come, come, remember faint heart--no lowering your crest, more than
+enough to bring that devilish sparkle in the eyes, and turn of the
+neck!"
+
+"Sir," said Anne rising, "Monsieur de Pilpignon is an old neighbour,
+and understands how to respect his most unwilling guest. I wish you
+a good-night, gentlemen. Guennik, venez ici, je vous prie."
+
+Guennik, the Breton boatswain's wife, understood French thus far,
+and comprehended the situation enough to follow willingly, leaving
+the remainder of the attendance to Hans, who was fully equal to it.
+The door was secured by a long knife in the post, but Anne could
+hear plainly the rude laugh at her entrenchment within her fortress
+and much of the banter of Peregrine for having proceeded no further.
+It was impossible to shut out all the voices, and very alarming they
+were, as well as sometimes so coarse that they made her cheeks glow,
+while she felt thankful that the Bretonne could not understand.
+
+These three men were all proscribed traitors in haste to be off, but
+Peregrine, to whom the yacht and her crew belonged, had lingered to
+obtain possession of the lady, and they were declaring that now they
+had caught his game and given him his toy, they would brook no
+longer delay than was absolutely necessitated by the storm, and
+married or not married, he and she should both be carried off
+together, let the damsel-errant give herself what haughty airs she
+would. It was a weak concession on their part to the old Puritan
+scruples that he might have got rid of by this time, to attempt to
+bring about the marriage. They jested at him for being afraid of
+her, and then there were jokes about gray mares.
+
+The one voice she could not hear was Peregrine's, perhaps because he
+realised more than they did that she was within ear-shot, and
+besides, he was absolutely sober; but she thought he silenced them;
+and then she heard sounds of card-playing, which made an
+accompaniment to her agonised prayers.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII: BLACK GANG CHINE
+
+
+"Come, Lady; while Heaven lends us grace,
+Let us fly this cursed place,
+Lest the sorcerer us entice
+With some other new device.
+Not a word or needless sound
+Till we come to holier ground.
+I shall be your faithful guide
+Through this gloomy covert wide."
+
+MILTON.
+
+Never was maiden in a worse position than that in which Anne
+Woodford felt herself when she revolved the matter. The back of the
+Isle of Wight, all along the Undercliff, had always had a wild
+reputation, and she was in the midst of the most lawless of men.
+Peregrine alone seemed to have any remains of honour or conscience,
+and apparently he was in some degree in the hands of his associates.
+Even if the clergyman came, there was little hope in an appeal to
+him. Naval chaplains bore no good reputation, and Portsmouth and
+Cowes were haunted by the scum of the profession. All that seemed
+possible was to commit herself and Charles to Divine protection, and
+in that strength to resist to the uttermost. The tempest had
+returned again, and seemed to be raging as much as ever, and the
+delay was in her favour, for in such weather there could be no
+putting to sea.
+
+She was unwilling to leave the stronghold of her chamber, but Hans
+came to announce breakfast to her, telling her that the Mynheeren
+were gone, all but Massa Perry; and that gentleman came forward to
+meet her just as before, hoping 'those fellows had not disturbed her
+last night.'
+
+"I could not help hearing much," she said gravely.
+
+"Brutes!" he said. "I am sick of them, and of this life. Save for
+the King's sake, I would never have meddled with it."
+
+The roar of winds and waves and the beat of spray was still to be
+heard, and in the manifest impossibility of quitting the place and
+the desire of softening him, Anne listened while he talked in a
+different mood from the previous day. The cynical tone was gone, as
+he spoke of those better influences. He talked of Mrs. Woodford and
+his deep affection for her, of the kindness of the good priests at
+Havre and Douai, and especially of one Father Seyton, who had tried
+to reason with him in his bitter disappointment, and savage
+penitence on finding that 'behind the Cross lurks the Devil,' as
+much at Douai as at Havant. He told how a sermon of the Abbe
+Fenelon's had moved him, and how he had spent half a Lent in the
+severest penance, but only to have all swept away again in the wild
+and wicked revelry with which Easter came in. Again he described
+how his heart was ready to burst as he stood by Mrs. Woodford's
+grave at night and vowed to disentangle himself and lead a new life.
+
+"And with you I shall," he said.
+
+"No," she answered; "what you win by a crime will never do you
+good."
+
+"A crime! 'Tis no crime. You _know_ I mean honourable marriage.
+You owe no duty to any one."
+
+"It is a crime to leave the innocent to undeserved death," she said.
+
+"Do you love the fellow?" he cried, with a voice rising to a shout
+of rage.
+
+"Yes," she said firmly.
+
+"Why did not you say so before?"
+
+"Because I hoped to see you act for right and justice sake," was
+Anne's answer, fixing her eyes on him. "For God's sake, not mine."
+
+"Yours indeed! Think, what can be his love to mine? He who let
+them marry him to that child, while I struggled and gave up
+everything. Then he runs away--_runs away_--leaving you all the
+distress; never came near you all these years. Oh yes! he looks
+down on you as his child's governess! What's the use of loving him?
+There's another heiress bespoken for him no doubt."
+
+"No. His parents consent, and we have known one another's love for
+six years."
+
+"Oh, that's the way he bound you to keep his secret! He would sing
+another song as soon as he was out of this scrape."
+
+"You little know!" was all she said.
+
+"Ay!" continued Peregrine, pacing up and down the room, "you know
+that all that was wanting to fill up the measure of my hatred was
+that he should have stolen your heart."
+
+"You cannot say that, sir. He was my kind protector and helper from
+our very childhood. I have loved him with all my heart ever since I
+durst."
+
+"Ay, the great straight comely lubbers have it all their own way
+with the women," said he bitterly. "I remember how he rushed
+headlong at me with the horse-whip when I tripped you up at the
+Slype, and you have never forgiven that."
+
+"Oh! indeed I forgot that childish nonsense long ago. You never
+served me so again."
+
+"No indeed, never since you and your mother were the first to treat
+me like a human being. You will be able to do anything with me,
+sweetest lady; the very sense that you are under the same roof makes
+another man of me. I loathe what I used to enjoy. Why, the very
+sight of you, sitting at supper like the lady in Comus, in your
+sweet grave dignity, made me feel what I am, and what those men are.
+I heard their jests with your innocent ears. With you by my side
+the Devil's power is quelled. You shall have a peaceful beneficent
+life among the poor folk, who will bless you; our good and gracious
+Queen will welcome you with joy and gratitude; and when the good
+time comes, as it must in a few years, you will have honours and
+dignities lavished on you. Can you not see what you will do for
+me?"
+
+"Do you think a broken-hearted victim would be able to do you any
+good?" said she, looking up with tears in her eyes. "I _do_
+believe, sir, that you mean well by me, in your own way, and I
+could, yes, I can, be sorry for you, for my mother did feel for you,
+and yours has been a sad life; but how could I be of any use or
+comfort to you if you dragged me away as these cruel men propose,
+knowing that he who has all my heart is dying guiltless, and
+thinking I have failed him!" and here she broke down in an agony of
+weeping, as she felt the old power in his eyes that enforced
+submission.
+
+He marched up and down in a sort of passion. "Don't let me see you
+weep for him! It makes me ready to strangle him with my own hands!"
+
+A shout of 'Pilpignon!' at the door here carried him off, leaving
+Anne to give free course to the tears that she had hitherto been
+able to restrain, feeling the need of self-possession. She had very
+little hope, since her affection for Charles Archfield seemed only
+to give the additional sting of jealousy, 'cruel as the grave,' to
+the vindictive temper Peregrine already nourished, and which
+certainly came from his evil spirit. She shed many tears, and
+sobbed unrestrainingly till the Bretonne came and patted her
+shoulder, and said, "Pauvre, pauvre!" And even Hans looked in,
+saying, "Missee Nana no cry, Massa Perry great herr--very goot."
+
+She tried to compose herself, and think over alternatives to lay
+before Peregrine. He might let her go, and carry to Sir Edmund
+Nutley letters to which his father would willingly swear, while he
+was out of danger in Normandy. Or if this was far beyond what could
+be hoped for, surely he could despatch a letter to his father, and
+for such a price she _must_ sacrifice herself, though it cost her
+anguish unspeakable to call up the thought of Charles, of little
+Philip, of her uncle, and the old people, who loved her so well, all
+forsaken, and with what a life in store for her! For she had not
+the slightest confidence in the power of her influence, whatever
+Peregrine might say and sincerely believe at present. If there
+were, more palpably than with all other human beings, angels of good
+and evil contending for him, swaying him now this way and now that;
+it was plain from his whole history that nothing had yet availed to
+keep him under the better influence for long together; and she
+believed that if he gained herself by these unjust and cruel means
+the worse spirit would thereby gain the most absolute advantage. If
+her heart had been free, and she could have loved him, she might
+have hoped, though it would have been a wild and forlorn hope; but
+as it was, she had never entirely surmounted a repulsion from him,
+as something strange and unnatural, a feeling involving fear, though
+here he was her only hope and protector, and an utter uncertainty as
+to what he might do. She could only hope that she might pine away
+and die quickly, and _perhaps_ Charles Archfield might know at last
+that it had been for his sake. And would it be in her power to make
+even such terms as these?
+
+How long she wept and prayed and tried to 'commit her way unto the
+Lord' she did not know, but light seemed to be making its way far
+more than previously through the shutters closed against the storm
+when Peregrine returned.
+
+"You will not be greatly troubled with those fellows to-day," he
+said; "there's a vessel come on the rocks at Chale, and every man
+and mother's son is gone after it." So saying he unfastened the
+shutters and let in a flood of sunshine. "You would like a little
+air," he said; "'tis all quiet now, and the tide is going down."
+
+After two days' dark captivity, Anne could not but be relieved by
+coming out, and she was anxious to understand where she was. It
+was, though only in March, glowing with warmth, as the sun beat
+against the cliffs behind, of a dark red brown, in many places
+absolutely black, in especial where a cascade, swelled by the rains
+into imposing size, came roaring, leaping, and sparkling down a
+sheer precipice. On either side the cove or chine was closely shut
+in by treeless, iron-coloured masses of rock, behind one of which
+the few inhabited hovels were clustered, and the boat which had
+brought her was drawn up. In front was the sea, still lashed by a
+fierce wind, which was driving the fantastically shaped remains of
+the great storm cloud rapidly across an intensely blue sky. The
+waves, although it was the ebb, were still tremendous, and their
+roar re-echoed as they reared to fearful heights and broke with the
+reverberations that she had heard all along. Peregrine kept quite
+high up, not venturing below the washed line of shingle, saying that
+the back draught of the waves was most perilous, and in a high wind
+could not be reckoned upon.
+
+"No escape!" he said, as he perceived Anne's gaze on the
+inaccessible cliff and the whole scene, the wild beauty of which was
+lost to her in its terrors.
+
+"Where's your ship?" she asked.
+
+"Safe in Whale Chine. No putting to sea yet, though it may be fair
+to-morrow."
+
+Then she put before him the first scheme she had thought out, of
+letting her escape to Sir Edmund Nutley's house, whence she could
+make her way back, taking with her a letter that would prove his
+existence without involving him or his friends in danger. And
+eagerly she argued, "You do not know me really! It is only an
+imagination that you can be the better for my presence." Then,
+unheeding his fervid exclamation, "It was my dear mother who did you
+good. What would she think of the way in which you are trying to
+gain me?"
+
+"That I cannot do without you."
+
+"And what would you have in me? I could be only wretched, and feel
+all my life--such a life as it would be--that you had wrecked my
+happiness. Oh yes! I do believe that you would try to make me
+happy, but don't you see that it would be quite impossible with such
+a grief as that in my heart, and knowing that you had caused it? I
+know you hate him, and he did you the wrong; but he has grieved for
+it, and banished himself. But above all, of this I am quite sure,
+that to persist in this horrible evil of leaving him to die, because
+of your revenge, and stealing me away, is truly giving Satan such a
+frightful advantage over you that it is mere folly to think that
+winning me in such a way could do you any good. It is just a mere
+delusion of his, to ruin us both, body and soul. Peregrine, will
+you not recollect my mother, and what she would think? Have pity on
+me, and help me away, and I would pledge myself never to utter a
+word of this place nor that could bring you and yours into danger.
+We would bless and pray for you always."
+
+"No use," he gloomily said. "I believe you, but the others will
+never believe a woman. No doubt we are watched even now by
+desperate men, who would rather shoot you than let you escape from
+our hands."
+
+It seemed almost in connection with these words that at that moment,
+from some unknown quarter, where probably there was an entrance to
+the Chine, Sir George Barclay appeared with a leathern case under
+his arm. It had been captured on the wreck, and contained papers
+which he wanted assistance in deciphering, since they were in Dutch,
+and he believed them to be either despatches or bonds, either of
+which might be turned to profit. These were carried indoors, and
+spread on the table, and as Anne sat by the window, dejected and
+almost hopeless as she was, she could not help perceiving that,
+though Peregrine was so much smaller and less robust than his
+companions, he exercised over them the dominion of intellect,
+energy, and will, as if they too felt the force of his strange eyes;
+and it seemed to her as if, supposing he truly desired it, whatever
+he might say, he must be able to deliver her and Charles; but that a
+being such as she had always known him should sacrifice both his
+love and his hate seemed beyond all hope, and "Change his heart!
+Turn our captivity, O Lord," could only be her cry.
+
+Only very late did Burford come back, full of the account of the
+wreck and of the spoils, and the struggles between the wreckers for
+the flotsam and jetsam. There was much of savage brutality mated
+with a cool indifference truly horrible to Anne, and making her
+realise into what a den of robbers she had fallen, especially as
+these narratives were diversified by consultations over the Dutch
+letters and bills of exchange in the wrecked East Indiaman, and how
+to turn them to the best advantage. Barclay and Burford were so
+full of these subjects that they took comparatively little notice of
+the young lady, only when she rose to retire, Burford made a sort of
+apology that this little business had hindered his going after the
+parson. He heard that the Salamander was at the castle, and
+redcoats all about, he said, and if the Annick could be got out to-
+morrow they must sail any way; and if Pil was still so squeamish, a
+Popish priest could couple them in a leash as tight as a Fleet
+parson could. And then Peregrine demanded whether Burford thought a
+Fleet parson the English for a naval chaplain, and there was some
+boisterous laughter, during which Anne shut herself up in her room
+in something very like despair, with that one ray of hope that He
+who had brought her back from exile before would again save her from
+that terrible fate.
+
+She heard card-playing and the jingle of glasses far into the night,
+as she believed, but it seemed to her as if she had scarcely fallen
+asleep before, to her extreme terror, she heard a knock and a low
+call at her door of 'Guennik.' Then as the Bretonne went to the
+door, through which a light was seen, a lantern was handed in, and a
+scrap of paper on which the words were written: "On second
+thoughts, my kindred elves at Portchester shall not be scared by a
+worricow. Dress quickly, and I will bring you out of this."
+
+For a moment Anne did not perceive the meaning of the missive, the
+ghastly idea never having occurred to her that if Charles had
+suffered, the gibbet would have been at Portchester. Then, with an
+electric flash of joy, she saw that it meant relenting on
+Peregrine's part, deliverance for them both. She put on her clothes
+with hasty, trembling hands, thankful to Guennik for helping her,
+pressed a coin into the strong toil-worn hand, and with an earnest
+thrill of thankful prayer opened the door. The driftwood fire was
+bright, and she saw Peregrine, looking deadly white, and equipped
+with slouched hat, short wrapping cloak, pistols and sword at his
+belt, dark lantern lighted on the table, and Hans also cloaked by
+his side. He bent his head in salutation, and put his finger to his
+lips, giving one hand to Anne, and showing by example instead of
+words that she must tread as softly as possible, as she perceived
+that he was in his slippers, Hans carrying his boots as well as the
+lantern she had used. Yet to her ears the roar of the advancing
+tide seemed to stifle all other sounds. Past the other huts they
+went in silence, then came a precipitous path up the cliff, steps
+cut in the hard sandy grit, but very crumbling, and in places
+supplemented by a rude ladder of sticks and rope. Peregrine went
+before Anne, Hans behind. Each had hung the lantern from his neck,
+so as to have hands free to draw her, support her, or lift her, as
+might be needful. How it was done she never could tell in after
+years. She might jestingly say that her lightened heart bore her
+up, but in her soul and in her deeper moments she thought that truly
+angels must have had charge over her. Up, up, up! At last they had
+reached standing ground, a tolerably level space, with another high
+cliff seeming to rise behind it. Here it was lighter--a pale streak
+of dawn was spreading over the horizon, both on sky and sea, and the
+waves still leaping glanced in the light of a golden waning moon,
+while Venus shone in the brightening sky, a daystar of hope.
+
+Peregrine drew a long breath, and gave an order in a very low voice
+in Dutch to Hans, who placed his boots before him, and went off
+towards a shed. "He will bring you a pony," said his master.
+
+"Excuse me;" and he was withdrawing his hand, when Anne clasped it
+with both hers, and said in a voice of intense feeling--
+
+"Oh, how can I thank you and bless you! This _is_ putting the Evil
+Angel to flight."
+
+"'Tis you that have done it! You see, I cannot do the wicked act
+where you are," he answered gloomily, as he turned aside to draw on
+his boots.
+
+"Ah! but you have won the victory over him!"
+
+"Do not be too sure. We are not out of reach of those rascals yet."
+
+He was evidently anxious for silence, and Anne said no more. Hans
+presently brought from some unknown quarter, a little stout pony
+bridled and saddled; of course not with a side saddle, but cloaks
+were arranged so as to make a fairly comfortable seat for Anne, and
+Peregrine led the animal on the ascent to St. Catherine's Down. It
+was light enough to dispense with the lanterns, and as they mounted
+higher the glorious sight of daybreak over the sea showed itself--
+almost due east, the sharp points of the Needles showing up in a
+flood of pale golden light above and below, with gulls flashing
+white as they floated into sunlight, all seeming to Anne's thankful
+heart to be a new radiance of joy and hope after the dark roaring
+terrors of the Chine.
+
+As they came out into the open freedom of the down, with crisp
+silvery grass under their feet, the breadth of sea on one side,
+before them fertile fields and hills, and farther away, dimly seen
+in gray mist, the familiar Portsdown outlines, not a sound to be
+heard but the exulting ecstasies of larks, far, far above in the
+depths of blue, Peregrine dared to speak above his breath, with a
+question whether Anne were at ease in her extemporary side saddle,
+producing at the same time a slice of bread and meat, and a flask of
+wine.
+
+"Oh, how kind! What care you take of me!" she said. "But where are
+we going?"
+
+"Wherever you command," he said. "I had thought of Carisbrooke.
+Cutts is there, and it would be the speediest way."
+
+"Would it not be the most dangerous for you?"
+
+"I care very little for my life after this."
+
+"Oh no, no, you must not say so. After what you are doing for me
+you will be able to make it better than ever it has been. This is
+what I thought. If you would bring me in some place whence I could
+reach Sir Edmund Nutley's house at Parkhurst, his servants would
+help me to do the rest, even if he be not there himself. I would
+never betray you! You know I would not! And you would have full
+time to get away to your place in Normandy with your friends."
+
+"You care?" asked he.
+
+"Of course I do!" exclaimed she. "Do I not feel grateful to you,
+and like and honour you better than ever I could have thought?"
+
+"You do?" in a strange choked tone.
+
+"Of course I do. You are doing a noble, thankworthy thing. It is
+not only that I thank you for _his_ sake, but it is a grand and
+beautiful deed in itself; and if my dear mother know, she is
+blessing you for it."
+
+"I shall remember those words," he said, "if--" and he passed his
+hand over his eyes. "See here," he presently said; "I have written
+out a confession of my identity, and explanation that it was I who
+drew first on Archfield. It is enough to save him, and in case my
+handwriting has altered, as I think it has, and there should be
+further doubt, I shall be found at Pilpignon, if I get away. You
+had better keep it in case of accidents, or if you carry out your
+generous plan. Say whatever you please about me, but there is no
+need to mention Barclay or Burford; and it would not be fair to the
+honest free-traders here to explain where their Chine lies. I
+should have brought you up blindfold, if I could have done so with
+safety, not that _I_ do not trust you, but I should be better able
+to satisfy those fellows if I ever see them again, by telling them I
+have sworn you to secrecy."
+
+Then he laughed. "The gowks! I won all those Indian bonds of them
+last night, but left them in a parcel addressed to them as a
+legacy."
+
+Anne took the required pledge, and ventured to ask, "Shall I say
+anything for you to your father?"
+
+"My poor old father! Let him know that I neither would nor could
+disturb Robert in his inheritance, attainted traitor as the laws
+esteem me. For the rest, mayhap I shall write to him if the good
+angel you talk of will help me."
+
+"Oh do! I am sure he would rejoice to forgive. He is much
+softened."
+
+"Now, we must hush, and go warily. I see sheep, and if there is a
+shepherd, I want him not to see us, or point our way. It is well
+these Isle of Wight folk are not early risers."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV: LIFE FOR LIFE
+
+
+"Follow Light, and do the Right--for man can half-control his doom--
+Till you find the deathless Angel seated in the vacant tomb.
+
+Forward, let the stormy moment fly and mingle with the Past.
+I that loathed, have come to love him. Love will conquer at the last."
+
+TENNYSON.
+
+On they had gone in silence for the most part, avoiding villages,
+but as the morning advanced and they came into more inhabited
+places, they were not able entirely to avoid meeting labourers going
+out to work, who stared at Hans's black face with curiosity. The
+sun was already high when they reached a cross-road whence the
+massive towers of Carisbrooke were seen above the hedges, and
+another turn led to Parkhurst. They paused a moment, and Anne was
+beginning to entreat her escort to leave her to proceed alone, when
+the sound of horses' feet galloping was heard behind them.
+Peregrine looked back.
+
+"Ah!" he said. "Ride on as fast as you can towards the castle. You
+will be all right. I will keep them back. Go, I say."
+
+And as some figures were seen at the end of the road, he pricked the
+pony with the point of his sword so effectually that it bolted
+forward, quite beyond Anne's power of checking it, and in a second
+or two its speed was quickened by shouts and shots behind. Anne
+felt, but scarcely understood at the moment, a sharp pang and thrill
+in her left arm, as the steed whirled her round the corner of the
+lane and full into the midst of a party of gentlemen on horseback
+coming down from the castle.
+
+"Help! help!" she cried. "Down there."
+
+Attacks by highwaymen were not uncommon experiences, though scarcely
+at eight o'clock in the morning, or so near a garrison, but the
+horsemen, having already heard the shots, galloped forward. Perhaps
+Anne could hardly have turned her pony, but it chose to follow the
+lead of its fellows, and in a few seconds they were in the midst of
+a scene of utter confusion. Peregrine was grappling with Burford
+trying to drag him from his horse. Both fell together, and as the
+auxiliaries came in sight there was another shot and two more men
+rode off headlong.
+
+"Follow them!" said a commanding voice. "What have we here?"
+
+The two struggling figures both lay still for a moment or two, but
+as some of the riders drew them apart Peregrine sat up, though blood
+was streaming down his breast and arm. "Sir," he said, "I am
+Peregrine Oakshott, on whose account young Archfield lies under
+sentence of death. If a magistrate will take my affidavit while I
+can make it, he will be safe."
+
+Then Anne heard a voice exclaiming: "Oakshott! Nay--why, this is
+Mistress Woodford! How came she here?" and she knew Sir Edmund
+Nutley. Still it was Peregrine who answered--
+
+"I captured her, in the hope of marrying her, but that cannot be--I
+have brought her back in all safety and honour."
+
+"Sir! Sir, indeed he has been very good to me. Pray let him be
+looked to."
+
+"Let him be carried to the castle," said the commander of the party,
+a tall man sunburnt to a fiery red. "Is the other alive?"
+
+"Only stunned, my lord, I think and not much hurt," was the answer
+of an attendant officer; "but here is a poor blackamoor dead."
+
+"Poor Hans! Best so perhaps," murmured Peregrine, as he was lifted.
+Then in a voice of alarm, "Look to the lady, she is hurt."
+
+"It is nothing," cried she. "O Mr. Oakshott! that this should have
+happened!"
+
+"My lord, this is the young gentlewoman I told you of, betrothed to
+poor young Archfield," said Sir Edmund Nutley.
+
+Lord Cutts, for it was indeed William's favoured 'Salamander,' took
+off his plumed hat in salutation, and both gentlemen perceiving that
+she too was bleeding, she was solicitously invited to the castle, to
+be placed under the charge of the lieutenant-governor's wife. She
+found by this time that she was in a good deal of pain, and
+thankfully accepted the support Sir Edmund offered her, when he
+dismounted and walked beside her pony, while explanations passed
+between them. The weather had prevented any communication with the
+mainland, so that he was totally ignorant of her capture, and did
+not know what had become of Mr. Fellowes. He himself had been just
+starting with Lord Cutts, who was going to join the King for his
+next campaign, and they were to represent the case to the King.
+Anne told him in return what she dared to say, but she was becoming
+so faint and dazed that she was in great fear of not saying what she
+ought; and indeed she could hardly speak, when after passing under
+the great gateway, she was lifted off her horse, at the door of the
+dwelling-house, and helped upstairs to a bedroom, where the wife of
+the lieutenant-governor, Mrs. Dudley, was very tender over her with
+essences and strong waters, and a surgeon of the suite almost
+immediately came to her.
+
+"Oh," she exclaimed, "you should be with Mr. Oakshott."
+
+The surgeon explained that Mr. Oakshott would have nothing done for
+him till he had fully made and signed his deposition, in case the
+power should afterwards be wanting.
+
+So Anne submitted to the dressing of her hurt, which was only a
+flesh wound, the bone being happily untouched. Both the surgeon and
+Mrs. Dudley urged her going to bed immediately, but she was
+unwilling to put herself out of reach; and indeed the dressing was
+scarcely finished before Sir Edmund Nutley knocked at the door to
+ask whether she could admit him.
+
+"Lord Cutts is very desirous of speaking with you, if you are able,"
+he said. "Here has this other fellow come round, declaring that
+Oakshott is the Pilpignon who was in the Barclay Plot, and besides,
+the prime leader of the Black Gang, of whom we have heard so much."
+
+"The traitor!" cried Anne. "Poor Mr. Oakshott was resolved not to
+betray him! How is he--Mr. Oakshott, I mean?"
+
+"The surgeon has him in his hands. We will send another from
+Portsmouth, but it looks like a bad case. He made his confession
+bravely, though evidently in terrible suffering, seeming to keep up
+by force of will till he had totally exonerated Archfield and signed
+the deposition, and then he fainted, so that I thought him dead, but
+I fear he has more to go through. Can you come to the hall, or
+shall I bring Lord Cutts to you? We must hasten in starting that we
+may bring the news to Winchester to-night."
+
+Anne much preferred going to the hall, though she felt weak enough
+to be very glad to lean on Sir Edmund's arm.
+
+Lord Cutts, William's high-spirited and daring officer, received her
+with the utmost courtesy and kindness, inquired after her hurt, and
+lamented having to trouble her, but said that though he would not
+detain her long, her testimony was important, and he begged to hear
+what had happened to her.
+
+She gave the account of her capture and journey as shortly as she
+could.
+
+"Whither was she taken?"
+
+She paused. "I promised Mr. Oakshott for the sake of others--" she
+said.
+
+"You need have no scruples on that score," said Lord Cutts.
+"Burford hopes to get off for the murder by turning King's evidence,
+and has told all."
+
+"Yes," added Sir Edmund; "and poor Oakshott managed to say, 'Tell
+her she need keep nothing back. It is all up.'"
+
+So Anne answered all the questions put to her, and they were the
+fewer both out of consideration for her condition, and because the
+governor wanted to take advantage of the tide to embark on the
+Medina.
+
+In a very few hours the Archfields would have no more fears. Anne
+longed to go with Sir Edmund, but she was in no state for a ride,
+and could not be a drag. Sir Edmund said that either his wife would
+come to her at once and take her to Parkhurst, or else her uncle
+would be sure to come for her. She would be the guest of Major and
+Mrs. Dudley, who lived in the castle, the actual Lord Warden only
+visiting it from time to time; and though Major Dudley was a stern
+man, both were very kind to her.
+
+As a Whig, Major Dudley knew the Oakshott family, and was willing to
+extend his hospitality even to the long-lost Peregrine. The Lord
+Warden, who was evidently very favourably impressed, saying that
+there was no need at present to treat him as a prisoner, but that
+every attention should be paid to him, as indeed he was evidently a
+dying man. Burford and another of his associates were to be carried
+off, handcuffed, with the escort to Winchester jail, but before the
+departure, the soldiers who had been sent to the Chine returned
+baffled; the place was entirely deserted, and Barclay had escaped.
+
+Anne allowed herself to be put to bed, being indeed completely
+exhausted, and scarcely able to think of anything but the one
+blessed certainty that Charles was safe, and freed from all stigma.
+When, after the pain in her arm lulled enough to allow her to sleep,
+she had had a few hours' rest, she inquired for Peregrine, she heard
+that for many hours the surgeon had been trying to extract the
+balls, and that they considered that the second shot had made his
+case hopeless, as it was in the body. He was so much exhausted as
+to be almost unconscious; but the next morning, when Anne, against
+the persuasions of her hostess, had risen and been dressed, though
+still feeling weak and shaken, she received a message, begging her
+to do him the great kindness of visiting him.
+
+Deadly pale, almost gray, as he looked, lying so propped with
+pillows as to relieve his shattered shoulder, his face had a strange
+look of peace, almost of relief, and he smiled at her as she
+entered. He held out the hand he could use, and his first word was
+of inquiry after her hurt.
+
+"That is nothing--it will soon be well; I wish it were the same with
+you."
+
+"Nay, I had rather cheat the hangman. I told those doctors
+yesterday that they were giving themselves and me a great deal of
+useless trouble. The villains, as I told you, could not believe we
+should not betray them, and meant to make an end of us all. It's
+best as it is. My poor faithful Hans would never have had another
+happy moment."
+
+"But you must be better, Peregrine," for his voice, though low, was
+steady.
+
+"There's no living with what I have here," he said, laying his hand
+on his side; "and--I dreamt of your mother last night." With the
+words there was a look of gladness exceeding.
+
+"Ah! the Evil Angel is gone!"
+
+"I want your prayers that he may not come back at the last." Then,
+as she clasped her hands, and her lips moved, he added, "There were
+some things I could only say to you. If they don't treat my body as
+that of an attainted traitor, let me lie at your mother's feet.
+Don't disturb the big Scot for me, but let me rest at last near her.
+Then tell Robin 'tis not out of want of regard for him that I have
+not bequeathed Pilpignon to him, but he could do no good with a
+French estate full of Papists; and there's a poor loyal fellow,
+living ruined at Paris--a Catholic too--with a wife and children
+half starved, to whom it will do more good."
+
+"I meant to ask--Shall a priest be sent for? Surely Major Dudley
+would consent."
+
+"I don't know. I have not loved such priests lately. I had rather
+die as near your mother as may be."
+
+"Miss Woodford," said a voice at the door, and going to it, Anne
+found herself clasped in her uncle's arms. With very few words she
+led him to the bedside, and the first thing he said was "God bless
+you, Peregrine, for what you have done."
+
+Again Peregrine's face lighted up, but fell again when he was told
+of the Portsmouth surgeon's arrival at the same time, saying with
+one of his strange looks that it was odd sort of mercy to try to
+cure a man for Jack Ketch, but that he should baffle them yet.
+
+"Do not set your mind on that," said Dr. Woodford, "for Lord Cutts
+was so much pleased with you that he would do his utmost on your
+behalf."
+
+"Much good that would do me," said poor Peregrine, setting his teeth
+as his tormentor came in.
+
+Meantime, in Mrs. Dudley's parlour, while that good lady was
+assisting the surgeon at the dressing, Anne and her uncle exchanged
+information. Mr. Fellowes had arrived on foot at about noon, with
+his servant, having only been released after two hours by a
+traveller, and having been deprived both of money and horses, so
+that he could not proceed on his journey; besides that he had given
+the alarm about the abduction, and raised the hue and cry at the
+villages on his way. There had been great distress, riding and
+searching, and the knowledge had been kept from poor Charles
+Archfield in his prison. Mr. Fellowes had gone on to London as soon
+as possible, and Dr. Woodford had just returned from a fruitless
+attempt to trace his niece, when Sir Edmund Nutley and Lord Cutts
+appeared, with the joyful tidings, which, however, could be hardly
+understood.
+
+Nothing, Dr. Woodford said, could be more thorough than the
+vindication of Charles Archfield. Peregrine had fully stated that
+the young man had merely interposed to prevent the pursuit of Anne
+Woodford, that it was he himself who had made the first attack, and
+that his opponent had been forced to fight in self-defence. Lord
+Cutts had not only shown his affidavit to Sir Philip, but had paid a
+visit to the Colonel himself in his prison, had complimented him
+highly on his services in the Imperial army, only regretting that
+they had not been on behalf of his own country, and had assured him
+of equal, if not superior rank, in the British army if he would join
+it on the liberation that he might reckon upon in the course of a
+very few days.
+
+"How did you work on the unhappy young man to bring about this
+blessed change?" asked the Doctor.
+
+"Oh, sir, I do not think it was myself. It was first the mercy of
+the Almighty, and then my blessed mother's holy memory working on
+him, revived by the sight of myself. I cannot describe to you how
+gentle, and courteous, and respectful he was to me all along, though
+I am sure those dreadful men mocked at him for it. Do you know
+whether his father has heard?"
+
+"Robert Oakshott is gone in search of him. He had set off to beat
+up the country, good old man, to obtain signatures to the petition
+in favour of our prisoner, and Robert expected to find him with Mr.
+Chute at the Vine. It is much to that young man's credit, niece, he
+was so eager to see his brother that he longed to come with me
+himself; but he thought that the shock to his father would be so
+great that he ought to bear the tidings himself. And what do you
+think his good wife is about? Perhaps you did not know that Sedley
+Archfield brought away jail fever with him, and Mrs. Oakshott,
+feeling that she was the cause by her hasty action, has taken
+lodgings for him in Winchester, and is nursing him like a sister.
+No. You need not fear for your colonel, my dear maid. Sedley
+caught the infection because he neither was, nor wished to be,
+secluded from the rest of the prisoners, some of whom were, I fear,
+only too congenial society to him. But now tell me the story of
+your own deliverance, which seems to me nothing short of
+miraculous."
+
+The visit of the Portsmouth surgeon only confirmed Peregrine's own
+impression that it was impossible that he should live, and he was
+only surviving by the strong vitality in his little, spare, wiry
+frame. Dr. Woodford, after hearing Anne's story, thought it well to
+ask him whether he would prefer the ministrations of a Roman
+Catholic priest; but whether justly or unjustly, Peregrine seemed to
+impute to that Church the failure to exorcise the malignant spirit
+which had led him to far worse aberrations than he had confessed to
+Anne. Though by no means deficient in knowledge or controversian
+theology, as Dr. Woodford soon found in conversation with him, his
+real convictions were all as to what personally affected him, and
+his strong Protestant ingrain education, however he might have
+disavowed it, no doubt had affected his point of view. He had
+admired and been strongly influenced by the sight of real devotion
+and holiness, though as his temptations and hatred of monotony
+recurred, he had more than once swung back again. Then, however, he
+had been revolted by the perception of the concessions to popular
+superstition and the morality of a wicked state of society. His
+real sense of any religion had been infused by Mrs. Woodford, and to
+her belongings, and the faith they involved, he was clinging in
+these last days.
+
+Dr. Woodford could not but be glad that thus it was, not only on the
+penitent's own account, but on that of the father, who might have
+lost the comfort of finding him truly repentant in the shock of
+finding a Popish priest at his bedside. And indeed the contrition
+seemed to have gathered force in many a past fit of remorse, and now
+was deep but not unhopeful.
+
+In the evening the father and brother arrived. The Major was now an
+old man, hale indeed, and with the beauty that a pure, self-
+restrained life often sheds on an aged man. He was much shaken, and
+when he came in, with his own white hair on his shoulders, and
+actually tears in his eyes, the look that passed between them was
+like nothing but the spirit of the parable so often, but never too
+often, repeated.
+
+Peregrine, who never perhaps had spent a happy or fearless hour with
+him, and had dreaded his coming, felt probably for the first time
+the mysterious sense of home and peace given by the presence of
+those between whom there is the tie of blood. Not many words
+passed; he was hardly in a state for them, but from that time, he
+was never so happy as when his father and brother were beside him;
+and they seldom left him, the Major sitting day and night by his
+pillow attending to his wants, or saying words of prayer.
+
+The old man had become much softened, by nothing more perhaps than
+watching the way in which his daughter-in-law dealt with the
+manifestations of the Oakshott imp nature in her eldest child.
+
+"If I had understood," he said to Dr. Woodford. "If I had so
+treated that poor boy, never would he have been as he is now."
+
+"You acted according to your conscience."
+
+"Ah, sir! a man does not grow old without learning that the
+conscience may be blinded, above all by the spirit of opposition and
+party."
+
+"I will not say there were no mistakes," said the Doctor; "and yet,
+sir, the high standard, sound principle, and strong faith he learnt
+from you and your example have prevailed to bear him through."
+
+The Major answered with a groan, but added, "And yet, even now,
+stained as he tells me he is, and cut off in the flower of his age,
+I thank my God and his Saviour, and after Him, you and yours, that I
+am happier about him than I have been these eight and twenty years."
+
+With no scruple, Major Oakshott threw his heart into the
+ministrations of Dr. Woodford, which Peregrine declared kept at bay
+the Evil Angel who more than once seemed to his consciousness to be
+striving to make him despair, while friend and father brought him
+back to the one hope.
+
+From time to time Anne visited him for a short interval, always to
+his joy and gratitude. There was one visit at last which all knew
+would be the final one, when she shared in his first and last
+English Communion. As she was about to leave him, he held her hand,
+and signed to her to bend down to hear him better. "If you can, let
+good Father Seyton at Douai know that peace is come--the Evil One
+beaten, thanks to Him who giveth us the victory--and I thank them
+all there--and ask their prayers."
+
+"I will, I will."
+
+Some one at the door said, "May I come in?"
+
+There was a sunburnt face, a head with long brown hair, a white
+coat.
+
+"Archfield?" asked Peregrine. "Come, send me away with pardon."
+
+"'Tis yours I need;" and as Charles knelt by the bed the two faces,
+one all health, the other gray and deathly, were close together.
+"You have given your life for mine, and given _her_. How shall I
+thank you?"
+
+"Make her happy. She deserves it."
+
+Charles clasped her hand with a look that was enough. Then with a
+strange smile, half sweetness, half the contortion of a mortal pang,
+the dying man said, "May she kiss me once?"
+
+And when her lips had touched the cold damp brow--
+
+"There--My fourth seven. At last! The change is come. Old--
+impish--evil--self left behind. At last! Thanks to Him who treads
+down Satan under our feet. Thanks! Take her away now."
+
+Charles took her away, scarce knowing where they went,--out into the
+spring sunshine, on the slopes above the turf bowling-green, where
+the captive King had beguiled his weary hours. Only then would awe
+and emotion let them speak, though his arm was round her, her hand
+in his, and his first words were, as he looked at the scarf that
+still bore up her arm, "And this is what you have borne for me?"
+
+"It is all but healed. Don't think of it."
+
+"I shall all my life! Poor fellow, he might well bid me deserve
+you. I never can. 'Tis to you I owe all. I believe, indeed, the
+ambassador might have claimed me, but he is so tardy that probably I
+should have been hanged long before the proper form was ready; and
+it would have been to exile, and with a tainted name. You have won
+for me the clearing of name and honour--home, parents and child and
+all, besides your sweet self."
+
+"And it was not me, but he whom we so despised and dreaded. Had I
+not been seized, I could only have implored for you."
+
+"I know this, that if you had not been what you are, my boy would
+have borne a dishonoured name, and we should never have been
+together as now."
+
+It was in truth their first meeting in freedom and security as
+lovers; but it could only be in a grave, quiet fashion, under the
+knowledge that he, to whom their re-union was chiefly owing, was
+breathing out the life he had sacrificed for them. Thus they only
+gently and in a low voice went over their past doings and feelings
+as they walked up and down together, till Dr. Woodford came in the
+sunset to tell them that the change so longed for had come in peace,
+and with a smile that told of release from the Evil Angel.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Peregrine's wish was fulfilled, and he was buried in Portchester
+Churchyard at Mrs. Woodford's feet. This time it was Mr.
+Horncastle, old as he was, who preached the funeral sermon, the In
+Memoriam of our forefathers; and by special desire of Major Oakshott
+took for his text, 'At evening time there shall be light.' He
+spoke, sometimes in a voice broken, as much by feeling as by age, of
+the childhood blighted by a cruel superstition, and perverted, as he
+freely made confession, by discipline without comprehension, because
+no confidence had been sought. Then ensued a tribute of earnest,
+generous justice to her who had done her best to undo the warp in
+the boy's nature, and whose blessed influence the young man had
+owned to the last, through all the temptations, errors, and frenzies
+of his life. Nor did the good man fail to make this a means of
+testifying to the entire neighbourhood, who had flocked to hear him,
+all that might be desirable to be known respecting the conflict at
+Portchester, actually reading Peregrine's affidavit, as indeed was
+due to Colonel Archfield, so as to prove that this was no mere
+pardon, though technically it had so to stand, but actual acquittal.
+Nor was the struggle with evil at the end forgotten, nor the
+surrender alike of love and of hatred, as well as of his own life,
+which had been the final conquest, the decisive passing from
+darkness to light.
+
+It was a strange sermon according to present ideas, but not to those
+who had grown up to the semi-political preaching of the century then
+in its last decade; and it filled many eyes with tears, many hearts
+with a deeper spirit of that charity which hopeth all things.
+
+* * * * *
+
+A month later Charles Archfield and Anne Jacobina Woodford were
+married at the little parish church of Fareham. Sir Philip insisted
+on making it a gay and brilliant wedding, in order to demonstrate to
+the neighbourhood that though the maiden had been his grandson's
+governess, she was a welcomed and honoured acquisition to the
+family. Perhaps too he perceived the error of his middle age, when
+he contrasted that former wedding, the work of worldly
+conventionality, with the present. In the first, an unformed,
+undeveloped lad, unable to understand his own true feelings and
+affections had been passively linked to a shallow, frivolous, ill-
+trained creature, utterly incapable of growing into a helpmeet for
+him; whereas the love and trust of the stately-looking pair, in the
+fresh bloom of manhood and womanhood, had been proved in the furnace
+of trial, so that the troth they plighted had deep foundation for
+the past, and bright hope for the future.
+
+Nor was anybody more joyous than little Philip, winning his Nana for
+a better mother to him than his own could ever have been
+
+It was in a blue velvet coat that Colonel Archfield was married. He
+had resigned his Austrian commission; and though the 'Salamander,'
+was empowered to offer him an excellent staff appointment in the
+English army, he decided to refuse. Sir Philip showed signs of
+having been aged and shaken by the troubles of the winter, and
+required his son's assistance in the care of his property, and
+little Philip was growing up to need a father's hand, so that
+Charles came to the conclusion that there was no need to cross the
+old Cavalier's dislike to the new regime, nor to make his mother and
+wife again suffer the anxieties of knowing him on active service,
+while his duties lay at home.
+
+Sedley Archfield, after a long illness, owed recovery both in body
+and mind to Mrs. Oakshott, and by her arrangement finally obtained a
+fresh commission in a regiment raised for the defence of the
+possessions of the East India Company. And that the poor changeling
+was still tenderly remembered might be proved by the fact that when
+the bells rung for Queen Anne's coronation there was one baby
+Peregrine at Fareham and another at Oakwood.
+
+
+
+
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