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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Doom of the Griffiths, by Elizabeth Gaskell</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
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+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Doom of the Griffiths</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Elizabeth Gaskell</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 21, 2000 [eBook #2549]<br />
+[Most recently updated: December 22, 2021]</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: David Price</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DOOM OF THE GRIFFITHS ***</div>
+
+<h1>THE DOOM OF THE GRIFFITHS</h1>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">by Elizabeth Gaskell</h2>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+<p>
+I have always been much interested by the traditions which are scattered up and
+down North Wales relating to Owen Glendower (Owain Glendwr is the national
+spelling of the name), and I fully enter into the feeling which makes the Welsh
+peasant still look upon him as the hero of his country. There was great joy
+among many of the inhabitants of the principality, when the subject of the
+Welsh prize poem at Oxford, some fifteen or sixteen years ago, was announced to
+be &ldquo;Owain Glendwr.&rdquo; It was the most proudly national subject that
+had been given for years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps, some may not be aware that this redoubted chieftain is, even in the
+present days of enlightenment, as famous among his illiterate countrymen for
+his magical powers as for his patriotism. He says himself&mdash;or Shakespeare
+says it for him, which is much the same thing&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+                    &lsquo;At my nativity<br/>
+The front of heaven was full of fiery shapes<br/>
+Of burning cressets . . . .<br/>
+. . . . I can call spirits from the vasty deep.&rsquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+And few among the lower orders in the principality would think of asking
+Hotspur&rsquo;s irreverent question in reply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among other traditions preserved relative to this part of the Welsh
+hero&rsquo;s character, is the old family prophecy which gives title to this
+tale. When Sir David Gam, &ldquo;as black a traitor as if he had been born in
+Builth,&rdquo; sought to murder Owen at Machynlleth, there was one with him
+whose name Glendwr little dreamed of having associated with his enemies. Rhys
+ap Gryfydd, his &ldquo;old familiar friend,&rdquo; his relation, his more than
+brother, had consented unto his blood. Sir David Gam might be forgiven, but one
+whom he had loved, and who had betrayed him, could never be forgiven. Glendwr
+was too deeply read in the human heart to kill him. No, he let him live on, the
+loathing and scorn of his compatriots, and the victim of bitter remorse. The
+mark of Cain was upon him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But before he went forth&mdash;while he yet stood a prisoner, cowering beneath
+his conscience before Owain Glendwr&mdash;that chieftain passed a doom upon him
+and his race:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I doom thee to live, because I know thou wilt pray for death. Thou shalt
+live on beyond the natural term of the life of man, the scorn of all good men.
+The very children shall point to thee with hissing tongue, and say,
+&lsquo;There goes one who would have shed a brother&rsquo;s blood!&rsquo; For I
+loved thee more than a brother, oh Rhys ap Gryfydd! Thou shalt live on to see
+all of thy house, except the weakling in arms, perish by the sword. Thy race
+shall be accursed. Each generation shall see their lands melt away like snow;
+yea their wealth shall vanish, though they may labour night and day to heap up
+gold. And when nine generations have passed from the face of the earth, thy
+blood shall no longer flow in the veins of any human being. In those days the
+last male of thy race shall avenge me. The son shall slay the father.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such was the traditionary account of Owain Glendwr&rsquo;s speech to his
+once-trusted friend. And it was declared that the doom had been fulfilled in
+all things; that live in as miserly a manner as they would, the Griffiths never
+were wealthy and prosperous&mdash;indeed that their worldly stock diminished
+without any visible cause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the lapse of many years had almost deadened the wonder-inspiring power of
+the whole curse. It was only brought forth from the hoards of Memory when some
+untoward event happened to the Griffiths family; and in the eighth generation
+the faith in the prophecy was nearly destroyed, by the marriage of the
+Griffiths of that day, to a Miss Owen, who, unexpectedly, by the death of a
+brother, became an heiress&mdash;to no considerable amount, to be sure, but
+enough to make the prophecy appear reversed. The heiress and her husband
+removed from his small patrimonial estate in Merionethshire, to her heritage in
+Caernarvonshire, and for a time the prophecy lay dormant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If you go from Tremadoc to Criccaeth, you pass by the parochial church of
+Ynysynhanarn, situated in a boggy valley running from the mountains, which
+shoulder up to the Rivals, down to Cardigan Bay. This tract of land has every
+appearance of having been redeemed at no distant period of time from the sea,
+and has all the desolate rankness often attendant upon such marshes. But the
+valley beyond, similar in character, had yet more of gloom at the time of which
+I write. In the higher part there were large plantations of firs, set too
+closely to attain any size, and remaining stunted in height and scrubby in
+appearance. Indeed, many of the smaller and more weakly had died, and the bark
+had fallen down on the brown soil neglected and unnoticed. These trees had a
+ghastly appearance, with their white trunks, seen by the dim light which
+struggled through the thick boughs above. Nearer to the sea, the valley assumed
+a more open, though hardly a more cheerful character; it looked dark and
+overhung by sea-fog through the greater part of the year, and even a
+farm-house, which usually imparts something of cheerfulness to a landscape,
+failed to do so here. This valley formed the greater part of the estate to
+which Owen Griffiths became entitled by right of his wife. In the higher part
+of the valley was situated the family mansion, or rather dwelling-house, for
+&ldquo;mansion&rdquo; is too grand a word to apply to the clumsy, but
+substantially-built Bodowen. It was square and heavy-looking, with just that
+much pretension to ornament necessary to distinguish it from the mere
+farm-house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In this dwelling Mrs. Owen Griffiths bore her husband two sons&mdash;Llewellyn,
+the future Squire, and Robert, who was early destined for the Church. The only
+difference in their situation, up to the time when Robert was entered at Jesus
+College, was, that the elder was invariably indulged by all around him, while
+Robert was thwarted and indulged by turns; that Llewellyn never learned
+anything from the poor Welsh parson, who was nominally his private tutor; while
+occasionally Squire Griffiths made a great point of enforcing Robert&rsquo;s
+diligence, telling him that, as he had his bread to earn, he must pay attention
+to his learning. There is no knowing how far the very irregular education he
+had received would have carried Robert through his college examinations; but,
+luckily for him in this respect, before such a trial of his learning came
+round, he heard of the death of his elder brother, after a short illness,
+brought on by a hard drinking-bout. Of course, Robert was summoned home, and it
+seemed quite as much of course, now that there was no necessity for him to
+&ldquo;earn his bread by his learning,&rdquo; that he should not return to
+Oxford. So the half-educated, but not unintelligent, young man continued at
+home, during the short remainder of his parent&rsquo;s lifetime.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His was not an uncommon character. In general he was mild, indolent, and easily
+managed; but once thoroughly roused, his passions were vehement and fearful. He
+seemed, indeed, almost afraid of himself, and in common hardly dared to give
+way to justifiable anger&mdash;so much did he dread losing his self-control.
+Had he been judiciously educated, he would, probably, have distinguished
+himself in those branches of literature which call for taste and imagination,
+rather than any exertion of reflection or judgment. As it was, his literary
+taste showed itself in making collections of Cambrian antiquities of every
+description, till his stock of Welsh MSS. would have excited the envy of Dr.
+Pugh himself, had he been alive at the time of which I write.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is one characteristic of Robert Griffiths which I have omitted to note,
+and which was peculiar among his class. He was no hard drinker; whether it was
+that his head was easily affected, or that his partially-refined taste led him
+to dislike intoxication and its attendant circumstances, I cannot say; but at
+five-and-twenty Robert Griffiths was habitually sober&mdash;a thing so rare in
+Llyn, that he was almost shunned as a churlish, unsociable being, and paused
+much of his time in solitude.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+About this time, he had to appear in some case that was tried at the Caernarvon
+assizes; and while there, was a guest at the house of his agent, a shrewd,
+sensible Welsh attorney, with one daughter, who had charms enough to captivate
+Robert Griffiths. Though he remained only a few days at her father&rsquo;s
+house, they were sufficient to decide his affections, and short was the period
+allowed to elapse before he brought home a mistress to Bodowen. The new Mrs.
+Griffiths was a gentle, yielding person, full of love toward her husband, of
+whom, nevertheless, she stood something in awe, partly arising from the
+difference in their ages, partly from his devoting much time to studies of
+which she could understand nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She soon made him the father of a blooming little daughter, called Augharad
+after her mother. Then there came several uneventful years in the household of
+Bodowen; and when the old women had one and all declared that the cradle would
+not rock again, Mrs. Griffiths bore the son and heir. His birth was soon
+followed by his mother&rsquo;s death: she had been ailing and low-spirited
+during her pregnancy, and she seemed to lack the buoyancy of body and mind
+requisite to bring her round after her time of trial. Her husband, who loved
+her all the more from having few other claims on his affections, was deeply
+grieved by her early death, and his only comforter was the sweet little boy
+whom she had left behind. That part of the squire&rsquo;s character, which was
+so tender, and almost feminine, seemed called forth by the helpless situation
+of the little infant, who stretched out his arms to his father with the same
+earnest cooing that happier children make use of to their mother alone.
+Augharad was almost neglected, while the little Owen was king of the house;
+still next to his father, none tended him so lovingly as his sister. She was so
+accustomed to give way to him that it was no longer a hardship. By night and by
+day Owen was the constant companion of his father, and increasing years seemed
+only to confirm the custom. It was an unnatural life for the child, seeing no
+bright little faces peering into his own (for Augharad was, as I said before,
+five or six years older, and her face, poor motherless girl! was often anything
+but bright), hearing no din of clear ringing voices, but day after day sharing
+the otherwise solitary hours of his father, whether in the dim room, surrounded
+by wizard-like antiquities, or pattering his little feet to keep up with his
+&ldquo;tada&rdquo; in his mountain rambles or shooting excursions. When the
+pair came to some little foaming brook, where the stepping-stones were far and
+wide, the father carried his little boy across with the tenderest care; when
+the lad was weary, they rested, he cradled in his father&rsquo;s arms, or the
+Squire would lift him up and carry him to his home again. The boy was indulged
+(for his father felt flattered by the desire) in his wish of sharing his meals
+and keeping the same hours. All this indulgence did not render Owen unamiable,
+but it made him wilful, and not a happy child. He had a thoughtful look, not
+common to the face of a young boy. He knew no games, no merry sports; his
+information was of an imaginative and speculative character. His father
+delighted to interest him in his own studies, without considering how far they
+were healthy for so young a mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of course Squire Griffiths was not unaware of the prophecy which was to be
+fulfilled in his generation. He would occasionally refer to it when among his
+friends, with sceptical levity; but in truth it lay nearer to his heart than he
+chose to acknowledge. His strong imagination rendered him peculiarly
+impressible on such subjects; while his judgment, seldom exercised or fortified
+by severe thought, could not prevent his continually recurring to it. He used
+to gaze on the half-sad countenance of the child, who sat looking up into his
+face with his large dark eyes, so fondly yet so inquiringly, till the old
+legend swelled around his heart, and became too painful for him not to require
+sympathy. Besides, the overpowering love he bore to the child seemed to demand
+fuller vent than tender words; it made him like, yet dread, to upbraid its
+object for the fearful contrast foretold. Still Squire Griffiths told the
+legend, in a half-jesting manner, to his little son, when they were roaming
+over the wild heaths in the autumn days, &ldquo;the saddest of the year,&rdquo;
+or while they sat in the oak-wainscoted room, surrounded by mysterious relics
+that gleamed strangely forth by the flickering fire-light. The legend was
+wrought into the boy&rsquo;s mind, and he would crave, yet tremble, to hear it
+told over and over again, while the words were intermingled with caresses and
+questions as to his love. Occasionally his loving words and actions were cut
+short by his father&rsquo;s light yet bitter speech&mdash;&ldquo;Get thee away,
+my lad; thou knowest not what is to come of all this love.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Augharad was seventeen, and Owen eleven or twelve, the rector of the
+parish in which Bodowen was situated, endeavoured to prevail on Squire
+Griffiths to send the boy to school. Now, this rector had many congenial tastes
+with his parishioner, and was his only intimate; and, by repeated arguments, he
+succeeded in convincing the Squire that the unnatural life Owen was leading was
+in every way injurious. Unwillingly was the father wrought to part from his
+son; but he did at length send him to the Grammar School at Bangor, then under
+the management of an excellent classic. Here Owen showed that he had more
+talents than the rector had given him credit for, when he affirmed that the lad
+had been completely stupefied by the life he led at Bodowen. He bade fair to do
+credit to the school in the peculiar branch of learning for which it was
+famous. But he was not popular among his schoolfellows. He was wayward, though,
+to a certain degree, generous and unselfish; he was reserved but gentle, except
+when the tremendous bursts of passion (similar in character to those of his
+father) forced their way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On his return from school one Christmas-time, when he had been a year or so at
+Bangor, he was stunned by hearing that the undervalued Augharad was about to be
+married to a gentleman of South Wales, residing near Aberystwith. Boys seldom
+appreciate their sisters; but Owen thought of the many slights with which he
+had requited the patient Augharad, and he gave way to bitter regrets, which,
+with a selfish want of control over his words, he kept expressing to his
+father, until the Squire was thoroughly hurt and chagrined at the repeated
+exclamations of &ldquo;What shall we do when Augharad is gone?&rdquo;
+&ldquo;How dull we shall be when Augharad is married!&rdquo; Owen&rsquo;s
+holidays were prolonged a few weeks, in order that he might be present at the
+wedding; and when all the festivities were over, and the bride and bridegroom
+had left Bodowen, the boy and his father really felt how much they missed the
+quiet, loving Augharad. She had performed so many thoughtful, noiseless little
+offices, on which their daily comfort depended; and now she was gone, the
+household seemed to miss the spirit that peacefully kept it in order; the
+servants roamed about in search of commands and directions, the rooms had no
+longer the unobtrusive ordering of taste to make them cheerful, the very fires
+burned dim, and were always sinking down into dull heaps of gray ashes.
+Altogether Owen did not regret his return to Bangor, and this also the
+mortified parent perceived. Squire Griffiths was a selfish parent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Letters in those days were a rare occurrence. Owen usually received one during
+his half-yearly absences from home, and occasionally his father paid him a
+visit. This half-year the boy had no visit, nor even a letter, till very near
+the time of his leaving school, and then he was astounded by the intelligence
+that his father was married again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then came one of his paroxysms of rage; the more disastrous in its effects upon
+his character because it could find no vent in action. Independently of slight
+to the memory of the first wife which children are so apt to fancy such an
+action implies, Owen had hitherto considered himself (and with justice) the
+first object of his father&rsquo;s life. They had been so much to each other;
+and now a shapeless, but too real something had come between him and his father
+there for ever. He felt as if his permission should have been asked, as if he
+should have been consulted. Certainly he ought to have been told of the
+intended event. So the Squire felt, and hence his constrained letter which had
+so much increased the bitterness of Owen&rsquo;s feelings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With all this anger, when Owen saw his stepmother, he thought he had never seen
+so beautiful a woman for her age; for she was no longer in the bloom of youth,
+being a widow when his father married her. Her manners, to the Welsh lad, who
+had seen little of female grace among the families of the few antiquarians with
+whom his father visited, were so fascinating that he watched her with a sort of
+breathless admiration. Her measured grace, her faultless movements, her tones
+of voice, sweet, till the ear was sated with their sweetness, made Owen less
+angry at his father&rsquo;s marriage. Yet he felt, more than ever, that the
+cloud was between him and his father; that the hasty letter he had sent in
+answer to the announcement of his wedding was not forgotten, although no
+allusion was ever made to it. He was no longer his father&rsquo;s
+confidant&mdash;hardly ever his father&rsquo;s companion, for the newly-married
+wife was all in all to the Squire, and his son felt himself almost a cipher,
+where he had so long been everything. The lady herself had ever the softest
+consideration for her stepson; almost too obtrusive was the attention paid to
+his wishes, but still he fancied that the heart had no part in the winning
+advances. There was a watchful glance of the eye that Owen once or twice caught
+when she had imagined herself unobserved, and many other nameless little
+circumstances, that gave him a strong feeling of want of sincerity in his
+stepmother. Mrs. Owen brought with her into the family her little child by her
+first husband, a boy nearly three years old. He was one of those elfish,
+observant, mocking children, over whose feelings you seem to have no control:
+agile and mischievous, his little practical jokes, at first performed in
+ignorance of the pain he gave, but afterward proceeding to a malicious pleasure
+in suffering, really seemed to afford some ground to the superstitious notion
+of some of the common people that he was a fairy changeling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Years passed on; and as Owen grew older he became more observant. He saw, even
+in his occasional visits at home (for from school he had passed on to college),
+that a great change had taken place in the outward manifestations of his
+father&rsquo;s character; and, by degrees, Owen traced this change to the
+influence of his stepmother; so slight, so imperceptible to the common
+observer, yet so resistless in its effects. Squire Griffiths caught up his
+wife&rsquo;s humbly advanced opinions, and, unawares to himself, adopted them
+as his own, defying all argument and opposition. It was the same with her
+wishes; they met their fulfilment, from the extreme and delicate art with which
+she insinuated them into her husband&rsquo;s mind, as his own. She sacrificed
+the show of authority for the power. At last, when Owen perceived some
+oppressive act in his father&rsquo;s conduct toward his dependants, or some
+unaccountable thwarting of his own wishes, he fancied he saw his
+stepmother&rsquo;s secret influence thus displayed, however much she might
+regret the injustice of his father&rsquo;s actions in her conversations with
+him when they were alone. His father was fast losing his temperate habits, and
+frequent intoxication soon took its usual effect upon the temper. Yet even here
+was the spell of his wife upon him. Before her he placed a restraint upon his
+passion, yet she was perfectly aware of his irritable disposition, and directed
+it hither and thither with the same apparent ignorance of the tendency of her
+words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Owen&rsquo;s situation became peculiarly mortifying to a youth whose
+early remembrances afforded such a contrast to his present state. As a child,
+he had been elevated to the consequence of a man before his years gave any
+mental check to the selfishness which such conduct was likely to engender; he
+could remember when his will was law to the servants and dependants, and his
+sympathy necessary to his father: now he was as a cipher in his father&rsquo;s
+house; and the Squire, estranged in the first instance by a feeling of the
+injury he had done his son in not sooner acquainting him with his purposed
+marriage, seemed rather to avoid than to seek him as a companion, and too
+frequently showed the most utter indifference to the feelings and wishes which
+a young man of a high and independent spirit might be supposed to indulge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps Owen was not fully aware of the force of all these circumstances; for
+an actor in a family drama is seldom unimpassioned enough to be perfectly
+observant. But he became moody and soured; brooding over his unloved existence,
+and craving with a human heart after sympathy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This feeling took more full possession of his mind when he had left college,
+and returned home to lead an idle and purposeless life. As the heir, there was
+no worldly necessity for exertion: his father was too much of a Welsh squire to
+dream of the moral necessity, and he himself had not sufficient strength of
+mind to decide at once upon abandoning a place and mode of life which abounded
+in daily mortifications; yet to this course his judgment was slowly tending,
+when some circumstances occurred to detain him at Bodowen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not to be expected that harmony would long be preserved, even in
+appearance, between an unguarded and soured young man, such as Owen, and his
+wary stepmother, when he had once left college, and come, not as a visitor, but
+as the heir to his father&rsquo;s house. Some cause of difference occurred,
+where the woman subdued her hidden anger sufficiently to become convinced that
+Owen was not entirely the dupe she had believed him to be. Henceforward there
+was no peace between them. Not in vulgar altercations did this show itself; but
+in moody reserve on Owen&rsquo;s part, and in undisguised and contemptuous
+pursuance of her own plans by his stepmother. Bodowen was no longer a place
+where, if Owen was not loved or attended to, he could at least find peace, and
+care for himself: he was thwarted at every step, and in every wish, by his
+father&rsquo;s desire, apparently, while the wife sat by with a smile of
+triumph on her beautiful lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Owen went forth at the early day dawn, sometimes roaming about on the shore
+or the upland, shooting or fishing, as the season might be, but oftener
+&ldquo;stretched in indolent repose&rdquo; on the short, sweet grass, indulging
+in gloomy and morbid reveries. He would fancy that this mortified state of
+existence was a dream, a horrible dream, from which he should awake and find
+himself again the sole object and darling of his father. And then he would
+start up and strive to shake off the incubus. There was the molten sunset of
+his childish memory; the gorgeous crimson piles of glory in the west, fading
+away into the cold calm light of the rising moon, while here and there a cloud
+floated across the western heaven, like a seraph&rsquo;s wing, in its flaming
+beauty; the earth was the same as in his childhood&rsquo;s days, full of gentle
+evening sounds, and the harmonies of twilight&mdash;the breeze came sweeping
+low over the heather and blue-bells by his side, and the turf was sending up
+its evening incense of perfume. But life, and heart, and hope were changed for
+ever since those bygone days!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Or he would seat himself in a favourite niche of the rocks on Moel G&ecirc;st,
+hidden by a stunted growth of the whitty, or mountain-ash, from general
+observation, with a rich-tinted cushion of stone-crop for his feet, and a
+straight precipice of rock rising just above. Here would he sit for hours,
+gazing idly at the bay below with its back-ground of purple hills, and the
+little fishing-sail on its bosom, showing white in the sunbeam, and gliding on
+in such harmony with the quiet beauty of the glassy sea; or he would pull out
+an old school-volume, his companion for years, and in morbid accordance with
+the dark legend that still lurked in the recesses of his mind&mdash;a shape of
+gloom in those innermost haunts awaiting its time to come forth in distinct
+outline&mdash;would he turn to the old Greek dramas which treat of a family
+foredoomed by an avenging Fate. The worn page opened of itself at the play of
+the &OElig;dipus Tyrannus, and Owen dwelt with the craving disease upon the
+prophecy so nearly resembling that which concerned himself. With his
+consciousness of neglect, there was a sort of self-flattery in the consequence
+which the legend gave him. He almost wondered how they durst, with slights and
+insults, thus provoke the Avenger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The days drifted onward. Often he would vehemently pursue some sylvan sport,
+till thought and feeling were lost in the violence of bodily exertion.
+Occasionally his evenings were spent at a small public-house, such as stood by
+the unfrequented wayside, where the welcome, hearty, though bought, seemed so
+strongly to contrast with the gloomy negligence of home&mdash;unsympathising
+home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One evening (Owen might be four or five-and-twenty), wearied with a day&rsquo;s
+shooting on the Clenneny Moors, he passed by the open door of &ldquo;The
+Goat&rdquo; at Penmorfa. The light and the cheeriness within tempted him, poor
+self-exhausted man! as it has done many a one more wretched in worldly
+circumstances, to step in, and take his evening meal where at least his
+presence was of some consequence. It was a busy day in that little hostel. A
+flock of sheep, amounting to some hundreds, had arrived at Penmorfa, on their
+road to England, and thronged the space before the house. Inside was the
+shrewd, kind-hearted hostess, bustling to and fro, with merry greetings for
+every tired drover who was to pass the night in her house, while the sheep were
+penned in a field close by. Ever and anon, she kept attending to the second
+crowd of guests, who were celebrating a rural wedding in her house. It was busy
+work to Martha Thomas, yet her smile never flagged; and when Owen Griffiths had
+finished his evening meal she was there, ready with a hope that it had done him
+good, and was to his mind, and a word of intelligence that the wedding-folk
+were about to dance in the kitchen, and the harper was the famous Edward of
+Corwen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Owen, partly from good-natured compliance with his hostess&rsquo;s implied
+wish, and partly from curiosity, lounged to the passage which led to the
+kitchen&mdash;not the every-day, working, cooking kitchen, which was behind,
+but a good-sized room, where the mistress sat, when her work was done, and
+where the country people were commonly entertained at such merry-makings as the
+present. The lintels of the door formed a frame for the animated picture which
+Owen saw within, as he leaned against the wall in the dark passage. The red
+light of the fire, with every now and then a falling piece of turf sending
+forth a fresh blaze, shone full upon four young men who were dancing a measure
+something like a Scotch reel, keeping admirable time in their rapid movements
+to the capital tune the harper was playing. They had their hats on when Owen
+first took his stand, but as they grew more and more animated they flung them
+away, and presently their shoes were kicked off with like disregard to the spot
+where they might happen to alight. Shouts of applause followed any remarkable
+exertion of agility, in which each seemed to try to excel his companions. At
+length, wearied and exhausted, they sat down, and the harper gradually changed
+to one of those wild, inspiring national airs for which he was so famous. The
+thronged audience sat earnest and breathless, and you might have heard a pin
+drop, except when some maiden passed hurriedly, with flaring candle and busy
+look, through to the real kitchen beyond. When he had finished his beautiful
+theme on &ldquo;The March of the men of Harlech,&rdquo; he changed the measure
+again to &ldquo;Tri chant o&rsquo; bunnan&rdquo; (Three hundred pounds), and
+immediately a most unmusical-looking man began chanting
+&ldquo;Pennillion,&rdquo; or a sort of recitative stanzas, which were soon
+taken up by another, and this amusement lasted so long that Owen grew weary,
+and was thinking of retreating from his post by the door, when some little
+bustle was occasioned, on the opposite side of the room, by the entrance of a
+middle-aged man, and a young girl, apparently his daughter. The man advanced to
+the bench occupied by the seniors of the party, who welcomed him with the usual
+pretty Welsh greeting, &ldquo;Pa sut mae dy galon?&rdquo; (&ldquo;How is thy
+heart?&rdquo;) and drinking his health passed on to him the cup of excellent
+<i>cwrw</i>. The girl, evidently a village belle, was as warmly greeted by the
+young men, while the girls eyed her rather askance with a half-jealous look,
+which Owen set down to the score of her extreme prettiness. Like most Welsh
+women, she was of middle size as to height, but beautifully made, with the most
+perfect yet delicate roundness in every limb. Her little mob-cap was carefully
+adjusted to a face which was excessively pretty, though it never could be
+called handsome. It also was round, with the slightest tendency to the oval
+shape, richly coloured, though somewhat olive in complexion, with dimples in
+cheek and chin, and the most scarlet lips Owen had ever seen, that were too
+short to meet over the small pearly teeth. The nose was the most defective
+feature; but the eyes were splendid. They were so long, so lustrous, yet at
+times so very soft under their thick fringe of eyelash! The nut-brown hair was
+carefully braided beneath the border of delicate lace: it was evident the
+little village beauty knew how to make the most of all her attractions, for the
+gay colours which were displayed in her neckerchief were in complete harmony
+with the complexion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Owen was much attracted, while yet he was amused, by the evident coquetry the
+girl displayed, collecting around her a whole bevy of young fellows, for each
+of whom she seemed to have some gay speech, some attractive look or action. In
+a few minutes young Griffiths of Bodowen was at her side, brought thither by a
+variety of idle motives, and as her undivided attention was given to the Welsh
+heir, her admirers, one by one, dropped off, to seat themselves by some less
+fascinating but more attentive fair one. The more Owen conversed with the girl,
+the more he was taken; she had more wit and talent than he had fancied
+possible; a self-abandon and thoughtfulness, to boot, that seemed full of
+charms; and then her voice was so clear and sweet, and her actions so full of
+grace, that Owen was fascinated before he was well aware, and kept looking into
+her bright, blushing face, till her uplifted flashing eye fell beneath his
+earnest gaze.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While it thus happened that they were silent&mdash;she from confusion at the
+unexpected warmth of his admiration, he from an unconsciousness of anything but
+the beautiful changes in her flexile countenance&mdash;the man whom Owen took
+for her father came up and addressed some observation to his daughter, from
+whence he glided into some commonplace though respectful remark to Owen, and at
+length engaging him in some slight, local conversation, he led the way to the
+account of a spot on the peninsula of Penthryn, where teal abounded, and
+concluded with begging Owen to allow him to show him the exact place, saying
+that whenever the young Squire felt so inclined, if he would honour him by a
+call at his house, he would take him across in his boat. While Owen listened,
+his attention was not so much absorbed as to be unaware that the little beauty
+at his side was refusing one or two who endeavoured to draw her from her place
+by invitations to dance. Flattered by his own construction of her refusals, he
+again directed all his attention to her, till she was called away by her
+father, who was leaving the scene of festivity. Before he left he reminded Owen
+of his promise, and added&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps, sir, you do not know me. My name is Ellis Pritchard, and I live
+at Ty Glas, on this side of Moel G&ecirc;st; anyone can point it out to
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the father and daughter had left, Owen slowly prepared for his ride home;
+but encountering the hostess, he could not resist asking a few questions
+relative to Ellis Pritchard and his pretty daughter. She answered shortly but
+respectfully, and then said, rather hesitatingly&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Master Griffiths, you know the triad, &lsquo;Tri pheth tebyg y naill
+i&rsquo;r llall, ysgnbwr heb yd, mail deg heb ddiawd, a merch deg heb ei
+geirda&rsquo; (Three things are alike: a fine barn without corn, a fine cup
+without drink, a fine woman without her reputation).&rdquo; She hastily quitted
+him, and Owen rode slowly to his unhappy home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ellis Pritchard, half farmer and half fisherman, was shrewd, and keen, and
+worldly; yet he was good-natured, and sufficiently generous to have become
+rather a popular man among his equals. He had been struck with the young
+Squire&rsquo;s attention to his pretty daughter, and was not insensible to the
+advantages to be derived from it. Nest would not be the first peasant girl, by
+any means, who had been transplanted to a Welsh manor-house as its mistress;
+and, accordingly, her father had shrewdly given the admiring young man some
+pretext for further opportunities of seeing her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for Nest herself, she had somewhat of her father&rsquo;s worldliness, and
+was fully alive to the superior station of her new admirer, and quite prepared
+to slight all her old sweethearts on his account. But then she had something
+more of feeling in her reckoning; she had not been insensible to the earnest
+yet comparatively refined homage which Owen paid her; she had noticed his
+expressive and occasionally handsome countenance with admiration, and was
+flattered by his so immediately singling her out from her companions. As to the
+hint which Martha Thomas had thrown out, it is enough to say that Nest was very
+giddy, and that she was motherless. She had high spirits and a great love of
+admiration, or, to use a softer term, she loved to please; men, women, and
+children, all, she delighted to gladden with her smile and voice. She
+coquetted, and flirted, and went to the extreme lengths of Welsh courtship,
+till the seniors of the village shook their heads, and cautioned their
+daughters against her acquaintance. If not absolutely guilty, she had too
+frequently been on the verge of guilt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even at the time, Martha Thomas&rsquo;s hint made but little impression on
+Owen, for his senses were otherwise occupied; but in a few days the
+recollection thereof had wholly died away, and one warm glorious summer&rsquo;s
+day, he bent his steps toward Ellis Pritchard&rsquo;s with a beating heart;
+for, except some very slight flirtations at Oxford, Owen had never been
+touched; his thoughts, his fancy, had been otherwise engaged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ty Glas was built against one of the lower rocks of Moel G&ecirc;st, which,
+indeed, formed a side to the low, lengthy house. The materials of the cottage
+were the shingly stones which had fallen from above, plastered rudely together,
+with deep recesses for the small oblong windows. Altogether, the exterior was
+much ruder than Owen had expected; but inside there seemed no lack of comforts.
+The house was divided into two apartments, one large, roomy, and dark, into
+which Owen entered immediately; and before the blushing Nest came from the
+inner chamber (for she had seen the young Squire coming, and hastily gone to
+make some alteration in her dress), he had had time to look around him, and
+note the various little particulars of the room. Beneath the window (which
+commanded a magnificent view) was an oaken dresser, replete with drawers and
+cupboards, and brightly polished to a rich dark colour. In the farther part of
+the room Owen could at first distinguish little, entering as he did from the
+glaring sunlight, but he soon saw that there were two oaken beds, closed up
+after the manner of the Welsh: in fact, the domitories of Ellis Pritchard and
+the man who served under him, both on sea and on land. There was the large
+wheel used for spinning wool, left standing on the middle of the floor, as if
+in use only a few minutes before; and around the ample chimney hung flitches of
+bacon, dried kids&rsquo;-flesh, and fish, that was in process of smoking for
+winter&rsquo;s store.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before Nest had shyly dared to enter, her father, who had been mending his nets
+down below, and seen Owen winding up to the house, came in and gave him a
+hearty yet respectful welcome; and then Nest, downcast and blushing, full of
+the consciousness which her father&rsquo;s advice and conversation had not
+failed to inspire, ventured to join them. To Owen&rsquo;s mind this reserve and
+shyness gave her new charms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was too bright, too hot, too anything to think of going to shoot teal till
+later in the day, and Owen was delighted to accept a hesitating invitation to
+share the noonday meal. Some ewe-milk cheese, very hard and dry, oat-cake,
+slips of the dried kids&rsquo;-flesh broiled, after having been previously
+soaked in water for a few minutes, delicious butter and fresh butter-milk, with
+a liquor called &ldquo;diod griafol&rdquo; (made from the berries of the
+<i>Sorbus aucuparia</i>, infused in water and then fermented), composed the
+frugal repast; but there was something so clean and neat, and withal such a
+true welcome, that Owen had seldom enjoyed a meal so much. Indeed, at that time
+of day the Welsh squires differed from the farmers more in the plenty and rough
+abundance of their manner of living than in the refinement of style of their
+table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the present day, down in Llyn, the Welsh gentry are not a wit behind their
+Saxon equals in the expensive elegances of life; but then (when there was but
+one pewter-service in all Northumberland) there was nothing in Ellis
+Pritchard&rsquo;s mode of living that grated on the young Squire&rsquo;s sense
+of refinement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Little was said by that young pair of wooers during the meal; the father had
+all the conversation to himself, apparently heedless of the ardent looks and
+inattentive mien of his guest. As Owen became more serious in his feelings, he
+grew more timid in their expression, and at night, when they returned from
+their shooting-excursion, the caress he gave Nest was almost as bashfully
+offered as received.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was but the first of a series of days devoted to Nest in reality, though
+at first he thought some little disguise of his object was necessary. The past,
+the future, was all forgotten in those happy days of love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And every worldly plan, every womanly wile was put in practice by Ellis
+Pritchard and his daughter, to render his visits agreeable and alluring.
+Indeed, the very circumstance of his being welcome was enough to attract the
+poor young man, to whom the feeling so produced was new and full of charms. He
+left a home where the certainty of being thwarted made him chary in expressing
+his wishes; where no tones of love ever fell on his ear, save those addressed
+to others; where his presence or absence was a matter of utter indifference;
+and when he entered Ty Glas, all, down to the little cur which, with clamorous
+barkings, claimed a part of his attention, seemed to rejoice. His account of
+his day&rsquo;s employment found a willing listener in Ellis; and when he
+passed on to Nest, busy at her wheel or at her churn, the deepened colour, the
+conscious eye, and the gradual yielding of herself up to his lover-like caress,
+had worlds of charms. Ellis Pritchard was a tenant on the Bodowen estate, and
+therefore had reasons in plenty for wishing to keep the young Squire&rsquo;s
+visits secret; and Owen, unwilling to disturb the sunny calm of these halcyon
+days by any storm at home, was ready to use all the artifice which Ellis
+suggested as to the mode of his calls at Ty Glas. Nor was he unaware of the
+probable, nay, the hoped-for termination of these repeated days of happiness.
+He was quite conscious that the father wished for nothing better than the
+marriage of his daughter to the heir of Bodowen; and when Nest had hidden her
+face in his neck, which was encircled by her clasping arms, and murmured into
+his ear her acknowledgment of love, he felt only too desirous of finding some
+one to love him for ever. Though not highly principled, he would not have tried
+to obtain Nest on other terms save those of marriage: he did so pine after
+enduring love, and fancied he should have bound her heart for evermore to his,
+when they had taken the solemn oaths of matrimony.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no great difficulty attending a secret marriage at such a place and
+at such a time. One gusty autumn day, Ellis ferried them round Penthryn to
+Llandutrwyn, and there saw his little Nest become future Lady of Bodowen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How often do we see giddy, coquetting, restless girls become sobered by
+marriage? A great object in life is decided; one on which their thoughts have
+been running in all their vagaries, and they seem to verify the beautiful fable
+of Undine. A new soul beams out in the gentleness and repose of their future
+lives. An indescribable softness and tenderness takes place of the wearying
+vanity of their former endeavours to attract admiration. Something of this sort
+took place in Nest Pritchard. If at first she had been anxious to attract the
+young Squire of Bodowen, long before her marriage this feeling had merged into
+a truer love than she had ever felt before; and now that he was her own, her
+husband, her whole soul was bent toward making him amends, as far as in her
+lay, for the misery which, with a woman&rsquo;s tact, she saw that he had to
+endure at his home. Her greetings were abounding in delicately-expressed love;
+her study of his tastes unwearying, in the arrangement of her dress, her time,
+her very thoughts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No wonder that he looked back on his wedding-day with a thankfulness which is
+seldom the result of unequal marriages. No wonder that his heart beat aloud as
+formerly when he wound up the little path to Ty Glas, and saw&mdash;keen though
+the winter&rsquo;s wind might be&mdash;that Nest was standing out at the door
+to watch for his dimly-seen approach, while the candle flared in the little
+window as a beacon to guide him aright.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The angry words and unkind actions of home fell deadened on his heart; he
+thought of the love that was surely his, and of the new promise of love that a
+short time would bring forth, and he could almost have smiled at the impotent
+efforts to disturb his peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A few more months, and the young father was greeted by a feeble little cry,
+when he hastily entered Ty Glas, one morning early, in consequence of a summons
+conveyed mysteriously to Bodowen; and the pale mother, smiling, and feebly
+holding up her babe to its father&rsquo;s kiss, seemed to him even more lovely
+than the bright gay Nest who had won his heart at the little inn of Penmorfa.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the curse was at work! The fulfilment of the prophecy was nigh at hand!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was the autumn after the birth of their boy; it had been a glorious summer,
+with bright, hot, sunny weather; and now the year was fading away as seasonably
+into mellow days, with mornings of silver mists and clear frosty nights. The
+blooming look of the time of flowers, was past and gone; but instead there were
+even richer tints abroad in the sun-coloured leaves, the lichens, the golden
+blossomed furze; if it was the time of fading, there was a glory in the decay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nest, in her loving anxiety to surround her dwelling with every charm for her
+husband&rsquo;s sake, had turned gardener, and the little corners of the rude
+court before the house were filled with many a delicate mountain-flower,
+transplanted more for its beauty than its rarity. The sweetbrier bush may even
+yet be seen, old and gray, which she and Owen planted a green slipling beneath
+the window of her little chamber. In those moments Owen forgot all besides the
+present; all the cares and griefs he had known in the past, and all that might
+await him of woe and death in the future. The boy, too, was as lovely a child
+as the fondest parent was ever blessed with; and crowed with delight, and
+clapped his little hands, as his mother held him in her arms at the
+cottage-door to watch his father&rsquo;s ascent up the rough path that led to
+Ty Glas, one bright autumnal morning; and when the three entered the house
+together, it was difficult to say which was the happiest. Owen carried his boy,
+and tossed and played with him, while Nest sought out some little article of
+work, and seated herself on the dresser beneath the window, where now busily
+plying the needle, and then again looking at her husband, she eagerly told him
+the little pieces of domestic intelligence, the winning ways of the child, the
+result of yesterday&rsquo;s fishing, and such of the gossip of Penmorfa as came
+to the ears of the now retired Nest. She noticed that, when she mentioned any
+little circumstance which bore the slightest reference to Bodowen, her husband
+appeared chafed and uneasy, and at last avoided anything that might in the
+least remind him of home. In truth, he had been suffering much of late from the
+irritability of his father, shown in trifles to be sure, but not the less
+galling on that account.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While they were thus talking, and caressing each other and the child, a shadow
+darkened the room, and before they could catch a glimpse of the object that had
+occasioned it, it vanished, and Squire Griffiths lifted the door-latch and
+stood before them. He stood and looked&mdash;first on his son, so different, in
+his buoyant expression of content and enjoyment, with his noble child in his
+arms, like a proud and happy father, as he was, from the depressed, moody young
+man he too often appeared at Bodowen; then on Nest&mdash;poor, trembling,
+sickened Nest!&mdash;who dropped her work, but yet durst not stir from her
+seat, on the dresser, while she looked to her husband as if for protection from
+his father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Squire was silent, as he glared from one to the other, his features white
+with restrained passion. When he spoke, his words came most distinct in their
+forced composure. It was to his son he addressed himself:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That woman! who is she?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Owen hesitated one moment, and then replied, in a steady, yet quiet voice:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Father, that woman is my wife.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He would have added some apology for the long concealment of his marriage; have
+appealed to his father&rsquo;s forgiveness; but the foam flew from Squire
+Owen&rsquo;s lips as he burst forth with invective against Nest:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You have married her! It is as they told me! Married Nest Pritchard yr
+buten! And you stand there as if you had not disgraced yourself for ever and
+ever with your accursed wiving! And the fair harlot sits there, in her mocking
+modesty, practising the mimming airs that will become her state as future Lady
+of Bodowen. But I will move heaven and earth before that false woman darken the
+doors of my father&rsquo;s house as mistress!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this was said with such rapidity that Owen had no time for the words that
+thronged to his lips. &ldquo;Father!&rdquo; (he burst forth at length)
+&ldquo;Father, whosoever told you that Nest Pritchard was a harlot told you a
+lie as false as hell! Ay! a lie as false as hell!&rdquo; he added, in a voice
+of thunder, while he advanced a step or two nearer to the Squire. And then, in
+a lower tone, he said&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She is as pure as your own wife; nay, God help me! as the dear, precious
+mother who brought me forth, and then left me&mdash;with no refuge in a
+mother&rsquo;s heart&mdash;to struggle on through life alone. I tell you Nest
+is as pure as that dear, dead mother!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Fool&mdash;poor fool!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this moment the child&mdash;the little Owen&mdash;who had kept gazing from
+one angry countenance to the other, and with earnest look, trying to understand
+what had brought the fierce glare into the face where till now he had read
+nothing but love, in some way attracted the Squire&rsquo;s attention, and
+increased his wrath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;poor, weak fool that you are, hugging
+the child of another as if it were your own offspring!&rdquo; Owen
+involuntarily caressed the affrighted child, and half smiled at the implication
+of his father&rsquo;s words. This the Squire perceived, and raising his voice
+to a scream of rage, he went on:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I bid you, if you call yourself my son, to cast away that miserable,
+shameless woman&rsquo;s offspring; cast it away this instant&mdash;this
+instant!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In this ungovernable rage, seeing that Owen was far from complying with his
+command, he snatched the poor infant from the loving arms that held it, and
+throwing it to his mother, left the house inarticulate with fury.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nest&mdash;who had been pale and still as marble during this terrible dialogue,
+looking on and listening as if fascinated by the words that smote her
+heart&mdash;opened her arms to receive and cherish her precious babe; but the
+boy was not destined to reach the white refuge of her breast. The furious
+action of the Squire had been almost without aim, and the infant fell against
+the sharp edge of the dresser down on to the stone floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Owen sprang up to take the child, but he lay so still, so motionless, that the
+awe of death came over the father, and he stooped down to gaze more closely. At
+that moment, the upturned, filmy eyes rolled convulsively&mdash;a spasm passed
+along the body&mdash;and the lips, yet warm with kissing, quivered into
+everlasting rest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A word from her husband told Nest all. She slid down from her seat, and lay by
+her little son as corpse-like as he, unheeding all the agonizing endearments
+and passionate adjurations of her husband. And that poor, desolate husband and
+father! Scarce one little quarter of an hour, and he had been so blessed in his
+consciousness of love! the bright promise of many years on his infant&rsquo;s
+face, and the new, fresh soul beaming forth in its awakened intelligence. And
+there it was; the little clay image, that would never more gladden up at the
+sight of him, nor stretch forth to meet his embrace; whose inarticulate, yet
+most eloquent cooings might haunt him in his dreams, but would never more be
+heard in waking life again! And by the dead babe, almost as utterly insensate,
+the poor mother had fallen in a merciful faint&mdash;the slandered,
+heart-pierced Nest! Owen struggled against the sickness that came over him, and
+busied himself in vain attempts at her restoration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was now near noon-day, and Ellis Pritchard came home, little dreaming of the
+sight that awaited him; but though stunned, he was able to take more effectual
+measures for his poor daughter&rsquo;s recovery than Owen had done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By-and-by she showed symptoms of returning sense, and was placed in her own
+little bed in a darkened room, where, without ever waking to complete
+consciousness, she fell asleep. Then it was that her husband, suffocated by
+pressure of miserable thought, gently drew his hand from her tightened clasp,
+and printing one long soft kiss on her white waxen forehead, hastily stole out
+of the room, and out of the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Near the base of Moel G&ecirc;st&mdash;it might be a quarter of a mile from Ty
+Glas&mdash;was a little neglected solitary copse, wild and tangled with the
+trailing branches of the dog-rose and the tendrils of the white bryony. Toward
+the middle of this thicket a deep crystal pool&mdash;a clear mirror for the
+blue heavens above&mdash;and round the margin floated the broad green leaves of
+the water-lily, and when the regal sun shone down in his noonday glory the
+flowers arose from their cool depths to welcome and greet him. The copse was
+musical with many sounds; the warbling of birds rejoicing in its shades, the
+ceaseless hum of the insects that hovered over the pool, the chime of the
+distant waterfall, the occasional bleating of the sheep from the mountaintop,
+were all blended into the delicious harmony of nature.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It had been one of Owen&rsquo;s favourite resorts when he had been a lonely
+wanderer&mdash;a pilgrim in search of love in the years gone by. And thither he
+went, as if by instinct, when he left Ty Glas; quelling the uprising agony till
+he should reach that little solitary spot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the time of day when a change in the aspect of the weather so frequently
+takes place; and the little pool was no longer the reflection of a blue and
+sunny sky: it sent back the dark and slaty clouds above, and, every now and
+then, a rough gust shook the painted autumn leaves from their branches, and all
+other music was lost in the sound of the wild winds piping down from the
+moorlands, which lay up and beyond the clefts in the mountain-side. Presently
+the rain came on and beat down in torrents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Owen heeded it not. He sat on the dank ground, his face buried in his
+hands, and his whole strength, physical and mental, employed in quelling the
+rush of blood, which rose and boiled and gurgled in his brain as if it would
+madden him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The phantom of his dead child rose ever before him, and seemed to cry aloud for
+vengeance. And when the poor young man thought upon the victim whom he required
+in his wild longing for revenge, he shuddered, for it was his father!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again and again he tried not to think; but still the circle of thought came
+round, eddying through his brain. At length he mastered his passions, and they
+were calm; then he forced himself to arrange some plan for the future.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had not, in the passionate hurry of the moment, seen that his father had
+left the cottage before he was aware of the fatal accident that befell the
+child. Owen thought he had seen all; and once he planned to go to the Squire
+and tell him of the anguish of heart he had wrought, and awe him, as it were,
+by the dignity of grief. But then again he durst not&mdash;he distrusted his
+self-control&mdash;the old prophecy rose up in its horror&mdash;he dreaded his
+doom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last he determined to leave his father for ever; to take Nest to some
+distant country where she might forget her firstborn, and where he himself
+might gain a livelihood by his own exertions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But when he tried to descend to the various little arrangements which were
+involved in the execution of this plan, he remembered that all his money (and
+in this respect Squire Griffiths was no niggard) was locked up in his
+escritoire at Bodowen. In vain he tried to do away with this matter-of-fact
+difficulty; go to Bodowen he must: and his only hope&mdash;nay his
+determination&mdash;was to avoid his father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He rose and took a by-path to Bodowen. The house looked even more gloomy and
+desolate than usual in the heavy down-pouring rain, yet Owen gazed on it with
+something of regret&mdash;for sorrowful as his days in it had been, he was
+about to leave it for many many years, if not for ever. He entered by a side
+door opening into a passage that led to his own room, where he kept his books,
+his guns, his fishing-tackle, his writing materials, et cetera.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here he hurriedly began to select the few articles he intended to take; for,
+besides the dread of interruption, he was feverishly anxious to travel far that
+very night, if only Nest was capable of performing the journey. As he was thus
+employed, he tried to conjecture what his father&rsquo;s feelings would be on
+finding that his once-loved son was gone away for ever. Would he then awaken to
+regret for the conduct which had driven him from home, and bitterly think on
+the loving and caressing boy who haunted his footsteps in former days? Or,
+alas! would he only feel that an obstacle to his daily happiness&mdash;to his
+contentment with his wife, and his strange, doting affection for the
+child&mdash;was taken away? Would they make merry over the heir&rsquo;s
+departure? Then he thought of Nest&mdash;the young childless mother, whose
+heart had not yet realized her fulness of desolation. Poor Nest! so loving as
+she was, so devoted to her child&mdash;how should he console her? He pictured
+her away in a strange land, pining for her native mountains, and refusing to be
+comforted because her child was not.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even this thought of the home-sickness that might possibly beset Nest hardly
+made him hesitate in his determination; so strongly had the idea taken
+possession of him that only by putting miles and leagues between him and his
+father could he avert the doom which seemed blending itself with the very
+purposes of his life as long as he stayed in proximity with the slayer of his
+child.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had now nearly completed his hasty work of preparation, and was full of
+tender thoughts of his wife, when the door opened, and the elfish Robert peered
+in, in search of some of his brother&rsquo;s possessions. On seeing Owen he
+hesitated, but then came boldly forward, and laid his hand on Owen&rsquo;s arm,
+saying,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nesta yr buten! How is Nest yr buten?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked maliciously into Owen&rsquo;s face to mark the effect of his words,
+but was terrified at the expression he read there. He started off and ran to
+the door, while Owen tried to check himself, saying continually, &ldquo;He is
+but a child. He does not understand the meaning of what he says. He is but a
+child!&rdquo; Still Robert, now in fancied security, kept calling out his
+insulting words, and Owen&rsquo;s hand was on his gun, grasping it as if to
+restrain his rising fury.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But when Robert passed on daringly to mocking words relating to the poor dead
+child, Owen could bear it no longer; and before the boy was well aware, Owen
+was fiercely holding him in an iron clasp with one hand, while he struck him
+hard with the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a minute he checked himself. He paused, relaxed his grasp, and, to his
+horror, he saw Robert sink to the ground; in fact, the lad was half-stunned,
+half-frightened, and thought it best to assume insensibility.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Owen&mdash;miserable Owen&mdash;seeing him lie there prostrate, was bitterly
+repentant, and would have dragged him to the carved settle, and done all he
+could to restore him to his senses, but at this instant the Squire came in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Probably, when the household at Bodowen rose that morning, there was but one
+among them ignorant of the heir&rsquo;s relation to Nest Pritchard and her
+child; for secret as he tried to make his visits to Ty Glas, they had been too
+frequent not to be noticed, and Nest&rsquo;s altered conduct&mdash;no longer
+frequenting dances and merry-makings&mdash;was a strongly corroborative
+circumstance. But Mrs. Griffiths&rsquo; influence reigned paramount, if
+unacknowledged, at Bodowen, and till she sanctioned the disclosure, none would
+dare to tell the Squire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, however, the time drew near when it suited her to make her husband aware
+of the connection his son had formed; so, with many tears, and much seeming
+reluctance, she broke the intelligence to him&mdash;taking good care, at the
+same time, to inform him of the light character Nest had borne. Nor did she
+confine this evil reputation to her conduct before her marriage, but insinuated
+that even to this day she was a &ldquo;woman of the grove and
+brake&rdquo;&mdash;for centuries the Welsh term of opprobrium for the loosest
+female characters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Squire Griffiths easily tracked Owen to Ty Glas; and without any aim but the
+gratification of his furious anger, followed him to upbraid as we have seen.
+But he left the cottage even more enraged against his son than he had entered
+it, and returned home to hear the evil suggestions of the stepmother. He had
+heard a slight scuffle in which he caught the tones of Robert&rsquo;s voice, as
+he passed along the hall, and an instant afterwards he saw the apparently
+lifeless body of his little favourite dragged along by the culprit
+Owen&mdash;the marks of strong passion yet visible on his face. Not loud, but
+bitter and deep were the evil words which the father bestowed on the son; and
+as Owen stood proudly and sullenly silent, disdaining all exculpation of
+himself in the presence of one who had wrought him so much graver&mdash;so
+fatal an injury&mdash;Robert&rsquo;s mother entered the room. At sight of her
+natural emotion the wrath of the Squire was redoubled, and his wild suspicions
+that this violence of Owen&rsquo;s to Robert was a premeditated act appeared
+like the proven truth through the mists of rage. He summoned domestics as if to
+guard his own and his wife&rsquo;s life from the attempts of his son; and the
+servants stood wondering around&mdash;now gazing at Mrs. Griffiths, alternately
+scolding and sobbing, while she tried to restore the lad from his really
+bruised and half-unconscious state; now at the fierce and angry Squire; and now
+at the sad and silent Owen. And he&mdash;he was hardly aware of their looks of
+wonder and terror; his father&rsquo;s words fell on a deadened ear; for before
+his eyes there rose a pale dead babe, and in that lady&rsquo;s violent sounds
+of grief he heard the wailing of a more sad, more hopeless mother. For by this
+time the lad Robert had opened his eyes, and though evidently suffering a good
+deal from the effects of Owen&rsquo;s blows, was fully conscious of all that
+was passing around him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Had Owen been left to his own nature, his heart would have worked itself to
+doubly love the boy whom he had injured; but he was stubborn from injustice,
+and hardened by suffering. He refused to vindicate himself; he made no effort
+to resist the imprisonment the Squire had decreed, until a surgeon&rsquo;s
+opinion of the real extent of Robert&rsquo;s injuries was made known. It was
+not until the door was locked and barred, as if upon some wild and furious
+beast, that the recollection of poor Nest, without his comforting presence,
+came into his mind. Oh! thought he, how she would be wearying, pining for his
+tender sympathy; if, indeed, she had recovered the shock of mind sufficiently
+to be sensible of consolation! What would she think of his absence? Could she
+imagine he believed his father&rsquo;s words, and had left her, in this her
+sore trouble and bereavement? The thought madened him, and he looked around for
+some mode of escape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had been confined in a small unfurnished room on the first floor,
+wainscoted, and carved all round, with a massy door, calculated to resist the
+attempts of a dozen strong men, even had he afterward been able to escape from
+the house unseen, unheard. The window was placed (as is common in old Welsh
+houses) over the fire-place; with branching chimneys on either hand, forming a
+sort of projection on the outside. By this outlet his escape was easy, even had
+he been less determined and desperate than he was. And when he had descended,
+with a little care, a little winding, he might elude all observation and pursue
+his original intention of going to Ty Glas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The storm had abated, and watery sunbeams were gilding the bay, as Owen
+descended from the window, and, stealing along in the broad afternoon shadows,
+made his way to the little plateau of green turf in the garden at the top of a
+steep precipitous rock, down the abrupt face of which he had often dropped, by
+means of a well-secured rope, into the small sailing-boat (his father&rsquo;s
+present, alas! in days gone by) which lay moored in the deep sea-water below.
+He had always kept his boat there, because it was the nearest available spot to
+the house; but before he could reach the place&mdash;unless, indeed, he crossed
+a broad sun-lighted piece of ground in full view of the windows on that side of
+the house, and without the shadow of a single sheltering tree or shrub&mdash;he
+had to skirt round a rude semicircle of underwood, which would have been
+considered as a shrubbery had any one taken pains with it. Step by step he
+stealthily moved along&mdash;hearing voices now, again seeing his father and
+stepmother in no distant walk, the Squire evidently caressing and consoling his
+wife, who seemed to be urging some point with great vehemence, again forced to
+crouch down to avoid being seen by the cook, returning from the rude
+kitchen-garden with a handful of herbs. This was the way the doomed heir of
+Bodowen left his ancestral house for ever, and hoped to leave behind him his
+doom. At length he reached the plateau&mdash;he breathed more freely. He
+stooped to discover the hidden coil of rope, kept safe and dry in a hole under
+a great round flat piece of rock: his head was bent down; he did not see his
+father approach, nor did he hear his footstep for the rush of blood to his head
+in the stooping effort of lifting the stone; the Squire had grappled with him
+before he rose up again, before he fully knew whose hands detained him, now,
+when his liberty of person and action seemed secure. He made a vigorous
+struggle to free himself; he wrestled with his father for a moment&mdash;he
+pushed him hard, and drove him on to the great displaced stone, all unsteady in
+its balance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Down went the Squire, down into the deep waters below&mdash;down after him went
+Owen, half consciously, half unconsciously, partly compelled by the sudden
+cessation of any opposing body, partly from a vehement irrepressible impulse to
+rescue his father. But he had instinctively chosen a safer place in the deep
+seawater pool than that into which his push had sent his father. The Squire had
+hit his head with much violence against the side of the boat, in his fall; it
+is, indeed, doubtful whether he was not killed before ever he sank into the
+sea. But Owen knew nothing save that the awful doom seemed even now present. He
+plunged down, he dived below the water in search of the body which had none of
+the elasticity of life to buoy it up; he saw his father in those depths, he
+clutched at him, he brought him up and cast him, a dead weight, into the boat,
+and exhausted by the effort, he had begun himself to sink again before he
+instinctively strove to rise and climb into the rocking boat. There lay his
+father, with a deep dent in the side of his head where the skull had been
+fractured by his fall; his face blackened by the arrested course of the blood.
+Owen felt his pulse, his heart&mdash;all was still. He called him by his name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Father, father!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;come back! come back! You never
+knew how I loved you! how I could love you still&mdash;if&mdash;Oh God!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the thought of his little child rose before him. &ldquo;Yes, father,&rdquo;
+he cried afresh, &ldquo;you never knew how he fell&mdash;how he died! Oh, if I
+had but had patience to tell you! If you would but have borne with me and
+listened! And now it is over! Oh father! father!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whether she had heard this wild wailing voice, or whether it was only that she
+missed her husband and wanted him for some little every-day question, or, as
+was perhaps more likely, she had discovered Owen&rsquo;s escape, and come to
+inform her husband of it, I do not know, but on the rock, right above his head,
+as it seemed, Owen heard his stepmother calling her husband.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was silent, and softly pushed the boat right under the rock till the sides
+grated against the stones, and the overhanging branches concealed him and it
+from all not on a level with the water. Wet as he was, he lay down by his dead
+father the better to conceal himself; and, somehow, the action recalled those
+early days of childhood&mdash;the first in the Squire&rsquo;s
+widowhood&mdash;when Owen had shared his father&rsquo;s bed, and used to waken
+him in the morning to hear one of the old Welsh legends. How long he lay
+thus&mdash;body chilled, and brain hard-working through the heavy pressure of a
+reality as terrible as a nightmare&mdash;he never knew; but at length he roused
+himself up to think of Nest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Drawing out a great sail, he covered up the body of his father with it where he
+lay in the bottom of the boat. Then with his numbed hands he took the oars, and
+pulled out into the more open sea toward Criccaeth. He skirted along the coast
+till he found a shadowed cleft in the dark rocks; to that point he rowed, and
+anchored his boat close in land. Then he mounted, staggering, half longing to
+fall into the dark waters and be at rest&mdash;half instinctively finding out
+the surest foot-rests on that precipitous face of rock, till he was high up,
+safe landed on the turfy summit. He ran off, as if pursued, toward Penmorfa; he
+ran with maddened energy. Suddenly he paused, turned, ran again with the same
+speed, and threw himself prone on the summit, looking down into his boat with
+straining eyes to see if there had been any movement of life&mdash;any
+displacement of a fold of sail-cloth. It was all quiet deep down below, but as
+he gazed the shifting light gave the appearance of a slight movement. Owen ran
+to a lower part of the rock, stripped, plunged into the water, and swam to the
+boat. When there, all was still&mdash;awfully still! For a minute or two, he
+dared not lift up the cloth. Then reflecting that the same terror might beset
+him again&mdash;of leaving his father unaided while yet a spark of life
+lingered&mdash;he removed the shrouding cover. The eyes looked into his with a
+dead stare! He closed the lids and bound up the jaw. Again he looked. This time
+he raised himself out of the water and kissed the brow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It was my doom, father! It would have been better if I had died at my
+birth!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Daylight was fading away. Precious daylight! He swam back, dressed, and set off
+afresh for Penmorfa. When he opened the door of Ty Glas, Ellis Pritchard looked
+at him reproachfully, from his seat in the darkly-shadowed chimney-corner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re come at last,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;One of our kind
+(<i>i.e.</i>, station) would not have left his wife to mourn by herself over
+her dead child; nor would one of our kind have let his father kill his own true
+son. I&rsquo;ve a good mind to take her from you for ever.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I did not tell him,&rdquo; cried Nest, looking piteously at her husband;
+&ldquo;he made me tell him part, and guessed the rest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was nursing her babe on her knee as if it was alive. Owen stood before
+Ellis Pritchard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be silent,&rdquo; said he, quietly. &ldquo;Neither words nor deeds but
+what are decreed can come to pass. I was set to do my work, this hundred years
+and more. The time waited for me, and the man waited for me. I have done what
+was foretold of me for generations!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ellis Pritchard knew the old tale of the prophecy, and believed in it in a
+dull, dead kind of way, but somehow never thought it would come to pass in his
+time. Now, however, he understood it all in a moment, though he mistook
+Owen&rsquo;s nature so much as to believe that the deed was intentionally done,
+out of revenge for the death of his boy; and viewing it in this light, Ellis
+thought it little more than a just punishment for the cause of all the wild
+despairing sorrow he had seen his only child suffer during the hours of this
+long afternoon. But he knew the law would not so regard it. Even the lax Welsh
+law of those days could not fail to examine into the death of a man of Squire
+Griffith&rsquo;s standing. So the acute Ellis thought how he could conceal the
+culprit for a time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;don&rsquo;t look so scared! It was your
+doom, not your fault;&rdquo; and he laid a hand on Owen&rsquo;s shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re wet,&rdquo; said he, suddenly. &ldquo;Where have you been?
+Nest, your husband is dripping, drookit wet. That&rsquo;s what makes him look
+so blue and wan.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nest softly laid her baby in its cradle; she was half stupefied with crying,
+and had not understood to what Owen alluded, when he spoke of his doom being
+fulfilled, if indeed she had heard the words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her touch thawed Owen&rsquo;s miserable heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, Nest!&rdquo; said he, clasping her in his arms; &ldquo;do you love
+me still&mdash;can you love me, my own darling?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; asked she, her eyes filling with tears. &ldquo;I only
+love you more than ever, for you were my poor baby&rsquo;s father!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But, Nest&mdash;Oh, tell her, Ellis! <i>you</i> know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No need, no need!&rdquo; said Ellis. &ldquo;She&rsquo;s had enough to
+think on. Bustle, my girl, and get out my Sunday clothes.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand,&rdquo; said Nest, putting her hand up to her
+head. &ldquo;What is to tell? and why are you so wet? God help me for a poor
+crazed thing, for I cannot guess at the meaning of your words and your strange
+looks! I only know my baby is dead!&rdquo; and she burst into tears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, Nest! go and fetch him a change, quick!&rdquo; and as she meekly
+obeyed, too languid to strive further to understand, Ellis said rapidly to
+Owen, in a low, hurried voice&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you meaning that the Squire is dead? Speak low, lest she hear. Well,
+well, no need to talk about how he died. It was sudden, I see; and we must all
+of us die; and he&rsquo;ll have to be buried. It&rsquo;s well the night is
+near. And I should not wonder now if you&rsquo;d like to travel for a bit; it
+would do Nest a power of good; and then&mdash;there&rsquo;s many a one goes out
+of his own house and never comes back again; and&mdash;I trust he&rsquo;s not
+lying in his own house&mdash;and there&rsquo;s a stir for a bit, and a search,
+and a wonder&mdash;and, by-and-by, the heir just steps in, as quiet as can be.
+And that&rsquo;s what you&rsquo;ll do, and bring Nest to Bodowen after all.
+Nay, child, better stockings nor those; find the blue woollens I bought at
+Llanrwst fair. Only don&rsquo;t lose heart. It&rsquo;s done now and can&rsquo;t
+be helped. It was the piece of work set you to do from the days of the Tudors,
+they say. And he deserved it. Look in yon cradle. So tell us where he is, and
+I&rsquo;ll take heart of grace and see what can be done for him.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Owen sat wet and haggard, looking into the peat fire as if for visions of
+the past, and never heeding a word Ellis said. Nor did he move when Nest
+brought the armful of dry clothes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, rouse up, man!&rdquo; said Ellis, growing impatient. But he
+neither spoke nor moved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What is the matter, father?&rdquo; asked Nest, bewildered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ellis kept on watching Owen for a minute or two, till on his daughter&rsquo;s
+repetition of the question, he said&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ask him yourself, Nest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, husband, what is it?&rdquo; said she, kneeling down and bringing her
+face to a level with his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you know?&rdquo; said he, heavily. &ldquo;You won&rsquo;t
+love me when you do know. And yet it was not my doing: it was my doom.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What does he mean, father?&rdquo; asked Nest, looking up; but she caught
+a gesture from Ellis urging her to go on questioning her husband.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will love you, husband, whatever has happened. Only let me know the
+worst.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A pause, during which Nest and Ellis hung breathless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My father is dead, Nest.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nest caught her breath with a sharp gasp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God forgive him!&rdquo; said she, thinking on her babe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;God forgive <i>me</i>!&rdquo; said Owen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You did not&mdash;&rdquo; Nest stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I did. Now you know it. It was my doom. How could I help it? The
+devil helped me&mdash;he placed the stone so that my father fell. I jumped into
+the water to save him. I did, indeed, Nest. I was nearly drowned myself. But he
+was dead&mdash;dead&mdash;killed by the fall!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then he is safe at the bottom of the sea?&rdquo; said Ellis, with hungry
+eagerness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, he is not; he lies in my boat,&rdquo; said Owen, shivering a little,
+more at the thought of his last glimpse at his father&rsquo;s face than from
+cold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, husband, change your wet clothes!&rdquo; pleaded Nest, to whom the
+death of the old man was simply a horror with which she had nothing to do,
+while her husband&rsquo;s discomfort was a present trouble.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While she helped him to take off the wet garments which he would never have had
+energy enough to remove of himself, Ellis was busy preparing food, and mixing a
+great tumbler of spirits and hot water. He stood over the unfortunate young man
+and compelled him to eat and drink, and made Nest, too, taste some
+mouthfuls&mdash;all the while planning in his own mind how best to conceal what
+had been done, and who had done it; not altogether without a certain feeling of
+vulgar triumph in the reflection that Nest, as she stood there, carelessly
+dressed, dishevelled in her grief, was in reality the mistress of Bodowen, than
+which Ellis Pritchard had never seen a grander house, though he believed such
+might exist.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By dint of a few dexterous questions he found out all he wanted to know from
+Owen, as he ate and drank. In fact, it was almost a relief to Owen to dilute
+the horror by talking about it. Before the meal was done, if meal it could be
+called, Ellis knew all he cared to know.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, Nest, on with your cloak and haps. Pack up what needs to go with
+you, for both you and your husband must be half way to Liverpool by
+to-morrow&rsquo;s morn. I&rsquo;ll take you past Rhyl Sands in my fishing-boat,
+with yours in tow; and, once over the dangerous part, I&rsquo;ll return with my
+cargo of fish, and learn how much stir there is at Bodowen. Once safe hidden in
+Liverpool, no one will know where you are, and you may stay quiet till your
+time comes for returning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I will never come home again,&rdquo; said Owen, doggedly. &ldquo;The
+place is accursed!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hoot! be guided by me, man. Why, it was but an accident, after all! And
+we&rsquo;ll land at the Holy Island, at the Point of Llyn; there is an old
+cousin of mine, the parson, there&mdash;for the Pritchards have known better
+days, Squire&mdash;and we&rsquo;ll bury him there. It was but an accident, man.
+Hold up your head! You and Nest will come home yet and fill Bodowen with
+children, and I&rsquo;ll live to see it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never!&rdquo; said Owen. &ldquo;I am the last male of my race, and the
+son has murdered his father!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nest came in laden and cloaked. Ellis was for hurrying them off. The fire was
+extinguished, the door was locked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here, Nest, my darling, let me take your bundle while I guide you down
+the steps.&rdquo; But her husband bent his head, and spoke never a word. Nest
+gave her father the bundle (already loaded with such things as he himself had
+seen fit to take), but clasped another softly and tightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No one shall help me with this,&rdquo; said she, in a low voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her father did not understand her; her husband did, and placed his strong
+helping arm round her waist, and blessed her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We will all go together, Nest,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;But where?&rdquo;
+and he looked up at the storm-tossed clouds coming up from windward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is a dirty night,&rdquo; said Ellis, turning his head round to speak
+to his companions at last. &ldquo;But never fear, we&rsquo;ll weather
+it?&rdquo; And he made for the place where his vessel was moored. Then he
+stopped and thought a moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stay here!&rdquo; said he, addressing his companions. &ldquo;I may meet
+folk, and I shall, maybe, have to hear and to speak. You wait here till I come
+back for you.&rdquo; So they sat down close together in a corner of the path.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let me look at him, Nest!&rdquo; said Owen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She took her little dead son out from under her shawl; they looked at his waxen
+face long and tenderly; kissed it, and covered it up reverently and softly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nest,&rdquo; said Owen, at last, &ldquo;I feel as though my
+father&rsquo;s spirit had been near us, and as if it had bent over our poor
+little one. A strange chilly air met me as I stooped over him. I could fancy
+the spirit of our pure, blameless child guiding my father&rsquo;s safe over the
+paths of the sky to the gates of heaven, and escaping those accursed dogs of
+hell that were darting up from the north in pursuit of souls not five minutes
+since.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t talk so, Owen,&rdquo; said Nest, curling up to him in the
+darkness of the copse. &ldquo;Who knows what may be listening?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pair were silent, in a kind of nameless terror, till they heard Ellis
+Pritchard&rsquo;s loud whisper. &ldquo;Where are ye? Come along, soft and
+steady. There were folk about even now, and the Squire is missed, and madam in
+a fright.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They went swiftly down to the little harbour, and embarked on board
+Ellis&rsquo;s boat. The sea heaved and rocked even there; the torn clouds went
+hurrying overhead in a wild tumultuous manner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They put out into the bay; still in silence, except when some word of command
+was spoken by Ellis, who took the management of the vessel. They made for the
+rocky shore, where Owen&rsquo;s boat had been moored. It was not there. It had
+broken loose and disappeared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Owen sat down and covered his face. This last event, so simple and natural in
+itself, struck on his excited and superstitious mind in an extraordinary
+manner. He had hoped for a certain reconciliation, so to say, by laying his
+father and his child both in one grave. But now it appeared to him as if there
+was to be no forgiveness; as if his father revolted even in death against any
+such peaceful union. Ellis took a practical view of the case. If the
+Squire&rsquo;s body was found drifting about in a boat known to belong to his
+son, it would create terrible suspicion as to the manner of his death. At one
+time in the evening, Ellis had thought of persuading Owen to let him bury the
+Squire in a sailor&rsquo;s grave; or, in other words, to sew him up in a spare
+sail, and weighting it well, sink it for ever. He had not broached the subject,
+from a certain fear of Owen&rsquo;s passionate repugnance to the plan;
+otherwise, if he had consented, they might have returned to Penmorfa, and
+passively awaited the course of events, secure of Owen&rsquo;s succession to
+Bodowen, sooner or later; or if Owen was too much overwhelmed by what had
+happened, Ellis would have advised him to go away for a short time, and return
+when the buzz and the talk was over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it was different. It was absolutely necessary that they should leave the
+country for a time. Through those stormy waters they must plough their way that
+very night. Ellis had no fear&mdash;would have had no fear, at any rate, with
+Owen as he had been a week, a day ago; but with Owen wild, despairing,
+helpless, fate-pursued, what could he do?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They sailed into the tossing darkness, and were never more seen of men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The house of Bodowen has sunk into damp, dark ruins; and a Saxon stranger holds
+the lands of the Griffiths.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE DOOM OF THE GRIFFITHS ***</div>
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