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-Project Gutenberg's The Broken Font, Vol. 2 (of 2), by Moyle Sherer
-
-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: The Broken Font, Vol. 2 (of 2)
- A Story of the Civil War
-
-Author: Moyle Sherer
-
-Release Date: July 20, 2013 [EBook #43262]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BROKEN FONT, VOL. 2 (OF 2) ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by sp1nd, Matthew Wheaton and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE BROKEN FONT
-
- A STORY OF THE CIVIL WAR.
-
- BY THE
- AUTHOR OF "TALES OF THE WARS OF OUR TIMES,"
- "RECOLLECTIONS OF THE PENINSULA," &c. &c. &c.
-
-
- IN TWO VOLUMES.
-
- VOL. II.
-
-
- LONDON:
-
- PRINTED FOR
-
- LONGMAN, REES, ORME, BROWN, GREEN, & LONGMAN,
-
- PATERNOSTER-ROW.
-
- 1836.
-
-
-
-
-THE BROKEN FONT.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
- And now, good morrow to our waking soules,
- Which watch not one another out of feare.
- DONNE.
-
-
-The noble spirit of Katharine Heywood was severely exercised by those
-disclosures of Jane Lambert which have been related in a former
-chapter.
-
-She regretted, too late, that she had ever asked that true-hearted
-girl to perform an office so difficult in itself, and which had
-proved, in its consequences, so hazardous to her reputation and her
-peace. The chance of such a misfortune as that which had befallen Jane
-never remotely presented itself to her mind at the moment when she
-made the request, yet she could not but feel compunction as she
-reflected on the trouble to which the generous constancy of a delicate
-mind had subjected her affectionate friend. One slight reparation was
-in her power. It became her plain duty to undeceive the mind of Juxon
-on the subject; and the thought that she should be thus instrumental
-in bringing together two fine characters, formed for each other, made
-all selfish considerations about her own sorrow, and every pang which
-her maidenly pride must suffer, vanish before that proper resolution.
-
-No opportunity of speaking in private with Juxon occurred on the
-evening of Jane's disclosure to Katharine, nor did any offer itself
-until the arrival of her young cousin Arthur from Oxford. It was a
-mournful trial to Katharine to observe the high and joyous spirits of
-the ardent youth, as he embraced and thanked Sir Oliver for acceding
-to his request. The silent house became suddenly full of cheerful
-echoes as the brave boy passed to and fro on its oaken staircase and
-along the pleasant gallery, singing snatches of loyal songs, or making
-his spurs jingle as he ran. All his preparations for the solemn work
-of war were made with a light heart, and with little or no
-consideration that fellow-countrymen were to be his enemies. Such
-little sympathy as the boy once felt for the tortured Prynne existed
-no longer for any one of that party, which he had learned to look upon
-as traitors.
-
-One would have thought that he was volunteering in a foreign
-expedition, by his gay-hearted alacrity in getting ready.
-
-"Cousin Kate," said he, turning towards her as they sat at breakfast
-in the hall, "you must make us a couple of King's rosettes,--and I
-hope you have both of you," he added, looking at Jane Lambert, "nearly
-finished embroidering the small standard for our troop:--you have
-laughed at me, and called me boy, Jane; but when I bring you back your
-own embroidery, stained with the blood of traitors, you shall reward
-me as a man."
-
-"I am not so very blood-thirsty, Arthur," said Jane Lambert, "as to
-wish it shed to do honour to my embroidery; and if I see you come
-safe back with your sword bright and a peace branch in your hand, I
-will tell a fib for you, and call you a man before your beard comes.
-Now don't frown--it does not become your smooth face:--when all is
-over, you shall play the part of a lady in the first court masque, and
-shall wear my rose-coloured gown."
-
-"Why, Jane," said Sir Oliver, "what is come to you, girl? It was but
-five minutes ago that I saw you with your kerchief at your eyes,
-looking as sad as though you were sitting at a funeral; and now thou
-mockest poor Arthur, as if he were a vain boaster, instead of a
-gallant boy, as thou well knowest.--Never mind her, Arthur: she is a
-true woman, and teazes those most whom she loves the best. She will
-cry peccavi to thee a few weeks hence, and suffer thee to give her a
-full pardon in honest kisses."
-
-"Marry, Sir Oliver," said Jane, smiling, "you will spoil the boy, an
-you talk thus to him."
-
-"She shall not wait so long for my pardon," said the good-tempered
-Arthur, with quickness; and rising from his seat, he went to Jane,
-and, with the permitted familiarity of boyhood and cousinship, he
-gave her a kiss. "There," he added: "a bird in the hand is worth two
-in the bush. 'To-morrow' is a word I never liked, and it is a season
-which I may never find. Now, remember, if I should have the ill luck
-to be cut down by the sword of a traitor, I die in peace with you,
-dear coz, and forgive you for your merriment beforehand."
-
-"She will not be merrier, Arthur, than she is now," said Katharine;
-"and to say truth, the very thought is enough to make us sad, if we
-were not melancholy already:--but I must not hear, my dear father, of
-your going to the field. It will be at the cost of your life, and
-that, too, without your having the satisfaction to be of use."
-
-"An example, Kate, must always be of service, if it be a good one; and
-though I never stood opposite a shotted cannon hitherto, methinks, to
-do that once by the side of my King would make the short remnant of my
-life all the brighter for it. Besides, my dear girl, for all the talk
-which these Parliament men make about their levies, let the country
-gentlemen of the western counties arm in right earnest, and the loyal
-cavaliers of England will make these praying rogues bend the knee and
-cry out for quarter."
-
-"To be sure they will," said the excited Arthur: "I will bring cousin
-Jane a live specimen of the genuine round-headed rebel, with his hands
-tied behind him, and the whites of his eyes where the pupils should
-be."
-
-At this moment Juxon entered the hall from Old Beech:--he caught the
-last sentence; and putting one hand on Arthur's shoulder, as he gave
-the other to Sir Oliver.--"Remember, my young master," he said, "that
-thy game must be caught before it can be cooked, at least so says the
-cookery book in my old housekeeper's room; and, believe me, you will
-find a day's fighting with these Parliament boys rather harder work
-than a morning's hare-hunting, and little game bagged at the close of
-it."
-
-"Why, George Juxon! this from you!" said Sir Oliver. "Why, you are the
-very last man that I expected to hear croak in this fashion. Why, I
-expect to see the vagabonds turn tail, before a charge of well mounted
-cavaliers, like a flock of sheep."
-
-"You could not see such a runaway flight with greater pleasure than I
-should; but take my word for it, the King's enemies are made of
-sterner stuff than you give them credit for. Many a great spirit is
-reckoned among their leaders; and of the meaner folk that follow them
-numbers have put their hearts into the cause, under a notion that it
-is that of the people. No, sir, Arthur will act in these troubles, I
-am well assured, with the same manliness of spirit with which he wrote
-to you from Oxford, and, therefore, I do not wish to hear him talk
-like a school boy."
-
-Arthur coloured with a little confusion at this grave rebuke; but,
-with the frank grace of a generous spirit, confessed himself to have
-spoken idly, and to be wrong; excusing it, at the same time, by
-saying, that he was only vapouring so to plague Jane Lambert a little,
-who, he verily believed, to be in love with one of the rebels. The
-eyes of Katharine fell, and her gaze was fixed silently upon the
-ground, and a slight contraction of her brow showed to Jane how very
-keenly she was suffering. It was not possible, at the moment, to leave
-the table without an abruptness which must, of necessity, attract
-notice, or she would have done so; but Jane, with a ready
-cheerfulness, replied, "Perhaps I am: now, guess for me, most noble
-cavalier, whether my Puritan suitor be tall or short; young or old;
-how many hairs grow on his chin; whether his cheeks be red and white,
-like summer apples; how much buff it may take to make him a war coat;
-and if he do not wear high boot heels and jingling spurs for bravery?"
-
-The fine temper of Arthur enabled him to take this playful raillery of
-Jane's as pleasantly as it was meant; and Sir Oliver came to the boy's
-aid, observing, "The sly maiden is laughing at us both, Arthur; and it
-is too true that I must have a broad seam let into my old buff
-coat.--See thou have it done quickly," said he, "Philip," turning to
-the old serving man behind his chair.
-
-The announcement, however, which Sir Oliver had before made of his
-intentions, confirmed by the order thus gaily given, seemed to take
-away the old man's breath; for to old Philip none of these sad changes
-were matters for laughter.
-
-Juxon did not discourage these intentions of Sir Oliver for the
-present: he had satisfied his own mind that the family must, of
-necessity, soon quit the mansion at Milverton for a season. The spirit
-in Warwick and in Coventry was decidedly favourable to the cause of
-the Parliament; and although many of the gentlemen and yeomen in the
-country villages declared for his Majesty, yet whatever men could be
-raised under the commission of array would, of course, be marched
-away. However, it was agreed among the gentry, that the King should be
-invited to show himself in the county, and that some effort should be
-made to arouse the loyalty and enlist the feelings of the people in
-his quarrel. Should this fail, they all looked to Nottingham or
-Shrewsbury as favourable rallying points for the Royalists.
-
-In the mean time secret preparations were made for concealing or
-removing valuable effects, and for transporting families and
-households, when the approach of the parliamentary forces should
-render it no longer safe for the more distinguished and wealthy of the
-Royalists to remain in their stately homes.
-
-The conversation at the breakfast table at Milverton was changed from
-the jocular mood of the moment to a graver tone.
-
-The news of the day,--the last movements of the King,--the rumours of
-his approach,--conjectures of his reception,--by turns engaged the
-attention of all, and were discussed between Juxon and Sir Oliver with
-earnestness and forethought.
-
-The calm clear judgment of George Juxon made him look far on to
-consequences; and Sir Oliver, conscious of his own deficiency of
-information, and of the indolence of his inquiries, deferred more
-readily to the opinions of Juxon than obstinate men are found willing
-to do in general.
-
-When the party rose and quitted the hall, Katharine, under the
-pretence of asking Juxon's advice about packing a valuable picture,
-led him to the gallery alone, while Arthur and Jane Lambert were
-settling their playful quarrel upon the terrace.
-
-At the far end of the gallery was a windowed niche, with an antique
-seat of carved oak. Katharine sat down, and entreating the attention
-of Juxon to something of consequence, which it was her desire to
-impart to him, he placed himself on the bench by her side.
-
-"You must be at a loss, Master Juxon, I fear, thoroughly to understand
-our dear friend, Jane Lambert."
-
-"It is true--she is a very strange girl."
-
-"Yes, strangely excellent: her idle words and idle ways do veil a
-character of rare and precious worth."
-
-"I would fain think so, lady; but I do sometimes fear that she is of a
-nature too open and too free for this hollow world. Already, to my
-thought, she is unhappy from this very cause: whatever may be her
-sorrow, I wish she would confide it to you."
-
-"I have discovered it."
-
-"Can it be possible? If so, I am truly happy to think that she will
-have a friend, whose maidenly reserve and heavenly wisdom may guide
-her through all dangers and difficulties in safety."
-
-"Ah! there's the pang; 'twas I betrayed her to them."
-
-"You wrong yourself, lady,--I am convinced you do. I am afraid that I
-can make a better guess at what causes the melancholy of Jane Lambert
-than you can; however, I do not feel at liberty to speak more
-plainly."
-
-"I tell you it was I who placed her in the painful perplexity in which
-you once surprised her. The gentleman from whom you saw her part was
-an unhappy relative of mine: mine was the errand she was doing; mine
-was the secret that she kept with so noble a constancy:--that
-gentleman was nought to her."
-
-"Indeed! was he not her lover?"
-
-"No: would he were! and yet the wish were selfish, and not kind, for
-she loves another."
-
-"I am utterly confused:--how much have my suspicions wronged her:--she
-is a generous girl;--how can I have been so deceived? And yet the
-gallant kissed her hand upon his knees."
-
-"I know it; but even in that action he only charged her with his
-homage to another: she was but love's messenger."
-
-"Lady, I am troubled in my thoughts at this sad business: it is plain
-I wronged her; plain that she is constant as a star to friend or to
-lover. What she has done in friendship may well command my lasting
-admiration. You tell me that she loves. Why is her lover unknown and
-unavowed? What is his condition? Where is he? What barriers divide
-their fortunes and their hopes?"
-
-"One only--he knows not of her love."
-
-"Whoever he may be, wherever he may dwell, in ignorance of such a vast
-possession as such a woman's love--methinks, lady, it is your duty,
-your solemn and sweet duty, to make it known to him. I envy you the
-joy: let me be the bearer of your words or letter; so shall I some
-atonement make for my unworthy suspicions of her danger."
-
-"You forget--these are no times for lovers' vows; these are no times
-for marrying and giving in marriage: such knowledge might depress the
-object of her love with care:--to see happiness offered to our heart's
-want, and then, in the self-same instant, wrested from us by the iron
-hand of war, and scared away by the blast of discord, is to make
-acquaintance with a sorrow which, by ignorance, we might have
-escaped."
-
-"I think not with you, lady: it were pity for any man to die in his
-first field unconscious of such a blessing."
-
-"As I have a human heart, I can conceive of such a feeling, and like
-the noble thought.--Long may you live, Master Juxon, to prove how well
-Jane Lambert loves you!" So saying, Katharine rose and left the
-gallery.
-
-Juxon remained fixed where he sat, in a state of mind which no
-language could faithfully depict. His heart swelled; his eyes became
-dim; and as the blinding tears fell fast away, the first object on
-which they rested was the figure of Jane Lambert, walking under the
-shade of the lime-trees alone. He went down to join her in a tumult
-of rapture; but before he reached the end of the avenue the reflection
-crossed him, "What am I about to do? what am I about to utter? This is
-no moment, this is no mood, in which, for the first time, to address
-her as a lover. Katharine said true, 'These are no times for lovers'
-vows.' 'For better' I would have her mine, but not 'for worse.' She
-shall know no misery that I can shield her from now, as a friend; and
-when peace smiles on my country once more, may God then join our
-hands, as even now our hearts!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. II.
-
- Thus would I teach the world a better way,
- For the recovery of a wounded honour,
- Than with a savage fury, not true courage,
- Still to run headlong on.
- MASSINGER.
-
-
-There is no earthly consolation under sorrow of a more noble kind than
-that of witnessing and of promoting the happiness of those whom we
-know to deserve our affection. Katharine had not experienced for a
-long time a feeling of joy so true as that, with which, in the
-solitude of her chamber, she reflected upon what had just passed
-between herself and Juxon. She saw him go out, with hasty steps,
-towards the avenue where Jane was walking alone, and she rightly
-interpreted that check and change of his resolutions which made him
-turn suddenly away. But she determined that the work which she had
-begun should not be left long incomplete, and that Jane Lambert should
-at once know of the revelation which she had made to Juxon that
-morning. She regretted having uttered a syllable during their
-interview which could operate to discourage Juxon from an immediate
-avowal of the impression which Jane's conduct had made upon his heart.
-Most true it was that, in the present posture of public affairs, it
-could not be advisable for any one, and more especially for a
-clergyman, to enter into the state of matrimony, and it was a
-melancholy thing to form engagements which might never be fulfilled.
-Here, however, she could not but admit there was room for an exception
-to the common rules of prudence. Juxon and Jane Lambert were not
-ordinary characters. She knew that Juxon had of late taken a most
-serious view of the duties which were imposed on him as the rector of
-a parish, and that he had decided to guide and guard his flock with
-vigilance and courage as long as the spirit of persecution would
-suffer him to do so. While, therefore, many of the clergy were for
-arming themselves, and for accompanying the King's forces in the
-field, he resisted that natural inclination, and that easy escape into
-the security of a camp, by preparing to abide the visitations of the
-storm at his appointed post. The path of duty, however dangerous and
-exposed, is always that of peace; nevertheless, the age, the active
-habits, and the resolute spirit of Juxon made a vast and necessary
-difference between his course and that of the mild old parson of
-Cheddar. As Katharine revolved all these matters in her mind, she
-became reconciled to the thought of seeing her beloved Jane united at
-once to the man so well worthy of possessing her. The sole difficulty
-would be the reluctance of Juxon to expose a woman to those chances of
-distress and privation which alone he could cheerfully endure.
-
-Katharine had long foreseen that the moment would arrive when Sir
-Oliver and herself must quit Milverton; and until the late disclosure
-of Jane, she had fully reckoned upon that dear girl as the companion
-of their wanderings and the friend of her bosom; but now it seemed a
-duty to resign that comfort. However, there was one procedure by which
-it might be retained. If, when it became necessary for the royalist
-gentry to quit their homes, George Juxon would accompany the family to
-whatever city they might select as a temporary and secure residence,
-his marriage with Jane might soon take place, and there would be no
-interruption of her own sweet intercourse with her friend. Some
-thoughts like these had passed through the mind of Juxon as he paced
-up and down the terrace, full of that hope which is dashed with fear.
-While he was thus taking counsel of his own heart, Sir Charles Lambert
-arrived at Milverton, and, in company with Sir Oliver and Arthur,
-descended the steps and joined him. Sir Charles had for some time past
-appeared to so great advantage by the manner in which he had come
-forward in the royal cause, that he was considered, even by Juxon, a
-thoroughly changed man. There was a carefulness in his language, which
-greatly contrasted with his former coarseness. His manners were not
-only grave and composed, but there was an urbanity in his address,
-which made a frank-hearted person like Juxon ashamed of not being able
-to like him. He thought him of a better capacity than he had once
-given him credit for, and was not willing to believe that, under all
-this outward improvement of his words and ways, his heart could remain
-unaffected. Moreover, there seemed no adequate reason for his assuming
-a false exterior, nor for any design which he might not openly avow.
-He attributed this amendment of character to secret compunction for
-his violence and brutality towards Cuthbert Noble; to that elevation
-of sentiment which a new position and great duties might and ought to
-produce; and to those considerations of death as an event possible and
-near, which the hazards of the approaching contest might naturally
-suggest to the least serious of men. "What think you, Master Juxon,"
-said Sir Oliver, "our cousin Charles hath just had a letter from
-Yorkshire from Sir Thomas Leigh, who saith that we may soon expect his
-most gracious Majesty in these parts, and that he hopes to possess
-himself of Coventry and raise Warwickshire, and make a good stand in
-this county, if Essex should march hither: in that case, you see, we
-shall not need to quit Milverton; and the battle may be fought so near
-home, that even Kate will see how fit it is that I should be in the
-field. Gout or no gout, I can get as far as Stoneleigh Abbey, and meet
-his Majesty."
-
-"I am afraid the King reckons without his host," answered Juxon: "I
-doubt if the gates of Coventry will open more readily for him than
-those of Hull:--the citizens there are all for the parliament."
-
-"The citizens of Coventry be hanged," said Sir Charles: "they have
-only their own train bands to man the walls,--a set of knock-knee'd
-rascals:--why, a squib in their breeches would clear their
-market-place."
-
-"Yes," said Arthur; "and they would run like rats to their holes at
-the very clatter of a horse-hoof."
-
-"Perhaps they might, Arthur," said Juxon smiling; "but the matter will
-be to get this horse into the streets, and this squib into the
-market-place."
-
-Sir Charles, who well knew that Juxon was no coward, bit his lips,
-and said, "Really I cannot think what is come to you, parson: you are
-always now a prophet of evil:--why the cause of the King would soon be
-down, if all had such faint hearts about it as you have."
-
-"Faint hearts, sir, are fond of feeding on false hopes; stout hearts
-look at naked dangers without blenching. The notion that a rebellion
-of citizens can be put down by a few horses is foolish. It prevents,
-first, earnest preparations to subdue it; and, at last, when these are
-attempted, they prove too late, and altogether ineffectual."
-
-"Well, Juxon, Sir Oliver here and I have done our parts, and shall do
-them to the last: your words don't touch me; but I must say, you love
-to damp us; I hope, however, that the boy cares as little for you as I
-do."
-
-"You need not to be rude as well as angry, Sir Charles."
-
-"Rude! methinks you forget yourself!--a truce to all compliments. Did
-you not call me faint-hearted?"
-
-"Your memory is short indeed, Sir Charles, not to remember who first
-used the word."
-
-"Come, come," interrupted the old knight, "I wo'n't have any falling
-out between friends. Are we not all king's men, loyal and true? It may
-be, Sir Charles, that Juxon sees further into matters than we do; but
-his heart is with us."
-
-"That may seem clear to you, Sir Oliver:--time will show us all men in
-their true colours: I have been right once before, and I may be right
-again."
-
-"What do you mean?" asked Juxon, reddening with anger: "do you doubt
-my loyalty, sir?"
-
-The evil temper of Sir Charles was so strong within him, that,
-desirous only of vexing Juxon to the uttermost, he replied with a
-sneer, "You have taken care to secure yourself a friend in the enemy's
-camp; so that your parsonage at Old Beech will be quite safe, come
-what may; and you mean to stick by it, as I am told."
-
-"It is an insinuation as false as it is base to suspect and utter it:
-try me not farther, or you will make me forget my sacred calling."
-
-"You are not likely to do that by what I hear of your doings at Old
-Beech. You preach like a Puritan already: it were a pity to lose a fat
-rectory if the Parliament get uppermost."
-
-The mean and cruel turn, which Sir Charles thus gave to his malicious
-charge, so startled and affected Juxon, who had always been both
-honest and earnest in his pulpit, that he paused in his reply,--and
-was sending up a swift ejaculation to Heaven for the grace of
-patience, when Sir Oliver angrily interposed.
-
-"Zounds and thunder, Sir Charles, you might have remembered, among the
-doings of Friend Juxon, that he has furnished right stout troopers
-from his own purse, and that every man in his parish, capable of
-bearing arms, who can be spared from home, has been sent off already
-to carry a pike for King Charles. I think the devil is in thee, or
-that yellow Margery hath crossed thy path this morning."
-
-The mention of yellow Margery was never pleasant to Sir Charles, and a
-scowl came over his brow at the sound of her name; but he answered in
-a dogged and sullen manner,--"Ay, that is all very well: it is good to
-have two strings to one's bow. I suppose, Master Juxon will not deny
-that that canting fanatic, Cuthbert Noble, is his friend. My steward,
-who came last night from Hertfordshire, saw the vile hypocrite, with
-tuck and partizan, on guard in the market-place at St. Albans. Your
-grave tutor is a lieutenant of pikemen. I hope I shall ride over the
-rascal some fine day."
-
-"A fanatic he may be--a hypocrite he cannot be; and you say truly that
-I am his friend; but I will not trust myself with another word--I must
-return home. Sir Charles, from henceforth I shall look on you as a
-stranger; and did it become my cloth I would chastise you."
-
-"Insolent priest! thy cloth is thy protection," said Sir Charles,
-advancing with a lifted hunting whip, as if to strike Juxon.
-
-"You need not come between us, Sir Oliver," said Juxon, with a look of
-quiet scorn: "in spite of the anger in his heart, he knows when to be
-prudent."
-
-"Odd's life!" said the old knight, "I will have no more ill blood at
-Milverton:--look you, go your ways, both of you, and sleep over it,
-and come here again to-morrow, and let us make all up. You are both
-right, and both wrong--faults on both sides; that is always the story
-of a quarrel."
-
-With these words he took Juxon by the hand and shook it kindly,
-adding, "There go, man, get your horse; you'll be yourself again
-before you reach home. Here, Arthur, boy, go with him, and call
-Richard to saddle his hobby.--I'll make Sir Charles listen to reason."
-
-This easy and indolent mode of confounding right and wrong, and
-escaping out of the proper and severe course of honourable judgment,
-was by no means agreeable to the upright and manly Juxon. He coldly
-gave his hand, and wishing Sir Oliver a good morning, ascended the
-steps with Arthur, casting a look of silent and expressive indignation
-at Sir Charles, who regarded him in return with violent eyes and
-cheeks livid with rage.
-
-As Juxon and Arthur passed round to the side of the mansion facing the
-court-yard, they saw Katharine Heywood and Jane Lambert standing
-together under the shade of a tree, in earnest conversation. At the
-sound of the approaching footsteps they turned their heads; and it was
-evident to George Juxon that the subject of their discourse was
-connected with what had already passed at the interview between
-Katharine and himself that very morning.
-
- "Oh! what a thing is man! how far from power,
- From settled peace and rest!
- He is some twenty sev'ral men, at least,
- Each sev'ral hour."
-
-The sweet and sudden calm which fell upon the roused and troubled
-passions of Juxon at the very sight of Jane Lambert brought that
-stanza of Herbert's to his memory, and he gave utterance to it as he
-joined and stood with them for a few moments, while Arthur went
-forward to order out his horse.
-
-If Katharine had not already told her friend that Juxon was now truly
-informed of all those circumstances which, at the time, must of
-necessity have perplexed him about her conduct and her probable
-engagement, the expression of his fine eyes would have revealed to her
-that grateful fact. There is a silent eloquence in the look of one
-who truly and fondly loves which needs no interpreter. The avowal of
-his attachment, which he had upon principle resolved to suppress, his
-eyes, prompted by the pulses of his heart, spoke as plainly to Jane as
-though she had heard it from his lips in all the language of ardour
-and admiration.
-
-Katharine questioned him reproachingly on the cause of his sudden
-return to Old Beech, but he excused himself without betraying the true
-reason. They gave credit to his simple assurance that it was not
-possible for him to prolong his visit at present; and with a tender
-pressure of the hand he took his leave of Jane, promising Katharine
-that he would soon ride over to Milverton again.
-
-It was not till his horse had turned the distant corner of the road,
-and was lost to view, that Arthur came in from the outer gate; and the
-distress and dejection of the youth were so plainly to be read in his
-countenance, that Katharine took him aside to ask what was the matter.
-He related to her the quarrel between Juxon and Sir Charles Lambert
-just as it had occurred. She heard it with more pain than surprise,
-for she was well aware of the unaltered nature of Sir Charles; and she
-knew that he cherished mean and vindictive feelings towards Juxon for
-his conduct at the time of his own ferocious assault on Cuthbert
-Noble, and for all his subsequent kindness and friendship to that
-injured student. On one account she very deeply regretted this
-occurrence. It could not fail to put a very serious obstacle in the
-way of that union between Jane Lambert and Juxon which she had just
-indulged herself with the hope she might soon have the happiness of
-seeing perfected at the altar.
-
-The reflections of Juxon himself, as he rode homewards, were of a
-complexion as varied as the face of an April sky. His thoughts were
-overshadowed by many a cloud of fear, and care, and coming sorrow,
-while ever and anon they became glad and bright as if coloured with
-blue sky and sunbeams, and the rainbow of hope. Notwithstanding his
-uncomfortable quarrel with Sir Charles, it was a day to be marked in
-his calendar with a white stone. The day was so hot, that he walked
-his horse leisurely all the way; and when he had gone about half the
-distance between Milverton and Old Beech, he pulled up near a water
-trough, under the shadow of a majestic old oak, and dismounted. There
-was a bank of earth round the trunk of the tree, on which he seated
-himself: his beast stood indolently still, after having dipped its
-nose in the trough; and both rider and horse luxuriated in the cool
-shade. The murmur of the spring that fed the trough was the only sound
-to be heard; and the loneliness of the spot, for it was in the middle
-of a common, suggested pleasing thoughts of gratitude for the human
-charity which had thus provided for the comfort and refreshment of man
-and his dumb companions in labour. By a natural train of associations
-the mind of Juxon was led to reflect on charity in its more high and
-heavenly signification, and on those works which it should produce. He
-considered what the earth would be if subjected to the law of love,
-and what it really was. He bethought him of the mission and office of
-the Prince of Peace: he remembered that he was a minister of that new
-and glorious covenant announced by the voice of angels in a heavenly
-melody,--"Peace on earth, good will towards men." He mused upon the
-titles by which ministers are designated,--watchmen, shepherds,--and
-he was more than ever confirmed in his resolution to remain with his
-flock at Old Beech during the coming troubles. "'The hireling
-fleeth,'" said he to himself, "'because he is an hireling.' Why was I
-so moved at the taunt of malignity and ignorance? How strong a thing
-must be the fear of man, when I can allow myself to fear the opinion
-of one whom I despise, and whom, in truth, I ought to pity; when I can
-dare to wish for an opportunity of showing on the battle-field that my
-heart is English, loyal, and true. I am priest of the temple; I will
-defend my church porch to the last, and keep out the wolf as long as I
-can." As Juxon was thus occupied in sober meditation, he heard the
-tramp of a horse galloping across the common, in the direction of
-Milverton. On looking up, he instantly knew the horse and the figure
-of Sir Charles Lambert. He felt certain that nothing but a fit of
-boiling and ungovernable anger would have led to this swift pursuit of
-him, and was at no loss to conjecture the nature of the trial for
-which he must prepare. Juxon never rode from home in those unquiet
-days without pistols; but come what might from the violence of this
-infuriated man, he resolved that nothing should induce him to use them
-in his defence. Although as a clergyman he could not wear a sword, yet
-he often carried with him a cane of Italian invention, which contained
-a sword-blade, and by means of a secret spring threw out a small guard
-at the handle, which supplied a hilt, and thus, if at any time
-assaulted with the sword, he was furnished with some, though an
-imperfect, weapon of resistance. He was fortunately thus provided on
-the present occasion.
-
-Sir Charles no sooner reached the spot than he threw himself
-impetuously from his horse, and said with a loud oath, "This shall
-settle our difference for ever." At the same time he drew his rapier,
-and advanced upon his antagonist.
-
-Juxon, without a word, took a defensive posture, and opposing his
-cane-sword to that of Sir Charles, parried his fierce passes with such
-a quick eye and so strong a hand, that, in a rencontre which could not
-have lasted two minutes, he twisted the sword of his opponent from his
-angry grasp, and made it fly several yards off. He as immediately
-secured it. "By hell, you shall not escape me!" said Sir Charles,
-frantic with vexation; and plucking a pistol from his belt, he
-discharged it at Juxon as he returned from picking up the sword. The
-ball struck the buckle of Juxon's hat-band, and glanced off. He felt a
-slight shock, but, as it came aslant upon it, the concussion was not
-so violent as to stun him.
-
-Sir Charles dropped the pistol, seized upon a second, which was in his
-belt, but, ere he could deliver his fire, Juxon had beaten aside his
-arm, and the bullet spent its force harmlessly on the yielding air.
-
-"Madman!" said Juxon with an earnest and solemn tone, "let us from our
-hearts thank God. He has preserved you from the sin of murder, and me
-from being hurried into the holy presence of the Prince of Peace from
-a scene of guilty contention, in the cause of which I am far from
-innocent. There is your sword:--there is my hand:--by these lips no
-human being shall ever be informed of what has just occurred. Your
-present situation and your present duties call upon you to use your
-sword in the field of honour and in the service of your king: do so in
-a good spirit, and forget this hour as fully as I forgive it."
-
-The burning coal fell, guided by Heaven, upon the humbled head of the
-proud one. Scalding tears stood in his eyes; the blood rushed hotly to
-his cheeks. His embarrassment was so great, that for a while he could
-utter nothing. "Let me hope," said Juxon, "that I have lost an enemy,
-and gained a friend."
-
-"You have done more, much more," answered Sir Charles: "you are the
-first person on earth who ever touched my heart with a feeling
-altogether new:--I shall bless this day for ever. You shall never
-repent your noble consideration for my character. This sword shall
-never again be dishonoured." Here Sir Charles fell upon his knees. "I
-ask pardon of God and of you, Juxon, for my murderous purpose. I feel
-that the hand of Providence has been in this strange work--I am not
-yet an utter reprobate."
-
-"God forbid!" said Juxon, as he raised him up: "we will talk together
-of better hopes. Suppose we return together to Milverton, and show
-ourselves as reconciled heartily--it will, I think, spare that kind
-family many hours of uneasiness."
-
-Sir Charles acceded with eagerness to the proposal, and mounting their
-horses they rode back quietly together.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. III.
-
- And is there care in heaven? and is there love
- In heavenly spirits to these creatures base,
- That may compassion of their evils move?
- There is; else much more wretched were the case
- Of men than beasts. But O th' exceeding grace
- Of highest God! that loves his creatures so,
- And all his works with mercy doth embrace,
- That blessed angels he sends to and fro,
- To serve to wicked man, to serve his wicked foe.
- SPENSER.
-
-
-The village of Old Beech, which has been often named in this story as
-the living of George Juxon, was a retired and picturesque place,
-containing about three hundred inhabitants. Here, as at Cheddar, there
-was no lord of the manor in residence. The principal owner of the
-village lands for the last twenty years had been a Roman Catholic
-gentleman, who, being single, and of a severe and gloomy temper of
-mind, had, before this accession of property, embraced the monastic
-life in Italy, and taken the vows as a brother of the Carthusian
-order. The lessee of his estates had let them advantageously to four
-substantial farmers; one of whom occupied the venerable old
-manor-house. Its quaint wooden gables and ornamental carpentry always
-arrested the attention of the passer by their venerable appearance.
-
-A bay window, with five lights in two divisions, marked very
-distinctly the situation of the great hall; a noble apartment used
-only by the tenant as a vast store-room for the produce of his orchard
-and his garden. The broad gates hung broken and decaying from the
-square stone columns in which their hinges had been fastened by iron
-staples, and the pavement of the court was half hid by rank weeds. The
-church was small and ancient, and stood, not far from the manor-house,
-on a gentle eminence, which commanded a beautiful flat of meadow-land,
-watered by a small clear river that meandered through the fields in
-fine and graceful curves, was richly fringed with willows, and turned
-in its course two clean-looking busy mills. Not far from the
-churchyard stood a tall and stately beech-tree, about two centuries
-old, and near it the stump of the very tree from which the village had
-been first named was still visible.
-
-The smooth bark of this noble old beech was covered with initial
-letters, true love knots, and joined hearts, rudely carved by rustic
-hands, many of which, it might be seen by the dates affixed, had long
-since mouldered under the grassy heaps, to which lowly beds of peace
-the very same bell still tolled the parting summons of their lineal
-descendants.
-
-One of the most remarkable features in this pretty village was the
-rectory. The basement story was completely built of glazed bricks in
-checkered patterns, while that over it was constructed of fine massive
-black timbers, the walls being plastered between; the whole was
-surmounted with elevated overhanging roof and lofty gables. The
-entrance was through a fine long porch of timber, and the woodwork of
-this, as well as of the projecting portions of the roofs and gables,
-was elaborately ornamented after the fashion of the fifteenth
-century. Of Juxon's habits something has already been said, but a
-more particular account of his home life is necessary to show him
-faithfully in the relation in which he stood to his parish. Having a
-private fortune, in addition to the proceeds of his living, he was as
-able as he proved himself always willing to benefit his people. When
-he came first among them he found them much neglected and in great
-darkness: his first step was to establish a school, and to win the
-hearts of the parents through their children, all of whom he had
-taught to read, and many of the most promising yet further instructed
-in writing and arithmetic. A few of the old villagers, and one of the
-most acute of his farmers, who, though unable to read himself, was
-well furnished with all that worldly wisdom which may be orally
-conveyed in pithy proverbs, and committed to memory for practical
-guidance in life, resisted this strange innovation. But steady
-perseverance and good-humoured resolution soon conquered all
-opposition; and Juxon had the satisfaction of seeing around him much
-improvement in that knowledge which makes the mind, and _the heart_
-of man, accessible to the light of divine truth.
-
-He was diligent in his duties, open in his manners, cheering in his
-words, and wise in his charities; he distinguished well between the
-objects of them, knew how to give, and when and what; he farmed his
-own glebe, partly as an amusement, and also to set a good example
-before his farmers of just behaviour to labourers. He understood
-cottage economy as well as the most prudent among them; could talk
-with them over the wickets of their little gardens about their
-succession crops, and about the fattening of their pigs and poultry,
-and knew every poor man's cow upon the village common.
-
-The happy children upon the green never paused in their merry games
-when he passed them, and the winner of a race was doubly pleased if
-Master Juxon's eye had seen his triumph. The rough blacksmith, when,
-at breathing times, he stood out under the shade of the ancient and
-hollow oak near which his shed had been erected, always tried to
-engage him in a little talk; and although these brief colloquies were
-commonly of simple occurrences, yet the sturdy smith forgot not the
-dropped word of advice, and he sung his part in the village quire
-o'Sundays with his understanding as well as with his fine deep voice.
-It might be truly said, that the parson of Old Beech was popular in
-his parish, and deserved to be so. A hogshead of wheat, and another of
-pease or barley, stood ever in his hall, out of which the aged widows
-and the poor housekeepers of the village were always liberally
-supplied in their need. He would patiently listen to their long and
-prosy tales about their family as they sat in his hospitable porch,
-without hurrying them, though perhaps they had told him the same story
-for weeks in succession. But if an angel from heaven dwelt among three
-hundred human beings, and passed his life in acts of love and kindness
-towards them, he should not want enemies, nor should he reap gratitude
-and good will from all; therefore Juxon was regarded by a small and
-envious knot with evil eyes. Of this party, a small chandler or
-grocer, a publican, and one of the millers, who was sinking into
-poverty from slothful habits, were the leaders, and the worthy rector
-had sense enough to know that in due time they would show their enmity
-openly.
-
-However, with the answer of a good conscience, he walked about daily,
-without the shadow of a fear, and lay down to sleep in peace, well
-knowing that God alone can make any of us to dwell in safety. Within
-the last two years many things had occurred to awaken his own mind to
-more serious views than those with which he had at first entered upon
-the ministerial office. The questions concerning scandals among the
-clergy engaged his serious attention; and his opinions about the
-lawfulness, or rather the expediency, of some practices, the good or
-evil of which he had never previously considered, now underwent a
-change.
-
-He would never admit for a moment, that to hunt, or to shoot, or to
-fish, were diversions _inherently_ sinful; but he began to look on
-time as a talent, for which every man must render a solemn account,
-and the time of a clergyman as more especially given him to be
-employed to graver ends than could be honestly and effectually
-attained, if sports and amusements of a nature so idle and absorbing
-were not resigned. Nor was this the only change in his opinions;--a
-closer study of the sacred volume, for the purpose of preaching its
-saving truths more plainly to his people; an earnest desire to set
-before them the glory of gospel hopes, and the comfort of Scripture
-promises; and a lively recollection of some of his conversations with
-Cuthbert Noble, satisfied him that if he would be found faithful he
-must preach, with authority and with persuasion, free reconciliation
-to God through a willing and all-sufficient Saviour.
-
-The prayerful exercises to which the composition of his sermons now
-compelled him produced a blessed influence on his own spirit; and he
-never stood up in his pulpit, as an ambassador for Christ, without a
-most affectionate solicitude for the welfare of immortal souls, and a
-present sense of the high privilege and deep responsibility of his
-sacred office. His growing seriousness, as a clergyman, had been more
-apparent to Katharine Heywood than to any one else at Milverton; for
-she was too deeply taught to be deceived in the evidences of a living
-grace. In his parish his earnestness in his pulpit was well known, as
-might be seen from the report of it which had reached Sir Charles
-Lambert, and which partly caused those taunts and insinuations, the
-issue of which, in the quarrel and the encounter that followed, has
-been already related; but to common observers, as Juxon's language had
-no peculiar religious phraseology, and as his manners, his happy
-countenance, and his manly habits, prepossessed their good opinion,
-without alarming any of their prejudices, he seemed one of themselves,
-and they neither knew nor cared to know his inner man.
-
-However, as Juxon and Sir Charles rode back slowly to Milverton after
-the violent scene which might have terminated so awfully for both, he
-was determined not to lose so favourable an occasion for setting
-before the softened transgressor the great and common evil of man's
-nature, and the blessed remedy. He did this with a feeling, a
-faithfulness, and a humility which surprized and affected his silent
-companion greatly, and which at last drew from him a confession of a
-most interesting kind. He told Juxon that, from his earliest
-childhood, he had found himself an object of dislike and aversion to
-all his family; that his elder brother, his senior only by one year,
-had been the indulged and favoured pet both of his father and mother,
-while he had been always either treated with neglect or addressed in
-the language of unkindness and reproach; that hate had begotten hate,
-and that he had passed his early youth hating and hateful; that at the
-age of sixteen, as his brother was out shooting on the manor, he lost
-his life by the accidental discharge of his own gun, as he was
-carelessly forcing his way through some thick furze bushes. He
-confessed that he was inwardly rejoiced at this calamity; that he
-looked upon the corpse without one emotion of sorrow or even of pity,
-and that he viewed with a malignant satisfaction the agony of his
-parents, more especially that of his mother, whose persecution of him
-had been perpetual, and of a petty and irritating nature. This feeling
-of his was so irrepressible as to be seen. The thought that their
-despised boy should inherit the estates and the title had proved so
-very intolerable to his mother that she could not endure his presence
-at home. He was therefore sent away, and placed under the charge of a
-severe tutor, who, finding him the ignorant and evil-disposed youth
-which the letters of his father had represented him, governed him with
-strictness, and instructed him with an evident contempt for his want
-of capacity and for his backwardness in those attainments which, in
-truth, it had been impossible for him to acquire; it having been the
-mean pleasure of his mother to deny him the advantages enjoyed by his
-brother. He related the story of his mother's funeral, to which he was
-called after an absence of two years, and the death of his father,
-which had taken place four years later, while he himself was abroad.
-It appeared by these accounts that subsequent to the death of his
-brother he had never enjoyed or indeed desired any intercourse with
-his parents, and that when he came to take possession of the estates,
-he found his sisters, who were much younger than himself, grown up and
-left to his protection. As they were not mixed up in his mind with the
-injuries of his childhood, such little kindness as he had ever felt
-capable of he had entertained for them. But even here he stated he had
-found disappointment; for one being timid and of no character, feared
-him, while his sister Jane, the only being who had ever behaved well
-to him, he nevertheless knew did not, and perhaps could not, love him
-as a brother.
-
-This confession was poured into the ear of a generous and a thoughtful
-Christian, deeply skilled in the diseases of the human heart. It was
-evident to Juxon that the depravity of our fallen nature, common to
-all, had, in the miserable heart now laid bare before him, been
-inflamed by the early unkindness of parents, and had taken the dark
-colours of a rancorous and cruel disposition. Yet, even in this
-apparently desperate case, there was a ray of hope, there was a light
-of that mysterious something which may be observed in the human heart,
-as a fragment of its better nature that has survived the fall,--_a
-capacity of loving_; which, as it could find no issue towards man,
-exhibited itself in a rare kindness and affection to dogs, horses, and
-birds. To these living creatures Sir Charles, who was to man
-indifferent or cruel, showed himself gentle, patient, and fond. Juxon
-had often observed this with pleasure: he now caught this golden
-string, and by it he led up the mind of his hearer to contemplate the
-God of creation upon a throne of universal love, caring for the
-meanest of his creatures, and revealing himself more especially to man
-in the relation of Father. Thence, by a swift transition, he painted
-man (_the whole race_) prodigal, miserable, naked, feeding with swine,
-till returning to their Father they were forgiven and with embraces;
-nor, while he fixed attention upon the mighty Saviour, from whose
-gracious lips this parable proceeded, did he fail to preach Jesus as
-the incarnation of Divine love, reconciling the lost children of earth
-to their heavenly Father, waiting to be gracious. He did not thus
-speak in vain:--who shall dare to look down upon any human being as
-lost, hardened, reprobate? Who maketh men to differ? Who can make the
-rock yield water, and dry up the Euphrates? He who can change flesh
-into stone when it is his pleasure.
-
-But we return to show the connection of what has passed with the
-progress of our story.
-
-It was a most welcome sight to the family at Milverton, to see Juxon
-and Sir Charles return amicably together after the quarrel of the
-morning; but there was something, nevertheless, very inexplicable in
-the manners of both. Those of the former were far more serious and
-absorbed than Katharine had ever observed them before; while the
-latter had an embarrassed air, a softened tone of voice, and an
-expression of deep, real, unaffected sorrow in his countenance.
-
-Whatever had passed between them, it was evident that the
-reconciliation was on both sides of the sincere nature of hearty
-forgiveness. As Katharine contemplated the brow and the features of
-Sir Charles, she discerned traces of a mental working such as she had
-never seen at any previous period of their frequent intercourse; and,
-for the first time, she looked on him without aversion and without
-suspicion.
-
-To his great honour, and as the strongest proof of the good effect
-wrought on him by the events of that memorable day, he took the first
-opportunity that offered, to declare, in the absence of Juxon, the
-circumstances of their rencontre, and the generous conduct of his
-noble antagonist.
-
-There is a something in the honest avowal of shame, and the honest
-recognition of another's excellence, which, as it can only proceed
-from a humbled and subdued heart, so it will instantly engage the
-approval of every well constituted mind.
-
-From that very hour Sir Charles found himself regarded by all at
-Milverton with a new feeling,--all countenances were changed towards
-him: he had gotten a friend in Katharine,--he found the eyes of his
-sister Jane ever resting upon him, with a new and strange delight: Sir
-Oliver, to whom discord was trouble, and who had never wholly
-resigned the hope of having Sir Charles for a son-in-law, was beyond
-measure gratified; and Arthur felt a more undoubting confidence and
-ease at the thought of serving under him than he had hitherto
-admitted.
-
-A sense of all these mercies, a consciousness that he was drawn with
-the cords of love by an invisible hand, deepened his repentance and
-humility, and gave life, strength, and love to his new-born faith; but
-all this was a secret work, in which he was wisely assisted by the
-prudent counsel and the sound judgment of Juxon. It was fortunate,
-that, amid the stirring and necessary duties of those times, he was
-provided with so plain, so manly, so healthy an adviser. Side by side,
-with a profound self-abasement, grew a sentiment of self-respect, that
-prevented his spirit being paralysed, or cast down below the right
-degree of energy required of him by his position at the moment. He was
-now truly prepared, in a more noble frame of mind, to render good and
-faithful service wherever the cause of his king and country might
-lead him. Now, too, he understood and respected the motives which
-decided Juxon to remain at his own proper post, and to perform his own
-sacred duties to the last moment.
-
-In the fortnight which passed about this period he lived long; that
-is, he gathered the experience which is usually the fruit of a much
-longer space of time.
-
-Swiftly as the days glided by, they fully developed the love of Juxon
-and Jane Lambert; and, although Katharine could not persuade Juxon to
-hear of Jane's being exposed to the inconvenience and danger of
-becoming his wife, at a time when the clergy might expect a
-persecution, yet she did enjoy the happiness of seeing them seated
-before her in the sweet and interesting relation of avowed and
-betrothed lovers.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. IV.
-
- Food for powder, food for powder; they'll fill a pit as well
- as better: tush, man, mortal men, mortal men.
- _King Henry IV._
-
-
-Although Cuthbert Noble was by degrees gaining a little experience in
-his new and unsuitable calling, yet it must be confessed that a little
-of his enthusiasm evaporated under the necessary process of being
-drilled and taught his exercise; and not only so, but he began to be
-very much puzzled and perplexed at the opinions and the conduct of
-many with whom he was now to live and to act. The Colonel of the
-regiment in which he had received his appointment was, indeed, a man
-eminently worthy of respect and esteem. He was a devout, reserved
-person, of a noble and grave presence,--an approved soldier, and a
-sincere and sound patriot. He considered himself to be opposing the
-crown upon strict constitutional principles; and, being
-conscientiously attached to the Presbyterian form of church
-government, desired the overthrow of the prelacy, and the total
-abolition of episcopacy. Nevertheless, he viewed with distaste and a
-cold sufferance the extravagant proceedings of the various independent
-sects now loose upon society; and discouraged, as far as he could,
-without danger to the one great and common cause, the practices which
-already obtained in the ranks of the Parliament levies. Every vain and
-intoxicated fanatic, who had the power of uttering a few dozen
-unconnected and rambling sentences without book, claimed for his
-shallow babbling the authority of inspiration, and asserted his gift
-of speech as a divine commission, by which he was called to the office
-of a preacher of the word of God. His own religion was serious,
-practical, intelligible; and he had a sternness of sound judgment,
-before which all flighty pretensions and false confidences fell down
-or fled away. His name was Maxwell: he had been a friend of the father
-of Francis Heywood, and was very well acquainted with Francis. Owing
-to this circumstance Cuthbert was favourably introduced to him, and
-was always very considerately treated; but their characters, their
-ages, and their relative situations in the regiment, made it
-impossible for them to become intimate with each other. Moreover, the
-earliest and latest waking thoughts of Colonel Maxwell were wholly
-taken up with the very important duties of preparing his corps by
-strict discipline and close training for the day of trial, which could
-not be very far distant; therefore Cuthbert was left, soon after he
-joined, to make out as well as he could with the society of the
-captain of his company and his brother lieutenant. At first, indeed,
-for a very few days, he had enjoyed the comfort of having Francis
-Heywood in the same quarters, but the horse had marched down to
-Northampton, and they were thus separated. Now the captain of
-Cuthbert's company had been a master butcher, of the name of Ruddiman,
-about forty years of age: a fine portly man, standing about six feet
-three inches in height, with ample chest and broad shoulders, little
-eyes, red cheeks, a low forehead, and coarse greasy black hair. He
-had a fist that would fell a bullock, and a voice that would frighten
-a herd of them. In spite of the very hardening influence of his
-calling, he had nothing unkind in his temper. He had thrived greatly
-in his business, was honest and just in all his dealings, a good
-husband, a good father, and a good citizen--with a house full of
-children, and a pretty pasture farm in the county of Hertfordshire. He
-was as bold as he was strong; but was here, nevertheless, solely in
-obedience to the wishes of an active, ambitious, meddling wife, who
-was a bitter, censorious, religious politician, and whose pride it was
-that her husband should be a down-king man, and a captain in the
-Parliament army. The good captain himself, meanwhile, barring his
-wife's sovereign will, and the honour of the title, would much rather
-have looked after his business at home; or, at all events, have been
-permitted to join a horse regiment, though only as a sergeant. But
-Mrs. Ruddiman had decided otherwise, and had told him that, if he only
-served for a few weeks or months as a captain, and looked well about
-him, he might get made a commissary and get a contract, and make his
-fortune. This last consideration was not without its weight; for
-Master Ruddiman had always a keen eye to the main chance. The brother
-lieutenant of Cuthbert was a very different sort of personage. He was
-a thin man, of middle stature, with a pale face and red hair, under
-thirty years of age. His trade had been that of a dyer: he had
-rendered conspicuous service at the last election, in securing the
-return of a Puritan to Parliament, and had been rewarded thus: he was
-needy, and the pay of his humble rank an object to him. He had great
-fluency of words, and was a raving Independent of the most virulent
-order. His name was Elkanah Sippet: he was ignorant, irritable, and
-vain. He knew a little Latin, with which he was wont to garnish his
-talk when he wanted to pass off for a scholar, and puzzle big Captain
-Ruddiman; and he could fill his mouth with Scripture phrases and texts
-when he wished to impress Cuthbert with a favourable notion of his
-piety. Ruddiman and Sippet hated each other with about as natural and
-as cordial a hatred as might consist with their being on the same side
-in this contest. Neither of them could understand or like poor
-Cuthbert; but both took refuge from the uneasy contempt with which
-they regarded each other, by endeavouring to conciliate his good
-opinion, or rather his preference.
-
-To choose between them was easy: Ruddiman was worth a dozen Sippets in
-the qualities of his nature; nor was there any thing of the hypocrite
-in him. He was dull, and slow of comprehension; therefore he seldom
-suffered himself to speak about religion, but passively knelt and
-passively listened to the long prayers and longer preachings of the
-chaplain. He had been so stupified and subdued at home about points of
-faith and church government by his wife's brother, a warm and wordy
-brazier, the godly elder of the congregation to which his wife
-belonged, that he yielded, partly for the sake of peace, and partly in
-distrust of his own reason. Thus, in plain fact, he feared God truly
-for himself, and received the interpretations of Scripture delivered
-by the clergy, and the lay elders of his sect, with a submission as
-implicit, and an apprehension as confused, as the Italian peasant
-listens to the Latin oration of a Franciscan friar. His politics were
-more simple; and he was in the habit of expressing what he felt about
-them by always calling the King _the man Charles Stuart_, and all the
-principal leaders of the Parliament party right honest and God-fearing
-worthies. "A man's a man," he would say: "I don't see why any one
-should be called lord over another; and as for bishops, bless us, why
-should they live in palaces, and hold forth about taxes in the House
-of Lords?--Don't you think that's wrong, Master Noble, quite wrong?
-Why it is writ in the Bible that the kingdom of Christ is not of this
-world." To this political creed Cuthbert would give assent; but a
-quick memory whispered to his inner man, "Why then do my servants
-fight?" As for his brother lieutenant, his tone was always rancorous
-and unchristian: he was of a mean and narrow mind, without charity and
-without patience; selfish and tricky, and, withal, quite intent on
-rising upon the ruin of his betters. He felt a sort of inferiority in
-the presence of Cuthbert that a little awed him; but his nature would
-break out occasionally. It was no small advantage to Cuthbert that his
-two companions had seen him, for a few days, often walking and
-conversing with Francis Heywood, whose soldierly appearance had
-attracted general attention among the troops. Moreover, though far
-indeed from the aptitude desired by Colonel Maxwell, the intelligence
-of Cuthbert in the field of exercise was greater than that of either
-Ruddiman or Sippet. Perhaps, after all, the greatest trial of Cuthbert
-arose from the manners of those with whom he was now compelled, by the
-distribution of quarters, to live night and day. As officers of the
-same company, Captain Ruddiman, Sippet, and himself, took their meals
-together, and he was compelled to occupy a stretcher in the same
-sleeping chamber with Sippet. Now Ruddiman was a very gross and
-unclean feeder, and had a most disgusting habit of hawking and
-spitting on the floor all day long; while Sippet, who secretly
-indulged in the too frequent use of strong waters, always stunk of
-spirits, and snored through his nights so loudly, as very seriously to
-disturb the rest of Cuthbert: nor was it possible, with so irritating
-an accompaniment, to comfort his wakeful hours with those meditations
-with which he had often solaced his night watches at Milverton while
-confined by his wound. However, his spirit, though fretted, did not
-sink under these annoyances: he rose constantly with the first glimmer
-of dawn: he did his utmost to perfect himself in all matters of drill
-and discipline. He gave his best attention to all his instructors, and
-he performed all his duties with manly cheerfulness, and in the best
-possible spirit. Colonel Maxwell saw this with silent satisfaction;
-but he was not a man for lavish praises and sudden intimacies, nor was
-he without a clear perception that Cuthbert would never make a
-thorough soldier; indeed his immovable gravity was sometimes very near
-being altogether conquered by a burst of laughter at the mode in which
-Cuthbert exhibited the solemn earnestness of his desire to learn his
-exercises thoroughly, and to command his men properly.
-
-One day, for instance, very soon after Cuthbert's arrival, as he rode
-through the different squads of recruits who were learning their
-facings, he found Cuthbert in one corner of the field, with his head
-in the air, and a corporal giving him private instructions; and,
-unperceived by the former, he heard the following strange
-query:--"Now, my brave man, pray have the goodness to explain to me,
-very exactly, how it is, that is, upon what principle it is, that, if
-I place my feet in this extraordinary manner, I shall come to what you
-call 'the right about face?'"
-
-"Principle! God save you, master! I know nothing at all about
-principles; but I know, if you do as I bid you, and put the ball of
-your right toe to your left heel, and raise the fore part of your
-feet, and come smartly, heel round, on your two heels, and bring back
-your right sharply and square with the left, you will come to the
-right about like a man and a musketeer."
-
-Again, at an after period, as the Colonel passed the spot where a
-company of pikemen was parading under the orders of Cuthbert, the
-warlike student, who was just fresh from the perusal of a military
-treatise in Greek, having taken post at a farther distance than usual
-in the front, and noticing a little whispering and unsteadiness,
-called out with most innocent seriousness,--"Silence, men, silence:
-the Lacedaemonians never spoke in the ranks."
-
-The pikemen seeing the Colonel near became silent, rather in respect
-to his presence than obedience to their simple-hearted lieutenant, and
-wondered the while what county militia these Lacedaemonians might be.
-The commanding officer, averting his head to conceal his irrepressible
-smiles, went forward; and Cuthbert, quite unconscious of any thing
-strange or ridiculous, proceeded to number off, and prove his pikemen
-according to the intricate system of the slow and cumbrous movements
-of those days.
-
-Never, however, was a human being more thoroughly out of his element
-than Master Cuthbert as lieutenant in this said company of pikemen
-under the orders of Captain Ruddiman. He could contrive, indeed, a
-little leisure and a little solitude most days; but even those brief
-seasons of meditation and enjoyment were often broken in upon by a
-sergeant hurrying after him to say that perhaps eleven set of new
-straps for back and breast pieces were wanting, or that two pikes were
-broken, and three men had lost the scabbards of their tucks.
-
-Moreover, he could hardly find a private path or walk near St. Albans,
-where he did not come suddenly upon a few military sinners, who had
-stolen out of the sight of their preaching officers and praying
-comrades to have a game of trap-ball, tip-cat, or the greater
-abominations of cross and pile, pitch and hustle, and chuck farthing.
-Nay, upon one occasion, he surprised a little party under a buttress
-of the abbey playing at primero, trump, put, or beat the knave out of
-doors, with two dollys sitting in their company, of whom it might be
-plainly seen that they had no business in a garrison of Puritans. But
-he was in these moments usually in too absorbed a mood to take notice
-of and reprove these transgressors, and was quite as anxious to turn
-away his eyes as the soldiers were to see them so averted.
-
-One day, as he wandered into the abbey a little before sunset, and was
-standing lost in thought before the monument of Lord Bacon, and
-contemplating the fine alabaster effigy of that great philosopher, he
-heard himself gently addressed by name, and turning to the speaker, he
-recognised, with as much surprise as delight, his worthy and
-invaluable friend Randal, the surgeon of Warwick, to whose skilful
-care and kind treatment he held himself indebted, under God, for his
-life.
-
-Their pleasure at meeting was mutual, and was increased when they
-found that they were again providentially brought together, and held
-commissions in the same corps. Randal had offered his services to the
-Parliament, and had been appointed the surgeon of this levy.
-Henceforth Cuthbert would enjoy the comfort of his society and the
-advantage of his counsel. They agreed instantly to live and mess
-together; and, after a long and interesting conversation about
-Milverton, the Heywoods, and his friend Juxon, they walked together to
-the Colonel's quarter, where Randal had been invited to sup; and
-Cuthbert returned, in high spirits, and with a heart full of joy and
-thanksgiving, to take his own meal with Ruddiman and Sippet, and to
-make known to them his intention of leaving their mess, and living in
-future with his old friend Randal. Ruddiman was sincerely vexed, ate
-less, and hawked rather more than usual, and proposed as an
-arrangement, not unnatural, that the surgeon should join their party
-instead of this breaking up; and Lieutenant Sippet, who wished much to
-avoid being left alone with Ruddiman, very earnestly seconded this
-proposal; observing, that he thought it a very proper subject for most
-serious consideration, and that they ought to seek the Lord for
-guidance, that they might plainly discern his will in this important
-matter.
-
-This, Cuthbert said, he deemed to be an occasion on which so solemn a
-proceeding was altogether uncalled for and improper. Sippet misquoted
-and misapplied a shower of texts, which, in a sadder mood, would have
-made poor Cuthbert's head ache. Ruddiman did not see what they were to
-pray about, for his part, and thought a man might do his duty to God
-and his neighbour very well without so much prayer. "But if you must
-pray," said he, "Friend Sippet, pray to be kept from putting your
-mouth so often to that stone bottle of strong waters at the corner of
-your bed, and from snoring so loud every night, man. Why, though I am
-next room, you waked me this morning before cock-crow; and I doubt if
-Master Noble has had a sound night's sleep since he joined us."
-Cuthbert hastily wished them good night, and withdrew; so in what
-manner the wrathful Sippet resented this affront, or whether he did so
-at all, he never heard.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. V.
-
- Pray now buy some: I love a ballad in print, a' life; for
- then we are sure they are true.
- _Winter's Tale._
-
-
-Although the good parson of Cheddar was as yet unmolested, and
-continued his ministrations in peace, he was far too sagacious not to
-perceive the growing strength of Parliament, and never partook of
-those extravagant hopes, which, upon the arrival of the Marquis of
-Hertford, at the city of Wells, animated so many of the gentlemen and
-the clergy in Somersetshire. But he gave such attendance at the
-meetings of a public nature as was necessary to show plainly the part
-which he had taken,--and he set a faithful example of loyalty in his
-parish. The son and the son-in-law of old Blount the franklin, and
-most of the yeomen of Cheddar, offered their services to the Marquis,
-and repaired to his quarters well mounted and armed.--It was a deeply
-mortifying reflection to Noble and his wife that their son Cuthbert
-had joined the forces of the Parliament, and was already in arms
-against his king. Their spirits were far more depressed by this
-consideration than by any other. Compared to this heavy trial all
-others, which could possibly arrive, seemed light and undeserving of
-careful or anxious deprecation; but for this one chastisement, they
-humbled themselves before God daily with tears and supplications.
-Nevertheless they sorrowed not as without hope, and they did not
-murmur. They knew that their prayers were poured out before a Father
-of mercies, who heareth always, and gives or withholds the blessing
-implored, with a wisdom that cannot err, and with a mysterious love.
-
-Therefore they were enabled to preserve a calm and resigned aspect
-before the village, and before their household, though plain Peter and
-the good maidens were not to be deceived as to their silent
-sufferings; for master did not notice the flowers and birds in the
-garden so much now, and walked up and down thinking, instead of
-talking pleasant; and mistress had not looked after her
-fruit-preserves and her home-made wines this year with the heart she
-used to do; and, worst sign of all, the dinner was often carried away
-hardly touched by either. The apprehensions of Noble as to the
-progress of disaffection to the royal cause proved but too well
-founded. The private agents and emissaries of the Parliament party
-wrought underhand to persuade the people, that, by the commission of
-array, a great part of the estates of all substantial yeomen and
-freeholders would be taken from them, alleging, that some lords had
-said that "twenty pounds by the year was enough for every peasant to
-live on;" and they further said, that all the meaner and poorer sort
-of people were appointed by the same commission to pay a tax of one
-day's labour in every week to the King. These reports, however little
-deserving of credit, were received by the more ignorant with implicit
-belief, and circulated by the interested and designing with most
-persevering activity. The people were thus taught that, if they did
-not adhere to the Parliament, and submit to the ordinance for the
-militia, they would soon be no better than slaves to the lords, and
-the victims of a most cruel oppression.
-
-The ignorance and credulity of the vulgar were by these arts widely
-and successfully imposed upon; but the population of Cheddar was
-preserved from these corrupting falsehoods by the prudence of Noble.
-He early obtained a copy of the commission of array, which was written
-in Latin, and having translated it with fidelity, distributed copies
-from house to house. The word of the good parson was ever held in
-reverence by his flock, therefore, with few exceptions, and those
-confined to the worst characters in the village, his account of the
-matter was received as true; while in many other places the crafty
-supporters of the levelling party, taking advantage of the commissions
-being in Latin, translated it into what English they pleased, and
-abused simple folk in the manner related.
-
-While the Marquis of Hertford maintained himself at Wells all things
-continued quiet at Cheddar; but as Noble had foreseen, there was soon
-a very powerful party brought against him, and he was compelled to
-retire, before the increasing forces and the active officers of the
-Parliament, to Sherborne, in Dorsetshire.
-
-Master Daws, the artful and the covetous enemy of Noble, who had been
-already baffled in his endeavour to drag him before a committee, and
-whose eyes were steadily fixed upon the living of Cheddar, had not
-been inactive while the Royalists lay at Wells.
-
-He had, it is true, seldom ventured from home for fear his precious
-carcass might receive some weighty mark of the wrath or merriment of a
-royal trooper, though he might have gone to and fro in his clerical
-garb as safe as an innocent child: but conscience made a coward of
-him; for he had employed the period of his confinement to his house in
-preparing certain lying and inflammatory papers, which, through the
-agency of a near relation, who was a scrivener's clerk at Bristol, he
-procured to be secretly printed in that city. These papers were of the
-most indecent and outrageous nature, directed chiefly against
-prelacy, and all supporters of the church of England and the episcopal
-form of government. Now, this scrivener's clerk, though he knew and
-despised the hypocrisy of Master Daws, and laughed at all religion,
-whether real or pretended, lent himself as a most ready agent in this
-charitable work. "There are diversities of gifts, my dear Matty," said
-his crafty uncle Daws in the letter which accompanied his manuscript
-libels,--"diversities of gifts, but the same spirit:--thou hast a
-lively wit, and a playful hand with thy pencil; prithee put a little
-device of some facetious kind at the head of each of these
-papers,--such an one as may be easily struck off in a wood-cut of the
-kind, which the profane Italians call caricature: but what need I say
-more? Thou knowest what I would have:--see thou do it. I wish to have
-them done before Cheddar fair, which is held, thou knowest, at the
-latter end of September. They are a bigoted, base, priest-ridden herd
-of swine in that parish, and as blind as the moles and the bats:--we
-must let in a little light on them:--see thou do it broadly."
-
-The sharp-visaged, pale-faced nephew grinned as he read his worthy
-uncle's epistle, and secretly resolved at once to gratify the mean
-desire expressed in it, and to amuse himself, at his uncle's expense,
-when it was too late for him to make any alteration should he detect
-it. Of the ungainly figure, and the hideous features of his uncle, he
-had caricatures without number; and as they were so strongly marked,
-that the rudest engraver of a wooden block could not fail to copy them
-faithfully, he determined that the long visage of Daws himself should
-find a place in his performance.
-
-The fair-day of Cheddar was that one day in the year which was always
-most trying to Noble. All the other holydays were home festivals, and
-were kept by the villagers among themselves, being seldom intruded on
-by strangers; but the annual fair always brought with it a herd of
-idle vagabonds from Bristol, and other towns within a convenient
-distance, and seldom terminated without many profligate, disgusting
-scenes, or an open brawl. The state of public affairs, and the
-presence of a Puritan force in Somersetshire, had such an effect on
-the fairs throughout the county this autumn, that they were in general
-but thinly attended, and little or no business was done among the
-farmers and dealers, by whom they were commonly frequented.
-
-Nevertheless, fairs were too important in the social economy to the
-convenience of the people to be wholly suspended. Therefore, on the
-appointed morning, early in September, a pleasant peal of five bells
-(not as yet silenced by force or law) gave due notice from the tower
-of Cheddar church that the day of fairings and gilt gingerbread had
-arrived; but although a certain quantity of booths had been erected,
-only one, and that but scantily supplied, was set apart for the
-profane display of those glittering temptations. Among the farm
-servants standing for hire, there were no stout young carters with
-their whips, no hale shepherds with their crooks and green sprigs in
-their hats; and though there was no lack of maids, yet, as they
-crowded together, they looked lonesome and sad, and their bonny brown
-hair was not tied up with ribands. The few children present were held
-fast by the hand, and led by their parents to see the common purchases
-made for the household; but even in these matters the traffic was
-dull. There were, indeed, a few cattle; a few pens of sheep; some
-piles of Cheddar and other Somersetshire cheese; a store of salted
-meats; one stall with fair garnishes of pewter for the cupboard;
-another with wooden bowls, and trenchers, and vessels for the dairy;
-and one great one, at which groceries, cloths, linens, and articles of
-hardware, were promiscuously set forth, and where the neighbouring
-housewives were wont to lay in their store of useful necessaries for
-the coming year. But now it was so uncertain what a day might bring
-forth, that not many cared to make their annual outlay.
-
-It might be supposed, that, in such unsettled times, mountebanks,
-tumblers, and conjurers could hardly reckon on a sufficient harvest of
-pence to find them in beer and shoe leather; but some of them still
-ventured their exhibitions, and with a ready wit practised boldly,
-wherever they came, upon the popular prejudices of the hour, and lent
-themselves to the crafty suggestions of the designing, who well knew
-that the vulgar mind may be artfully seduced to join in the ridicule
-of those very persons and things, which, in its better moments, it has
-respected.
-
-Now the nephew of Daws had been a most willing and active agent in
-forwarding the objects of his uncle; for he had not only procured his
-libellous papers to be printed, but he had provided them each with a
-caricature engraving on wood; and he had, in like manner, caused
-certain ribald songs to be headed for distribution at Cheddar fair; so
-that they who could not read the slanders and calumnies contained in
-the printed matter might see them pictured to their senses. Nor did he
-stop here; but he procured a base fellow, the son of a drunken
-saddler, who was a noted posture master in Bristol, to carry these
-papers and prints to Cheddar on the fair day, and to commend them to
-the people. This knave, taking with him a merriman and a fire-eater to
-assist him in attracting a crowd, repaired thither, and about noon
-began his operations on a scaffold near the market cross. They had
-been followed by a rabble of disorderly persons, among whom the report
-of some fun at Cheddar fair had been already spread by the rogues
-engaged on the occasion.
-
-Master Daws, who had been advised by his nephew of the preparations
-that were made for bringing the church and its ministers into contempt
-before the population of Cheddar, walked to the village at an early
-hour in company with his nephew, under the pretence of buying a
-hundred weight of cheese and a salted mutton; and, though the day was
-fine, he took care to appear in the blue Geneva cloak, which was
-commonly worn by the Puritan divines. Having engaged an upper room in
-a public house facing the market place, he had no sooner stalked
-through the vacant crowd, and made his purchases, than he retired to
-feast his malignant envy from the window of this chamber.
-
-The sound of the pipe and tabor, and the nasal tones of Master
-Merriman, soon gathered all the idle folk in the fair round the
-mountebank's scaffold. The fool began with their favourite egg-dance;
-and they stood with gaping mouths to see him hop about on one leg, and
-then, being blindfolded, dance backwards and forwards between the eggs
-without touching one of them: their mouths gaped yet wider, as this
-performer was succeeded by the fire-eater, who, after commencing by
-the trick of drawing forth from his mouth yard after yard of ribands,
-as if his stomach had been a riband loom, put a bundle of lighted
-matches into his mouth, and blew the smoke of the sulphur through his
-nostrils. Last came the posture-master, whose art consisted in making
-all sorts of uncouth faces, and exhibiting in a natural but shocking
-manner every species of deformity and dislocation. Now he showed a
-huge rising of his left shoulder; now shifted the deformity into the
-other; now represented a humpback; accompanying these changes of his
-figure with sundry comical contortions of countenance, to which the
-crowd responded in roars of laughter. Having thus got them into good
-humour for his purpose, he went on to imitate the cries and voices of
-sundry animals and birds; the crow of the cock, the gabble of the
-geese, the gobble of the turkey, the quaak of the duck, the squeak of
-the sucking pig, the bleat of the lamb, the grunt of the old sow, and
-the braying of the ass. The crowd was on the broad grin while he went
-through these imitations. He now therefore disappeared for a minute,
-leaving the merriman to amuse them, by way of interlude, with a
-jocular dance, and returned in robes made of coarse materials to
-imitate those of a bishop. His figure was stuffed out to Falstaff-like
-proportions; his hands were crossed with due gravity; he had plumpers
-in his cheeks; and he forthwith began to intone an anthem with
-burlesque solemnity. The words were in mockery of the coronation
-anthem; and the petition for the growth of the King's beard, and the
-shaving thereof, was delivered in all those varieties of note which he
-had before given when mimicking the animals of the farm-yard. He thus
-excited the mirth of the rabble vastly. He closed this mischievous
-performance by a comic song about tithes; and, after imitating the
-squeak of a sucking pig, and the clack of a hen, he produced upon the
-stage, by sleight of hand, as if from his paunch, a basket filled with
-curious samples of the small tithe, in which the tenth egg was not
-forgotten. His place was now taken by the mountebank, who professed to
-be appointed grand physician to the state, and purifier of the church.
-The fool stood by his side making all the uncouth faces which he could
-think of, taken, it must be confessed, most chiefly from the sour
-_kill-joys_ of the time; and holding a large bundle of printed papers,
-each headed by a wood-cut, he distributed them down among the people
-for due consideration of pence and farthings dropped into his cap.
-These papers, though ridiculous devices were prefixed to them,
-contained a venom of no laughable matter, and were eagerly bought up.
-
-The nephew of old Daws had been at little pains to rack his invention
-for the subject of these curious cuts. On one, he had engraven the
-figure of a fox, vested in canonicals, with a crosier in his hand and
-a mitre on his head, hanging upon a tree, with a flock of geese and
-other fowl beneath chattering at him; on another, he had represented a
-fox in chains, with his right paw on a bag of money, and a monkey at
-prayers by his side, trying to steal it away. On the next was given
-the figure of a wolf in sheep's clothing, bearing a close resemblance
-to his own uncle, puffing a large fire with a pair of bellows, on
-which was inscribed "Groans and sighs;" while above was depicted an
-owl, with a wolf and a lamb joining in prayers. By a self-deception
-not uncommon, Master Daws had not the slightest suspicion that the
-said wolf bore any likeness to himself, and, to the secret diversion
-of his nephew, he gave a most ghastly smile of approval as he looked
-over the rude caricatures, three of which we have described. The time
-was now come for directing the wayward crowd to a stronger expression
-of their contempt for the church than laughter. Accordingly, the
-nephew of Daws descended among them, and proposed that they should
-burn a bishop's effigy before the parson's house. While the effigy was
-preparing, the people stood in groups reading the papers; and sundry
-charitable suggestions were made by the baser among them. "Let's get
-into his cellar," said one, "and drink a little of the sacrament
-wine."--"Let's lay hold of the church plate," said another:--"Or give
-the parson a ride on old Bruin here," was the cruel proposal of a
-third, pointing to a huge bear in a string, led by a wandering
-showman. All things were soon ready; and, led by the posture master in
-front, and guided behind by the mischievous nephew of Master Daws, off
-the rabble moved, noisy and half drunk, and ready for all evil. They
-had no sooner reached the yew-tree in the churchyard, and were
-advancing towards the wicket, than out rushed an old beggar, stumping
-on his wooden leg, followed by plain Peter and two more old labourers,
-and immediately behind them, as if in pursuit, a fine young bull. The
-old beggar, who was no other than the worn-out veteran before
-mentioned, shouted, "_Mad bull!_" at the top of his voice, with an
-earnestness and passion that made him at once believed; and the crowd
-fled, tumbling over each other, as they ran, in inextricable
-confusion: nor were they allowed time to detect the deception
-practised on them; for the old soldier and plain Peter slipping behind
-the frightened beast, and goading him forward, he performed his
-friendly office as well as the maddest of all bulls, and very
-effectually dispersed the mob, and defeated their base and cruel
-intentions for that day. Master Daws, who had from his post of
-observation at the window witnessed the scenes in the market-place
-with the most malignant satisfaction, as soon as the crowd marched off
-towards the vicarage with the effigy, and he saw the coast clear,
-could not repress his curiosity, and, stealing down, followed afar off
-to watch their operations. In the luckless moment of their panic and
-flight, he was so terrified and puzzled, that he could not regain the
-house, but ran with the crowd, and was thrown down by a pig; nor was
-this the worst, for it so happened that a man, leading a monkey, fell
-at the same moment, and jocko flew upon Daws and bit his right ear,
-till he screamed for agony: beyond this, however, and the tearing of
-his clothes, he sustained no injury. A worse fate waited the
-posture-master, the bear being infuriated at the hubbub, and having
-broken away from his master, seized him fiercely, and embraced him in
-a hug so fatal, that it produced contortions of countenance and a
-dislocation of bones very different from those he had so lately been
-exhibiting, and left him a cripple for life. The warning of his
-master's danger had been communicated to plain Peter, that very
-morning, by the grateful old soldier, who had come to that fair with
-no other intention than rendering this service, he having heard a
-whisper of the intended doings in a tap at Bristol. It so chanced that
-old Noble was confined to the house by a sprain of the ankle, and his
-mistress was not well; so Peter kept from them all mention of these
-fears. The stratagem he adopted for putting the mob to flight was
-suggested by the old soldier, and cheerfully aided by a neighbouring
-farmer and two of his servants. Thus was the worthy parson protected
-in peace, and kept safe from the strife of tongues and the violence of
-a base rabble, throughout a day that was very threatening:
-unconscious himself how Daws had been undermining him, he had passed
-it in a frame of mind more than usually composed.
-
-Daws and his nephew continued their retreat without staying to pay
-their reckoning at the public-house. The greater part of the crowd,
-finding themselves on the road to Axbridge, proceeded there, to make
-up for their disappointment at Cheddar by a riot at that place
-instead. So few, indeed, returned, after they had got beyond the reach
-of danger, to find out the truth of it, and they squabbled so much
-among themselves, that Master Blount and the villagers were able to
-prevent further disturbance at that time. Before evening all the
-strange rabble departed; and the sun set on Cheddar as tranquilly as
-in happier times.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. VI.
-
- It's a hard fate to be slain for what a man should never
- willingly fight.
- RALEIGH.
-
-
-The prediction of Juxon concerning the city of Coventry proved
-correct:--not only was the disposition of the inhabitants such as he
-described, but the Parliamentarians, whose vigilance and activity were
-very great, sent forward a small force to assist the citizens in
-defending the place,--and the King had the mortification of summoning
-it in vain. The gates were shut against him, and the burghers sent out
-a message of defiance. His Majesty came to Stoneleigh Abbey the same
-afternoon, much dejected; and being there joined by several of the
-most considerable gentlemen in the county, he decided on raising his
-standard at Nottingham, which was accordingly done on the 25th of
-August; but he found that place much emptier than he expected, and
-learned that the army of the Parliament, composed of horse, foot, and
-cannon, was at Northampton. His own few cannon and stores were, as
-yet, at quarters in York; and the levy gathered immediately under his
-own person was at this moment very inconsiderable. Among the
-cavaliers, who had brought their contingent of horsemen for the royal
-service, was Sir Charles Lambert, with young Arthur Heywood and a
-small troop of stout yeomanry. The age of boyhood is so impressible,
-that the mind readily admits an omen for good or for evil; and Arthur
-felt, and was angry with himself for feeling, uncomfortable, because
-the very first evening of its erection the royal standard was blown
-down by a violent storm of wind and rain.
-
-A short time was now consumed in messages between the King and the two
-Houses; but on neither side were the negotiations conducted in a
-spirit which could issue otherwise than they did. The declaration of
-the two Houses to the kingdom was a trumpet note that gave no
-uncertain sound, and it was answered to by the King with a princely
-courage.
-
-He now removed to Derby; and having clear information that Shrewsbury
-was at his devotion, continued his march to that town; and, collecting
-all his forces in that strong and pleasant situation, was enabled to
-organise them for taking the field in security, and to keep up his
-correspondence with Worcester,--a city zealously affected to the royal
-cause. Soon after the King left Nottingham, the Earl of Essex marched
-from Northampton with his whole army towards Worcester, and, as he
-traversed Warwickshire, placed garrisons of foot both in Warwick and
-Coventry. It so chanced that, by these dispositions, the regiment to
-which Cuthbert belonged was stationed for a time at Warwick.
-
-Sir Oliver Heywood had been disappointed of his wishes by an attack of
-gout so very severe, that it quite disabled him; and although he had
-contrived to present himself before the King at Stoneleigh, the effort
-had thrown him back, and reduced him to the helplessness of a
-cripple. He was therefore compelled to forego his intention of
-repairing to Nottingham and joining the levy. Under these
-circumstances he was willing to remain shut up at Milverton House, and
-to abide all chances and all consequences which might follow on that
-course, when the army of the Parliament should enter the county. But
-Juxon warmly represented to him the great imprudence of this
-unnecessary risk, and advised him to seek a temporary residence in a
-more protected situation. With a wise forethought he recommended
-Oxford; observing that it was at present occupied for the King; and,
-if his Majesty could make head against his enemies, would undoubtedly
-become the royal quarters, in the event of his not being fortunate
-enough to recover the capital before winter. It was true that in the
-interval which must pass before the King could take the field, and
-advance in strength, the University of Oxford might be exposed to a
-visit of some division of the Parliamentary forces; but it was not
-probable that private families lodging there without show would be
-seriously molested:--whereas it was almost certain that the country
-mansion of any Royalist of like consideration with himself would be
-subjected to a visitation of a very insulting and rude nature. Sir
-Oliver yielded to this sensible advice; and as soon as the King
-quitted Nottingham he departed from Milverton. Jane and Sophia Lambert
-accompanied Katharine Heywood to Oxford; and Juxon having escorted the
-party on their first day's journey, took leave of them with the best
-composure which he could, and, without betraying the depth and
-tenderness of his solicitude by one look or tone of dejection,
-returned with all speed to Old Beech.
-
-It was near midnight when he approached the village; and by the
-obscure light of a moonless but clear sky he discerned in the lane
-before him two men moving about at a point where another road crossed
-it. As a gate on his right hand opened into a large field, he
-dismounted, and leading in his horse, fastened it to a hedge-stake,
-and stole forward softly on foot by a pathway, leading to the point
-where the roads crossed. Just as he reached the spot, a disturbed
-bird nestled in a bush. "Who goes there?" said a gruff voice. Juxon
-remained perfectly still, and saw two sentinels, one a pikeman, and
-the other a musketeer, who now ceased their pacing, and stood halted,
-fronting the lane end.
-
-"It is nobody," replied the comrade of the soldier who had given the
-challenge:--"this is the second time thou hast been fooled to-night."
-
-"Thou art the fool, deaf dunderhead, and wouldst not hear a troop of
-horse till they were down on thee:--what dost thou know of the wars,
-bumpkin? I tell thee I heard a horse at the far end of yon lane as
-clear as I hear thy clapper; and there may be royal troopers closer
-than we think for. Dost mind? when I fire, take to thy scrapers, and
-join the post at the barn."
-
-"Well, call me bumpkin as you will, you may be right: I warn't
-thinking about horses, nor listening, you see. Your ears are sharp
-enough for both;--a plague o' the Parliament folk;--I was thinking
-about them pretty bodies that wear white caps and yellow kerchiefs. I
-was to ha' been wed, man, at Michaelmas, but for all this to do about
-the litia: what's the King done to me?"
-
-"Why you talk like a fool: hold your tongue.--Who goes there?" again
-roared the old musketeer,--but Juxon kept a breathless silence.--"You
-talk like a fool. Pay is pay, and victuals victuals, and one side as
-good as t' other; and ours will be the best for booty, man."
-
-"Booty! what's that?"
-
-"Why you must be a queer simpleton not to know: why money, and plate,
-and rich gear, and wines, and grub of all sorts; all's fish that comes
-to net, man: that's the best part of a soldier's life."
-
-"Why what's he got to do with them things, if they beynt his'n?"
-
-"Beynt his'n!" said the old soldier with a tone of contempt: "why make
-'em his'n."
-
-"Why that's what I call plain picking and stealing; and it's taught in
-the Catechiz that you musn't do that."
-
-"Ay, that's all very well for brats at a parson's village school; but
-that wo'n't do for them that know better. Besides, the Catechiz, as
-you call it, is no good now; it's all wrong foundation."
-
-"Well, while I ha' got hands to get my living I don't want gold nor
-silver: I never heard one of your rich folk whistle in all my born
-days; and as for your madams, why my Madge has a laughing face that
-shames them. Dang it, I wish I were back with her, and you might
-soldier and the Roundheads might preach long enough afore I'd come
-among ye."
-
-"Why I don't say any thing for those fellows that pray and preach; and
-sometimes I am afraid they'll stand between a good soldier and his
-right, and wo'n't let him have his fair share of plunder. There's that
-grave, demure leeftenant they call Cuthbert drove me and two more out
-of the parson's orchard this very afternoon before I mounted duty. He
-looks too sharp after other people's business, that godly rogue; and
-if ever I catch him tripping in a thick smoke, I'll give him a rap on
-the sconce shall make him sleep sound enough ever after."
-
-"Thou shalt never hurt a hair of his head while I am by," said the
-rustic soldier: "he's a kind, fair-spoken gentleman as ever stepped in
-shoe-leather."
-
-"Tut! you're both of a kidney--both fools alike--I've been throwing
-away my breath on. Keep your own path, and keep moving," said the
-musketeer, and resumed his own cross beat in a surly silence.
-
-Warned by this adventure that Parliament soldiers were quartered for
-the night in Old Beech, and by the mention of Cuthbert's name, and the
-anecdote connected with it, that he had a friend among the hostile
-party, who would, as far as possible, protect his interests, Juxon
-instantly resolved to pass round by another road, and put up at a
-detached farm-house a quarter of a mile to the north of the village,
-where he could gain more accurate information of their doings, and
-judge how to act in the morning. He was turning about quietly, to
-steal off and get back to his horse, when his attention was again
-arrested by the musketeer saying suddenly and bluntly to the pikeman,
-"You want to be off home, I'm sure."
-
-"You're right enough there, and no conjurer:--I told you so."
-
-"I mean, you want to desert."
-
-"No, I doant."
-
-"Yes you do, and you'll run off when the fighting comes."
-
-"No I wunt: there's no man shall ever say that Bob Hazel gave back in
-a fair stand-up fight."
-
-"Well, then, you'll change your side as soon as we come near the
-King's troops, and fight on the other."
-
-"Why for the matter o' that, I didn't choose my side, to be sure, any
-more than if I had been called by him that won the toss at football;
-but now I'm in for it, I'll fight it out with the best of them on my
-own side."
-
-"That's more than I'll say," muttered the musketeer: "I'm always for
-the uppermost cause and the best paymaster: after the first battle we
-shall see which has the good luck."
-
-They were again silent, and Juxon moved away, and regaining his horse
-led it round by paths and gaps well known to himself to the farm-house
-above mentioned. He found the farmer out and on the watch, and his
-family had not gone to bed. The information which he here obtained of
-the conduct of the Parliament troops in Old Beech was very
-satisfactory. They had been peaceable and orderly, and had done
-violence to no man. The commanding officer, it seems, had taken up his
-quarters at the rectory, and a safeguard was appointed to protect the
-church from injury. It was reported that they would march forwards the
-next morning, or in the course of the day. But although the Colonel
-had maintained a strict control over the soldiers during the day, the
-farmer was naturally afraid that in the course of the night some
-evil-disposed marauders might visit the farm, and therefore all his
-people kept watch. Juxon's horse was instantly put up,--and before the
-large fire in the farmer's kitchen a homely but welcome supper was
-cheerfully provided. Although fatigued, he was far too restless to
-sleep; and when he had refreshed himself with a little food and a cup
-of strong ale he went out again, and walked towards the village. In
-the clear gloom of night it presented the fine outline of a
-picturesque cluster of habitations, of which the principal feature was
-the small church, with its ancient tower, looking black and solemn. To
-the surprize, however, of Juxon, a light, the only one to be seen in
-all the dark mass of buildings, gleamed steadily from the window of
-his chancel. The sight attracted him; and under the impulse of
-curiosity, to see what the guard might be doing, he crossed the
-intervening fields, leaped over the wall of the churchyard, and gained
-the window without seeing or being noticed by any one. A lamp in the
-chancel had been lighted, and threw around an illumination, faint
-indeed, but sufficient to show very distinctly to the eyes of Juxon
-the reverend figure within. Directly opposite the window, with his
-face so slightly averted towards a monument on the same side, that not
-a feature nor an expression was lost, stood a tall grave person in a
-clerical habit. His features were noble and sad: his eyes were very
-bright, but severe withal; and his complexion was pale as marble. He
-wore a small skullcap of black velvet; and beneath it his hair fell,
-on either side, in a large wavy mass, and lay upon the broad white
-collar that turned over his narrow and close-buttoned cassock. His
-upper lip was shaded with a small quantity of the blackest hair; a
-tuft of the same filled the indenture beneath his under lip, and thus
-the pallor of his long thin cheeks, and of his high forehead, appeared
-more deadly. His pale hand, which held a closed volume, was pressed
-against his bosom; and he stood so very motionless, and so deeply
-absorbed in meditation, that a less healthy fancy than that of Juxon
-would have deemed him some ghostly visitant, permitted, during the
-witching hour of night, to haunt that holy place. The slow heavy tread
-of a man in arms, turning the distant corner of the church, warned
-Juxon to conceal himself; and passing quickly round under the altar
-window to the other side, he came to the small door of the chancel. It
-stood ajar; and pushing it gently, he entered, and again closing it,
-found himself in the presence of the venerable stranger, and alone
-with him. He turned at the sound of Juxon's entrance without
-abruptness or discomposure; but as the light showed him an unknown
-face, and an athletic form in garments dusty with travel, he demanded
-of him in a tone of authority how he had come thither, and what was
-his business.
-
-"But yesterday," said Juxon, "I might have asked that question of
-thee: but a day has brought forth a sudden change; and the shepherd
-must enter his own fold by stealth, or with the permission of others."
-
-"I understand thee. Thou art the minister of this place: thou hast
-nothing to fear: I have watched in thy sanctuary, and no one has
-violated or defiled it. You may go home to your own chamber in peace:
-it was allotted as my quarter by the commander of this band, but I
-resolved to keep a vigil here, and would continue it alone. Go, and
-God speed thee. We shall march in the morning; and I pray that you may
-be kept safe in all future visitations."
-
-"March!--have I heard aright? Does such an one as you march in the
-ranks of rebels? Does a minister of the Gospel preach war, and that
-against the Lord's anointed?"
-
-"Against the person of the King we do not war: we fight against his
-false and dangerous friends. The sword of the Lord is with us, and it
-must go through the land; but we march as mourners to the field of
-blood. Witness these walls that have heard my groanings, yon tomb that
-has been watered by my tears. In that tomb lie the ashes of my
-grandfather, who was the first Protestant of his race. The
-Reformation, begun by the godly men of that day, has never yet been
-completed: that work remains for us."
-
-"Miserable delusion!" cried Juxon aloud; "miserable delusion! Is it by
-kindling and diffusing the false fire of fanaticism? is it in arms? is
-it by a path of blood that you move? Then is your work a work of evil,
-and your light darkness."
-
-"So called they the work and the light of our forefathers, when they
-led them forth, and burned them at the stake. You have a zeal for the
-church, but not according to knowledge. I have heard of you from your
-friend Cuthbert Noble."
-
-"Call him not friend of mine: give to all things their right names. He
-that stands in arms against his king is a traitor; and if he had lain
-in my heart's core, I would pluck him out, and cast him from me."
-
-At this moment, a man in arms entered the small door of the chancel,
-and taking off his steel cap, advanced towards Juxon, and put forth
-his hand:--it was Cuthbert Noble. He was much altered in his
-appearance: his countenance was severe and sad, but resolute withal;
-and his corslet, with the broad buff girdle beneath, had produced a
-change in his aspect and bearing incredible to the mind of Juxon, if
-he had not witnessed it with his eyes.
-
-"Do you refuse my hand? do you turn away from me, Juxon? I have not
-deserved this at your hands," said Cuthbert, still stretching forth
-his hand. Juxon turned his face and looked steadfastly upon him.
-
-"Cuthbert," said he with a slow, grave utterance, "I and your revered
-father are upon the same side, and we fill the same sacred office.
-Even now, perhaps, his fold is broken into by some furious zealots,
-who will not show the same lingering compunction which is now, for a
-moment, sparing mine. No, Cuthbert, the hand that grasps a sword, and
-wields it against my king, shall never more be clasped with
-friendliness by me."
-
-Cuthbert's hand fell down, and his knees shook, and his whole frame
-trembled with the strength of his emotion.
-
-"Dare to repent," added Juxon, observing the internal struggle,--"dare
-to repent. Here in the house of God, and before the altar of God, lay
-down the arms of rebellion, and go home to comfort, and, if possible,
-to protect, your father and mother."
-
-What effect this appeal might have had upon Cuthbert had he been alone
-with Juxon, and subjected to all the strength with which it would have
-been urged home upon him, we cannot say; for it was no sooner spoken,
-than the Puritan chaplain fell upon his knees, and poured forth a
-prayer for the cause of the Parliament, which, by its solemn tone and
-intense fervency, commanded the silent and breathless attention of
-both. It was evident that this petitioner, with an enthusiasm that has
-been felt perhaps in common by some of every creed and party under the
-cope of heaven, identified the particular cause which he himself had
-espoused with that of truth and of God. Before he had uttered the
-first brief sentence of adoration, Cuthbert had fallen down in a lowly
-posture of worship,--and his spirit was soon carried by his leader in
-prayer whithersoever he would.
-
-Juxon leaned his head against the wall where he stood, and kept his
-eyes fixed on them. He had before him one of those rarely endowed
-beings on whom gifts without measure had been poured:--for a quarter
-of an hour he listened, with a painful and solemn interest, to a flow
-of real eloquence. The petitions touched in succession every point at
-issue. They justified, as by divine command, the appeal to arms, and
-proclaimed the end thereof to be reformation and peace. They
-recognised the sacredness of the King's anointed head; and they ended
-in a prophetic anticipation of the days of millennial glory, and the
-universal reign of a manifested God.
-
-In the course of the prayer he had not forgotten to pray for all
-mankind, and especially for all those enemies who now stood opposed to
-them in the present contest, and again in a yet more especial manner
-for the near and dear relations, whose wishes and entreaties they were
-now called on to resist, and whose hearts they might now afflict.
-Painting this resistance most truly, as the highest order of
-self-denial, he urged it as a sacred duty, and a sacrifice well
-pleasing to the Lord.
-
-Juxon saw by the expression of Cuthbert's mouth the new and stronger
-resolutions he was making;--nor did it surprise him to see that, when
-they rose together at the conclusion of this fervent prayer, the
-chaplain took Cuthbert by the hand, that was passively yielded, and
-led him forth from the church without either of them addressing one
-word to himself. They looked at him, indeed, with seriousness, if not
-with compassion, and they moved their lips, but the whispered
-ejaculations of their hearts had no voice; and their departing
-footsteps were the only sounds that broke the silence of the place and
-of the hour.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. VII.
-
- Thy friend put in thy bosom: wear his eyes,
- Still in thy heart, that he may see what's there.
- HERBERT.
-
-
-By the care of Juxon, who had written to an old college servant of
-Christ-church, a lodging was provided for Sir Oliver Heywood and his
-party in a retired street at Oxford; and, having accomplished their
-journey without any accident, they took possession of their new abode
-early in September. The house though small was clean, and by no means
-incommodious; but a part of it was already in the occupation of
-another lodger. However, he was a quiet man, and was employed all day
-in his labours, as a painter of coloured glass, having been engaged to
-execute the windows of a chapel then building at University College.
-Moreover, he was a Fleming, and spoke English so imperfectly that he
-could not understand what was said to him, except on the most common
-and necessary matters. But Sir Oliver, who suffered great pain with
-his gout, and was really mortified at not being able to join the army,
-began to show a fretfulness and discontent at his position, very
-trying to Katharine and all about him. He was perpetually finding
-fault with every thing, and every person; and his anger at the
-language of alarm and doubt, which he found prevalent at Oxford, knew
-no bounds. The secret of all this peevishness lay deeper than his
-gouty sufferings; for, upon the very day of his arrival, he read in
-"The Perfect Diurnall" that two squadrons of horse under Sergeant
-Major Francis Heywood had joined the head quarters of the Lord Say,
-who was the Lord Lieutenant of Oxfordshire, and stoutly opposed to the
-King. Nor was this the simple announcement; but the news went on to
-say, that these horsemen were well accoutred, and disciplined very
-exactly under the training of Sergeant Major Heywood, a soldier of
-excellent promise, who had served under the great Gustavus, and was
-nearly allied to Sir Oliver Heywood of Milverton House, Warwickshire.
-The old gentleman cursed and swore heartily when he first read this
-aloud to Katharine and the Lamberts, but he never afterwards named the
-subject or Francis; however, the thought lay rankling under every
-expression of anger which daily events drew forth.
-
-The cloisters and the groves on the banks of the Isis were no longer
-the solemn and silent haunts of peaceful, meditative scholars,--they
-now echoed to the harsh beating of drums; and the young students,
-instead of pacing slowly in their black academic habits, were dressed
-in the garb of soldiers, with blue scarfs suspended across their
-bodies from the shoulder, and with pikes in their hands. At a
-convocation held in July the University had, with one consent, voted
-his Majesty all the public money which they had in hand; and, besides
-this, several of the colleges, as well as private persons, sent in
-their plate and their ready money also. This act of the convocation,
-however, was immediately pronounced null and void by Parliament; and
-any such actions were forbidden for the future. This proclamation
-pronounced those criminal who had been concerned in advising this
-diversion of the treasures of their colleges, and commanded each
-society to secure its own. It also ordered that the Dean of
-Christ-church, the President of Magdalen, and the Provost of Queen's,
-who had been most active in this matter, should be seized and brought
-to the bar of the House to answer for their conduct. But this could
-not be accomplished, because the High Sheriff and the Mayor of Oxford,
-acting upon the commission of array, had called out the train bands of
-the city, and the scholars had taken arms. To support this show of
-resistance, Sir John Biron marched to Oxford, and took possession of
-it for the King. Sir John had with him about five hundred horse; and
-thus he secured the contributions for the King's service, and was
-enabled, though compelled soon afterwards to retire from the city, to
-carry a considerable portion of it safe to the royal quarters. It was
-during the period that Oxford was thus held for the King that Sir
-Oliver and his family came there to reside. They were visited by
-several of the stanch Royalists and their ladies: these visitors
-consisted for the most part of the troubled and alarmed clergy, who
-were connected by office with the University. To some of their wives
-it was a delight to have a new family into whose ears they might pour
-all the bitter scandals against the Nonconformists, and others of the
-Parliament party, which they eagerly collected and minutely detailed.
-Nor was there any deficiency in spirit; for some of them went so far
-as to declare that, happen what might, nothing should make them stir
-from their own houses; that their husbands might run away if they
-pleased; but no canting Roundheads should ever eject them from their
-own arm chairs; and generally concluded by observing, that if their
-husbands were not such a poor set of creatures, they would drive the
-odious Lord Say out of the county; and that, as it was, there was no
-chance whatever of his getting into the city. Then they reckoned upon
-their fingers,--the five hundred men of Sir John Biron, and the four
-hundred pikes of the train bands, and the two hundred scholars with
-pikes, and the fifty doctors and masters of arts that had horses and
-pistols, and spirit to use them. Mrs. Veal, the lady of a doctor of
-Christ-church, was the most eloquent in these invectives, and the most
-exact in these calculations; and, to her honour be it spoken, she kept
-her word; and when the day of trial came, and Oxford was abandoned to
-the Parliamentarians, she would not accompany her husband, but
-remained obstinately fixed in her own arm-chair, and most successfully
-defended her house with a scolding tongue.
-
-Amid all these bitter and uncongenial elements Katharine Heywood was
-perplexed and troubled, and found little rest for her spirit, save
-that which passeth man's understanding, and that which she found in
-the affectionate friendship of Jane Lambert. Nothing more cruelly
-jarred her feelings than the language in which, by common consent,
-almost all around her seemed to talk of the Parliamentarians. Her own
-loyalty was firm and pure, but it was of an exalted character; and
-under no circumstances could it have stooped to so low a hatred of the
-persons, or to so mean an opinion of the motives, of the King's
-enemies, as that generally entertained and daily expressed before her.
-She did every thing which it was in the power of a daughter to do for
-the comfort and tranquillity of her father, but her efforts were not
-very successful.
-
-As soon as it became known that the Lord Say was advancing upon Oxford
-with superior forces, and that Sir John Biron was about to retire upon
-Worcester, nothing would pacify Sir Oliver but an endeavour to
-accompany that movement. However, the means of conveyance were not to
-be obtained for money, and he was compelled to remain where he was.
-
-On the morning of the 14th of September the greatest possible
-consternation prevailed in the city; and early in the forenoon a
-strong body of horse, headed by the Lord Say, marched into the
-University. His first act was to cause all the colleges to be strictly
-searched for plate and arms, and to secure whatever plate had not
-been hidden, or despatched under escort of Sir John Biron. He also
-broke into their treasuries, but found little in them, save in that of
-Christ-church, where, after a day's labour, and breaking through a
-plastered wall to an iron chest, he discovered in the bottom thereof a
-groat and a halter;--a pleasant surprize for a man of his morose
-temper, and provided for him by the wit of the doctor's lady who has
-been mentioned above.
-
-It was not till late in the evening of the 14th that Sir Oliver and
-his daughter got any distinct information of what was passing. Their
-street was retired; not a soldier entered it; nor a sound, save that
-of trumpets from the market-place, reached their anxious ears. The
-worthy knight forbade Katharine and Jane to leave the house, and old
-Philip the butler was not at all inclined to volunteer any inquiries.
-But the Flemish painter had been absent from a very early hour; on
-which account Sir Oliver charitably pronounced him a Dutch
-Presbyterian rascal, who had been acting as a spy for the Roundheads.
-It was in vain that Katharine observed that he was an artist employed
-by a college upon its chapel windows: the knight pronounced him a
-foreign scoundrel, gone to join in the plunder. Towards evening the
-painter returned, and came to their apartment, to tell them in his
-broken stammering language, with tears in his eyes, that a fine young
-officer, who spoke Dutch, had saved all his painted glass from being
-broken, and had put a safeguard at all the chapels.
-
-The officer of whom the painter related this was no other than Francis
-Heywood. The throb of Katharine's heart told her so at the instant,
-but it was confirmed to her afterwards.
-
-It was the habit of Katharine and Jane to walk daily in the afternoon
-in the fair meadows on the banks of the river to which they had quick
-and easy access, from the retired quarter in which they dwelt, without
-passing through any of the more public streets of the town.
-
-Their friendship had strengthened under all the adverse and anxious
-circumstances of the times; and the piety of Jane had become so
-deepened by her constant intercourse with Katharine that their
-spirits held communion together in these walks, whether they conversed
-or were silent.
-
-The arrival of the Parliamentarians put a stop to these rambles for
-the first few days after they took possession of the city; but, by the
-strictness of their discipline and the quietness of their behaviour
-towards the citizens of the place, confidence was soon restored, and
-the people went about the streets and ventured into the neighbouring
-fields as usual.
-
-It was on a fine glowing afternoon, about a week after the entrance of
-Lord Say's horsemen, that Katharine and Jane went forth together to
-their favourite meadow. The sun had such power, that, instead of
-keeping the open and more public path, they confined themselves to a
-short and shady promenade beneath a few stately trees on the margin of
-the river. No one chanced to be in the meadow but themselves: the
-glorious hues of autumn were already beginning to tinge the tops of
-trees, and the hedge rows were blushing with bird fruit. In the
-distance, too, on the low hills, the naked and yellow stubble of the
-corn fields told that the harvest was ended, and the season of the
-last fruits was come. The friends were carrying forward their hopes
-and fears as to the future, and were comforting themselves with the
-vain hope that, even yet, before the fall of the leaf, some change for
-the better might come.
-
-It was rumoured that, through the Lord Falkland, who was highly
-considered by many of the Parliamentary leaders, and who was known to
-be a Royalist far too generous and right minded to wish well to
-despotic government, expectations of a reconciliation between the King
-and his Commons were yet entertained. But Katharine, though she wished
-not to depress her more sanguine friend, could not but fear that these
-rumours of peace were begotten rather of the wishes of those who
-uttered them than of their judgment: that too many resolute men were
-on horseback and in arms; and that they would assuredly draw the sword
-and try the issues of battle. As thus they walked together, softened
-by the repose and beauty of the scene around, Jane ventured upon a
-theme which seldom or ever passed her lips. She spoke of love, and of
-its many crosses; but withal that better it was to love, though life
-were passed separated from the object of it, than not to feel so sweet
-an influence.
-
-"It is true, Jane," said Katharine mournfully, "it is most true; yet
-misplaced affections do greatly wear the spirit."
-
-"You do not mean misplaced, dear cousin, surely; but fixed hopelessly
-on one most worthy of our love. Such is your destiny, for Francis is a
-noble being. You never told me of the first growth of your attachment:
-how did it first spring? what moved you? did he woo you? Love, they
-say, does ever beget love; but yet, methinks, nothing of outward show
-or manliest beauty, no mere words of admiration, would have availed to
-fix any man firmly in a heart like yours."
-
-"Albeit the subject pains me, I will tell thee, Jane. Yes, he is
-worthy of a woman's love. From his first youth he has been, as thou
-knowest well, a soldier. It was his father's pride to see him, when
-but a stripling, not so tall as the boy Arthur, intrusted with a
-standard in the day of battle. In his first field, a bullet struck him
-down upon his knees; still, with uplifted arms, he waved his ensign,
-and strove to keep his place in the close ranks, till faint with pain
-he fell: but, even then, he grasped the colour staff so firmly, that a
-stout lieutenant, who, for its safety, took it from him, was forced to
-bruise his boyish hands ere they would let go their sacred charge. On
-the morrow, as he lay upon his bloody straw in the field hospital, the
-great Gustavus gave him the Iron Cross of Honour, and with it a
-commission in his guard of horse,--rewards for this first proof of
-constancy.
-
-"This, at our table, his father did relate with such a pride as doth
-become a parent. Francis the while coloured a little, and looked down
-for modesty, but said nothing. I felt hot tears upon my cheek; and
-when they drank his health, and I did pledge him, he saw those tears.
-Such was the birth of our attachment; and kind words, and gentle
-actions, and books, and music, and many things, did feed it, till it
-grew to love; and then came trouble. Thou knowest well the bitter feud
-that blazed forth suddenly between our fathers. The quarrel was of
-public matters; for my father never knew nor even guessed our love.
-'Tis long, long past that blissful season: let's talk of it no more."
-
-"Thank you, dear Katharine," said Jane, with swimming eyes and
-faltering tongue; "I feel for you. I love you so, it was but right to
-tell me this. You wish for silence; be it so: for the world I would
-not pain you." Their conversation dropped, and they gave themselves to
-the grave thoughts it had called up.
-
-It had been late in the afternoon before they came out: evening drew
-on; and the sun was setting in a fine autumnal sky, when they were
-surprised by the sound of approaching voices: as they became more
-distinct, Jane observed that they must proceed from some persons on
-the river or on the opposite bank. They went to a tree near the water,
-and there, concealed by the overhanging branches, they saw a small
-boat dropping down the stream, and gliding to the very bank on which
-they stood. It came close, but neither of the persons in it stepped
-ashore: they continued talking in a foreign language, and comparing a
-distant outline of ground with papers which they held in their hands.
-Their backs were towards Katharine and Jane; but these almost
-immediately recognised one as the Flemish painter, who lodged in the
-same house with them, the other was a tall stately man in a helmet and
-a buff war coat, with an orange scarf depending from his right
-shoulder. The heart of Katharine throbbed violently. Under the
-disguise of a foreign tongue, she was not certain about the voice; but
-she thought it was that of Francis. He lifted his helmet from his
-head, and turned to catch the evening breeze. It was her cousin. Her
-cheek became deadly pale: she trembled excessively, and caught at the
-trunk of the tree for support. A sudden exclamation from Jane Lambert
-gave alarm. Francis sprang instantly to the shore, eager to quiet any
-fears which he might innocently have caused. Nor was the surprise
-greater to them than to himself, when he saw Katharine Heywood and
-Jane Lambert before him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. VIII.
-
- My true love hath my heart, and I have his.
- SIDNEY.
-
-
-When the painter, who followed Francis Heywood from the boat, saw the
-affecting situation of the parties, and discerned clearly, at a
-glance, that they were not only well acquainted with each other, but
-apparently suffering from very deep and embarrassing emotions, he
-withdrew. There was a something in this meeting of Francis and
-Katharine, under present circumstances, so mournful, that Jane
-Lambert, from a sympathy with their sacred feelings, walked to a short
-distance from the spot, and left them together. They stood alone; they
-were both pale; both trembling; the greeting of the embrace, and the
-utterance of each other's names, had already passed in the presence of
-Jane. Silence was first broken by Francis. "I bless the leading of my
-better angel for bringing me here this evening. Oh, Katharine, how I
-have longed for an interview with you: that blessing is come; it is a
-boon of Providence; we meet again: once more I have heard your lips
-pronounce my name; once more I gaze upon the living form which has
-dwelt with me as a bright shadow; the comfort of my wanderings and
-toils; the cherished idol of my lonesome hours; the household image
-that gladdened my solitary lodging. Nay, do not seek to silence me; do
-not avert your eyes from me; let not displeasure cloud your glorious
-brow. I have loved you long, faithfully, and well. I hail this meeting
-as an omen of Heaven's favour: the hour will come that I may dare ask
-thee of thy father without shame or fear."
-
-"Francis, that hour will never come; it was an unhappy hour in which
-we first became acquainted."
-
-"Oh, say not so: from that sweet hour I date a happiness that cannot
-die: why look so grave upon me? You cannot quench my love:--it grew as
-does the flower which with a constancy looks ever to the sun. Thou
-art a sun to me; and till I am cut down by the swift scythe of war, or
-wither in decay, thus will it ever be."
-
-"Oh, Francis, who hath bewitched you? Why did you return to England?
-Why did you leave the green savannas of the New World, and your pure
-and peaceful labours, for scenes of strife and of rebellion?
-Away--afar--separated from me by the stormy ocean--and too painfully
-conscious myself that the course of our true love never could run
-smooth--I had a comfort in your absence. We are divided in time, was
-my thought--but not for ever. There is a high and distant region,
-where we may meet again to part no more;--but now, Francis--it is not
-too late--put off these arms--return to America. Here, now, let us
-take our last and long farewell. Return to your father, and give me
-back the happiness of knowing that he who loves me may be, without a
-crime, beloved again. Yes--I have loved you well. I have known that
-our union was impossible:--to honour a parent's will is the duty of a
-child. But hear me, Francis:--if all such obstacles were by some magic
-power removed,--if fortune crowned you with all those gifts of wealth
-and station, which so generally secure the consent of fathers and the
-approval of the world,--never would I accept the hand of that man, who
-had raised his sword against his king."
-
-While Katharine was delivering this earnest, fond remonstrance, with
-all the tenderness of a woman, but with a tone of decision towards the
-close at once solemn and mournful, Francis stood pale and attentive,
-with eyes that regarded her countenance admiringly. He remained silent
-for more than a minute after she had ceased from speaking, as if
-waiting to hear more; then coming closer to her, he took her hand,
-gazed on her with intense affection, and slowly answered,--
-
-"With due deliberation of my deed, I took commission of the
-Parliament, and swore the oath prescribed; and I will keep it,
-Katharine, as a soldier should. You live at home, as women use to do,
-and therefore cannot know the truth of this great nation's quarrel
-with its king. Spirits there are in this bad world, to whom their own
-security and peace bring no content, while any are debarred a common
-right. Such lead the people now; such, standing up in arms, demand for
-all, true liberty--and I am with them. The anointed head of England's
-king is to me, as to you, sacred, and I would defend it from the
-swords of my own squadrons should any dare to threaten it. You have
-none near you, my beloved Katharine, to show you things in their true
-colours, and your gentle and pious fear of evil misleads your better
-judgment."
-
-"Francis, I thank God I live apart from the great world, and hear but
-little of their teaching; but this I know, nations are families, and
-he that slays his brother in any quarrel commits a sin, and he that
-puts forth his hand against a nation's father is tempted to a crime so
-like to parricide, that the laws do visit treason with the same
-punishment. I'll pray for thee, cousin,--pray that some power divine
-may turn thy deceived heart,--may touch it with the spirit of peace,
-and love, and holy fear. Lay not the flattering unction to your soul,
-that the cause of true religion, or of true liberty, can be promoted
-by the sword of rebellion. It will turn into your own generous bosom
-hereafter, and pierce you through with sorrows."
-
-"Well, Katharine, a nation is a family; but if some of the children do
-poison a father's mind against others, and these last rise up to
-punish their treachery, at whose door lieth the sin?"
-
-"My heart is too heavy, Francis, to deal with you in argument. Sure I
-am, that you feel persuaded in your own mind of the truth of that view
-which lures you on to misery. Oh, that I could move thee. Francis,
-from the tender age at which I kneeled upon a mother's lap, and lisped
-my infant prayer, I was taught to love and to reverence the church in
-which I was baptized; to worship in her courts; to kneel before her
-altars; and now I may not see her in the dust without a pang."
-
-"Katharine, I would sooner this arm should rot than that it should
-violate a church, or desecrate one pillar of the temple; but all that
-are called Israel are not Israel. There are unseemly spots upon the
-raiment of the King's daughter. She will come forth more glorious for
-purification. Fear not, my gentle cousin, fear not, all will yet be
-well."
-
-"Not so--not so; my heart more truly tells some fatal end. What scarf
-is that upon thy shoulder? Where is thy king? Doth not his sacred head
-even now pillow upon thorns? His throne! his crown! where are they? by
-whom assailed? by whom defended?"
-
-"The true enemies of the King, the true foes of the church, are
-gathered about the royal person; have poisoned his ear; have turned
-the generous blood of a princely heart to the black and bitter stream
-that swells the veins of tyrants. The best friends both of the church
-and of the King march to free them and to reinstate them in the love
-of all the people."
-
-"Oh, that it were so, Francis--were truly so! Is Falkland in your
-ranks? Oh, that I had a tongue of persuasion to win you back again!
-Oh, that you were riding among your king's defenders!"
-
-"Katharine, by the sweet sacredness of my deep and constant love for
-you, ask me not that which I could never do with honour. Beneath the
-cope of heaven there walks no being whose wish is such a law to me as
-thine. My services are pledged--my colours chosen. My heart is in the
-cause. If thou couldst give to me thy precious self in marriage, as
-the mighty price of my desertion, I were unworthy of thee--we should
-be unworthy of each other. Our fall would be beyond the common lapse
-of false mankind. Even in our wedding garments our love would die."
-
-"Lord of my constant heart, forget my words:--I know not what they
-meant--I know not how I spake them. Sorrow, and fear, and love, and
-dark forebodings, do half bewilder me. I would not have thee other
-than thou art in any thing. Thy heart is no traitor's heart. Delusion,
-bright as is the garment of an archangel, goes before thee; and in
-Heaven's chosen squadrons you shall be one day marshalled. Whene'er
-thou fallest in the battle, I shall know it:--the stars will tell it
-me: Francis, thou wilt be taken away from me,--I know it:--a presage
-dark and cold overshadows me."
-
-"Nay, love, that fear is idle; 'tis a passing weakness. Nor time, nor
-space, nor life, nor death, can e'er divide our loves. In all I think,
-in all I do, you are present with me. Spirits are not confined:--in
-lonely forest haunts, across the wide Atlantic, I have had thee with
-me, Katharine, _visibly with me_; and I do know by the mysterious
-sympathy between us, that thou hast seen me sit with thee, beneath thy
-favourite cedar, when ocean rolled between us. This is the high and
-glorious privilege of love like ours. Come to my heart:--be folded
-there in one such fond embrace as may live in memory's cup to be a
-daily nectar." He pressed her majestic form to his manly breast, and
-bowed his head upon her shoulder. Just then a trumpet sounded from the
-city. He strained her yet closer to his heart, then cast his eyes
-around with eager glance, and made signal with his hand till Jane
-observed him and came up:--to her he passed his pale and silent charge
-with soft and reverent action, and, with the quick farewell of
-soldiers' partings, broke suddenly away.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. IX.
-
- He calls us rebels, traitors; and will scourge with haughty
- arms this hateful name in us.
- _Henry IV._
-
-
-On the cold foggy evening of October the 22d, 1642, the brigade of
-foot to which the regiment of Cuthbert Noble belonged took up its
-ground for the night in an open field to the north of the village of
-Keinton, in which the Earl of Essex fixed his head-quarters. The
-armies of the King and the Parliament had been several days on the
-march, both moving in the same direction, on lines of route some
-twenty miles asunder. Both the King and Essex were well resolved to
-fight a battle when the fit opportunity should offer; and it was the
-common talk of the soldiers on both sides that they should soon come
-to blows. Nevertheless, there was little thought in either camp that
-they were on the very eve of an engagement, or, indeed, that the main
-bodies lay so convenient to each other as to fight on the morrow. As
-soon as the guards were posted, the pikemen and musketeers of
-Maxwell's regiment piled their arms in ranks, and were allowed to make
-such fires as they could. The country being open, and bare of wood,
-these fires were comfortless and short lived. By a flickering flame,
-fed with the small wood of the few bushes that grew near, Cuthbert
-Noble and Randal ate a slender supper of dry bread and salt herring,
-which they washed down with a weak draught of cold mixture, but
-faintly tinged with strong waters. "The Saxons," said Randal, who was
-a very hardy man, "call this month the wine month, or _Wyn Monath_;
-certainly there must have been milder seasons in England formerly than
-we experience now; for it is impossible to fancy a vintage during such
-sharp frosts as these."--"Yes," said Cuthbert, "yes." Randal smiled at
-a reply which bespoke inattention and discomposure, then added,
-"Master Cuthbert, I counted on seeing you a little proud of your
-first night in camp: we must all endure hardness as good soldiers."
-
-"True," answered Cuthbert, recovering himself: "what is a little cold
-and a little hunger compared to what thousands of Christian men have
-in all ages endured, and do in all ages endure for the truth? It is a
-great cause--a holy cause. I was only thinking at the moment that it
-is a pity we had not taken a little better care of our bread and of
-that bottle of strong waters: there is a loaf missing, and the bottle
-is almost empty. But what petty trifles these are; how much below the
-dignity of our nature: you are right, Randal; I am, and I ought to be,
-happy; see how comfortable the Colonel has made himself;" so saying,
-he pointed to where Maxwell sat, near the only good fire on the
-ground, with a few officers round him. He was enveloped in a large
-cloak,--a fur cap was drawn over his ears,--he was leaning with his
-back against a pack-saddle; and as the smoke of his pipe issued in
-warm clouds from his mouth he looked as much at his ease as if seated
-in a chimney corner by the brightest fireside in the kingdom.
-
-"Ay," said Randal, "he is an old campaigner, and use is second nature;
-for myself, as long as I am warmly clad, for no other comfort do I
-care: I hate a pipe, and am not fond of a fire." Now Randal was
-wrapped up in an outer coat of the thickest woollen; and Cuthbert
-himself, being also clothed in a large warm mantle, checked his
-disposition to complain, and, after a little conversation of a better
-kind, they both composed themselves to sleep. About two or three hours
-after he had lain down he was awakened by a sensation of extreme cold.
-He instantly discovered the cause: his mantle had been stripped off,
-and he was left without any other covering than the clothes in which
-he stood. Most of the camp fires were already extinguished, or only
-emitted a very faint light from the expiring embers. The stars in the
-deep blue sky above shone with the most vivid lustre: the fog had
-disappeared; and through the clear gloom of night he could see
-outlines of the piles of arms and of the groups of sleeping soldiers.
-Immediately near him lay Randal in a profound sleep: lifting a
-half-burned brand, he saw by the light which it gave as he waved it
-around that the mantle was nowhere near the spot. He went among the
-groups which were not far off to search for it; but the growl and the
-curse of a brawny pikeman, over whom he chanced to stumble, deterred
-him from his pursuit; and he had no other resource than to pace up and
-down in a vacant space of ground, that he might keep himself warm by
-exertion. In vain he tried to raise his mind to heavenly
-contemplations; in vain he sought to warm his zeal by picturing the
-sad and severe sublimities of battle and of victory; and the price of
-blood which he might soon be called upon, and which he was ready to
-pay, for the triumph of his cause. For great sacrifices he was eager;
-for petty troubles he was wholly unprepared; therefore the night wore
-away in coldness and discontent.
-
-Just as the day was breaking, he observed a man, in the garb of a
-Puritan, riding leisurely along the lines, and apparently taking a
-very particular notice of the position and number of the troops. What
-it was in the manner of the man that awakened the suspicions of
-Cuthbert is uncertain, but he felt impelled to go closer, and examine
-him. Accordingly, he crossed towards the quarter-guard, where he
-observed him stop and enter into conversation with the sergeant. The
-man's back was towards Cuthbert,--thus he was able to approach the
-quarter-guard without being perceived by the stranger. No sooner did
-Cuthbert catch the tone of his voice than he immediately recognised it
-to be that of the roguish hypocrite who had slept in the same chamber
-with him at the inn in Aylesbury, two years before, and had stolen his
-purse and the horse lent him by Sir Oliver Heywood. The knave, not
-recollecting Cuthbert in his new dress, continued to pursue his
-inquiries after he came up in the same canting phraseology, and even
-addressed some questions to Cuthbert himself; but the latter,
-suddenly seizing the bridle of his beast, directed the sergeant to
-pull him out of his saddle, which was instantly and adroitly done, and
-gave him in charge as a thief and a horse-stealer, and on suspicion of
-being a spy. The wretch was so panic-stricken that he made no effort
-to conceal or destroy any of the proofs which were found upon him,
-when they proceeded to search his person. These papers consisted of a
-letter to Prince Rupert--another, without a signature, saying that two
-squadrons of the Parliamentarian horse were prepared to desert as soon
-as the armies met--and a third, containing an accurate return of the
-strength of Essex's main body, and an estimate of the numbers left
-behind in garrisons, and on other duties. He was taken before Colonel
-Maxwell; by him sent forthwith to the Earl of Essex, who, having
-gotten all the information which the confused hypocrite could give,
-directed him to be hanged in front of the lines, before the troops
-marched. The rogue died like a dog and a dastard, imploring mercy with
-loud and feverish howls, till, the noose being fastened tight about
-his neck, and made secure to a strong branch on the only tree near
-the camp, the forage cart, on which he had been dragged beneath it,
-was driven away, and he suddenly fell, and swung slowly to and fro
-before the silent and stern battalions which were assembled upon the
-ground in arms.
-
-Such was the Sabbath morning of October the 23d,--far different in
-prospect and in promise from those of his youthful days at Cheddar.
-The distant sound of trumpets told that the divisions of horse were
-already in motion; the drums beat; many a shrill fife pierced the ear;
-and the columns of foot slowly followed. The army had scarcely
-advanced a mile before the troops were halted; and they could all
-distinctly see a fair body of horse on the top of a high level, called
-Edge Hill, not more than a good mile in front. At the same moment, the
-Earl of Essex rode past Maxwell's regiment, and said, in the hearing
-of Cuthbert,--
-
-"Maxwell, I shall give you plenty of work to-day, for I know I may
-reckon on your regiment safely."
-
-"My Lord, we're all ready and willing," was the Colonel's brief reply.
-
-The order now came for drawing up the army in order of battle. Near
-Keinton, on the right, were some hedges and enclosures: among these
-were placed the musketeers and pikemen; and one of the most important
-posts was assigned to the regiment in which Cuthbert served. There
-were not above two regiments of horse in this wing, where the ground
-was narrowest; but in the left wing was placed a thousand horse under
-Ramsey. The reserve of horse was commanded by the Earl of Bedford,
-assisted by Sir William Balfour: between the Parliamentarians and the
-royal position, on Edge Hill, it was a fair open country. Essex having
-thus chosen his ground, stood still in a defensive posture, and
-directed three cannon to be discharged as a defiance and a challenge
-to the royal army: they answered readily on their part with two shot
-from a battery of field guns on the brow of their position. However,
-many of their foot regiments were quartered seven or eight miles from
-the main body, and had that distance to march to the rendezvous. It
-was past one of the clock before the King's forces marched down the
-hill, with the King's standard waving in the centre of his regiment of
-guards. They made a very fine and gallant appearance, especially their
-horse. Their trumpets sounded out in the distance, very grand to hear,
-and those upon Essex's left wing sounded also. It was a glorious sight
-to see the royal forces move steadily on, in two lines, with bodies of
-reserve. They numbered not less than eighteen thousand men, and the
-army of Essex was very little superior in strength; for two of his
-best regiments of foot, and one of his horse regiments, were a day's
-march behind him. However, the Parliament soldiers were no less ready
-for the fray than their eager adversaries.
-
-During the solemn pause before the battle, while the hosts were
-drawing up face to face, and the dispositions for the attack were
-completing, Cuthbert felt an unaccountable sadness on his spirits. He
-could well imagine, from all that he heard and saw, that the feelings
-of a true soldier, standing opposite an army of hostile invaders, and
-about to fight for the altars and the hearths of his native land, must
-be of a most exalted and enviable description,--but how different were
-his. The royal standard of England was floating in the adverse line,
-and English voices were marshalling it for the onset: his own pupil,
-young Arthur Heywood, was riding in those ranks.
-
-"Remember, men," said the commanding voice of Maxwell, "to be silent
-and steady: wait for the order: reserve your fire to the last moment,
-musketeers; and keep your ranks, pikemen, when it comes to the push.
-By God's help, we'll drive them up that hill in worse order than they
-are coming down."
-
-In another minute there broke a sudden flash from the enemy's line:
-close followed the white smoke and the thundering echo; and, by the
-very side of Cuthbert, a sergeant was struck down dead.
-
-"Pick up Sergeant Bond's partisan," said the sergeant-major of the
-regiment as he was passing by: "pick it up, you Tibbs," he repeated,
-in a sharp cold tone, to a supernumerary sergeant attached to the same
-company, and who had only a sword.
-
-"Is this the glorious battle death?" said Cuthbert to himself,--but he
-had no leisure for thought: the roar of shotted guns began on both
-sides, and the battle fiercely opened. The musketeers of the regiment
-were thrown out towards a hedge, a little in front of the ground
-occupied by the pikemen; and a canopy of smoke soon rose above them
-all, veiling the golden sun and the blue heavens, and giving to all
-the forms and faces of those around, whether friends or foes, a
-shadowy indistinctness.
-
-In the midst of all this apparent confusion, governing commands were
-given by beat of drum, or by the swift and intelligent service of
-chosen aides, or by the personal presence and loud voice, at the
-particular point were they were needed, of Essex himself, who
-commanded and fought with his foot throughout the day. Captain
-Ruddiman, who commanded the company of pikemen to which Cuthbert
-belonged, did not appear to relish the cannon balls; feeling very
-naturally, that however ready and able to encounter the Royalists at
-close quarters, there was no mode of guarding against a round iron
-shot; nor was he much better pleased with the spitting and whistling
-of musket-balls. However, being a very brave man, he stood them all as
-steady as a signpost, and rebuked Lieutenant Sippets for bobbing up
-and down in a very unsoldier-like fashion. Meanwhile Cuthbert was
-expressly called by Maxwell to go to the front, and take charge of a
-company of musketeers, the officers of which were all killed or
-wounded. He ran eagerly forward and was soon hotly engaged; but the
-royal dragoons coming up to the support of their foot, and both
-forcing their way on with ardour, the musketeers were withdrawn by
-Maxwell behind the reserve of pikemen; and these moving up in good and
-compact order soon came to a gallant push of pike, and drove back the
-enemy with severe loss; at the same time the musketeers stoutly
-supported the push of pike with their clubbed muskets, and made a
-bloody carnage in the royal ranks. In this melee Cuthbert owed his
-life to that expertness at the sword exercise for which he was
-indebted to the lessons of George Juxon; for by a dexterous parry he
-beat off the assault of a stout Royalist officer, who ran at him as he
-was grasping at a colour, the bearer of which had stumbled, and,
-killing him by a home thrust through the body, succeeded in taking the
-colour.
-
-In the pause which followed on the repulse of this attack Cuthbert
-received the high praise of Maxwell, and the honest congratulations of
-Captain Ruddiman, who, at close quarters, had himself done good
-service among the Royalists, making not a few bite the dust beneath
-the blows of a heavy poll-axe which he had found upon the field. Both
-parties now for awhile took wind and breath; but soon again the horse
-of Essex's right wing was led by Sir William Balfour against the point
-of the King's left. Their squadrons passed the flank of Maxwell's
-regiment, as they advanced at a walk to take their ground before they
-formed up for the charge; and Francis Heywood, already distinguished
-by his brilliant conduct at the unfortunate affair of Pershore, passed
-so close to Cuthbert that they shook hands. It scarcely seemed a
-minute from this friendly greeting ere their trumpets sounded the
-charge, and with a desperate fury they galloped towards the enemy. The
-first line broke before them: the second was staggered; but two
-regiments of the royal dragoons, in reserve, came swiftly to their
-aid, and by the fire of their long carbines struck down a great many
-of the Parliament horse, and following this up by a charge, compelled
-them to wheel about. The royal foot now advanced again, and made a
-furious attack upon the right of Essex, and pushed up to the very
-mouths of his cannon, and drove away the gunners and spiked several of
-the guns; but this artillery was valiantly won back by the
-Parliamentarians: and the brigade of foot in which Maxwell's regiment
-fought actually charged the royal dragoons with their pikes, and drove
-them back in disorder, with the loss of a great many men and horses.
-It so happened, in this last movement, that when the two parties were
-close together, Cuthbert caught a momentary but a very distinct view
-of the fine countenance of young Arthur Heywood, and heard him cry
-aloud, "Strike home, lads, for God and the King!" The smoke of battle
-soon hid the vision, and the royal dragoons were compelled to retire.
-
-Prince Rupert had beaten the left wing of Essex, and was in full
-pursuit; but as night drew on the horsemen of the Prince were seen
-returning to the field of battle; and as the right wing had maintained
-its ground stubbornly, the battle ended by the King retiring to the
-hills, and leaving Essex in possession of the field, where he kept his
-troops together throughout the night. Both sides laid claim to the
-victory, and both gained some advantages in the fight, but their
-losses were very heavy and nearly equal. However, Essex slept upon the
-field of battle, and was joined in the night by most of the fugitives
-from his left wing, and was further reinforced by the arrival of two
-good regiments of foot and one of horse.
-
-The sun had no sooner set on the evening of the battle than it began
-to freeze hard; and it being Cuthbert's turn for outline guard, he was
-posted at the end of a considerable enclosure, near some large gaps,
-which had been made by the enemy in their attacks to admit of their
-bringing up their cannon and their cavalry. The slaughter near this
-spot had been considerable, and Cuthbert had to plant his sentinels
-among mangled and naked corpses; but in the gloom and obscurity of
-night the only appearance they presented was that of pallid and stony
-objects without a shape. He was surprised to find himself insensible
-to any feeling but the low animal sensations of hunger, cold, and
-weariness. He sat round the watch fire with the men composing the
-guard, and ate ravenously of such coarse provisions as were issued.
-His share of the plunder had been a large warm horseman's cloak, which
-his corporal had found among the slain of the King's guards, and which
-he now folded about him as he lay down to rest with a very thankful
-but somewhat a selfish sense of comfort. He gave orders that he
-should be waked at every relief of the sentinels, and then sunk into a
-deep slumber, from which he was aroused, within two hours, to go his
-rounds. When he returned from them all disposition for sleep had
-departed. He trimmed the watch fire, and was soon the only one awake
-near the spot except the sentinel. A little book, with silver corners
-and clasps, lay on the ground, where it had apparently been thrown by
-one of the soldiers: it attracted the eye of Cuthbert by the gleaming
-of its silver clasps,--he took it up; the covers were smeared with
-dirt: he opened it,--it was a Book of Common Prayer: a leaf was folded
-down at the collect for the day; and in the inside of the cover was
-written the following quotation from George Herbert:--
-
- "Sundays observe:--think, when the bells do chime,
- 'Tis angels' music."
-
-He knew the handwriting; it was that of Katharine: he knew the book;
-he remembered the Sabbath morning when she first presented it to her
-cousin Arthur. He thought upon that glimpse which he had caught of his
-pupil's countenance in the battle, and he shuddered with
-apprehensions.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. X.
-
- Great God! there is no safety here below;
- Thou art my fortress; thou that seem'st my foe,
- 'Tis thou that strik'st the stroke, must guard the blow.
- QUARLES.
-
-
-Although the malice of the hypocrite Daws had been disappointed by the
-result of his wicked artifices at Cheddar fair, and the worthy Noble
-had been saved from the injury and ruin which a lawless rabble were
-instigated to inflict on that peaceful man of God, yet Daws, being
-unsuspected and secure from detection, did not relax his efforts for
-the persecution and ejectment of Noble.
-
-He contrived to have him haled before a committee of religious inquiry
-which visited those parts soon after; but here again he was baffled:
-for one of the commissioners being pricked in his conscience by
-observing the godly simplicity of the good parson of Cheddar, and the
-sincerity of his love to the blessed Saviour of the world, procured
-his dismissal from that ordeal unharmed. Nevertheless Daws continued
-to work secretly for his own ends, and gave himself no rest in the
-pursuit of his great object. He had the reputation of great strictness
-and sanctity as a minister,--and the outward man imposed upon many; in
-his heart he cared not for the souls of men; his sins were those which
-often and long escape the detection of the world, and which can be
-indulged under the cloak of religious zeal without exciting the
-suspicions of any, but those honest and sagacious persons who can
-detect a character by indications of its spirit too slight and fine to
-be admitted as important by the multitude. He was avaricious and
-tyrannical: money was his idol; and to subject the minds of a
-congregation was his next delight. From his pulpit he dealt forth the
-most fierce and cruel fulminations against all unbelievers. Nor was he
-without many trembling followers, whom he scolded and comforted,
-according to the caprice of his own temper.
-
- "He damned the sins he had no mind to,
- And spared the few he was inclined to."
-
-In his creed, the prayers and alms of any one who did not exactly
-entertain his notions of faith were sins, and would be visited as
-such. Now Parson Noble was a minister who bowed his knees before the
-Father of mercies as a self-abased sinner, confessing himself without
-grace or strength to will or to do, save of God's free mercy,
-communicated through and for Christ's sake. He taught all his people
-that if they asked the gifts and graces of repentance and faith in
-that precious name they could not be denied, and should never be sent
-empty away: to proclaim the message of peace and reconciliation was
-his delight; to invite all freely, to tell of a pardon to the human
-race, which, under the present dispensation of mercy, was the common
-right of all who were _willing_ to accept it, was his constant
-practice; and he showed them plainly that if they came not to the
-light, it was because they loved darkness; because they could not part
-with their sins, and shrunk from the Gospel as a rule of life. "Love,"
-he would say, "worketh no ill to his neighbour, therefore love is the
-fulfilling of the law. Love is keeping the commandments: God is love,
-from whom they came. Jesus is love, by whom they were taught,
-magnified, and perfectly obeyed, that in his sacrifice of himself, as
-a pure and spotless victim, we might have an all-sufficient atonement,
-and hope towards a God who had taken our nature upon him, and been
-manifest in the flesh." Now Daws held that Noble was a blind leader of
-the blind, and that both would fall into the ditch; and he desired,
-first, the proceeds of Cheddar living in his pocket, and, next, the
-gratification of telling the flock of Noble that they were one and all
-in the broad road to destruction.
-
-Nor did this insidious priest fail to spread all sorts of calumnies
-about the poor unconscious vicar, and to irritate many furious
-zealots against him. He kept up a constant correspondence with a
-political partisan in London, to whom he gave much information on
-local and county matters, stretching his invention not a little when
-he had to tell any thing against the Royalists of those parts. By this
-means he got a name as a person well affected to the Parliament, and
-greatly interested in the cause of religious liberty.
-
-It so happened, that, in the November immediately following the
-breaking out of the war, and the great battle of Keinton, a body of
-Parliamentarian horse being quartered in his neighbourhood, Daws found
-a fit instrument for his purposes on Cheddar, in a most furious and
-bigotted fanatic, who commanded a troop of horse. This man was easily
-persuaded that he could not render a more acceptable service to God
-than by destroying with fire and sword all places, all persons, and
-all things, which were, in his own view, defiled, and idolatrous, and
-impure; and he therefore sallied forth against the church and the
-parson of Cheddar as he would against a temple and a priest of Baal.
-
-On the day on which old Noble was ejected from Cheddar, with many
-circumstances of cruelty and hardship, he arose, as usual, with some
-fears, but with unshaken trust in the goodness and mercy of an
-all-wise and almighty Father. The day was cold, and not a sunbeam was
-admitted through the cloud and gloom which brooded over all things. It
-chanced that the stout and resolute old franklin Blount had determined
-that his grandchild should be publicly baptized at the same ancient
-font at which his own venerable forehead had been signed with the sign
-of the cross. There was some doubt in the mind of his son-in-law,
-Hargood, whether it was prudent at that moment of busy persecution, on
-the part of the county committee, to make so open a display of devout
-attachment to the hallowed ceremony of a christening. His loving
-daughter, from a tender apprehension about her infant's safety, if any
-thing should fall out amiss, would have stolen to church, at the
-earliest possible hour, and in the most quiet manner. However, habits
-of submission to her father, formed by an admiration of his character,
-were of so long a growth, and so deeply rooted, that the remonstrance
-of her fears was not ventured on; indeed Blount would have held it
-craven to yield to the timid suggestions of prudence, where he looked
-to a principle in his conduct. It is not improbable that some shadow
-of a domestic tragedy had been cast upon the old man's solitary
-thoughts; for, within a few days past, there had been observable in
-his manner a mixture of severity and gentleness at once strange and
-affecting. He had twice been found in the large oak parlour alone,
-reading from the Book of Martyrs, which was there chained upon a tall
-desk. It is true that on both these occasions he had whistled and
-walked away quick; but it was afterwards remembered. Howbeit, at ten
-o'clock in the forenoon, there issued from the porch of the franklin's
-old mansion a small party consisting of about eight persons, male and
-female: one of the last bore in her arms an infant so folded up and
-hidden in a large mantle of thick white woollen, that nothing but a
-little outline of the babe could be seen, and not a breath of the keen
-wintry wind could penetrate to its tender frame. They moved slowly,
-and in a formal order up the long straggling street; and all the
-villagers who met them by the way, or looked at them from their doors,
-saluted them with bows and good words, but with evident and anxious
-wonder. A faithful woodman ventured to go close and whisper to Master
-Blount that he was just come in from Axbridge, and saw some of the
-rascal Roundheads mustering, and that he heard say, at the Old
-Pack-horse Inn, that they were going to march for Wells by the road of
-Cheddar. "Well, let them come," said the franklin; "we are not doing
-any thing to be ashamed of: let them see us doing as their forefathers
-did before us, and redden in the face for their own falsehood; 'church
-and king' is an old cry and a good one: out upon the knaves!--God will
-defend his own."
-
-The party went forward; and having reached the churchyard, passed
-into the church by the low chancel door, walked down the great aisle,
-and turned into the southern transept. Here stood the font; here the
-worthy parson awaited them, and his wife also, who was by a promise of
-long date to stand as godmother to the child. The old stone font,
-round which this pious family were assembled, had long been an object
-of great veneration to the inhabitants of Cheddar. It was octagonal in
-form, and supported upon a clustered shaft of Purbeck marble. The
-compartments on its sides were sculptured with scenes from Holy Writ.
-In one was represented the circumcision of Christ; in another the same
-blessed Lord was figured in manhood, with a little child in his arms,
-and his disciples standing round: through age and injury the subjects
-in the other compartments were no longer discernible.
-
-Above the font was a window of painted glass, which, as there was no
-light of the sun to illuminate its gorgeous groups, did only present
-to the eye a dim cold grandeur;--a grave and visionary glory, through
-which, as in the pages of unaccomplished prophecy, might be caught
-bright glimpses of pale and celestial faces, and yet garments crimson
-withal, as though they had been rolled in blood.
-
-In this solemn light, and around this sacred font, the family of
-Blount reverently kneeled, and the service proceeded. The babe lay
-still and unconscious in the arms of the old franklin's wife; and
-nothing told of its young life but a soft breath from parted lips, and
-a faint flush upon a waxen cheek. By its side knelt the fair mother,
-delicate and colourless, with eyes bent on the ground, and a forehead
-over which fears flitted, and disturbed her prayers.
-
-Of all the party none save the sweet infant was so calm as Blount
-himself. Upon the throne of the old man's heart his God was seated,
-and his soul was at peace. In fancy and in spirit he was again the
-subject of that holy rite. When Noble took the babe in his arms, and
-it opened its blue eyes and stretched out its little helpless hands,
-and as it felt the sprinkled water, and was signed with the sign of
-the cross, gave that little cry for which mother and nurse listen so
-fondly, a few large tears dropped from the eyelids of the stalwart
-franklin, and the voice of Noble faltered a little as he saw them
-fall. The solemn declaration by which the child is received into
-Christ's flock was completed, and was responded to by the deep and
-fervent Amen of Blount, and the gentler tones of those around him; and
-the good parson was proceeding to the thanksgiving that follows, when
-that fearful sound, which is made up of the trampling of horses, and
-the rattle of harness, and the blast of the trumpet, was heard at the
-church doors in the opposite transept. Their heavy leaves were thrown
-open with a sudden and violent crash, and two of the horsemen rode
-into the body of the church, accompanied by three severe and sour
-looking persons in sad coloured doublets, and narrow crowned hats, and
-followed by some low rabble, with whom, in fear and curiosity, a few
-of the good folk of Cheddar intermingled.
-
-"I have a message for thee, thou priest of Baal,--thou blind leader of
-the blind,--thou whited wall," said he, whose caparisons bespoke him
-the chief, laying the flat of his sword with a smart stroke upon the
-neck of Noble. "Thou art weighed in the balance, and found wanting:
-thou must come with me; thy mummeries and thy knaveries shall no more
-pollute the sanctuary."
-
-"Dost thou not fear God?" said the meek but undaunted Noble, with a
-firm voice and unshrinking mien. "Dost thou not fear God, that thus
-thou comest to his holy temple? To what manner of man was it told,
-that it were better for him a millstone were tied about his neck, and
-he cast into the sea, than that he should offend one of these little
-ones? I tell thee, the angel of that helpless babe doth, even now,
-behold the face of his Father, which is in heaven, and beareth witness
-against thee.--Go forth. I myself will follow thee, whithersoever thou
-wouldest, be it to judgment or to death; but this hoof-clatter in the
-courts of the Lord is a most abominable sin."
-
-"Now will I do so, and yet more, thou hypocrite, thou whitened
-sepulchre!" so saying, the fanatic plunged his spurs into the flanks
-of his frightened war-horse, but the fretted and gallant beast did
-only rear, and chafe, and champ the bit. Meanwhile, the young mother,
-with her child in her bosom, and the other women round her, had sunk
-back into the corner of the transept in terror. Old Blount and his
-son-in-law interposed between the horsemen and Noble, and demanded of
-them loudly to quit the sacred building.
-
-"I ask ye not," said he, "as Christians, for that ye cannot be, but
-for your manhood's sake, to suffer, that these poor terrified women
-pass forth with the infant in peace; for ourselves, though we be
-unarmed, we will abide your wrath as best we may."
-
-"Let not thine eye pity," said a harsh voice from behind the horsemen:
-"blessed be he that taketh her children and dasheth them against the
-stones. Woe to the idolaters! woe!--The priest shall be slain at the
-altar, and the water of the Babylonish font shall be red with the
-blood of sacrifice."
-
-The frenzied zeal of the willing fanatic being thus excited, he urged
-on his powerful steed, and raised his glittering sword. The hot animal
-by a weighty plunge came breast upon the font, and overthrew and brake
-it, and the consecrated water was spilled upon the ground. At this
-sight old Blount, with the strong arm of a Samson, caught at the
-bridle, and threw back the horse and his rider with so violent a
-force, that the hoofs slipped upon the smooth pavement, and they fell
-together; and before they had risen, the old man had caught up a heavy
-bar of wood near him, and raising the ponderous weapon with both
-hands, aimed so true and so deadly a blow at the sacrilegious chief
-that he never moved after; and the life-blood ran from his mouth and
-ears, and flowing onward, mingled with the water from the BROKEN FONT.
-
-Every voice was silenced,--every foot was rivetted there where it
-stood. All were hushed and motionless, and every face looked ghastly.
-During this awful pause, the aged franklin, exhausted by the mighty
-and energetic deed, fell back against a seat, and, sinking into it,
-turned pale, and his eye-sight became dim. Noble went over and took
-his hand in alarm, and eagerly inquired, "What is this? what is this?
-Are you wounded?"
-
-"No," he faintly answered, "not wounded, but--this is--death. Heavenly
-Father, forgive me, for thy dear Son's sake, for I knew not what I
-did."
-
-His wife and daughter and his sons now gathered round him; but he was
-dying, and his words were few. He tried to kiss his infant grandchild,
-and he said to Noble, with a heavy sigh,--
-
-"Your trials are coming:--I count myself happy, and commit my own dear
-family and yours to him who remembers mercy in judgment;" and now,
-letting fall his head on his wife's bosom, he breathed a few times in
-a struggling convulsive manner, and his spirit returned to the God who
-gave it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XI.
-
- Even my prayers,
- When with most zeal sent upward, are pull'd down,
- With strong imaginary doubts and fears,
- And in their sudden precipice o'erwhelm me.
- MASSINGER.
-
-
-The close of the December following the battle of Keinton found
-Cuthbert in winter quarters at Warwick. His regiment marched into that
-city on the day before Christmas-day; and, as soon as the men were
-distributed in their quarters, he walked towards Milverton, from that
-natural impulse which inclines us all to revisit any spot where we
-have passed a part, however small, of our mysterious lives.
-
-It was a bright, clear, invigorating day: the ground was firm under
-the foot, and, though the sun shone out in a cloudless sky, there was
-so hard a frost that the pathways were clean. The trees glittered in
-the sun's rays like frosted silver, and the face of nature looked
-healthy and cheerful, like the winter season of a hale old age.
-
-The step of Cuthbert was not so fast or active as travellers use in
-such weather. He walked like one who reluctantly takes exercise, and
-in company in which he takes no pleasure. He was alone, indeed, but
-with care and doubt for his companions. Since the battle, he had been
-advanced to the command of a company of musketeers, and Maxwell had
-distinguished him by particular attentions. Randal was still his more
-constant associate; and the petty and disagreeable perplexities to
-which he had been at first subjected by the uncongenial persons with
-whom he had been thrown, and by the novelty of the duties to which he
-had been called, had altogether vanished: for in three months habits
-are formed, and we become accustomed to any mode of life. To be
-accustomed, however, is not to be reconciled to it. But this was the
-least, and the most trifling and despised ingredient in the bitter cup
-from which Cuthbert daily drank,--his conscience was not at peace. He
-drugged it with an opium, extracted, by a very common process, from
-the precepts and the promises of Scripture; but there was not a day of
-his life that it did not awake to some doubts and horrors, and the
-same medicine, dangerous where it is unskilfully applied, was taken to
-excess. He felt himself embarked in a black ship, with a wild and
-motley crew, and he dared not own to himself that he mistrusted those
-who navigated the vessel. Her way was through gloom and danger, and
-the voyage might, after all, end in shipwreck.
-
-From the day of the battle, he was never seen to smile by any one; and
-from the severity of his thoughts, his countenance had gathered a sad
-yet stern complexion, which was not unsuitable to his present
-fortunes.
-
-In a sort of hope that the sight of Milverton House might beguile his
-melancholy, might soothe him, by reviving sweet images of past and
-precious hours, and building, as he walked along, a new fabric of
-happy and peaceful liberty for his distracted country, he reached the
-well known gates of the once hospitable mansion. Absorbed in his
-reflections, he never raised his eyes to direct them towards the
-house, till he stood at the very portal. The gates lay upon the
-ground; the noble edifice was a blackened and a yawning ruin. A sudden
-and terrific thunder clap, bursting from a serene sky, could not so
-painfully have startled him. All around was silent--desolately,
-dreadfully silent; and the sun was bright, and the stony skeleton of
-the vast dwelling was black. He poured a passionate cry to God: he
-fell down upon the earth, and petitioned feverishly that the evil one
-might not hunt him to despair.
-
-When he had in some measure recovered his composure, he rose and
-walked through the lonely and roofless ruins. The rubbish, which had
-fallen in when the floors and ceilings of the upper chambers gave way,
-or were consumed, had been disturbed, and removed in large quantities,
-to be sifted for any valuable metals which they might contain, so that
-he could make his way without difficulty, and could still trace
-distinctly all the lower apartments.
-
-Near the fire-place in the large kitchen, on a part of the wall that
-had only been scorched, might still be read one of those rude and
-homely posies which were the delight of our honest forefathers, and
-might be found alike in the manor-house and the humbler cottage of the
-husbandman:--
-
- "At Christmas be merry, and thankful withal,
- And feast thy poor neighbours, the great with the small;
- Yea all the year long, to the poor let us give,
- God's blessing to follow us while we do live."
-
-And upon the other side of the fire-place was written up,--
-
- "Play thou the good fellow; seek none to misdeem;
- Disdain not the honest, though merry they seem;
- For oftentimes seen, no more very a knave,
- Than he that doth counterfeit most to be grave."
-
-These posies brought more to Cuthbert's mind than the memory of the
-happy Christmas he had once passed within these very walls. The lines,
-which he had known from his boyhood, were taken from old Thomas
-Tusser's Book of Husbandry, the favourite manual of the old franklin
-Blount, and a work of which he remembered his father had always been
-very fond, and which stood upon the book-shelf at Cheddar next the
-Country Parson of Master George Herbert. All these recollections came
-upon him at once, and overwhelmed his spirit. He was totally ignorant
-of all that had been lately enacted at Cheddar, and of the present
-situation of his father. He had not heard of or from his parents for
-several months; but his fears for their safety had been quieted by a
-promise, that especial orders should be sent to all the forces of the
-Parliament to respect both the persons and the dwellings of all such
-relations of the officers and men serving the Parliament as did not
-take up arms against them, whatever might be their known sentiments on
-affairs of church and state.
-
-How far this line of forbearance had been broken through, and how
-violently, the ruins around most plainly declared; for he was well
-assured that Francis Heywood would have omitted no precaution which
-could possibly have availed to protect the property of Sir Oliver; nor
-had he been present with the division by whom this wanton crime was
-effected would he have failed to repress it. But when "Havoc!" is once
-cried, and the dogs of war are once let slip, who shall, who can,
-restrain them, but he who sitteth in the circle of the heavens?
-
-His fancy became bewildered with the thought of his mother's grief,
-and the dangers to which she might possibly be exposed, and of the
-possibility that his father might be suffering the penalty of some
-bitter persecution by his adherence to the royal cause. He, as was his
-wont in all extremities of doubt and sorrow, betook himself to the
-only source of true comfort, when men are guided by the Spirit of
-truth to a right use of it:--he drew from the bosom of his doublet a
-small Bible. He implored direction from above; and yet, when he had
-done so, yielded to the petty superstition of opening the sacred
-volume suddenly, and taking the first text that presented itself to
-his eye for his counsellor. The words which he thus read were, "Where
-envying and strife is, there is confusion and every evil work." He
-smote upon his breast with agony, perused the chapter of James the
-Apostle, from whence it was taken, and that which followed. All his
-resolutions were staggered and shaken. He was in a mood to unbuckle
-his sword, and to find a lodge in some wilderness where man could not
-penetrate. "Yet," said he aloud, as pleading his own cause before the
-invisible throne, "Lord, thou knowest all things, thou knowest that I
-am not moved by the spirit that lusteth to envy in this great
-contention against apostasy and spiritual wickedness in high places."
-In the fervour and agitation of his appeal his Bible fell from his
-hand, and when he took it up, it opened at that same epistle at the
-beginning of it; and reading there that he was to count it all joy
-falling into divers temptations, and that the trying of his faith
-worked patience, he was again as suddenly recovered to steadfastness,
-in what he blindly persuaded himself was the battle of the Lord; thus
-giving a most sad practical proof that he was a waverer, tossed and
-driven to and fro like a wave of the sea. What further doubts and
-changes might have coloured his meditations, and his prayers in that
-desolate and afflicting scene, had he been left alone to brood over
-all his fears, it is not possible to say; but he was roused and
-interrupted by the sound of footsteps on the paved path, which led up
-from the terrace towards the principal entrance, the steps of which
-yet remained. He stood aside, that the intruder, whoever it might be,
-should not discover him. To his surprise, it was no other than old
-Margery of the sand pit. She turned towards the offices as soon as she
-entered the Hall, and went winding her way through heaps of rubbish,
-towards an outhouse in the court-yard, the roof of which was still
-entire. Her aspect, and the echo of her staff and of her footsteps, in
-that solitary ruin, were very strange and affecting. Afraid of too
-suddenly alarming the aged and unhappy being, he followed her with
-light and noiseless steps to the low building, which she entered. Of
-the two small windows that gave it light one was half open, and having
-gained it, he could see and hear what was passing within. Laying down
-her bag and staff, she seated herself on a very low stool, close by
-the little fire-place, and applied her breath to the embers. The white
-ashes flew off, and laid bare the glowing embers. To these she applied
-a few dry sticks which she had brought with her, and a warm and
-cheerful flame, accompanied by a light crackling noise, soon blazed
-comfortably before her.
-
-"I wonder where the master is this blessed day," were her first words,
-"and Mistress Kate, that was God's angel to me, and the rest of them.
-Wherever they are, Christ comfort them, and bless them: they were good
-friends to me, and to many. I never came to the gate, and went away
-without a measure of meal and a kind word; and it was a good day for
-my poor soul when the beautiful lady first talked to me:"--she
-stopped, and put on another stick or two;--"and Parson Juxon, that
-made me leave the pit, and gave me a bit of a cot to myself at Old
-Beech, where he and I would have been now but for the wars and the
-villainies of those devils that burned his house over his head, and
-made a bonfire to roast me, if it had not been God's will to make 'em
-fall out about it. They called me 'a child of hell,' I mind:--well, it
-is not the first time--many a score times gentle and simple have
-called me the same, till within the last two years, and I thought it
-was all over, and I got to heaven already; but there's a weary bit yet
-for me. I hope it wo'n't be long. Now, if parson was here, he'd scold
-and look pleasant at me, and say, 'God's time's the best time,
-Margery.' Well, now, I've lost him--God's will be done. I've been a
-poor sinful body all my days; but I never harmed any more than a curse
-might, and little ill could that do to any but my own poor self. It's
-well it couldn't; for if it had been able to kill, I should have sent
-it after many a one, and might again. God help me! I'll be burnt for a
-witch some day yet; and, truth to say, I've many a time wished I was
-one,--but that's all over. I say the Lord's Prayer different now."
-
-Here she clasped and raised her lean and withered hands, and said it
-in a humble whisper on her knees.
-
-Cuthbert was agitated terribly; but he dared not speak, he dared not
-enter.
-
-"Who shall say," thought his better mind, "who shall say that the
-blessed One, who taught his disciples thus to pray, is not present,
-dimly seen, perhaps, but felt with secret reverence and affection?"
-
-Her prayer said, the old woman put a little earthen pot on the fire,
-and again seated herself on the stool by the side of it.
-
-"Ah! it's no merry Christmas," said she, "here, or any where else; but
-I have known a worse; and I think this is safe hiding, for the folk
-all think the place haunted. Well, I must thank God, and make the best
-of it."
-
-As she ended these words, she began humming the air of an old
-Christmas carol, and at last sung, in the mournful voice of age, this
-ancient fragment:--
-
- "He neither shall be clothed
- In purple nor in pall,
- But all in fair linen,
- As were babies all;
- He neither shall be rocked
- In silver nor in gold,
- But in a wooden cradle,
- That rocks on the mould."
-
-At the close he went to the door, and before he entered called her
-gently by name. The tone of voice in which he spoke had the effect
-which he intended, and, without any cry of alarm, she rose up quietly
-and turned round; but she no sooner beheld his military dress than her
-terror became excessive. It was quite in vain that he attempted to
-bring himself to her recollection: the fear of being dragged forth and
-led to the stake was uppermost, and entirely bewildered her. In his
-person she saw only one of those from whose hands she had so recently
-escaped, and her shrieks and implorations were agonising to hear. To
-relieve her he quitted the ruin; and before he was many hundred yards
-from it had the pain of seeing her on the far side of it hobbling fast
-towards the cover of the adjoining wood for concealment. He walked to
-his quarters in a miserable and dejected mood; and as he passed an
-open church which had apparently been occupied by Parliamentary
-soldiers, he went in for a moment. It was empty: the tombs and
-monuments had been broken and their inscriptions defaced: not a pane
-of glass in the tall windows had escaped destruction: a painting over
-the altar had been hacked to pieces; and, as if in mockery, the tables
-of God's commandments were left on either side plainly legible, and
-above, in the midst, might be seen, in letters of gold, the words of
-that message of mercy which the angels of God sang to the shepherds
-keeping watch by night, when they announced the advent of
-Messiah,--_Peace on earth,--good will towards man_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XII.
-
- Thus see we how these ugly furious spirits
- Of warre are cloth'd, colour'd, and disguis'd,
- With stiles of vertue, honour, zeale, and merits,
- Whose owne complexion, well anatomis'd,
- A mixture is of pride, rage, avarice,
- Ambition, lust, and every tragicke vice.
- LORD BROOKE.
-
-
-It is now necessary to relate that treatment of George Juxon to which
-old Margery alluded in the last chapter. For six weeks after the first
-visit of the Parliamentary soldiers to Old Beech he successfully
-maintained his post, and continued to officiate every Sabbath among
-his people. His house, indeed, had been often beset by small parties
-of soldiers or by other godly reformers deputed to arrest him, but he
-was so beloved by the villagers that he was always warned, and was
-thus enabled to escape their hands or evade their search; nor were any
-of these parties of a strength sufficient for attempting acts of
-violence upon the church or the parsonage. Indeed one of them was
-fairly braved and driven away by Juxon himself, disguised like a
-farmer, and aided by his faithful friend the blacksmith and half a
-dozen more. One Sabbath morning, as he was out upon the watch, in the
-disguise of a belted woodman, he met a party coming to seize him about
-a mile from Old Beech, and, having put them on a wrong scent, went
-joyfully home, and preached to a glad and attentive congregation.
-However, his popularity and his very name were offences too great in
-the sight of the Roundheads of Coventry to suffer him much longer to
-elude his enemies. A squadron of horse made a sudden march from that
-city on a Sunday afternoon, and surprised both pastor and flock while
-engaged at divine service. They rode into the churchyard; and having
-there dismounted, their commander, followed by a dozen or more
-officers and troopers, entered the church with their steel caps on
-their heads, and, by the noise of their steps, would have drowned the
-voice of Juxon if he had not instantly made a pause to consider his
-best course. One look at the leader of this band satisfied him that
-any appeal to the spirit of love and of a sound mind would be vain;
-and a glance through the window had shown him that any resistance by
-force on the present occasion would only expose his people to a very
-great calamity.
-
-The commander of the troops was no other than Sir Roger Zouch.
-Accordingly Juxon said, with a loud voice, "My Christian brethren, the
-worship of God in this place being thus interrupted, I dismiss you to
-your homes." His manly tone caused an attention on the part of the
-soldiery, which produced a short and silent pause, and, taking
-advantage of this, he solemnly pronounced the blessing with which the
-service of the church always concludes. Sir Roger, after stammering
-with anger, now broke out most violently, "Peace, peace! thou criest
-peace where there is no peace, thou son of perdition. Come out of thy
-calves' coop, and make an end of thy pottage. I know thee, who thou
-art; thy very name savoureth of all evil: take him out, thou good and
-faithful soldier of the cross, Zachariah Trim, and that book of
-abomination with him, and make my passage to yon pulpit pure;--verily
-I will speak a word to these poor, perishing, and neglected people."
-If it had not been for Juxon's discretion at this moment the church
-would soon have become a scene of blood; for the stout blacksmith,
-seeing Zachariah move towards the desk with an action as if he would
-lay hands on Juxon, interposed with so hasty and resolute a manner, as
-caused Zachariah to step back two or three paces and draw his sword.
-His example was instantly followed by many comrades; and the shrieks
-of alarm among the women and children were dreadful. But Juxon came
-forth in a collected mood, and so spoke, that the swords were returned
-to their scabbards, and his people submitted, though in fear yet in
-silence, while the few among them, who, like the blacksmith, were
-ready for any hazards, forebore any further attempt at resistance.
-
-Sir Roger ascended the pulpit, put down his steel cap by his side,
-poured forth a long, rambling, confused prayer, took out his pocket
-Bible, and preached for two hours; till the sweat streamed down his
-bony cheeks, and his voice became hoarser than any raven that ever
-croaked his sad predictions at a sick man's window. Juxon listened
-with profound and with indignant astonishment to his wild and
-blasphemous perversions of divine truth; but he was comforted, as far
-as his own flock was concerned, in the consciousness that they were
-better instructed than to be moved by his fanaticism. His manner
-corresponded with his matter; and if he had not been accompanied by
-too many and too formidable and ready ministers of his violent will he
-would only have excited sentiments of disgust and ridicule. But as he
-thundered forth his curses upon the church in which the poor villagers
-had been brought up, and described her by a flood of reproachful names
-and epithets, of which last, Babylonish was the most gentle, no one
-could listen to his ravings without serious fears that they were a
-plain preface to deeds of crime. It was, therefore, with a heart full
-of devout and sincere thanksgiving for his people that Juxon heard
-this strange and fierce iconoclast promise with solemnity that their
-houses and their little property should be respected, and that no one
-of them should suffer any harm from his soldiers; but that he would
-take away with him their blind and wicked guide, and would only purge
-and purify the polluted temple and the priest's dwelling.
-
-The surplice and hood of Juxon had been torn from his back before this
-precious discourse began, and he had been placed in custody between
-two armed troopers, with pistols in their hands, and was frequently
-addressed by the heated Sir Roger in those words which are applied
-both in the Old Testament and the New to false and unfaithful
-teachers. All this he had borne with a calm and admirable
-courage,--feeling within the answer of a good conscience, and
-supported by an unshaken faith in a God of wisdom and love.
-
-"It is the Lord," he said within himself, "let him do what seemeth him
-good,"--and all the unuttered petitions which his heart sent up to
-the throne of grace were for the spiritual and temporal preservation
-of his little flock.
-
-When Sir Roger concluded his sermon, he gave forth one of those
-psalms, which, being directed against idolatry, he considered as
-appropriate to the work he now meditated. It was sung in loud and
-harsh notes by his gloomy looking troopers, after which, descending
-into the body of the church, he directed fire to be brought, and
-burned the Book of Common Prayer before the communion table; heaping
-on the same fire all those rags and fragments of the whore of Babylon,
-as he was pleased to designate pulpit and altar cloth, and all the
-decent vestments of the minister.
-
-At this gross outrage, Juxon burst forth with a holy zeal, in a most
-earnest tone of faithful remonstrance; but he was instantly gagged in
-a painful mode, and was forced in this state to witness their after
-proceedings.
-
-The people were now forcibly driven out of the church, and as many
-troopers as could find room were directed to come in and stable there
-for the night. The order was obeyed with tumultuous joy; and they had
-no sooner taken possession of their once sacred quarters, than they
-began and completed the work of demolition,--breaking the coloured
-windows, destroying the tombs, and crowning their work of hell by
-bringing in a baggage ass, and baptizing it with mock ceremonies at
-the font. This last work was not witnessed by Sir Roger, who was
-busily superintending the burning of poor George Juxon's library, and
-of many _curiosa_ in the way of antiquities, which his father had
-collected in foreign countries, and bequeathed to him at his death.
-
-It so chanced, that the first thing on which the eyes of Sir Roger
-rested, when he entered the parsonage, was a glass case, or cabinet,
-in which, among other ancient relics, was a small crucifix,
-exquisitely wrought in ivory. The sight of this inflamed his zeal to
-the boiling pitch; and declaring that so great an abomination could
-only be punished by the utter destruction of the dwelling in which it
-was found, he called in two or three assistants, whom he judged
-qualified to overlook the books on the shelves, to the end that any
-godly ones might be saved from the general ruin;--declaring, at the
-same time, that all the silver, and the gold, and the raiment, and the
-furniture, and the pictures, and the vessels, of what sort soever,
-whether in hall or kitchen, were polluted, and must be consumed, and
-denouncing the wrath of God on any of his followers who should
-presume, like Achan, to appropriate a single article of the unhallowed
-heap. Accordingly, on the lawn before the windows, a huge fire was
-made of all these goods, which were cast forth from the windows; the
-shell only of the house being spared for the use of such godly
-minister as the Parliament might appoint.
-
-The attention of Sir Roger and the few zealots with him was confined
-to the contents of the library: not a few valuables, however, from
-other parts of the mansion, were stolen and secreted by the sly rogues
-of the squadron. But it so chanced that, as the house was spared, in a
-concealed recess, behind a false wainscot, his family plate and a few
-heirlooms were preserved. Of five hundred volumes, however, only
-three copies of the Bible, also one work in folio, two small thin
-quartos, and a heap of loose pamphlets of a controversial nature,
-written by Puritans, escaped the sentence of fire. Upon the same pile,
-and doomed to blaze in the same flame, were thrown fine copies of the
-ancient fathers; the works of sound Protestant divines, and ponderous
-lives and legends of Romish saints; the tomes of Bacon, and old
-worthless folios on astrology and divination; the plays and poems
-produced by the genius of a Shakspeare and a Spenser, and the
-interminable and prosaic romances which, in the preceding age, our
-ancestors had found leisure and patience to peruse.
-
-During the night, Juxon was confined as a prisoner in one of the
-out-houses in his own yard, and, in the morning, he was mounted on a
-lean, bony cart-horse, without saddle or bridle, and led by a small
-escort to Warwick, where, before he was committed to the gaol of the
-Castle, he was subjected to the odious and vile insults of an
-examination before a Committee of Religion. Three witnesses appeared
-against him: two of these were base knaves from his own parish, and
-the third was from Coventry.
-
-Thomas Slugg, the first of these, a lazy hypocrite, who found it
-easier to affect the office of an itinerant singer of psalms than to
-dig, deposed that Parson Juxon was an enemy to all godly persons, and
-a teacher of falsehoods, caring nothing for the souls of his people;
-and, as a proof, stated that, when, on one occasion, he, the witness,
-had asked him, "whether there were many or few that should be saved?"
-he had turned his back upon him, and entered the church saying,--
-
-"What is that to thee? follow thou me."
-
-Another, who was a turned-off journeyman of the blacksmith's, deposed
-that he saw Parson Juxon one day in a field behind his own garden
-casting the bar and hammer; and that he, the parson, threw a bar, and
-a heavy stone, and a sledge hammer, and that the smith, and two
-farmers, and one Strong, a warrener, threw against him.
-
-The third was no other than the witch-finder from Coventry, who swore
-that the parson consorted with dealers in magic and the black art;
-that books on those arts were found in his house, and burned (this was
-confirmed eagerly by some of the escort), and that he even kept in his
-pay and service a notorious witch named Yellow Margery.
-
-Juxon listened to these charges with a grave smile, and made no reply.
-Hereupon one of the commissioners observed, in great wrath,--
-
-"That he was a most godless and obstinate Malignant, as was plain to
-see by his laughing, and the redness of his face; and that if not
-drunk, he was merry; but that a gaol and bread and water would soon
-take away the colour from his cheeks, and bring down the naughtiness
-of his spirit."
-
-They forthwith committed him to Warwick Castle, as a soul-destroying
-hypocrite, who held communion with idle and lewd fellows, and
-consorted with witches; and they appointed one Mr. Blackaby, a true
-brother, and bold as a lion for the faith, to succeed him at Old
-Beech, directing that he should be protected in his settlement by a
-detachment from the garrison, until the stubborn people of that
-village were reduced to submit heartily to God and the Parliament.
-
-The room of the Castle to which Juxon was now removed was a large
-comfortless apartment with damp stone walls and no fire, containing
-about fourteen other prisoners, ten of whom were, like himself,
-incumbents. The two windows of this room looked down upon the river,
-which washed the very walls of the Castle; and the windows were not
-only securely barred, but even were it possible to force that
-obstacle, the fall being very great, any notion of the escape of a
-prisoner would have been judged an idle fear. However, the faithful
-blacksmith and George Juxon's groom had followed the escort into
-Warwick, and watched the courageous parson as he walked with an
-upright carriage and manly step between the guards who took him to
-prison.
-
-Having gained information concerning the part of the Castle in which
-he was confined, they laid a plan for his deliverance, which, from
-their knowledge of his strength and activity, they thought possible,
-though extremely difficult.
-
-They conveyed to him in a loaf of brown bread, which was sent by one
-of the charity children of the place, and was given him without
-suspicion, a small cord, of sufficient strength to bear his weight, a
-small steel saw, and a phial of aqua-fortis.
-
-It was not possible to conceal this from his fellow-prisoners, nor
-could he desire to do so. They promised secrecy, but dissuaded him
-from the attempt. That it was very perilous, he well knew; but he
-resolved upon it at once. In the afternoon of the day on which he
-received the cord, he saw the blacksmith standing on the river bank in
-the opposite meadow. The man did not pretend to take any notice of the
-Castle, but stripped off his clothes and plunged into the water; and
-it being a cold frosty day, he was loudly laughed at by a group of
-soldiers standing on the bridge. He swam out into the middle of the
-stream and back again; then putting on his clothes, he disappeared.
-
-By two o'clock on the following morning Juxon had cut away a bar, and
-made fast his cord. Amid the breathless good wishes of his
-fellow-prisoners he began to descend, clad only in a pair of stout
-drawers and his shirt. The cord, though strong enough, was so small,
-that it cut his hands like a knife; but he got safely down to within
-twelve feet of the water, and from hence dropped into the river; and
-gaining the opposite side, was helped up the bank by the stout arm of
-his faithful blacksmith, and hurried to a hedge, behind which he found
-dry clothes and his groom with two horses. To dress himself, to snap a
-hunter's mouthful, and to take one draught of cordial spirit from the
-leathern bottle of his servant, was the glad work of a few minutes;
-and by eight o'clock on the same morning he was forty miles on the
-road to Shrewsbury. Among other friends at the royal head-quarters he
-found Sir Charles Lambert and Arthur Heywood, and at once resolved to
-follow the fortunes of the camp as a volunteer chaplain to the
-regiment of horse with which they were serving. He was present with
-them in the battle of Keinton; and though decided himself not to use
-arms, he rode upon the flank of the regiment when it charged.
-
-The horse of Sir Charles being killed under him, Juxon alighted, in an
-exposed and perilous position, and instantly gave his own to remount
-his friend. Here it was that, soon after, the gallant boy Arthur,
-returning wounded from the front, fell fainting from his saddle; and
-his frightened horse flying fast away, he would have been left
-helpless on the field before the advancing enemy, had not Juxon been a
-witness of his distress and danger. Hastening to the bleeding boy, he
-lifted him on his back, and so carried him a mile and a half to the
-top of Edge Hill, where a surgeon dressed his hurt, and pronounced it
-to be severe, but not dangerous, or likely to be attended with loss of
-limb or any very serious consequences. Having seen Arthur placed
-safely in a cart with other wounded officers going to a village in the
-rear, Juxon remained upon the hill, to which the royal army retired
-at sunset; and, as he saw Sir Charles and his own favourite roan horse
-coming safely back at the head of a squadron which had suffered severe
-losses, his heart swelled thankfully within him. He shook the hand of
-Sir Charles with a tearful cordiality; and they ate their cold and
-scanty supper by a little fire in the open fields, with sentiments of
-gratitude and of piety at once elevated and pure. The crown of England
-was hanging as it were on a bush, and they were among its guardians.
-Moreover, there was in both their bosoms a fine consciousness of what
-was passing in their respective hearts:--to see the noble and
-miraculous change in a man whom he had once, and with reason,
-despised, was a rich reward to Juxon,--while Sir Charles sat in the
-presence of his friend with the sweet and gracious feeling that he had
-been to him as a guardian angel and as a voice from Heaven.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XIII.
-
- Happy are those
- That knowing, in their births, they are subject to
- Uncertain change, are still prepared, and arm'd
- For either fortune:--a rare principle,
- And with much labour learn'd in wisdom's school.
- MASSINGER.
-
-
-One fair star was still shining in the eastern sky, and a cool wind,
-balmy with the odours of spring, blew pleasant upon his cheek, as a
-traveller, whose dusty feet showed that he had come many a mile upon
-more public roads, walked rapidly across the footpath-way of a green
-and dewy close, at the far end of which was the churchyard of Cheddar.
-
-The outline of the tall tower was majestically defined upon the light
-of the dawning day, and beyond, hidden by well-remembered trees, lay
-the home of the wayfarer.
-
-In the low grey wall which surrounded this sacred enclosure there was
-a very ancient stile, all rudely graven over with notches, crosses,
-and initial letters. The hand of the traveller was already upon this
-stile, when he suddenly paused, as though some unwelcome object
-presented itself, and forbade his progress. His cheek changed, and his
-heart sank, and he stood as still as though a spell were upon him. Yet
-it was no uncommon sight that arrested him, and one quite in keeping
-with the hour and the scene.
-
-A sturdy old sexton, the scarebabe of all the infants in the parish,
-but the cheerful, though grim-looking, minister to many of his boyish
-sports and pleasures, was digging a grave under the north wall of the
-church, and had just thrown up a skull, which lay beside his mattock,
-near the pediment of the building.
-
-All men are superstitious:--the eye of the traveller, which, but a
-minute before, was beaming bright with hope, became sad and anxious;
-his lip quivered, and, instead of vaulting over the stile eagerly, and
-hurrying to the wicket of the vicarage, he leaned upon the low wall
-with a feeling of faintness, his sight became dim, and his thoughts
-confused and mournful. He had been a long time absent in a foreign
-land,--some change might have taken place at home; and this idea once
-admitted to his mind, was followed by a crowd of most natural fears,
-and of melancholy images. These, however, were soon dispelled by the
-lively tones of the hale old sexton's voice. To relieve the dull and
-lonely labour of digging a grave, he was trolling out, in a sort of
-hearty jig-jog cadence, a fragment of the Mayers' song:--
-
- "The moon shines bright, and the stars give a light,
- A little before it is day;
- So God bless you all, both great and small,
- And send you a joyful May."
-
-This snatch of an ancient medley, so familiar to Martin Noble from his
-earliest years, called up the memory of May games, and summer days,
-and a happy boyhood; and a rush of bright recollections swept away the
-cloud from his mind, as a clearing wind drives the mist from a
-mountain top, and lays it open to the glad play of the cheerful
-sunbeams.
-
-Martin Noble, as we shall hence call our wayfarer, sprung lightly into
-the churchyard, and approaching the old sexton, thus accosted him:--
-
-"Good morrow to you, Robert: I am glad to hear your voice once more,
-and to find you so stout and well."
-
-"Kindly spoken," said the old man, raising his head, and leaning on
-his spade, "kindly spoken. Robert is my name, sure enough; but what
-yours may be is more than I know, or can guess even, without you are
-young Blount that went to the wars. Perhaps, master, you made a bit of
-guess-work, and never saw me before."
-
-"No, I am not young Blount, but I have seen you as often and knew you
-as well as he did; and to thy cap, thy jerkin, the keys at thy girdle,
-and thy grizzled beard, thou art just as I left thee, old Robert. God
-grant that I may find my own dear father as little altered."
-
-The spade fell from the old man's hand, and rubbing his eyes as if to
-clear his vision, at the same time coming closer to his object, he
-exclaimed,--
-
-"Odd's life, you cannot be Master Martin that went to foreign parts?"
-
-"Yes, but I am," said Martin, shaking the old man's hand:--"tell me,
-Robert, is my father well."
-
-"Oh yes, he's well,--that's to say, he don't ail, as I hear, God bless
-him!--but as to well,--I can't call him well, after all, when I think
-of a kind soul like him without a----"
-
-"Heavens! my mother is not dead?"
-
-"Oh no; but have not you heard of all the changes here at Cheddar?"
-
-"Of what changes do you speak? I have heard nothing. It was only last
-evening at sunset that I landed at Clevedon Creek in a fishing-boat
-which came alongside our brigantine as we were running up the Channel
-to Bristol. I journeyed hither, as you see, on foot, but I shall know
-all by going home at once."
-
-"Stop, Master Martin, the parson's house is no home of thine now; an
-thou ring the bell, a sour face, and a hard word, and a slammed door,
-would be thy sorry welcome."
-
-"You don't surely mean that such a man as my father has been taken
-from his people, and from his own house and home?"
-
-"Yes but I do. The good shepherd is gone, and we have a false goatherd
-in his place,--a wolf in shepherd's clothing."
-
-"Where then is my father gone? Where shall I find him?"
-
-"I can't rightly tell you myself; but I'll take you to them that can.
-It's somewhere, however, near old Glastonbury Tor; and they tell me
-that master is as cheery as ever, though, God help him, he fares no
-better, as this world goes, than I do. Come, I'll take you to old
-Mistress Blount: right glad she'll be to see thee again, and a sad
-story she'll have to tell thee about the old gentleman. God's blessing
-on his soul!--a was the poor man's friend."
-
-"What! is dear old Master Blount gone?"
-
-"Ay, it's an awful tale. The mistress will tell you all about it." So
-saying, he led the way to a wicket leading out of the churchyard at an
-opposite corner; but ere they reached it he stopped, observing, that
-second thoughts were best.
-
-"No," said the old man, "if I take thee to Mistress Blount it may get
-her into trouble, and if I take thee to my bit of a cot, it may bring
-thee into trouble; for my old woman is as curious as a magpie and as
-leaky as a sieve, and every gossip near us would soon be on the
-lookout and the chatter. If thou go to the Jolly Woodcutter, near the
-Market Cross, thou wilt find old Margery Broad the right hostess: she
-hath good liquor and few words, and neither meddles nor makes. Go
-break thy fast, and take rest, and in the evening thou canst set
-forward for Glastonbury. When the chimes go five, I'll bring one shall
-guide thee to thy father's."
-
-"Why such delay? I would go at once."
-
-"It will be better for your father that you should not reach
-Glastonbury till after dusk; besides, you have been afoot all night,
-and a stretch on one of Dame Margery's pallets will do you no hurt."
-
-With these words they parted, and Martin Noble walked slowly down
-towards the hostel. The rising sun was but just beginning to gild the
-carved pinnacles of the church tower and the tops of the tallest
-trees. The townlet itself lay, as yet, in deep shadow. The streets
-were silent, and, but for here and there the figure of a solitary
-labourer going early to the field, they were empty.
-
-Nobody was yet astir at the Jolly Woodcutter, therefore Martin
-patiently took seat at the Market Cross, in one of the angular
-recesses of that ancient hexagonal building which so conveniently
-shelter poor wayfarers from sun and rain.
-
-As here he mused in silence, his reverie was suddenly broken by a
-voice from one of the adjoining seats, and he found he was not the
-sole occupant of the friendly building. His unseen neighbour thus
-talked with himself, or rather thought aloud,--
-
-"Ho, daylight!--truly the light is comfortable, and a pleasant thing
-it is to behold the sun: blessings on the man that built this shelter
-for the houseless head. Jack, thou art a fool; I say thou art a fool,
-and I have often told thee so. Thou hast not one farthing in thy
-pocket. I tell thee a man with empty pockets is and must be a fool;
-and it shall go hard with him if, though he keep his hands from
-picking and stealing, he be not called a knave also. Here cometh a
-fellow now, with a red face and a portly belly, who will say me a
-'sirrah' to a certainty, and talk to me comfortable words about the
-gallows. I am penniless, therefore I am a rogue; I am houseless,
-therefore I am a sorry vagabond. This is charitable judgment, and
-sound logic: so said the tapster last night when he thrust me forth
-into the street, and bolted his door against me. They may call gold
-poison to men's souls, but I verily think that one broad piece would
-do me no great hurt. A morning in the stocks, and without a breakfast,
-will never do: I must be off to the liberal fields, and try coaxing at
-a lone farm house."
-
-These words were followed by the sound of a shuffling footstep; and
-the speaker turned sharply round by Martin's side of the cross, to
-avoid the questions of a burly personage who was advancing to call
-him to account. The figure of the poor wanderer was sufficiently
-deplorable; yet it was impossible to look upon it without a smile. He
-was a very tall and a remarkably spare man, with a long pale face, one
-side of which was contracted so as to give the appearance of a
-perpetual winking:--his beard was yellow, and untrimmed. He was
-habited in a suit of plum-coloured cloth, which had been once of the
-best quality, but was now faded and threadbare:--his shoes were worn
-out, and he limped, leaning on a stout cane. At one glance Martin saw
-that he was one of those forlorn strolling players whose services
-during these times of trouble were no longer needed, and whose age and
-infirmity forbade him the privilege of following many of his calling
-to the camp. He was a cast off minister of pleasure, and, like a
-cracked viol or an empty flagon, thrown aside as useless.
-
-"Whither away so fast, sirrah?" said the beadle, stepping after him;
-"what dost thou here alone in the street at this hour?"
-
-"Marry I am not alone, but in company that I would be happy to be well
-rid of."
-
-"Why, thou knave, did I not see thee rub thine eyes, and shake
-thyself, and not a soul near thee?"
-
-"Nay, but I tell thee we were three:--first, there was myself; next,
-there was poverty, a fast traveller, that is even now pinching me,
-and, thirdly, there was an armed man called want, who belabours me
-without mercy."
-
-"None of thy foolery, rogue, or I'll clap thy claw-foot in the
-stocks:--thou wilt come to the gallows tree at last;--a sluggard all
-thy life long, I'll warrant me."
-
-"Look you, master, a slug is a fat thing, and a slow, that feeds
-without working. Now, you see, I am as lean as a scarecrow, and, lame
-as I am, I will race thee for a breakfast."
-
-"Out, thou yellow-faced varlet; out, troop away; take thy gabble to
-the common, and pick thy breakfast with the geese."
-
-"Have me to thy home, and give me part of thy manchets: it will be all
-the same, for then I shall breakfast with the gander."
-
-Till this moment, neither of the parties had seen Martin; but no
-sooner did the aged and wandering son of Thespis espy his countenance
-and smile than he boldly came back, and accosted him:--"Most gallant
-Cavalier, for by the very curl of thy light beard I see thou art one,
-help me in my need. Thou seest that I am pricked with many thorns:
-help me, I say, and so may God help you, and cover your head in
-battle."
-
-The beadle turned round with surprise; but before he had time to utter
-a single word Martin had slipped into the hand of the wanderer a piece
-of silver; and as, at the very same moment, the door of the Jolly
-Woodcutter was opened by a stout serving wench, he escaped thanks and
-questions by entering the house.
-
-"Silver, by my luck!--silver--and a broad piece! look you," said the
-exulting wanderer; "now begone dull care: let us take no thought for
-to-morrow; we will begin our day with a morning's draught of sack,
-next, we will be clean shaven, for money is a gentleman. We will have
-a pasty to our dinner, and be a lord for the rest of the day. A broad
-piece! I will drink canary; and this young cavalier shall hear my
-recitations, and I will regale him with merry songs. There hangeth a
-viol de gamba in the barber's shop, and there be a score of old play
-books on his shelf: we will have a rare evening. I will reward this
-young master: he hath breeding, and will take pleasure in my company;
-let to-morrow take care of itself, or let him take care of it for me:
-we will drink canary." These resolutions, the natural fruit of
-Martin's inconsiderate bounty, had well nigh disconcerted his quiet
-plan; but, luckily, the thoughtless player had drunk himself into a
-sound sleep before the evening chimes struck five.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XIV.
-
- These black clouds will overblowe;
- Sunshine shall have his returning;
- And my grief-wrung heart I know,
- Into mirth shall change his mourning.
- _Psalm_ xiii.--DAVISON.
-
-
-Martin Noble and his guide did not reach old Glastonbury till after
-sunset. Crossing one of the lower streets of the town, they passed
-into a suburb of scattered cottages; and turning up a narrow lane by
-one of those large stone barns that formerly belonged to the abbey,
-they stopped at the garden wicket of a small lone cottage. Martin
-stood without while his guide stepped gently forward, that the good
-parson and his lady might not be overcome by too sudden a surprise.
-
-A light shone through the narrow casement: all objects around were
-shaded in the soft obscurity of a summer night: the air was perfume;
-and all things seemed hushed into a stillness at once sweet and
-solemn. Martin passed the wicket with a trembling step and a throbbing
-heart; and ere he reached the door he was met in the path and folded
-to a father's heart. Another moment, and he was pressed again to that
-bosom on which he had hung in helpless infancy. Now the lamp was held
-up by his father, and his hair was parted from his forehead by his
-mother's hand, and her eyes rested upon his face and scanned his form;
-and he felt the unutterable bliss of being the child of such parents.
-They took him by the hand, and made him kneel with them before God,
-while they fervently thanked him for his mercy, "which endureth for
-ever." After a brief pause, they rose; and as Martin looked round on
-the mean and scanty accommodations of the poor hovel which they
-inhabited, and then remarked the calm and contented expression of
-countenance which they both wore, he was lost in astonishment.
-
-"Is it possible," he exclaimed, "father, that you have no better
-dwelling than this? Alas! how much must my dear mother undergo."
-
-"Your mother, Martin, never had more equal spirits or more regular
-health than in this humble and obscure cottage. She makes me and
-herself as happy as, under the painful circumstances of the land, any
-persons can or ought to be." Here the old couple looked in each
-other's eyes, with that calm fondness which is the fruit of love long
-tried, and lately quickened by the rude storms of persecution and
-poverty. But it is to be borne in mind, that in such and all like
-cases, in times of trouble and confusion, there may be suffering, but
-there cannot be shame. That which is commonly the most bitter
-ingredient of an indigent condition is altogether wanting: _there
-cannot be shame_: neither the sense of it, in those who are reduced to
-the extremities of need, nor one thought of it in the minds of those
-who look upon the necessities of their fallen fortunes. Their rags are
-honest: they can tread the clay floor of a common straw-roofed hut
-with as much pride as though it were a marble hall. Therefore, where
-there is health, and the physical capability of endurance, and where
-no habits of softness, sensuality, and self-indulgence, have
-previously enslaved the spirit, and left it tied and bound as a
-despised victim to be tormented by discontent and peevishness, there
-will be found a cheerful resignation in the poorest circumstances.
-Here there was the grace of contentment in daily exercise. Old Noble
-and his wife were not only resigned but thankful for the blessings of
-food, shelter, and raiment, and they hopefully made the best of every
-thing around them.
-
-"Martin," said his father as he heard the wicket swing, "here is one
-of your oldest friends coming: you have not forgot Peter."
-
-"Lord love you, Master Martin," said the old man as he entered, "I
-have heard of you:" here he took the offered hand, and bowed his head
-on it; then again looking up, resumed, "Well if it is not--yes,--no,
-well, I can't make you out; why, how you are grown and altered! One
-thing's right, I see,--you have not got your head clipped and shaved
-like a mule's rump." Here Peter caught a grave look on the face of
-his master, and added, "Well, truth's best spoken out: I don't like
-'em, the knaves, and I've reasons as plenty as blackberries. Didn't
-they come a horseback into the church at the christening, and throw
-over the Font; and has not that prick-eared, tallow-faced rogue, and
-no parson, stuck it into the ground in our poultry yard, near the
-muck-heap, for the ducks to dabble in? and didn't they drive you out
-of house and home, and throw your furniture out of window, and offer
-it for sale in the street? and didn't they burn your favourite old
-books, and break the old lute, and make you and mistress trudge half a
-winter's night in the mire? and worse than all, haven't they bewitched
-Master Cuthbert, and changed his nature like, and made him against his
-own kin and his own king? Rot'em! No rogue like your godly rogue, my
-old mother was wont to say:--all saint without, all devil within.
-There, love you, dear master, don't scold with your eyes in that
-fashion: 'an old dog cannot alter his way of barking.' Come, I've
-coughed it all out, and it has done me good, and now for salt and
-trenchers. I'll warrant Master Martin has got hunger sauce for his
-supper."
-
-Herewith he set about covering the low table with a white napkin and
-clean trenchers, and produced from the basket a small mutton ham and
-some fine heads of sweet lettuce, and a loaf of the best wheaten
-bread; and setting on one side a small keg of ale, stood up with a
-look of pride and joy at his master's back, and said, "To God's gift,
-God send a good appetite."
-
-"How is this, Peter, whence is this?" asked old Noble.
-
-"Why, master, it is from old Mrs. Blount. Wasn't her good man--'peace
-to his soul!'--wasn't he a church-tenant, and his father's father
-before him? and was there a day of your life that you hadn't a kind
-word for him? and does not she know that you have got a stout young
-trencher-man come to you and nothing to set before him?"
-
-"Well, well,--she is a warm-hearted woman, and always was. God reward
-her! but sit down, Peter: you and I are only fellow-labourers now; and
-if you did not handle the spade better than I do, we should not have
-fared half so well as we have hitherto:--make him sit down, wife."
-
-"No," said Peter, "'t was well enough sometimes o' the long winter
-nights, when madam worked her needle-work and you were making nets,
-for old Peter to have a seat in the chimney-corner, and to hear your
-blessed voices, and take food from your own hands, and eat it by the
-same fire; but now, with Master Martin at home, we'll soon have things
-right again."
-
-These few words of the honest and faithful Peter gave Martin a rude
-but strong outline of all that had been lately passing at home; and it
-was easy for him to fill in, from the fancy, a picture of the present
-state of England, by considering the evils to which his own parents
-had been exposed. As he saw in the person of his own father a pious
-son of the church, a true patriot, and a loyal subject, trampled under
-foot by a tyrannous parliament, degraded from his holy office, and
-ejected from his own house, he felt a deep thankfulness for the
-providential ordering that had kept him away from England at a moment
-of excitement when, unsuspicious of the real aim and tendency of many
-of the measures of Parliament, he should probably have joined their
-banners. He was now plainly called to a very different course; and, as
-there he sat in the presence of his parents, his resolution was
-silently taken to share the fortunes of the royal army. These things
-swept across his mind swiftly, and gave no interruption to the glad
-flow of his spirits, as, sitting once again at table with a father and
-a mother, he took his cheerful meal, replying to all the questions
-they asked, and relating to them such passages of his travels and
-adventures as he thought might gratify or divert them.
-
-When, however, his mother had retired, Martin questioned his father,
-with not a little anxiety, about the part which his brother had taken,
-and about the present condition of some of those families and friends
-whom he had hoped to have met again in happy intercourse. The answers
-to these inquiries did for the most part convey pain. His brother, it
-seemed, was among those devout but sincere enthusiasts, who, offended
-with certain faults in the government of the church, and certain
-scandals in unworthy individuals among the clergy, desired a severe
-purification of the Establishment, and in their zeal for rooting out
-the tares, were destroying the wheat with them. Upon this subject old
-Noble was very mournful. He had been himself an epistle known and read
-of all men:--his life was so pure and exemplary--his habits so
-quiet--his pursuits so innocent--his teaching so plain and
-faithful--and his attention to the spiritual wants and the temporal
-necessities of his flock so constant and tender--that such of the
-neighbouring clergy as led less creditable lives had long regarded him
-as a Puritan. The worldly, to whom all tests were indifferent, and who
-were ready to embrace any profession of faith, and submit to any
-novelties, whether of doctrine or of discipline, necessary, by present
-law, to preserve their incomes in peace, had fully reckoned on the
-sheltering support of his name. But, to the surprize of all, save the
-few who knew him intimately, he was found, in the hour of trial, in
-that humble and hallowed band which took cheerfully the spoiling of
-their goods for conscience-sake. It was past midnight before Martin
-and his father parted. In a small upper room, which took the shape of
-the sloping roof, Martin passed the night upon a clean pallet. He
-could sleep but little: through the open window came the grateful
-scent of the honeysuckle, and his eyes rested upon the stars. His
-broken slumbers were full of strange visions, that crowded on and away
-in such quick succession as to leave no connected impressions. Of some
-dear familiar face a sudden glimpse was caught, and lost so
-immediately as to be a grief; and a familiar voice heard soft and
-melodious, but the straining ear could catch no word; and then music
-exquisitely faint and plaintive; and then the stern trumpet, and
-darkness, and a crash, louder than any thunder, and so sleep frighted
-from the eyes, and a troubled awakening. But towards morning the
-blessing came:--a drowsiness stole upon him, and with it a delicious
-sense of fading consciousness. A sleep deep, dreamless, and
-refreshing, was gently and pleasantly chased from his eyes by the play
-of the cheerful sunbeams; and through the open casement was poured the
-varied melody of little birds, that with clear sweet notes were
-sending up to heaven, with the white incense of the morning dew, their
-early song.
-
-Martin sprang up with a grateful heart, and looked from the window.
-The mantling honeysuckle did half conceal him. Beneath the shade of an
-aged mulberry tree, by a cistern of water which flowed over at a rude
-lip of stone, and ran away to irrigate the plot of ground in which the
-cottage stood, sat his mother at her spinning-wheel. In a corner of
-the garden his father and old Peter were digging. This little bit of
-land, with a small orchard by its side, was the principal, though not
-the sole, support of his parents. In addition to the produce of his
-mother's spinning, her skill in needle-work brought in something; and
-old Noble had long ago taught himself to make cabbage nets, twist
-fishing lines, and turn hackle into flies, with little thought that
-such pastime should one day help him to buy bread. However, so many
-persons of ingenuity had fallen into poverty in these times, that a
-far walk might be taken, and a long stand might be made in a dull
-market-place, or at the corner of an inn yard, before a purchaser for
-such trifles could be found; indeed a sale for any thing beyond
-necessaries could not be reckoned on.
-
-As Martin looked down upon this scene of repose, as he saw his parents
-safe, in health, and not subdued by circumstances, he could not but
-feel that the wind of adversity had been tempered to them by that God
-whose terrible blasts were abroad; that a plank was thrown to them in
-the storm; that the Father of all mercies was their refuge, and the
-shadow of his almighty wings was over them for comfort and for good. A
-pang came across him, as he thought upon his brother. A vista of
-calamity and war now opened before his startled fancy; but genuine
-philanthropy, and the love of true freedom, no less than his
-attachment to the altar and the throne, gave a call to his spirit to
-which he could not be deaf, and which he would not disobey. However,
-he turned from all vain and dark forebodings to the contemplation of
-present happiness. It was a hallowed bliss to be again near those dear
-parents who had from his cradle loved and cherished him. Deep-felt
-pleasure is ever akin to melancholy; and thus it was, that, from
-excess of happiness, Martin could almost have wept, as he went down
-stairs, and freely did so as he felt his mother's arms about his neck,
-and her kiss upon his cheek; but such tears are dried as soon as shed.
-
-The morning rites were performed by his father with the same
-impressive tones, and the same hallowed composure, that he could
-remember as having often soothed the little troubles of his boyhood,
-and which did now again the like office, and calmed the strong but
-natural emotions of the man.
-
-After their plain wholesome breakfast of milk and bread, Martin took
-his father aside, and made known to him the resolution which he had
-last night formed of immediately joining some division of the royal
-army as a volunteer. He entreated him not to utter one syllable of
-objection or remonstrance, and not to feel any apprehension of his
-ever being brought into a distressing situation, as regarded Cuthbert.
-They should never meet, nor in any way be personally opposed to each
-other; and the circumstance of his having one son in arms against the
-King made it necessary that another should more truly represent his
-father, by being enrolled among the royal forces. He stated both his
-intentions and his means of carrying them into effect,--at the same
-time inviting the best advice which his father could offer as to the
-manner of his proceeding, and the leader whom he should join.
-
-It was not without grief and reluctance that old Noble consented to be
-so immediately deprived of his gallant boy; and the mother was almost
-inconsolable at the thought of so early and sad a separation: but that
-same evening Martin took his departure for Bristol, that he might
-secure such baggage as he had brought with him from Italy, and equip
-himself for the camp.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XV.
-
- But at my back I always hear
- Time's winged chariot hurrying near;
- And yonder all before us lie
- Deserts of vast eternity.
- MARVELL.
-
-
-Although Bristol was at this time garrisoned by the Parliamentary
-troops, Martin Noble and old Peter, by whom he was accompanied, found
-no difficulty at the barriers, for the city was not besieged,--and
-being on foot, they entered without suspicion.
-
-The doublet and cloak of Martin being cut in the Italian fashion, he
-easily passed in that large and busy port as one newly arrived from
-Leghorn and Genoa, and as one engaged in some commercial venture. His
-first care was to secure the little property which he had brought from
-Italy, and which, save one bag of a hundred pieces in ready money,
-consisted entirely in paintings, drawings, and engravings, with a few
-antiques. The value of this small collection might have amounted to
-twelve hundred pieces. It was now necessary to part with these for
-whatever they might produce. His object being to send the whole price
-of them, beyond the sum necessary for his own equipment as a volunteer
-soldier of horse, to his parents. The captain and crew of the vessel
-in which he had returned home were all so cheerfully devoted to his
-interests, that he procured his baggage to be privately landed; and
-having unpacked and carefully arranged them in his apartment at a
-large inn near the quay, he went forth in search of a purchaser. He
-had not far to seek: the contents of an open shop kept by a Venetian
-in that same quarter at once pointed out whither many a collection of
-those curious toys of human invention, whether in the fine arts or in
-plate or furniture, round which the strange children of manhood will
-fasten fondness, already lay in dull divorce from the pleasant
-chambers they had once adorned. The broker consented to go to the inn
-and look at his pictures with a cold and wily slowness. There was only
-one small original which had been given Martin; the rest were
-exquisite copies, executed by his brother artists or himself. The
-engravings and the articles of _virtu_ (many of them presents) were
-selected with the finest taste; and a magical feeling was associated
-in the breast of Martin with every trifle or scrap in his portfolios.
-Though his mind was healthy and strong, and the necessity of the
-sacrifice was obvious, yet he could bear no work of bargaining, no
-words of depreciation. He bade the dealer look them over silently, and
-take them at his own price. Nor was he at all disappointed when the
-sum of three hundred and fifty pieces were paid down for little heart
-treasures, from which, in happier circumstances, he would at no price
-have consented to be separated. Of this sum he despatched two hundred
-and fifty, by the safe hands of old Peter, to his parents, and the
-remainder, with what he had already by him, was amply sufficient to
-purchase a horse, a handsome buff coat, and good arms.
-
-During his residence in Italy, to relieve the sedentary labours of the
-_studio_, he had always used horse exercise, fencing, and the play of
-the broad sword, and having a vigorous and comely person and a quick
-eye, had great skill in all these exercises. He little thought in
-those days that he must exchange the wonderful art to which his genius
-was wedded for that of war; the peaceful _studio_ and the open
-landscape for the noisy camp and the cloudy battle-field.
-
-He effected his departure from Bristol, and his journey to the
-headquarters of the Marquis of Hertford and Prince Maurice, who were
-then coming westward, with considerable address. By a few pieces well
-bestowed he obtained passports as a foreign artist for London; and,
-lading a sumpter-horse with two packages in which his great saddle and
-his arms were well concealed, he rode his trained horse in such
-furniture and clothing, and with such a bridle, as disguised its
-quality. Moreover, by avoiding the large towns, and travelling
-circuitous ways, through many of those lovely coombes or valleys with
-which the western counties abound, he exposed himself to as little
-observation as was possible. He slept in lonely places under a tree,
-and he snatched his refreshment through the day at farm-houses or
-little rustic inns. There was a consciousness in his bosom, that of
-this brief and precious season of his life the most was to be made.
-The weaning was at hand: the trials and the solemn chances of warfare
-lay before him in all their stern reality. The glorious arts were left
-behind as childish things; and he was passing through those scenes of
-nature in which the love of heaven is plainly mirrored. He loved the
-beautiful; in all things loved it: but, alone in the far windings of a
-sheltered vale, where trees and grass and waters blend their beauties;
-where cattle lie down, and the white lamb gambols,--with tears of
-thanksgiving he worshipped. Nor less in the still secluded forest,
-where rivulets make gentle music, he worshipped. Such spots are
-sacred: they are not solitudes; they are peopled, most thickly
-peopled, with innocent spirits, whom we cannot see; but we feel their
-presence, and tread softly in their quiet paradise. It was the last
-leisure of Martin's life, and the sweet scenes coloured his mind for
-ever; and afterwards, in coarse companies, and in the tumultuous camp,
-his memory would steal away back to those vales of peace, as to some
-hallowed visions, and lie awhile entranced, till laughter loud, or
-cannon's voice, did wake him. It was on this journey that he for the
-last time exercised the art he loved.
-
-In a deep still valley, with wooded hills on either side, and a small
-clear river that flowed between them, he stopped at noon before a
-solitary farm. The goodwife made him welcome. In her little hall she
-spread his clean repast, and there, in the window, sat her daughter
-with a child in her arms. It were easy to see she was its mother. If
-ever face was sweet and comely,--if ever eyes were calm, and brow was
-open,--if ever human forehead looked meet for the seal of Heaven, hers
-did, as it shone fair and pure beneath her dark and parted hair. The
-child, too, was of curly and surpassing beauty, and stretched its
-little arms with smiles. The obeisance of this young mother was
-modest,--but her blush was faint, and innocence itself. A sampler
-framed in oak hung upon the wall. Martin asked if it was her work, and
-she said "Yes--the prize sampler worked in her ninth year,"--and took
-it down; and, in fine needle-work, he read the following lines:--
-
- "Even as a nurse, whose child's imperfect pace
- Can hardly lead his foot from place to place,
- Leaves her fond kissing, sets him down to go,
- Nor does uphold him for a step or two;
- But, when she finds that he begins to fall,
- She holds him up and kisses him withal.
- So God from man sometimes withdraws his hand
- Awhile, to teach his infant faith to stand;
- But when he sees his feeble strength begin
- To fail, he gently takes him up again."
- QUARLES.
-
-He put it down, subdued to a sudden tenderness, and then asked the
-name of her child; she said it was christened "Charles," and then
-caressed it more closely, and sighed; adding, "It's a good name, but
-it has brought me my first sorrow, for it's with King Charles my
-husband is; and they that go to the wars may never come back again."
-
-She resumed her seat in the window; and, putting down the child, who
-could run stoutly about after his grandmother, she began to ply her
-needle in silence. Here, as her head was naturally bent downwards,
-Martin sketched a happy resemblance of her on his tablets, while she,
-unconscious, sat thinking of her fond husband far away, and daily
-exposed to wounds or death. Martin rode away from this dwelling; and,
-and at some distance, looking back, through a summer shower he saw it
-arched over by a glorious rainbow, and asked a blessing on that fair
-young mother from the God of hope.
-
-Thus and here he took leave of peaceful life for ever. That same
-evening his horses' hoofs were clattering over the pavement of a small
-town in Dorsetshire, filled with royal troopers; and, finding that
-Robert Dormer, the Earl of Caernarvon, was there in person, his
-journey was at an end. He had brought a particular letter of
-introduction to this youthful nobleman from one of his near relatives,
-then residing at Rome, in a declining state of health, and had been
-also intrusted to deliver to him a curious antique ring as a token of
-the abiding love and friendship of a dying man. The letter spoke very
-favourably of Martin; but was not written with any expectation that it
-would be presented under circumstances and with an object like those
-which now induced Martin to deliver it. He had engaged at Bristol a
-sprightly young horse-boy, who had whistled his long marches
-cheerfully by the side of the sumpter-horse, and who was not a little
-delighted at being now permitted to unpack saddle and equipments, and
-to see Martin put on a buff coat and a royal scarf. As soon as our
-volunteer was dressed, he proceeded to the quarters of Lord
-Caernarvon, sent up his letter and name, was instantly admitted, and
-met with a kind reception.
-
-The evening was cheerless and rainy, and the Earl was engaged at the
-game of tables, now better known by the name of backgammon, with a
-gentleman of a very fine person, about his own age, while a bright
-eyed youth of seventeen sat eagerly watching the game.
-
-The Earl gave Martin a friendly look, and bade him take a seat till
-the game was done; for he had already satisfied himself, by a glance,
-that it was a letter on private affairs, though he had not opened it.
-
-"You are from Bristol, young man. What news among our friends in that
-neighbourhood, or rather among our enemies within?"
-
-"I was so situated, my Lord, that I am not so well acquainted with the
-condition of the garrison, or the state of the place, as your
-Lordship. My sole business there was to get my baggage out of the
-vessel in which I came from Italy, to equip myself for camp, and to
-join the royal army."
-
-"From Italy!" said Lord Caernarvon; "indeed! From what part?"
-
-"I sailed from the port of Leghorn; but came from Rome only a few days
-before."
-
-"Here, Arthur," said the Earl, "take my place, and finish the
-game.--Sir Charles, you will excuse me."
-
-He now took his letter to the window, and immediately read it with
-attention. Then approaching Martin, he took him cordially by the
-hand.
-
-"I am afraid to ask how you left Edward Herbert; for in this letter he
-seems to consider his recovery as impossible."
-
-"I am sorry to say, my Lord, that he is a dying man; but he suffers
-very little pain, and is as calm and resigned as any person under such
-circumstances can be. I am the bearer of his last token of affection
-for the Lady Caernarvon."
-
-Here he drew forth a small case, containing a signet ring, of great
-antiquity. Upon the stone, which was a clear beryl, the engraved
-symbol was a genius, with an inverted torch.
-
-As Lord Caernarvon was silently and thoughtfully examining this gem,
-the door of the apartment was opened by a grave, mournful looking
-gentlemen in a neglected dress, who said,--
-
-"Well, Caernarvon, I shall start at eleven, on my return to the King's
-quarters, and will direct the escort to march back to you after they
-have halted eight hours. I shall only take them thirty miles; and as
-there is a moon, we shall have a pleasant ride. What have you got in
-your hand?" he added, observing the ring.
-
-"It is is a farewell token from Edward Herbert to his cousin Sophia:
-if you remember, Falkland, the youth was a great favourite of yours."
-
-Lord Falkland took the ring, and looked upon it in silence for more
-than two minutes, then gave it back to Caernarvon with a sigh, and
-going close to the window, from which Caernarvon had advanced, Martin
-distinctly heard him ingeminate the word "Peace, peace," while he
-raised his eyes towards the rainy sky. Yet was the tone of voice so
-low, and it came so deeply from within, that nobody else could
-distinguish what he uttered; and no one seemed to notice the
-inarticulate sound, as if it was a habit of grief and abstraction
-common to the man.
-
-Caernarvon himself was not in spirits the whole evening,--though, as a
-party of more than twelve were assembled at his supper table, he was
-necessarily engaged in much conversation on the state and prospects of
-the war.
-
-However, before this hour he introduced Martin in a particular manner
-to Sir Charles Lambert and Arthur Heywood, when they had finished
-their game; and he presented him to the Lord Falkland, who was very
-gracious,--but told him with a mournful smile that he must for awhile
-forget the fair creations of Raphael, and prepare himself for the
-study of severer subjects.
-
-His relationship to Cuthbert Noble was soon discovered by young
-Arthur; and it would have been impossible for him to have received
-more cordial and friendly attentions than both Sir Charles and the boy
-readily offered. They expressed their sorrow in a delicate yet
-becoming manner that Cuthbert should be in the ranks of the
-Parliamentary army, and congratulated Martin, as well as themselves,
-on the probability that they should be spared the pain of acting, for
-the present, against that division of the enemy's force with which he
-was known to be serving, as their own march lay westward, to join the
-Cornish army.
-
-Martin rode with the regiment of horse commanded by Lord Caernarvon,
-as a volunteer, and soon became a favourite with that nobleman, whose
-excellent example in the office and duty of a soldier it was his pride
-to imitate. Moreover, this nobleman took delight in the society of the
-youth, because he himself had, before the war, been a great traveller,
-and an exact observer of the manners of many nations; not only
-visiting the south of Europe, but also Turkey and other countries of
-the East. Therefore, in as far as any alleviating happiness could
-consist with a campaign life, in a warfare carried on in the heart of
-one's own country, Martin was fortunate.
-
-Nor is it to be denied that genius has so many sources of enjoyment
-that in no condition can they be all dried up. To love the beautiful
-in all things is a high privilege; and feelings of rapture, as of awe,
-may be extracted from objects which only impress ordinary minds with
-pain or terror. If the calm lake, the green valley, and the pale
-primrose soothe us with sweet pictures of peace, the stormy ocean, the
-rifted rock, and the blasted tree, can and do stir us with a deep
-delight. Thus war has its glories and its solemnities for the eye and
-for the ear of man; and his heart may throb with emotions the most
-sublime upon a battle-field, and at the wailing trumpets of a
-vanquished and a flying foe.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XVI.
-
- Lastly stoode warre in glitteryng armes yclad,
- With visage grym, sterne lookes, and blackely hewed;
- In his right hand a naked sworde he had,
- That to the hiltes was al with bloud embrewed.
- SACKVILLE.
-
-
-The zeal and fidelity of Francis Heywood, in that perplexity and
-trouble of the Earl of Essex which were caused by the desertion of
-Colonel Hurry at Thame, and by the information that he gave to Prince
-Rupert, were so conspicuous, and he rendered such gallant and eminent
-service in that unfortunate field of Chalgrave, in which Mr. Hampden
-fell, that he was promoted to a colonelcy of horse soon after.
-
-The army of Essex having been much weakened by the successful
-enterprises of Prince Rupert, and being also more wasted by sickness,
-the Earl moved from Thame towards London, and quartered his troops
-about St. Alban's. Here Francis Heywood met with a very unfortunate
-adventure, which ended by his taking away the life of a brother
-officer; but the origin of the dispute and the fatal issue of it were
-such, that, even by a regular trial before a court of Puritan
-officers, he was most honourably acquitted.
-
-It chanced that as he was passing before the abbey of St. Alban's a
-little after dusk, he saw a drunken and noisy procession of the rabble
-coming along by torchlight. He stopped to see what they were doing:
-when they approached close to him, his anger and disgust were strongly
-excited by observing a lewd wretch in a cope trailing in the dirt,
-with a service book in his hand, singing, as in scorn, the solemn
-words of the church litany, amid the derision and jeers of the base
-fellows around him. Francis darted through the crowd and dealt the
-impious knave a blow which laid him dumb in the gutter; and calling a
-corporal who came in sight had him picked up and confined in a
-guard-house for the night. It turned out that this rogue was a common
-soldier in the regiment of Sir Roger Zouch, to whom such a
-representation of the circumstance was made that he took up the matter
-in great wrath, and sent Colonel Heywood a challenge. Francis
-immediately sought an interview with Sir Roger, to explain and justify
-what he had done. This furious fanatic not only defended and lauded
-the crime of his soldier, but, in a paroxysm of rage, deaf to every
-argument, rushed on Francis sword in hand; while the latter kept
-retreating and expostulating, till at length he was obliged to draw
-his sword in self-defence.
-
-A home-thrust now soon put a period to Sir Roger's life. Fortunately,
-this contest took place in the open space near the Abbey, and in the
-presence of many respectable witnesses both of the army and the town;
-and these cheerfully came forward and deposed to the necessity under
-which Francis was laid to defend himself.
-
-This circumstance made a great impression upon Francis; for though he
-stood acquitted in his conscience of all blame, and though he felt
-opposed in heart to such a mischievous spirit as that evidenced by Sir
-Roger, yet it forced him to consider that it was against such men that
-the sincere churchmen in the royal ranks were honourably fighting.
-However, he did not slack in his zeal for that cause for which Hampden
-had already poured out his life-blood; but he confined himself
-strictly to the duties of his particular command, and, both by example
-and authority, enforced good discipline and quiet conduct among his
-own troopers. He occasionally saw Cuthbert, but had now little comfort
-or satisfaction from those interviews. In gloom and in sadness of
-spirits that unhappy man wore away his days: his temper had become
-embittered and stern; and he was ever unquiet and restless except in
-the field, where he delighted to expose himself to every chance of
-death. It has, however, been often observed, that that black tyrant,
-insatiate as he is, delights to pass by the wretched, and transfix the
-bosoms of those whose hopes are in the full blossom of promise. Of
-this war is ever furnishing examples.
-
-In a temper of mind very different from that of his brother did
-Martin Noble make his campaign under Caernarvon.
-
-About the middle of June, Prince Maurice and the Marquis of Hertford,
-with sixteen hundred horse, one thousand foot, and eight field pieces,
-marched to Chard, a fair town of Somersetshire, on the borders of
-Devon, and effected their junction with the Cornish army, which
-consisted of three thousand foot, eight hundred horse, and four guns.
-This force soon possessed itself of Taunton, Bridgewater, and Dunstar
-Castle, without bloodshed. Not long after they marched upon Wells,
-where a respectable body had been drawn together by the parliament
-officers, Popham, Strode, and others: these retired from the city as
-the Marquis of Hertford advanced against it, and drew up on the top of
-Mendip Hill; and, waiting till the royal horse came on the same level
-in front of them, pursued their retreat leisurely, and in good order.
-The King's horse followed them, till they having to pass through a
-lane, near Chewton, were compelled, before their entrance into that
-defile, to leave their reserve fronted. The Earl of Caernarvon, who
-was always in the van, and always charged home, perceiving this
-advantage, rode hard at them, entered the lane with them, routed the
-whole body of their horse, and did good execution on them for two
-miles. But the enemy being reinforced by a fresh strong party of horse
-and dragoons, which, by the cover of a hedge, had joined them without
-being discovered, rallied, charged, and pressed Caernarvon in his
-turn, who was now forced to retire through the village and lane, and
-fall back on the Prince's party, drawn up on the open heath.
-
-Though somewhat broken and chafed, his men rallied stoutly on the
-Prince's flank; and when the enemy came up, though now very superior
-in numbers, the Prince and the Earl, seeing the danger of a retreat
-over those open hills, took the brave resolution to charge them. This
-was so vigorously done by the Prince, and so briskly seconded by
-Caernarvon, that after a close and fierce melee, sword to sword, the
-enemy were driven from the field, and chased by Caernarvon again till
-set of sun.
-
-This stirring and brilliant action of cavalry was Martin's first
-trial; and he acquitted himself in a manner so spirited and valiant,
-as won the warm praise of his gallant patron. He received two hurts,
-and was beaten off his horse; but as the army rested many days at
-Wells, and his wounds were only sword-cuts, he was sufficiently
-recovered to be on horseback again before they marched forward. In the
-battle of Lansdown, on July the 5th, he gained fresh reputation; for,
-having been twice engaged in the early part of that action against the
-famous regiment of cuirassiers, by which the King's horse were so
-amazed and staggered, and having shown the most invincible courage in
-trying to restore confidence to the routed troopers, he was, in the
-last advance against the hill, dismounted, his horse being killed
-under him. He was himself at the moment immediately on the right of
-those brave Cornish pikes which Sir Bevil Greenvil was leading up. He,
-catching up the pike of a fallen soldier, fell into those ranks, by
-whom the summit of the hill was soon won, and maintained throughout
-that bloody evening. Night fell upon both hosts, tired, battered, and
-contented to stand still; but before morning Sir William Waller
-withdrew to Bath, and the field of battle, the dead, and other ensigns
-of victory, were left with the King's army.
-
-His next service was at Roundway Down, where Sir William Waller
-suffered so great a defeat as very much clouded his affairs and all
-his previous reputation. Early in August, Francis was with that army
-which sat down before Gloucester; but, as the horse are for the most
-part only lookers on at the operations of a siege, he here enjoyed a
-certain interval of leisure. At this period he contracted a close
-intimacy with young Arthur Heywood, and he had a strange pleasure in
-conversing with the youth about his brother Cuthbert. They two would
-ride together the circuit of the leaguer, observing the batteries and
-approaches, and watching the play of the cannon both on and from the
-city; or they would choose unfrequented roads, which led into valleys
-near where there was no sight of camp or town; or in tent or camp hut
-they would sit together for hours, and often as they did so, the name
-of Cuthbert came up, and the one recollected the brother of his
-boyhood, and the other, the kind and gentle tutor, who first woke him
-to good thoughts,--and it became a cement of love between them; and
-while they deplored the course which Cuthbert had taken, their hearts
-were full of affection for him. Nor was any one more forward to do
-justice to his many excellent qualities than Sir Charles Lambert, when
-he chanced, as he often did, to make one of the tent party.
-
-Sir Charles was, as Arthur told Martin, a changed man from the period
-when his brother first knew him; and no one that had seen the grave,
-the manly, and thoughtful deportment of Sir Charles, the loyal and
-devoted officer, could have deemed it possible that he was the same
-person who had once invited and deserved their suspicions and their
-contempt.
-
-However, after lying nearly a month before Gloucester, and making
-little progress in the siege, the King was roused by the news that
-Essex was advancing to relieve the city. A last effort was decided on:
-the town had been most ably defended by Colonel Massey, the governor,
-who had made many bold and effective sallies, and interrupted the
-labours of the siege with good success; but the garrison was now
-reduced to great extremities for want of ammunition; therefore the
-King battered the town heavily for thirty-six hours, made a fair
-breach, and tried an open assault. The attempt was boldly made, and
-the breach mounted, but, after a bloody conflict, the storming-party
-was beaten back again. In this last affair Martin and Arthur were
-looking on at the assault, when a cannon bullet struck and shattered
-the leg of the latter, so that he was forced to have his limb
-amputated considerably above the knee,--a most painful operation,
-which he bore with a cheerful courage and composure. Thus did the
-service of this noble boy suddenly end, he being made a cripple for
-life, and no longer able to share the honourable toils of warfare or
-to partake ever again of the pleasant and joyous exercises natural to
-his age. The helplessness incident to the last season of life fell
-suddenly upon him, and made him prematurely old. Martin parted from
-him as he lay in hospital with tears in his eyes, and they never met
-again: however, Arthur was removed with other wounded to a place of
-safety, and when sufficiently recovered was sent to Oxford. Meantime
-the siege of Gloucester was raised; and, when Essex marched into that
-joyful town, he found them reduced to a single barrel of powder, and
-other provisions nearly exhausted. He stayed three days in the place,
-after which his care was to retire again to London without
-encountering the King's army. He made a night march from Tewksbury to
-Cirencester, where he surprised two regiments of the royal horse, and
-found a great quantity of the King's provisions; hence he made his
-route through the deep and enclosed country of North Wiltshire direct
-for London. However, Prince Rupert, with five thousand horse, by
-incredible diligence and forced marches, got between London and the
-enemy, and detained him till the King, with his main army, came to
-Newbury.
-
-The forces of Essex being now intercepted in their movement, it was
-not the interest or wish of the King to engage in a battle, except on
-his own terms and with choice of his own ground; but when, on the
-morning of the 18th of September, the hot spirits in the royal army
-saw the host of Essex drawn up in fair battle array within a mile, and
-when they heard the beating of their drums and the breath of defiance
-from their trumpets, they would not be contained, and some young
-leaders of strong parties got so far engaged that the King was
-compelled to fight a general action.
-
-Never did hostile forces meet with greater fierceness and resolution.
-The field was obstinately disputed throughout the day, and night alone
-parted the combatants. The foot of Essex had maintained their ground
-with admirable steadiness; and the bold charges of Rupert and the
-royal horse could make no impression on their stand of pikes. One of
-the regiments most frequently exposed to these desperate assaults was
-that of Maxwell, where Cuthbert commanded a company of pikes. This
-corps, after having endured a storm of bullets from a body of the
-King's musketeers in the last attack of the royal forces before
-sunset, was come upon suddenly, and at a disadvantage, by some
-squadrons of horse, and broken in upon. Nearly half their numbers were
-cut to pieces; but the rest, being well rallied, resisted, and slew
-many of the horsemen that were intermixed with them, and finally drove
-off the enemy.
-
-No one exerted himself in this most critical juncture with more energy
-and sternness than Maxwell; and Cuthbert showed in that difficulty a
-noble example to his men. His sword had already been plunged into the
-horse of an assailant with such force, that by the action of the
-wounded beast he had been disarmed, and another horseman was rushing
-towards him. He discharged his pistol swiftly, yet with an aim so
-true, that the young Cavalier was borne past him reeling in the
-saddle, and thrown violently to the earth.
-
-When this short and confused conflict between the pikemen and the
-royal horse was over, and there came a breathing time, and a pause in
-the fighting at that spot, Cuthbert, who marked where his last
-opponent fell, left his ranks, and hastened (it was not many yards
-away) to his succour. The young man, bareheaded and pale, lay upon the
-ground: his bright hair was dabbled with blood--not his own, but that
-of other combatants who had been slain near him: a pistol shot had
-reached his gallant heart; the courageous and gentle spirit had fled.
-
-"Nothing can be done for him," said Randal, for whom Cuthbert had
-called,--"come away."
-
-"Surely, surely there can," answered Cuthbert, in an agony, strange
-and unaccountable even to himself.
-
-"Nothing, I tell you: he is dead."
-
-"Well, then, I will take care of the body, and bury it."
-
-"Let the dead bury the dead," said Randal.
-
-"The battle is not over yet. Hark! there is the drum beating to fall
-in."
-
-Cuthbert heard it, and the loud voice of Maxwell, and saw the men
-rushing to their arms. He hurried to his post; and there, as he stood,
-saw stragglers coming in, who stopped and stooped upon the very spot
-where the body of the youth lay, as if to rifle it. His regiment was
-at the same moment faced to the left, and moved a quarter of a mile
-off to new ground. Here they halted and stood at ease.
-
-Now came rumours how that great and good men had fallen on the King's
-side; that the gallant Caernarvon had been slain by the sword, and
-that a bullet had taken the life of the noble Falkland.
-
-The trumpets did seem to wail them, they sounded so desolate and
-mournful as the shades of evening came on. As soon as he could get
-away, Cuthbert again hurried to the place where the corpse of his own
-particular victim lay. He got a torch, and searched the body, if haply
-he might find a name: in the bosom next the heart there lay the
-miniature of a girl of calm pure beauty; from the features and the
-costume, it seemed that of an Italian. Cuthbert sighed, and continued
-his search for some paper that might give a name. At last, in the
-breast pocket of the doublet beneath his buff coat, he found a
-letter:--the address was "Martin Noble,"--the handwriting was that of
-his own father.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XVII.
-
- Lead us from hence; where we may leisurely
- Each one demand, and answer to his part
- Perform'd in this wide gap of time.
- _Winter's Tale._
-
-
-It is not necessary to the after-story of the persons in our domestic
-drama that the various fortunes of that unnatural war, which desolated
-England for so many years, should be further related.
-
-From the bloody field of Newbury, of which we have already spoken, to
-the close of that mighty and memorable contest which convulsed the
-whole kingdom, our tale pauses. The imagination of the reader must
-pass with us in haste across that afflicting season of violence and
-woe to consider the first-fruits of that harvest, the seed of which
-had been sown in the whirlwind of human passions, and had been watered
-by torrents of human blood.
-
-But some slight notices of what passed during this interval among our
-various characters--a faint outline of their doings, and of the
-positions which they occupied--may not be without some interest. From
-the period when we last mentioned him, the health of Sir Oliver
-declined: he grew infirm; and besides gout he had other complaints,
-which produced a morbid action in his system, and made him alternately
-gloomy and lethargic, or sensitive and irritable to excess. Any bad
-news, a disagreeable incident, a chance crossing of his will, made him
-angry and out of temper with every person and thing around him. All
-this Katharine bore with a prayerful composure of the spirit, and was
-often rewarded by subduing her unreasonable father into sincere and
-affectionate confessions of that divine mercy, which did in so many
-things comfort and succour them in this season of common adversity and
-universal suffering. But there were trials to which she was
-occasionally exposed that drove her away in agony of spirit, and with
-a silent step, to her closet, where she might weep alone.
-
-Sir Oliver had been informed, through the officious and mischievous
-agency of one of those busy old ladies who had forced their
-acquaintance on the family, first, that Francis Heywood had been in
-Oxford with Lord Say's horsemen, and, next, that he had had an
-interview on the bank of the river with Mistress Katharine. She
-contrived, moreover, in her relation of the story, under a pretence of
-feeling for the young people, and of its being so natural and so
-romantic, to insinuate that it was a prettily concerted meeting. It is
-not to be denied that she had some materials on which to build up the
-fabric of her falsehood: for she had seen Jane and Katharine walking
-in the meadow; she had seen Francis Heywood leap from the boat; and
-when he came forth from the avenue which concealed both the ladies as
-well as himself, and walked swiftly into the city, he had passed close
-under the window of her summer house.
-
-There is a dignity and there is an earnestness in a genuine spirit of
-truth which command belief and compel admiration. No sooner,
-therefore, did Sir Oliver first mention to Katharine what he had heard
-than she told him, with all plainness, in how sudden and unexpected a
-manner Francis and herself met. She told him in part what had passed
-between them, and excused herself for not telling him of the
-interview, by reminding him how very much the sight of her cousin's
-name in the newspaper had discomposed and excited him; and how, in his
-own judgment, it had exasperated the symptoms of his disease. By these
-explanations the old knight was at once satisfied and quieted. Her
-remonstrance with Francis put aside at the moment all suspicion. At
-her particular request, he promised that Francis and his politics
-should be an interdicted name and a forbidden subject. But this
-resolution was soon broken; for when he heard that Milverton House was
-burnt down, for a fortnight the name was constantly on his lips, and
-was always coupled with the most angry and contemptuous language, if
-not by maledictions of a more fearful nature.
-
-At such moments, a sense of his own impotent condition, which forbade
-him to join the camp, would press upon his mind, till it produced
-paroxysms of frantic rage. By these temptations a temper less heavenly
-than that of Katharine's would have been fretted into resistance and
-contention,--a faith less firm and exalted would have failed. But ever
-as the tempests of his mind subsided, Sir Oliver felt shame in her
-angelic presence. He could not indeed apprehend the high order of her
-mental force; but he could appreciate those solid principles of filial
-affection that enabled her to endure all things, to hope all things,
-and that replied to bitter words only by the kindest services, and by
-the most studious desires to content and cherish him. Through
-sickness, through pain, through greater reverses of fortune than they
-at first experienced,--under circumstances which compelled a great
-abridgement of all their ordinary comforts,--the daughter shone as if
-she had been some ministering spirit of love and patience, to whom a
-charge of peculiar difficulty had been assigned. Nor was this trial of
-her patience brief. It was not till the winter of 1647 that her
-chastised parent was removed from his scene of suffering and taken to
-his rest. The last two months of his existence were, however, marked
-by a change of temper and conduct very affecting to all who witnessed
-it; and this proved a reward and consolation to Katharine herself
-beyond all expectation. Hope, indeed, had never forsaken her; for her
-hope was ever anchored beneath the mercy seat of that Redeemer who is
-mighty to save. The old knight became gentle, penitent,
-tearful:--listened with earnestness to the word of life--was much in
-meditation--became tender as a little child--was full of thanksgiving
-and gratitude to his Christian daughter, and expired in her arms in
-peace. His end was only marked by one painful circumstance,--a last
-weakness and prejudice, that clung to him even when the approach of
-death was manifest, and eternity in view. He declared that he died in
-true and perfect charity with all men, and with Francis and his father
-more especially; but he made a request to Katharine, that she would
-solemnly promise, under no change of circumstances whatever, to give
-her hand in marriage to her cousin Francis. He confessed to her that,
-two years before, he had intercepted a letter from him to her address;
-in which, though he did not suppose them to be responded to by her,
-his sentiments of love were set forth in plain and melancholy words.
-Katharine gave the promise required with a low firm voice, and
-received upon a pale and trembling cheek the cold kiss that thanked
-her.
-
-The Heywoods had remained in Oxford through both the sieges, and in
-that city Sir Oliver died. Arthur Heywood, feeling himself by the loss
-of his limb disabled for all future service in the field, had again
-entered at his college, and prepared himself by diligent and cheerful
-study for embracing the profession of the law, whenever the
-distracted kingdom should be once more in a state of repose. George
-Juxon had been for the most part in the field, having accompanied the
-army of the King as the volunteer chaplain of a regiment of horse; but
-in the winter of 1645 he made Jane Lambert his own by those sweet and
-sacred ties which the church sanctifies and records. Katharine stood
-by her at the altar with that pure and perfect joy which hath its only
-outward expression in grave and loving looks. For her comfort, Jane
-was still spared to her as a companion,--a consolation greatly needed,
-and most thankfully enjoyed; for her domestic trials were of that
-petty and painful nature, that do especially wear and weary the most
-generous spirits.
-
-The name of Francis did never reach her ear save through some public
-channel, and that being commonly a newspaper, printed for the
-Royalists, she did only gather that he had been present on some fields
-where there had been obstinate fighting and great loss of lives. The
-thought of his being slain was one painfully familiar to her in the
-still night when she lay awake and prayed for him. Then again came
-other news in the morning, and his name mentioned as one still riding
-at the head of squadrons, and present, it would seem, and among the
-foremost wherever swords were drawn, and service to be done.
-Afterwards, for months she might not hear his name:--if he was dead,
-she did not know it; if he was living, she did not know it; and all
-these silent anxieties most deeply wrought upon her suffering spirit.
-
-At the death of Sir Oliver, the King being now a captive, and the
-royal cause (which had never looked up since the fatal battle of
-Naseby) on all sides declining, Katharine consented, at the earnest
-entreaty of Jane, to accompany the Juxons to Cottesmore, in the county
-of Gloucester; near which place the venerable uncle of George had an
-estate and a private dwelling. It was her intention to wait patiently
-the full end of all troubles or commotions before she attempted to fix
-her future residence; and then, upon the settlement of her family
-affairs, to summon back to her that little orphan girl, just shown at
-the commencement of this story. That sweet child had been securely
-placed with the widow of a clergyman in one of the most secluded
-valleys of Derbyshire, where, safe even from the sounds of war, she
-had been reared in peace, and educated with religious care. This
-arrangement had been made by Mistress Alice before her death, from an
-apprehension that unquiet days were coming; and ample provision for
-the support of the child had been lodged in the hands of a secure
-agent in that county.
-
-It was the plan of Katharine, whenever she might again take possession
-of the Warwickshire estates, to build and endow a college for the
-widows of clergymen on the site of the ruined mansion of Milverton,
-and to pass the rest of her days in some quiet and suitable retreat
-near Kenilworth. But it is premature to speak of the time and manner
-of a retirement which was not to be realised till yet greater trials
-than those she had hitherto experienced should come.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XVIII.
-
- He nothing common did nor mean
- After that memorable scene;
- But with his keener eye
- The axe's edge did try:
- Nor call'd the gods, with vulgar spite,
- To vindicate his helpless right;
- But bow'd his comely head
- Down as upon a bed.
- MARVELL.
-
-
-From the hour of his brother's untimely death Cuthbert led a life of
-crazed care and religious melancholy. He retired to London, but he
-avoided all his former acquaintances. He lodged in an obscure alley,
-and wandered about during the day without any apparent aim or object,
-when not compelled to some slight exertion to provide bread for the
-passing day. His resource on these occasions was a Puritan printer, to
-whom his Cambridge tutor, now dead, had very favourably introduced him
-before the breaking out of the war, and who, from compassion to his
-troubled state of mind, gave him such small and easy employments as
-might not only contribute to his support but might avail to divert his
-melancholy, and to restore the strength of his shattered intellect. He
-was not, however, to be engaged in any undertaking which long confined
-him at home or to a house. He had become one of those rueful objects,
-of which a few may be found in all large cities, and in the fields and
-parks in their vicinity. They stray about at will; stand near the
-crowded pageant; and though they seem to look upon it earnestly, are
-perfectly unconscious whether it is a funereal procession or the lord
-mayor's show. They gaze fixedly at buildings and at persons; but the
-former are to them as clouds, and the latter as trees walking. From
-frequent and careless exposure to chilling rains, and from his long
-fasts and the scantiness and irregularity of his meals, his health had
-suffered seriously: he had a settled cough; and he was so emaciated
-and altered in the face that hardly any body would have recognised
-him. Moreover, the change in his appearance had extended to his
-dress, which was old, threadbare, and torn. Such was the melancholy
-figure that came into churches, and sat down upon the benches of the
-middle aisle, not conscious why he was avoided by the more decent
-poor, why none but some Lazarus full of sores would take a seat beside
-him. He hung as a blighted leaf upon the social tree,--a sad memento
-that man is born to trouble, and that sooner in sorrow, or later in
-death, all the leaves must fade.
-
-Upon that black day in the calendar of England's history, the 30th of
-January, 1648, when the last act in the tragic drama of the civil war
-was presented in public before an afflicted and indignant people,
-Cuthbert stood among the gloomy and anxious crowd which was gathered
-round the scaffold at Whitehall. Several regiments of horse and foot
-were posted near the place of execution, as much to keep the people
-from hearing their king's last words as to observe and control their
-temper. The mind of Cuthbert had been roused from its long lethargy by
-the various news and rumours connected with the trial of the King,
-which had been circulated within the last fortnight around him; and he
-came along with the multitude on this day, not believing that they
-would dare execute Charles, and that if it were attempted, a rescue
-would be effected. The day was piercing cold, and the keen wind
-searched through his threadbare cloak; and he leaned back against a
-wall, a pale shadow of misery, feeble and trembling. He knew not why
-he was there, or what he was to do, but when he had seen the strong
-populace hastening to Whitehall, he had followed a helpless expectant
-of some strange judgment or deliverance. His view of the place of
-execution was intercepted by the tall men who stood in front of him
-and by a trooper on horseback; and he remained still and silent, lost
-in thought and in confused prayers, till a movement and murmurs in the
-crowd awakened him to a consciousness of the dread scene which was
-going forward at a little distance.
-
-"That's his Majesty," said one: "how noble he looks."--"He's speaking
-now," said another.--"See how grand and straight he stands up, and
-how he looks them all in the face."--And from other voices came such
-remarks,--"See! the clergy is speaking to him."--"Who is that
-parson?"--"'Tis a bishop, man."--"Which?"--"Why honest old
-Juxon."--"Look! the King has got his doublet off. God help his blessed
-Majesty! O for a few thousand good men and true!"--"Nay, nay, he's
-saved. Look! they're putting on his cloak again! Thank God! thank
-God!"--But the voice that had uttered this hope was soon hushed, and
-there was a dread silence,--the people held their breath. Suddenly
-there arose a loud and universal wail. At the sight of the royal head
-held up dripping with blood in the hands of the executioner,
-lamentations, and groans, and tears, and wringing of hands, did make a
-wild mourning such as became a nation's remorseful woe. Cuthbert smote
-on his breast, and fell upon his knees, and lifted up his voice, and
-wept scalding tears, calling himself a murderer and an abetter of the
-King's death,--one that had, like Judas, sold his master, and that his
-end would be the same, and everlasting fire his portion. A knot of
-persons gathered about him; some of whom, as they heard his ravings,
-did half believe that he had been more particularly concerned in
-betraying the King, and looked upon him with horror, as on one
-suffering the just judgment of Heaven, while others pitied him, and
-thought him mad. But the troopers being now called upon to dismiss the
-crowd, two large bodies of horse moved up and down from King Street to
-Charing Cross, dispersing the folk that had gathered in the middle of
-the way, while a few single dragoons moved towards the various knots
-and groups, that still lingered near the walls and in corners, to
-drive them also away. One approached the small crowd which had
-collected around Cuthbert in his bewildered agonies; and, either
-really taking him for an impostor or for a designing person wanting to
-create a disturbance, came close and gave him a brutal blow with the
-flat of his sword, bidding him away to his own dunghill, and play his
-tricks with his fellow-beggars in Rosemary Lane. Upon this, a stout
-man near, who, from his knit bonnet and coarse grey coat, looked like
-a woodman or a warrener from the country, struck the sword out of the
-trooper's hand, and knocked him off his horse; and the mob would have
-had his life but for the prompt assistance of his comrades, a few of
-whom came up led by a sergeant, who, being a reasonable man that felt
-ashamed for the unsoldierly services of that sad morning, contented
-himself with releasing the soldier and advising the people to go
-quietly to their homes. The trooper had been so startled and stunned
-by the assault that he could not point out the person who struck him
-first, nor did the sergeant seize upon any one.
-
-The stout man who had resented the blow inflicted on poor Cuthbert
-raised him up, and led him aside to a more private place, where, they
-two being alone together, he tried to make himself known, for he had
-already recognised the voice of Cuthbert; and his soul could, even on
-that day of public calamity, be filled with pity for this unhappy
-sufferer. It was George Juxon. Cuthbert, already in a kind of stupor,
-produced by great mental excitement on a weak and exhausted frame, and
-the action of the severe cold of the day upon his naked head, looked
-vacantly at him, with incredulity and alarm; and Juxon saw that he was
-not only very ill but that his senses were wandering. He immediately
-took him home to his own lodgings in a quiet street near St. Paul's
-Cathedral, and procured the help of a skilful and humane physician.
-
-It was a week before Cuthbert was sufficiently restored to strength
-either of body or mind to recognise his protector; but when he did so,
-the face and voice of Juxon appeared to give him the power of
-recovering his scattered memories and unravelling his tangled
-thoughts. Nor were the features of Juxon the only ones he was enabled
-to recall among those kind preservers with whom he had been thus
-mercifully thrown at so critical a moment of his life.
-
-Jane Lambert, now the wife of Juxon, was one of those who ministered
-to him in his sickness; and the countenance of Katharine Heywood, no
-longer radiant with youth, and health, and hope, but still majestic
-and merciful as those of guardian angels, shone upon him with a mild
-and Christian pity. They all viewed Cuthbert as an erring child of a
-heavenly Father brought back to him by affliction; and they felt that
-to minister to his sorrows and his need, and to lead him gently to the
-green pastures and the still waters of Christ's flock, was a sacred
-duty, and a sweet privilege.
-
-The circumstances of those around him were sufficiently easy,
-considering the times, to enable them to place him again in his
-relative station as regarded temporal matters; and he learned with
-thanksgiving that his father and mother were safe and well, and had
-been so far assisted as to be comparatively comfortable in the small
-cottage in which they dwelt.
-
-But it was long before Juxon prevailed with him to return to his
-father. At every mention of this duty he became silent and gloomy:
-from this trial he seemed to shrink with dejection and almost despair.
-His faith in the gracious promises of Scripture failed him,--and he
-thought his crimes of too black a dye for forgiveness. One evening,
-especially, a man coming before the parlour windows and crying certain
-relics for sale, offered with a loud hoarse voice,--"Most precious
-remains of his late sacred Majesty of pious memory, warranted genuine,
-and dipped in his own blood."
-
-"Here be two locks of hair, master, and three strips of a
-handkerchief, all bloody, as you see," said the knave, thrusting them
-across the rails towards the window where Mrs. Juxon and Cuthbert were
-sitting. At this sight the poor convalescent fainted, and suffered a
-relapse, which again disturbed his reason. But as the spring opened,
-his mind was restored to the vigour of his best days. He saw and
-embraced his privileges as a pardoned penitent, and he willingly
-prepared to return to his parents. It was plain, indeed, to himself as
-well as to Juxon, that his earthly pilgrimage could not be long, for
-consumption had set her deadly mark upon his cheek; and he was
-oppressed with a cough which he knew he must carry to the grave with
-him: but, grateful for the blessings of restored peace and hope, he
-took his last farewell of Juxon, and set forward on his journey home.
-
-He travelled down with a train of return pack horses to Bristol, and
-was five days upon the road. It was the middle of April, but the
-weather was cold, snowy, and ungenial;--as in some springs there is a
-brief season of summer heat, so in this there was that sharp and
-bitter check known among shepherds and countrymen by the name of the
-black thorn winter.
-
-There was a heavy fall of snow on the very day that he rode from
-Bristol to Glastonbury; and when he alighted at the small hostel where
-he was to leave his hired horse, all was dull, still and silent. He
-had passed through empty streets, and he came to an empty yard, where
-it was long before a lame hostler, with a sack over his shoulder, and
-a pair of wooden shoes on his feet, came out to take his hack. It was
-long, again, before he could procure any one to guide him to Priest
-Hill Cottage;--at last an urchin with a blue face, and his hands in
-his breeches pockets, was driven out, by a scolding landlady, to show
-Cuthbert on his way. The north-east wind blew keenly, and drove the
-snow into his face and neck as he followed the awkward and floundering
-steps of the stupid and unwilling boy: the distance seemed long; and
-when they stopped before the wicket of the small cottage, it had a
-most poor and desolate appearance.
-
-Cuthbert paid and dismissed his guide; and now he was alone on the
-threshold of that father, whose bosom he had pierced through with many
-sorrows; he was soon to meet the mother on whose breasts himself and
-Martin had both hanged in the innocent days of infancy. He had one
-secret in his bosom, which it would be his duty to keep from those
-parents--that they might not be grieved above measure in their
-declining years. He was only come for their pardon and their blessing
-before he died; but he could not open the wicket and go in. In silent
-agony he raised his eyes to the God of heaven, to implore strength for
-that solemn meeting. Then came the tempter, and showed him Martin in
-boyhood, with sunny curls, and an arm about his neck, running with
-him down the green slope of the garden to the arbour where their
-father and mother sat--and then a change came--and he saw the pale
-corpse, and the bright hair dabbled with blood--and frowning faces
-looked out on him from the black and laden sky. He felt chill as death
-and very giddy, and then came a merciful swoon.
-
-What hands were these chafing him as he awoke to consciousness, lying
-on warm blankets before a fire?--his mother's. What man was this upon
-his knees, with earnest and moist eyes, that was giving him a cordial
-with a gentle care?--it was his father: the wanderer was at home
-again. Words may not tell his happiness; earth has no language to
-express it: there, near the throne of mercy, to which his grateful
-heart throbbed up its thanksgiving, there it was intelligible; there
-good angels heard it, and struck their golden harps to hymns of joy.
-
-There was not in broad England a fireside more sweetly blessed with
-the spirit of peace and love than that by which old Noble and his wife
-and their child Cuthbert sat now for many weeks in quiet company. Not
-a single look of upbraiding even from old Peter shaded one hour of
-Cuthbert's life, from the moment when he was brought in from the
-wicket in the arms of his father and of that faithful old servant.
-Though quaint, and rough in manner, the man was true and tender at
-heart. It was enough for him that Master Cuthbert was come home again;
-and when he saw his hollow cheeks, and listened to his churchyard
-cough, all the same feelings which he had once had for him during a
-dangerous sickness of his childhood returned, and he was as gentle and
-kind in all he had to do for him as a nurse; but this was little,--for
-a mother was ever at his side: by her hands his pillow was smoothed,
-by her his back was propped, and his chair placed nearer to the fire;
-while his father sought to share in all these services, and read to
-him, and prayed with him, and communed with him through long and
-precious hours about their common faith, their common hope, and that
-future and abiding world, where they should dwell as pardoned and
-perfected spirits, in sinless felicity, and in the pure service of
-praise and love for ever.
-
-They all sat together one afternoon, about the close of May, when it
-was so warm that even the invalid had his chair moved out of doors for
-half an hour, and sat well wrapped up, to look at the flowers and the
-bee-hive. Cuthbert was silent, but a tear stole down his cheek; and
-turning suddenly to his father, he asked, "Did you see any thing?"
-
-"Nothing," replied Noble, calmly.
-
-"It was a vision then; the mere creature of my own brain: but it was
-very beautiful. I thought I saw our dear departed Martin."
-
-"That is not surprising, Cuthbert, we have talked together so much
-about him lately, and you think of him, I know, a great deal; I myself
-often in my fancy see the dear boy, and probably shall continue to do
-so as long as I live."
-
-"Yes, that is the natural way to account for it; but yet I have never
-before pictured him to my mind as I saw him just now. He stood in
-shining raiment, by the bank of a river that seemed to flow between
-us, and beckoned me to come over; and behind him I saw a field of
-light, and far off, a city that was bright as alabaster.
-
-"Father, I have one last request to make--I do not think that I shall
-be much longer with you--read me the fourteenth chapter of St. John
-now: there my hope as a Christian was first clearly revealed to me;
-there I first cast anchor. O that I had never put out into the stormy
-sea of controversy! But it is all well--it is all over now. By the
-Divine alchemy good hath been drawn out of evil.
-
- "'O Father of eternal life, and all
- Created glories under thee!
- Resume thy spirit from this world of thrall
- Into true liberty.'"
-
-"You are not, dear Cuthbert, impatient, I hope? We must all wait God's
-time."
-
-"I hope not; but it is better to depart."
-
-He now listened with the most devout and prayerful attention as his
-father read to him; but before the chapter was finished, his head
-suddenly sunk upon his bosom, and his spirit departed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XIX.
-
- The extreme peril of the case,
- The peace of England, and our person's safety,
- Enforced us to this execution.
- _King Richard III._
-
-
-Among the petitioners who stood waiting for an audience of the Lord
-Protector in the guard hall at Hampton Court, at that anxious period
-which followed the many arrests and trials of persons implicated in
-the conspiracy against his government, in the spring of 1655, was a
-lady in deep mourning, who stood alone in the window niche of that
-crowded apartment, and gazed upon the sunny garden before her with an
-air of settled melancholy.
-
-It was a May morning, the fourth day of that month. Notwithstanding
-that the air of every thing about the palace was solemn and grave, yet
-the appearance of his Highness's life guards was very stately and
-imposing. The hum of their voices, and of those of the various
-officials who passed to and fro to the door of the presence-chamber,
-though not loud, was yet audible and confident; while the little
-conversation on which the various groups of petitioners ventured was
-carried on in suppressed tones, or low and anxious whispers.
-
-For three hours the lady remained in the same place, and kept her face
-averted from the busy hall, and fixed upon the trees without. At last
-there was a sudden stir and bustle, and when she turned round, she saw
-the crowd going forth at the outer door; and an usher of the court
-gave notice in a loud voice, that his Highness the Lord Protector
-would not hear any further suits that day.
-
-She moved instantly towards the door of the presence-chamber.
-
-"By your leave, gentlemen,--let me pass: my humble suit will not
-detain his Highness a moment; and to-morrow will not----"
-
-"I understand you, lady," said a grey-haired officer, with a manly
-compassion; "but his Highness has passed into his inner
-presence-chamber, and is engaged with the great officers of state. He
-will not allow any one to approach him now; and he does not use to see
-any private petitioners after. No one dare present himself at the door
-of that chamber now; and we may not suffer you to pass."
-
-"Well, sir; but I will wait till the council is over, and then,
-perhaps, he will admit me. To-morrow will be too late," she added, and
-turned away her head.
-
-"Certainly, lady, you may remain awhile, till the council comes forth;
-and he never consults long with them; but if your suit touches any of
-the poor gentlemen about to suffer for the late treason, I fear there
-is no hope of your success. He hath refused many well-supported
-memorials for some who were but slightly connected with the offence,
-and whose friends have great personal influence with himself. Indeed,
-he cannot pardon them, with safety to his government."
-
-"It is not for a pardon that I come, sir, it is only for leave to part
-with a dear relative, who is sentenced to die as to-morrow; and I am
-denied admission to him, without I bring an authority from the Lord
-Protector himself."
-
-"In as far as I may serve you, lady, in this matter, I will surely do
-it." So saying, he crossed to a gentleman who sat at a table in the
-outer presence-chamber, the door of which was standing open, and
-conferred with him, giving the paper, with the prayer of her petition,
-into his hands. He returned, saying, that the secretary would present
-it as soon as the council broke up, and then placed a chair for her in
-the window near. In less than half an hour, the great officers of the
-council came out, and crossed the hall--the guards standing to their
-halberds. The lady rose, as they passed, out of respect to their
-offices; and they, with grave bows, acknowledged that courtesy--not
-aware, perhaps, that she was only a trembling suitor for their
-master's "Yes." But this was not given, as a matter of course, when
-the secretary asked it. The Protector questioned him closely
-concerning the aspect and manner of the lady, and ended by commanding
-her into his presence.
-
-She was ushered into the inner presence-chamber, the door closed
-behind her, and she found herself alone before Cromwell. He stood on
-the far side of a table, with one hand resting upon it, and her
-memorial in the other. The table was covered with papers, and directly
-near him was an ancient desk of ebony, with an hour-glass by the side
-of it, and three or four books, one of which was a Bible. He was
-dressed in a suit of black, and his costume would have been plainer
-than any about the court but for the extreme richness of his Flemish
-lace collar and cuffs; but these were cut after a plain square
-fashion, and not in the Vandyke pattern of Charles's reign. He avoided
-noticing her obeisance, for she did not kneel; and, after a
-considerable pause, he raised his eyes slowly, and fixed them upon her
-with a penetrating and a severe expression. It was a trying moment for
-Katharine Heywood,--for she was that lady; but she had been silently
-lifting up her heart to God, and she returned his look with dignity
-and composure. She could not but be impressed with awe in the presence
-of one so powerful; and there was nothing in his cloudy and grave
-deportment calculated to relieve that feeling. At last he addressed
-her:--"Thou comest to us on the matter of this poor and deluded man,
-who hath fallen into the snares of Satan, and hath attempted to fight
-against the Lord. It is vain to petition us in this matter: we are to
-this unhappy and distracted kingdom in the place of the angel of the
-Lord; and we must not bear the sword in vain. As we are man, in so far
-we are weak, poor, foolish, frail, blind, unstable, like unto the
-light vane that turneth with every breath of wind; but, in that we are
-the angel of this people, chosen of the Lord, set up in the place of
-judgment, our wisdom and strength, our counsels and actions, are from
-above, and we are strong, rich, wise, indestructible, discerning all
-things; steady, fixed, constant in our purposes; immovable as a great
-rock, that smileth at the madness of those waves that dash around
-it.--Do not interrupt me, woman. I know what thou wouldest say: I can
-tell thy thoughts afar off, and see tears before they come to the
-eyelids. I must not pity. He that hath covered my head in battle
-appointeth the doom of this troubler of Israel. His is the sceptre,
-and the sword is his. I am but the poor unworthy instrument by whom
-they are borne. I am no more but a poor Jack of the clock-house, and
-strike the stroke of righteous vengeance, even as that automatous toy
-striketh on the bell, being moved by the organs and machinery of the
-skilful constructor or contriver thereof. Thou understandest me? I
-like to speak plain, that my poor people may see what a very worm of
-earth is every child of Adam; and how little store I set by all the
-baubles and gewgaws of power and state. It is known how a whole nation
-did weary my spirit with petitions to take upon me this grave and
-weighty office, which I would gladly have foregone, if that I might
-have declined the cross without sin. But such peace was not for me."
-During this strange address, Cromwell looked alternately at the paper
-in his hand and at Katharine Heywood; dropping his eyes on the former,
-and then suddenly raising them again, as if to catch some expression
-of her countenance, which she would not willingly wear while his eyes
-rested on her: but there was about her a majesty sad and unmoved; the
-seriousness of her displeasure was grave; and she was fortifying
-herself by mental prayer. The Protector perceiving this, abruptly and
-without a pause, changed his manner and tone:--"You are the wife of
-the condemned?"
-
-"Not so, my Lord, I am his cousin."
-
-"What is your name?"
-
-"Katharine Heywood, Sir: it is written on the petition."
-
-"What Heywoods?"
-
-"Those of Warwickshire."
-
-"Ha! Malignants--Malignants:--Sir Oliver was one of them: a staunch
-slave of that foolish and misguided man, Charles Stuart."
-
-"My father, sir, was a faithful subject of King Charles."
-
-"And you, woman----"
-
-"I obey the laws. By my sex and by my sorrows I have been taught
-thankfulness for any government that brings peace."
-
-"Out of thine own mouth is thy rebel cousin condemned. How came it
-that all his relations were not instantly arrested? But thus it is.
-Thus am I served by indolent and purblind knaves--the serpent and the
-woman;--thus it ever was, and will be, the boldest treasons are ever
-hatched by women. Where dost thou live?"
-
-"At Cottesmore, in Gloucestershire."
-
-"How long have you dwelt there, and with whom?"
-
-"Since the death of my father, I have lived in the family of an
-ejected minister, named Juxon, a nephew of the bishop."
-
-Cromwell bit his nether lip, and passed his hand quickly across his
-brow.
-
-"I did not think that bluff old man was a plotter. They told me that
-he was turned hunter again; but it is me that they would hunt. My soul
-is as a partridge on the mountains: they hunt for the precious
-life;--but," he added (recovering the tone which a gloomy and passing
-emotion had discomposed), "it is the Lord: it is he that hath called
-me. I am his servant, and no weapon formed against me can prosper.
-Who are these that would disturb a peace which the Lord giveth, and
-kindle again the fires of a civil war which I have been commanded to
-extinguish? and so thou livest near this merry old hunter that would
-have my life?"
-
-"My Lord, it is not so: the bishop meddleth not with any public
-affairs, and I have never seen him smile since the sad end of his
-royal master. No, sir, he doth only hunt for health and diversion of
-his mind, which is ever occupied at home in dull cares and grave
-studies."
-
-"That soundeth true of him. I do remember that he was accounted
-honest; and that, from his youth, he had a body comely and quick--apt
-for that manly sport;--but still, 'The heart is deceitful above all
-things, and desperately wicked: who may know it?'--How long is it
-since thy cousin was at Cottesmore?"
-
-"He was never there."
-
-"Is this true?"
-
-"I would be sorry to utter any thing which might, by possibility, be
-proved mistaken; but, to my knowledge, he was never there."
-
-"And how long, then, is it since you have seen him?"
-
-"It is many years since I have seen him; nor for these two years have
-I even heard of him."
-
-"He was an officer of the Parliament?"
-
-"He was, sir; and was made a colonel of horse, in the second year of
-those wars."
-
-"I remember it. Ere this, he might have written general, and baronet
-to boot; but he was hot, and wrong-headed."
-
-"'Tis better as it is: his heart is right,--and he hath less to answer
-for."
-
-The eyes of Cromwell rested upon the countenance of the majestic
-Katharine with severity, and with a surprize that seemed to ask the
-meaning of words so strange and cold. But the tone in which they were
-uttered, and the sudden mournfulness and abstraction of her gaze, told
-him that emotions, both strong and tender, were working in her bosom.
-
-"And your prayer, lady, is that you may be permitted to take leave of
-your cousin before his execution?"
-
-"That is my prayer."
-
-"It is not wise. I speak as to a Christian mind. Though none hath
-shown himself more bitterly my foe than this cousin of thine, yet he
-was no assassin. He was, I know, for a warlike rising: his obscure
-lodging was found full of arms; and though he lived as frugally as he
-that laboureth for a groat a-day, yet was a horse worth fifty pieces,
-and trained for the great saddle, found in the shed, behind the small
-house where he lived. I have shown him all the favour in my
-power:--the sentence and manner of his death are changed. His life is
-a forfeit to the weal of England. I am no man of blood, lady:--the
-signing of death-warrants is no joy to me; but one example on a
-scaffold may save the lives of thousands. Lady, your visit will only
-disturb his last moments. I have cared for his soul:--a godly minister
-doth see him; and I learn that he doth exercise himself as a dying man
-should. It seems that you have not seen him for many years:--he will
-not expect thee--does not think of thee:--cousinship is not so close a
-kindred. I cannot grant thy prayer."
-
-"My Lord, I am his nearest relative--his only relative now living in
-the land. We were together in our youth. I would not fail him in this
-hour. At such a time, to feel that he is not forsaken of all men must
-be a comfort to the spirit. Besides, he may have parting words for his
-distant father, and parting words are precious. Oh, grant my suit,
-your Highness! on my knees I humbly ask it--I implore it. Oh, grant my
-suit! I will not let you go till my poor prayer is answered."
-
-Katharine had approached, and fallen upon her knees, and in her hands
-she had clasped the skirt of his dark cloak.
-
-"Lady, control yourself: I have a human heart--but duties are too
-sacred to be foregone for tears. I cannot grant your prayer."
-
-"Why not, my Lord? Oh, why this strict and stern refusal? Oh, deign to
-tell me what makes you thus cruelly dismiss me?"
-
-"It were to commit evil against thy cousin's soul, and to defeat the
-ends of public justice; I can tell by thy lofty eyes thou wilt carry
-him the means of death."
-
-Katharine rose from her low posture with a look of reproof to the
-suspicious usurper at once dignified and solemn.
-
-"Francis Heywood, my Lord, is of a nobler spirit than to tarnish his
-brave life by an end so mean, and hath too holy a trust in his
-Redeemer's mercy to shrink from his appointed trial. But were he
-other, and I found him so, and with a poison cup at his lips, this
-friendly hand should dash it from them."
-
-"You speak of what you know not: the most valiant heart that ever beat
-might yet shrink from the shame and dishonours of the scaffold."
-
-"Shame and dishonours! Where are they? 'Tis not the place or manner of
-a death can make them; besides, the scaffold hath now become a dying
-place of kings, and meaner men may hold themselves ennobled by
-suffering like end. I promise by all my love towards my gallant
-cousin, by all my truth, and all my hopes of heaven, to hold no word
-of conference with him on any matters save our private love as
-cousins, and our common faith as Christians."
-
-Just at this moment a door leading to the wing which Cromwell
-inhabited slowly opened, and a lady, with a gracious but most pensive
-face entered a little way and gently called him. He turned: the
-gloominess which had gathered over his brow at Katharine's last speech
-was dissipated at the sound of her soft voice: he went to her, but
-before Katharine could address an appeal to her she had left the
-chamber; and Cromwell, returning to the table, took a pen, and wrote
-on the back of her petition an order for her admission to the Tower,
-and to the prison of Francis Heywood; then, with a grave and not an
-unkind look, he put it into her hand.
-
-She glanced at the writing:--"Add another word, my good Lord,--the
-body:--Oh, grant me that! When the bloody axe hath done its work, let
-the body be my care:--we grew together in our youth,--I would not have
-his precious remains buried by executioners." Cromwell took back the
-paper, and, without uttering a word, wrote the permission.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XX.
-
- Nor death, nor sleep, nor any dismall shade
- Of low, contracting life, she then doth fear;
- No troubled thoughts her settled mind invade:
- The immortal root of life she seeth clear,
- Wisheth she ever were engrafted here.
- HENRY MORE.
-
-
-It had been arranged between Katharine and her ever-constant friends,
-the Juxons, who had accompanied her from London on this melancholy
-occasion, that she should go to the palace alone, while they awaited
-her return on the bank of the river. They had come from Westminster by
-water in the morning; and, in the event of her petition being attended
-with success, were to go back in the same manner direct to the Tower.
-
-They had been provided with a swift four-oared boat, well manned,
-hired for the day; and while Katharine was in the palace, Jane and her
-husband sat under the trees not fifty yards from the river, and in
-sight of the boat. The men had been cautioned against drinking or
-straying, and having shown all civility and attention, rested idly on
-the bank, to all seeming in contented obedience. But whether their
-patience had been exhausted, or the mournfulness of the party was
-displeasing to them, or they felt bribed by the chances of feasting
-and merriment with some party of pleasure, just before Katharine came
-down to the river, they suddenly took boat and rowed swiftly away,
-unheeding the loud and vain remonstrance of Juxon.
-
-By this petty perplexity she was for some time delayed. It was long
-before any conveyance could be found. Every horse--every
-carriage--every boat was out. It was one of those delicious days, when
-all the world, as by common consent, keeps holyday:--when sorrows,
-disappointments, wrongs, and sordid cares are left within doors; when
-grass is in its greenest beauty; when hedges are white and
-sweet-scented; when lovely blossoms cover all the orchards; and
-flowers are every where, and foliage is fresh and young, and birds
-are in full song.
-
-Absorbed, patient, unconscious, Katharine sat still, her hand within
-that of Jane. Juxon at last returned, rowing a small wherry himself,
-and placing them in it, made for the Tower with his best vigour. He
-said little; but as he passed the numberless boats, which were crowded
-with glad and joyous groups, here noisy with laughter, there vocal
-with sweet and innocent songs, the natural expression of youthful
-enjoyment, his heart bled for Katharine. But, in truth, all these
-sights and sounds gave her little disturbance--they were unheeded. Her
-spirit was preparing for a great trial, and was lying low before a
-hidden throne, imploring strength.
-
-As soon as they reached the neighbouring wharf, Juxon accompanied her
-to the gate of the Tower, promised to provide a lodging for the night
-in that neighbourhood, where they might all remain, and to return for
-her.
-
-And now this sad and gracious woman was left to pass through all the
-slow and cold formalities of admission alone. By no less than five
-different officers was her paper examined; and with some there was
-unkind delay, and with others, the rude questioning of an unfeeling
-curiosity. At last came the prison itself. Here the order from the
-lieutenant of the Tower having been duly recognised was obeyed in
-surly silence, by a stern-faced gaoler and his assistants. Heavy doors
-were slowly unlocked; and harsh and grating sounds, and the clank of
-keys, and the turning of strong bolts, made her blood chill.
-
-A lighter door, as of an apartment, was at length unlocked quietly,
-and she was ushered into a chamber, where her cousin sat at a table
-writing, with his back to the entrance. He did not, at first, turn
-round, fancying it was one of the gaolers. One grated window in his
-front, having a northern aspect, looked out upon a wall so close to
-it, that not even sunshine could be ever visible upon it. There were a
-few books upon his table:--here, too, there was an hour-glass. A
-little very ancient furniture, of oak, relieved the nakedness of the
-walls; and there was an aspect in the gloomy room which did properly
-belong to the prison of a state criminal of rank.
-
-The conductor of Katharine respectfully announced a visiter, and as
-immediately withdrew, and turned the lock. Francis rose:--he
-recognised Katharine at once, and with a mute embrace; then placed her
-with reverent tenderness in a seat, and went for a moment to the
-window, to recover his composure, after which he came and sat down
-beside her. Katharine was collected, and did not shed a single tear;
-but the first words she would have uttered died within her, and found
-no voice. Francis took her hand in a grave, calm manner:--
-
-"Remember," said he, "my dear, beloved Katharine, that this must be no
-melancholy parting. If any thing on earth could make me loth to quit
-it, most true it is, the thought that it must yet, for a brief season,
-be your dwelling-place, would make me cast a lingering look behind.
-But even that I have struggled with and conquered; nor does your
-presence shake my resolution. You must rejoice with me--not weep. It
-is a bad world, sweet cousin, and I have been among the worst upon it.
-But I have found the Great Deliverer; or, rather, have been found of
-him; and I do look beyond it now:--ay, Katharine, and have done so for
-many years. My spirit panteth to be gone; and well I know that thou
-art only kept on earth, as angels are, to minister God's mercy to the
-wretched. I knew that I should have thy charitable prayers, but did
-not think to see thee. How didst thou gain admission? It has been
-denied to some of my true friends. Besides, I thought thee far away,
-and wrote especially to the tyrant's private secretary to say that we
-had had no intercourse for years; and that you knew nothing of my
-actions, nor were you even acquainted with any of the Royalists
-engaged. I marvel much this favour hath been granted me, and humbly
-thank my God for this last blessing."
-
-The while he spoke she looked upon him steadily, and at every word did
-gather strength and peace.
-
-"How is it, Francis, that I feel no grief? How is it that I have
-stood face to face today with Cromwell without a falter of the tongue?
-How is it that I feel this nearness of thy death as if it were the
-appointment of some hallowed honour to wipe out all the noble errors
-of thy deceived heart, and write upon thy tomb their glorious
-confession? I did ever love you well, Francis--now better than ever.
-We are no longer young: I can read in your worn lineaments, as in a
-mirror, the lines of care, which Heaven has traced upon mine own. Your
-hair is grey, and war and woe have done their work upon you, and
-quenched the brightness of your eye of fire. Now you are dear to
-me;--now that you stand upon the verge of the invisible world,
-prepared, with prostrate heart, and with courageous faith, to enter
-in. I do not come to weep with thee:--your spirit kindles mine--I will
-rejoice."
-
-"There spoke the woman of my love--of my heart's choice. Katharine, I
-do own to thee, that when I did engage with this last band to strike a
-blow for freedom, and when discovery came, and chains and judgment
-followed, the thought that you would know my last true effort, would
-call it constant, honest, and drop a tear upon my grave, was a strong
-cordial to my wearied spirit, and did enable me to look at Cromwell in
-all his state and power with a bright defiance. I do marvel that he
-granted me this favour:--what said he?"
-
-"He did not do it readily. He spoke you fair and justly as a soldier;
-but only in one point he did you grievous wrong."
-
-"In what? I pray you name it."
-
-"He seemed to fear that I might bring you poison or a dagger--and so
-the scaffold lose a victim, and baser men an example for their
-terror."
-
-"And what said you in answer?"
-
-"I told him that you had a nobler scorn of death, and a holier fear of
-God, than so to sin against your soul.
-
-"He said that bravest men might dread the dishonours of the scaffold.
-
-"I told him these now were no dishonours--that it was a place
-ennobled by the blood of a royal martyr."
-
-"Dared you so much? How looked he?"
-
-"He loured and bent his eyes upon the ground. Just then his lady
-daughter entered. She whispered him, and, as I think, did plead for
-me--for, after she went forth, he wrote the permission instantly and
-more. The after-sentence is remitted:--then, when the axe hath done
-its cruel work, thou art mine, Francis--these hands shall fold thy
-grave-clothes."
-
-"Angels of heaven! are ye listening, are ye present? Yes, her steps
-are compassed round with holy guardians; her strength is more than
-mortal. Am I then helped in this my only trouble? this the last
-weakness of my shrinking nature? Have my prayers been heard, and have
-I been cared for as a timid child, by him who sitteth on the mercy
-seat? The tyrant told you truly, Katharine; for he, half hypocrite,
-half hero, is brave as his own sword:--yes--brave men may shrink from
-the rude shames done on their lifeless bodies. Remember, noble woman,
-that this last great charity doth take away the only bitterness that
-made my cup to taste of terror. Now my heart is light, and leaps
-within me, as if I felt its pinions struggling to be free. To-morrow
-is as a bridal-day to me."
-
-During this speech Katharine was so much overcome that big tears
-rolled down her marble cheeks, and she sought relief in prayer. Her
-eyes were raised to heaven in silence, and for a few brief minutes not
-a word was spoken by either; for Francis kneeled beside her, and his
-heart was lifted up in devout and still communion with hers. Being
-calmed and strengthened by this exercise of faith, Katharine was again
-able to address him.
-
-"Your hours are now precious, Francis; let me not dare to waste one
-golden moment of them: whatever may be your last desires and wishes,
-tell me, that they may be religiously observed."
-
-"They are not many: these papers, which one broken hour of the night
-will give me time enough to seal, I would have conveyed by a safe hand
-to New England; and perhaps one line from you might comfort my
-father's heart. These few books I would also have sent to him. This,
-Katharine, is my Psalter: take it; and till we meet in a better world
-use no other. Now hear me; and, for both our sakes, observe my last
-directions strictly. To-morrow morning, from the hour of eight to
-nine, keep closely to thy chamber, and shut thy door, and do not look
-abroad; but make this Psalter thy companion, and read therein the
-choicest words of praise and thanksgiving. Yes, praise and
-thanksgiving:--remember this. If that I am a pardoned sinner, and that
-I am pardoned a humble voice within me whispers, and visionary hands
-do point to him the blessed of the Father, who hung on the accursed
-tree, and died that we might live. If it be so, then to-morrow I shall
-cross Jordan at the narrowest point, and see that heavenly Canaan
-where happy spirits dwell: there we shall meet again. Hark! there be
-footsteps. One last embrace:--farewell."
-
-The door was unlocked, and a minister of a countenance most kind and
-holy did softly enter. He paused, irresolute at the sight of
-Katharine, and would have withdrawn till their interview might end.
-
-"Nay, my reverend and dear friend, come in, I prithee:--this is the
-lady of whom I spoke to you: my only relative in England. She hath
-come to do me the last charitable offices of earthly love. You are
-prepared, I see, to comfort and refresh me. My cousin will keep this
-feast with us."
-
-At these words the good man entered, bearing a salver and a cup, over
-which a white napkin was decently spread; and when the door had again
-been closed, and the clank of the keys at the gaoler's girdle had died
-away in the long passages, and the world and the world's sounds were
-all shut out, that dull and grated prison became a temple,--and they
-three in a mournful humility did make their meek confession, and in
-faith, hope, and charity, did feast upon a Saviour's love.
-
-
-
-
-CHAP. XXI.
-
- Dear beauteous death, the jewel of the just,
- Shining nowhere but in the dark:
- What mysteries do lie beyond thy dust,
- Could man outlook that mark!
- VAUGHAN.
-
-
-The good old vicar of Cheddar, and the aged partner of his trials and
-his consolations, survived the melancholy war which brought so much
-public misery on the nation, and so much private affliction on
-themselves, for many years. They continued to dwell in the same small
-cottage, in which, after the ejectment of Noble, they found their
-first refuge, unknowing and unknown. Their means were slender, but
-their wants were few; and they were rich in the graces of divine
-contentment.
-
-As with advancing years the strength necessary for manual labour
-declined, there came such little improvement of circumstances as
-enabled the worthy man to dispense with such exertion; and the toil of
-Peter was lightened by the assistance of a younger labourer. Noble
-himself walked regularly every Sunday of his life to attend divine
-service at a small village church distant from his cottage about a
-mile and a half; and old Peter and he sat together in the back seats
-under the gallery. His wife being feeble on her limbs, and dim of
-sight, remained at home; and it was Noble's pleasure to bring back to
-her the text of the sermon and the matter of the discourse.
-
-This church was served by a Puritan divine, who held a benefice five
-miles on the other side of it, and rode over to the hamlet for one
-full service in the afternoon. The lord of the manor was a nobleman
-who had been distinguished during the war; and who, after the close of
-hostilities in Ireland and the establishment of the protectorate, had
-retired to this mansion and estate, where he led a very secluded life,
-seldom stirring beyond his park wall. But he was a pious and
-charitable man, well spoken of by his servants, and by the poor of
-the village as a Christian master and a considerate landlord.
-
-There was something very fine and very affecting in the consideration,
-that an aged minister, ejected for conscience-sake, should sit every
-Sabbath as a humble and loving Christian listener, under the ministry
-of one young enough to be his son, and to find in him a helper of his
-joy.
-
-The young man knew not whom it was his privilege thus to strengthen
-and comfort; for there was a meekness and a shy reserve about Noble,
-and an enjoined silence to Peter, which repressed and baffled
-curiosity. They just knew so much as that one was a deprived
-clergyman; but whether he had been turned out for scandal, or what his
-story might be, none cared to discover more particularly;--he was an
-accustomed sight.
-
-It so chanced that, one Sunday, when the congregation was assembled at
-the usual hour the young minister was not forthcoming. All persons had
-taken their seats. The lord of the manor was in his pew; and, after a
-long pause, the singing was begun, in the expectation that perhaps he
-would yet arrive time enough to conduct the worship; but the psalm was
-concluded, and he did not appear.
-
-There was an evident disappointment on the countenances of all the
-people; and the grave nobleman, after leaning over his pew, and
-summoning the clerk, decided to sit down again, and linger yet a
-little time. Another psalm was given out and sung through,--still no
-minister arrived.
-
-At last, moved by a constraining principle of love to the great and
-Divine shepherd of all Christian flocks, and by a pure love to the
-souls of the people, Noble came forward with lowliness and composure,
-and told the clerk quietly that, being himself an ordained minister,
-he did not feel it right to let the people go empty away, without
-offering in such manner as he could to feed them; and that if there
-was no objection he was ready to go up into the pulpit. To this
-arrangement there was an immediate assent from the nobleman, to whom
-the clerk referred it; and old Noble, for the first time since the
-day when he was driven from Cheddar with blows and insults, found
-himself in the place and office of an ambassador for Christ.
-
-He was manifestly supported in this moment by the spirit of power,
-love, and of a sound mind. His prayer was serious, simple, and plain
-as the utterance of a child. Out of the abundance of his heart he
-offered up his petitions with reverent fervency and confiding love.
-The chapter which he selected for reading was the fourth chapter of
-the first Epistle of John; and, taking the tenth verse of this chapter
-for his text, he declared fully and freely that blessed message of
-pardon, reconciliation, and peace, which it is the most precious
-privilege of the Christian minister to deliver, and to deliver which
-is a duty of sacred and perpetual obligation. Mercy and grace fell
-softly from his lips, and distilled like the gentle dew upon the
-hearts of all his hearers.
-
-The poorest and least instructed could understand every thing he said;
-the most learned and advanced among them found a master in Israel,
-walking with a secure footing on the very summits of the mount of
-God. Unseen by Noble, the young minister entered, when he was in the
-middle of his discourse, and stood with rapt, devout, and breathless
-attention to its close. The rugged old warlike nobleman had early
-risen, and leaned over his pew with eyes fixed upon the preacher, and
-half the congregation were in the like posture of attention. Of all
-this Noble was utterly unconscious: his own gaze was perfectly
-abstracted; he saw nothing, he thought of nothing but the Divine love.
-He magnified it; he set it forth in the chaste radiance and the
-heavenly light of Scripture language and Scripture imagery. He
-commended it to the hearts of all around him, by speaking of it
-experimentally, gratefully. He showed what the world and society would
-be if subjected to its influence: drew the mournful contrast daily
-presented to the eye; and, towards the close, he drew aside, as it
-were, the curtains of the skies, and displayed the world of light, and
-the redeemed of the Lord walking, as angels, in an air of glory. When
-he had concluded, he kneeled down to pray: his few first words,
-though not quite so loud as his sermon, which had been preached in
-very subdued and quiet tones, were distinctly audible; but, then, they
-became faint and unintelligible, his grey head bowed down upon his
-pale hands, and both rested without motion upon the dark cushion of
-the pulpit.
-
-The young minister was the first to perceive his condition, and the
-first to run to his succour. With the aid of Peter, he brought him
-down and out into the summer air, and laid him on the grass, and
-loosened his vest; but the body itself was no longer any thing but a
-put-off garment:--the spirit was far off, breathing already the air of
-that Eden which is above.
-
-The young minister accompanied Peter back to the cottage with the
-precious remains, and, leaving them at a few yards' distance, entered
-first, and broke the loss to his aged partner. She felt it deeply: but
-as all the circumstances attending it were truly and tenderly related,
-the grief of the woman yielded to the faith of the Christian; and,
-while tears rolled down her withered cheeks, she was enabled to bless
-and praise her God.
-
-From that day, to the hour of her death, that youthful minister took
-her to his own home, and was to her as a son.
-
-The very same day which witnessed the sudden and solemn removal of the
-good old vicar of Cheddar brought a summons to his base and
-hypocritical successor in that vicarage. As the crafty and bitter
-bigot was crossing his yard with a more hasty step than usual, his
-foot tripped against the edge of the BROKEN FONT, which he had put in
-the ground near his ash-heap, to hold water for his fowls. He fell to
-the ground with such violence as to produce a compound fracture of his
-thigh; and, after the lingering torments of a very long confinement,
-died in the greatest agony of body, and in hopeless terror of mind.
-
-While this unhappy wretch lay upon his bed, in the first week after
-his accident, the body of Noble was brought to Cheddar for interment
-by the young Puritan divine, of whom we have spoken in the foregoing
-part of the chapter. The whole village poured forth to meet the body:
-the large hearted young minister performed the funeral service; and,
-indifferent to what the rigid party might say or think, he read over
-the grave of the departed vicar that solemn and sweet office for the
-burial of the dead which was, in those days, a forbidden charity to
-men who had suffered cheerfully the loss of all things rather than
-give up the sacred ritual of their church, or take the covenant which
-the faction in authority would have tyrannically imposed upon their
-conscience. The dropping of a leaf might have been heard in the green
-churchyard as that service was read; and a crowd stood listening with
-bare heads and serious eyes. When the last rite was done, and the
-earth was filled into the grave, fresh and verdant sods, which had
-been most carefully cut in a neighbouring paddock, were placed over it
-orderly and firm, and these again were so thickly strewn over with the
-choicest summer flowers as to be almost concealed by the profusion,
-while a fragrant and grateful incense, more pleasant than "precious
-ointment poured out," filled all the place with a sweet promise, that
-the name of the righteous should live.
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
- LONDON:
- Printed by A. SPOTTISWOODE,
- New-Street-Square.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Broken Font, Vol. 2 (of 2), by Moyle Sherer
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