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+Project Gutenberg's St. George and St. Michael, by George MacDonald
+
+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: St. George and St. Michael
+
+Author: George MacDonald
+
+Posting Date: June 21, 2011 [EBook #5753]
+Release Date: May, 2004
+[This file was first posted on August 23, 2002]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ST. GEORGE AND ST. MICHAEL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo, Charles Franks and the
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ST. GEORGE AND ST. MICHAEL
+
+BY GEORGE MACDONALD
+
+IN THREE VOLUMES
+
+LONDON
+
+1876
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. I.
+
+
+CHAPTER I. DOROTHY AND RICHARD.
+
+CHAPTER II. RICHARD AND HIS FATHER.
+
+CHAPTER III. THE WITCH.
+
+CHAPTER IV. A CHAPTER OF FOOLS.
+
+CHAPTER V. ANIMADVERSIONS.
+
+CHAPTER VI. PREPARATIONS.
+
+CHAPTER VII. REFLECTIONS.
+
+CHAPTER VIII. AN ADVENTURE.
+
+CHAPTER IX. LOVE AND WAR.
+
+CHAPTER X. DOROTHY'S REFUGE.
+
+CHAPTER XI. RAGLAN CASTLE.
+
+CHAPTER XII. THE TWO MARQUISES.
+
+CHAPTER XIII. THE MAGICIAN'S VAULT.
+
+CHAPTER XIV. SEVERAL PEOPLE.
+
+CHAPTER XV. HUSBAND AND WIFE.
+
+CHAPTER XVI. DOROTHY'S INITIATION.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII. THE FIRE-ENGINE.
+
+CHAPTER XVIII. MOONLIGHT AND APPLE-BLOSSOMS.
+
+CHAPTER XIX. THE ENCHANTED CHAIR.
+
+CHAPTER XX. MOLLY AND THE WHITE HORSE.
+
+CHAPTER XXI. THE DAMSEL WHICH FELL SICK.
+
+CHAPTER XXII. THE CATARACT.
+
+CHAPTER XXIII. AMANDA--DOROTHY--LORD HERBERT.
+
+CHAPTER XXIV. THE GREAT MOGUL.
+
+CHAPTER XXV. RICHARD HEYWOOD.
+
+CHAPTER XXVI. THE WITCH'S COTTAGE.
+
+CHAPTER XXVII. THE MOAT OF THE KEEP.
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII. RAGLAN STABLES.
+
+CHAPTER XXIX. THE APPARITION.
+
+CHAPTER XXX. RICHARD AND THE MARQUIS.
+
+CHAPTER XXXI. THE SLEEPLESS.
+
+CHAPTER XXXII. THE TURRET CHAMBER.
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII. JUDGE GOUT.
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV. AN EVIL TIME.
+
+CHAPTER XXXV. THE DELIVERER.
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI. THE DISCOVERY.
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII. THE HOROSCOPE.
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII. THE EXORCISM.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. III.
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX. NEWBURY.
+
+CHAPTER XL. DOROTHY AND ROWLAND.
+
+CHAPTER XLI. GLAMORGAN.
+
+CHAPTER XLII. A NEW SOLDIER.
+
+CHAPTER XLIII. LADY AND BISHOP.
+
+CHAPTER XLIV. THE KING.
+
+CHAPTER XLV. THE SECRET INTERVIEW.
+
+CHAPTER XLVI. GIFTS OF HEALING.
+
+CHAPTER XLVII. THE POET-PHYSICIAN.
+
+CHAPTER XLVIII. HONOURABLE DISGRACE.
+
+CHAPTER XLIX. SIEGE.
+
+CHAPTER L. A SALLY.
+
+CHAPTER LI. UNDER THE MOAT.
+
+CHAPTER LII. THE UNTOOTHSOME PLUM.
+
+CHAPTER LIII. FAITHFUL FOES.
+
+CHAPTER LIV. DOMUS DISSOLVITUR.
+
+CHAPTER LV. R. I. P.
+
+CHAPTER LVI. RICHARD AND CASPAR.
+
+CHAPTER LVII. THE SKELETON.
+
+CHAPTER LVIII. LOVE AND NO LEASING.
+
+CHAPTER LIX. AVE! VALE! SALVE!
+
+
+
+
+ST. GEORGE AND ST. MICHAEL.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+DOROTHY AND RICHARD.
+
+
+It was the middle of autumn, and had rained all day. Through the
+lozenge-panes of the wide oriel window the world appeared in the slowly
+gathering dusk not a little dismal. The drops that clung trickling to
+the dim glass added rain and gloom to the landscape beyond, whither the
+eye passed, as if vaguely seeking that help in the distance, which the
+dripping hollyhocks and sodden sunflowers bordering the little lawn, or
+the honeysuckle covering the wide porch, from which the slow rain
+dropped ceaselessly upon the pebble-paving below, could not give--steepy
+slopes, hedge-divided into small fields, some green and dotted with red
+cattle, others crowded with shocks of bedraggled and drooping corn,
+which looked suffering and patient.
+
+The room to which the window having this prospect belonged was large and
+low, with a dark floor of uncarpeted oak. It opened immediately upon the
+porch, and although a good fire of logs blazed on the hearth, was chilly
+to the sense of the old man, who, with his feet on the skin of a
+fallow-deer, sat gazing sadly into the flames, which shone rosy through
+the thin hands spread out before them. At the opposite corner of the
+great low-arched chimney sat a lady past the prime of life, but still
+beautiful, though the beauty was all but merged in the loveliness that
+rises from the heart to the face of such as have taken the greatest step
+in life--that is, as the old proverb says, the step out of doors. She
+was plainly yet rather richly dressed, in garments of an old-fashioned
+and well-preserved look. Her hair was cut short above her forehead, and
+frizzed out in bunches of little curls on each side. On her head was a
+covering of dark stuff, like a nun's veil, which fell behind and on her
+shoulders. Close round her neck was a string of amber beads, that gave a
+soft harmonious light to her complexion. Her dark eyes looked as if they
+found repose there, so quietly did they rest on the face of the old man,
+who was plainly a clergyman. It was a small, pale, thin, delicately and
+symmetrically formed face, yet not the less a strong one, with endurance
+on the somewhat sad brow, and force in the closed lips, while a good
+conscience looked clear out of the grey eyes.
+
+They had been talking about the fast-gathering tide of opinion which,
+driven on by the wind of words, had already begun to beat so furiously
+against the moles and ramparts of Church and kingdom. The execution of
+lord Strafford was news that had not yet begun to 'hiss the speaker.'
+
+'It is indeed an evil time,' said the old man. 'The world has seldom
+seen its like.'
+
+'But tell me, master Herbert,' said the lady, 'why comes it in this our
+day? For our sins or for the sins of our fathers?'
+
+'Be it far from me to presume to set forth the ways of Providence!'
+returned her guest. 'I meddle not, like some that should be wiser, with
+the calling of the prophet. It is enough for me to know that ever and
+again the pride of man will gather to "a mighty and a fearful head,"
+and, like a swollen mill-pond overfed of rains, burst the banks that
+confine it, whether they be the laws of the land or the ordinances of
+the church, usurping on the fruitful meadows, the hope of life for man
+and beast. Alas!' he went on, with a new suggestion from the image he
+had been using, 'if the beginning of strife be as the letting out of
+water, what shall be the end of that strife whose beginning is the
+letting out of blood?'
+
+'Think you then, good sir, that thus it has always been? that such times
+of fierce ungodly tempest must ever follow upon seasons of peace and
+comfort?--even as your cousin of holy memory, in his verses concerning
+the church militant, writes:
+
+ "Thus also sin and darkness follow still
+ The church and sun, with all their power and skill."'
+
+'Truly it seems so. But I thank God the days of my pilgrimage are nearly
+numbered. To judge by the tokens the wise man gives us, the mourners are
+already going about my streets. The almond-tree flourisheth at least.'
+
+He smiled as he spoke, laying his hand on his grey head.
+
+'But think of those whom we must leave behind us, master Herbert. How
+will it fare with them?' said the lady in troubled tone, and glancing in
+the direction of the window.
+
+In the window sat a girl, gazing from it with the look of a child who
+had uttered all her incantations, and could imagine no abatement in the
+steady rain-pour.
+
+'We shall leave behind us strong hearts and sound heads too,' said Mr.
+Herbert. 'And I bethink me there will be none stronger or sounder than
+those of your young cousins, my late pupils, of whom I hear brave things
+from Oxford, and in whose affection my spirit constantly rejoices.'
+
+'You will be glad to hear such good news of your relatives, Dorothy,'
+said the lady, addressing her daughter.
+
+Even as she said the words, the setting sun broke through the mass of
+grey cloud, and poured over the earth a level flood of radiance, in
+which the red wheat glowed, and the drops that hung on every ear flashed
+like diamonds. The girl's hair caught it as she turned her face to
+answer her mother, and an aureole of brown-tinted gold gleamed for a
+moment about her head.
+
+'I am glad that you are pleased, madam, but you know I have never seen
+them--or heard of them, except from master Herbert, who has, indeed,
+often spoke rare things of them.'
+
+'Mistress Dorothy will still know the reason why,' said the clergyman,
+smiling, and the two resumed their conversation. But the girl rose, and,
+turning again to the window, stood for a moment rapt in the
+transfiguration passing upon the world. The vault of grey was utterly
+shattered, but, gathering glory from ruin, was hurrying in rosy masses
+away from under the loftier vault of blue. The ordered shocks upon
+twenty fields sent their long purple shadows across the flush; and the
+evening wind, like the sighing that follows departed tears, was shaking
+the jewels from their feathery tops. The sunflowers and hollyhocks no
+longer cowered under the tyranny of the rain, but bowed beneath the
+weight of the gems that adorned them. A flame burned as upon an altar on
+the top of every tree, and the very pools that lay on the distant road
+had their message of light to give to the hopeless earth. As she gazed,
+another hue than that of the sunset, yet rosy too, gradually flushed the
+face of the maiden. She turned suddenly from the window, and left the
+room, shaking a shower of diamonds from the honeysuckle as she passed
+out through the porch upon the gravel walk.
+
+Possibly her elders found her departure a relief, for although they took
+no notice of it, their talk became more confidential, and was soon
+mingled with many names both of rank and note, with a familiarity which
+to a stranger might have seemed out of keeping with the humbler
+character of their surroundings.
+
+But when Dorothy Vaughan had passed a corner of the house to another
+garden more ancient in aspect, and in some things quaint even to
+grotesqueness, she was in front of a portion of the house which
+indicated a far statelier past--closed and done with, like the rooms
+within those shuttered windows. The inhabited wing she had left looked
+like the dwelling of a yeoman farming his own land; nor did this
+appearance greatly belie the present position of the family. For
+generations it had been slowly descending in the scale of worldly
+account, and the small portion of the house occupied by the widow and
+daughter of sir Ringwood Vaughan was larger than their means could match
+with correspondent outlay. Such, however, was the character of lady
+Vaughan, that, although she mingled little with the great families in
+the neighbourhood, she was so much respected, that she would have been a
+welcome visitor to most of them.
+
+The reverend Mr. Matthew Herbert was a clergyman from the Welsh border,
+a man of some note and influence, who had been the personal friend both
+of his late relative George Herbert and of the famous Dr. Donne.
+Strongly attached to the English church, and recoiling with disgust from
+the practices of the puritans--as much, perhaps, from refinement of
+taste as abhorrence of schism--he had never yet fallen into such a
+passion for episcopacy as to feel any cordiality towards the schemes of
+the archbishop. To those who knew him his silence concerning it was a
+louder protest against the policy of Laud than the fiercest
+denunciations of the puritans. Once only had he been heard to utter
+himself unguardedly in respect of the primate, and that was amongst
+friends, and after the second glass permitted of his cousin George.
+'Tut! laud me no Laud,' he said. 'A skipping bishop is worse than a
+skipping king.' Once also he had been overheard murmuring to himself by
+way of consolement, 'Bishops pass; the church remains.' He had been a
+great friend of the late sir Ringwood; and although the distance from
+his parish was too great to be travelled often, he seldom let a year go
+by without paying a visit to his friend's widow and daughter.
+
+Turning her back on the cenotaph of their former greatness, Dorothy
+dived into a long pleached alley, careless of the drip from overhead,
+and hurrying through it came to a circular patch of thin grass, rounded
+by a lofty hedge of yew-trees, in the midst of which stood what had once
+been a sun-dial. It mattered little, however, that only the stump of a
+gnomon was left, seeing the hedge around it had grown to such a height
+in relation to the diameter of the circle, that it was only for a very
+brief hour or so in the middle of a summer's day, when, of all periods,
+the passage of Time seems least to concern humanity, that it could have
+served to measure his march. The spot had, indeed, a time-forsaken look,
+as if it lay buried in the bosom of the past, and the present had
+forgotten it.
+
+Before emerging from the alley, she slackened her pace, half-stopped,
+and, stooping a little in her tucked-up skirt, threw a bird-like glance
+around the opener space; then stepping into it, she looked up to the
+little disc of sky, across which the clouds, their roses already
+withered, sailed dim and grey once more, while behind them the stars
+were beginning to recall their half-forgotten message from regions
+unknown to men. A moment, and she went up to the dial, stood there for
+another moment, and was on the point of turning to leave the spot, when,
+as if with one great bound, a youth stood between her and the entrance
+of the alley.
+
+'Ah ha, mistress Dorothy, you do not escape me so!' he cried, spreading
+out his arms as if to turn back some runaway creature.
+
+But mistress Dorothy was startled, and mistress Dorothy did not choose
+to be startled, and therefore mistress Dorothy was dignified, if not
+angry.
+
+'I do not like such behaviour, Richard,' she said. 'It ill suits with
+the time. Why did you hide behind the hedge, and then leap forth so
+rudely?'
+
+'I thought you saw me,' answered the youth. 'Pardon my heedlessness,
+Dorothy. I hope I have not startled you too much.'
+
+As he spoke he stooped over the hand he had caught, and would have
+carried it to his lips, but the girl, half-pettishly, snatched it away,
+and, with a strange mixture of dignity, sadness, and annoyance in her
+tone, said--
+
+'There has been something too much of this, Richard, and I begin to be
+ashamed of it.'
+
+'Ashamed!' echoed the youth. 'Of what? There is nothing but me to be
+ashamed of, and what can I have done since yesterday?'
+
+'No, Richard; I am not ashamed of you, but I am ashamed of--of--this way
+of meeting--and--and----'
+
+'Surely that is strange, when we can no more remember the day in which
+we have not met than that in which we met first! No, dear Dorothy----'
+
+'It is not our meeting, Richard; and if you would but think as honestly
+as you speak, you would not require to lay upon me the burden of
+explanation. It is this foolish way we have got into of late--kissing
+hands--and--and--always meeting by the old sun-dial, or in some other
+over-quiet spot. Why do you not come to the house? My mother would give
+you the same welcome as any time these last--how many years, Richard?'
+
+'Are you quite sure of that, Dorothy?'
+
+'Well--I did fancy she spoke with something more of ceremony the last
+time you met. But, consider, she has seen so much less of you of late.
+Yet I am sure she has all but a mother's love in her heart towards you.
+For your mother was dear to her as her own soul.'
+
+'I would it were so, Dorothy! For then, perhaps, your mother would not
+shrink from being my mother too. When we are married, Dorothy--'
+
+'Married!' exclaimed the girl. 'What of marrying, indeed!' And she
+turned sideways from him with an indignant motion. 'Richard,' she went
+on, after a marked and yet but momentary pause, for the youth had not
+had time to say a word, 'it has been very wrong in me to meet you after
+this fashion. I know it now, for see what such things lead to! If you
+knew it, you have done me wrong.'
+
+'Dearest Dorothy!' exclaimed the youth, taking her hand again, of which
+this time she seemed hardly aware, 'did you not know from the very
+vanished first that I loved you with all my heart, and that to tell you
+so would have been to tell the sun that he shines warm at noon in
+midsummer? And I did think you had a little--something for me, Dorothy,
+your old playmate, that you did not give to every other acquaintance.
+Think of the houses we have built and the caves we have dug together--of
+our rabbits, and urchins, and pigeons, and peacocks!'
+
+'We are children no longer,' returned Dorothy. 'To behave as if we were
+would be to keep our eyes shut after we are awake. I like you, Richard,
+you know; but why this--where is the use of all this--new sort of thing?
+Come up with me to the house, where master Herbert is now talking to my
+mother in the large parlour. The good man will be glad to see you.'
+
+'I doubt it, Dorothy. He and my father, as I am given to understand,
+think so differently in respect of affairs now pending betwixt the
+parliament and the king, that--'
+
+'It were more becoming, Richard, if the door of your lips opened to the
+king first, and let the parliament follow.'
+
+'Well said!' returned the youth with a smile. 'But let it be my excuse
+that I speak as I am wont to hear.'
+
+The girl's hand had lain quiet in that of the youth, but now it started
+from it like a scared bird. She stepped two paces back, and drew herself
+up.
+
+'And you, Richard?' she said, interrogatively.
+
+'What would you ask, Dorothy?' returned the youth, taking a step nearer,
+to which she responded by another backward ere she replied.
+
+'I would know whom you choose to serve--whether God or Satan; whether
+you are of those who would set at nought the laws of the land----'
+
+'Insist on their fulfilment, they say, by king as well as people,'
+interrupted Richard.
+
+'They would tear their mother in pieces----'
+
+'Their mother!' repeated Richard, bewildered.
+
+'Their mother, the church,' explained Dorothy.
+
+'Oh!' said Richard. 'Nay, they would but cast out of her the wolves in
+sheep's clothing that devour the lambs.'
+
+The girl was silent. Anger glowed on her forehead and flashed from her
+grey eyes. She stood one moment, then turned to leave him, but half
+turned again to say scornfully--
+
+'I must go at once to my mother! I knew not I had left her with such a
+wolf as master Herbert is like to prove!'
+
+'Master Herbert is no bishop, Dorothy!'
+
+'The bishops, then, are the wolves, master Heywood?' said the girl, with
+growing indignation.
+
+'Dear Dorothy, I am but repeating what I hear. For my own part, I know
+little of these matters. And what are they to us if we love one
+another?'
+
+'I tell you I am a child no longer,' flamed Dorothy.
+
+'You were seventeen last St. George's Day, and I shall be nineteen next
+St. Michael's.'
+
+'St. George for merry England!' cried Dorothy.
+
+'St. Michael for the Truth!' cried Richard.
+
+'So be it. Good-bye, then,' said the girl, going.
+
+'What DO you mean, Dorothy?' said Richard; and she stood to hear, but
+with her back towards him, and, as it were, hovering midway in a pace.
+'Did not St. Michael also slay his dragon? Why should the knights part
+company? Believe me, Dorothy, I care more for a smile from you than for
+all the bishops in the church, or all the presbyters out of it.'
+
+'You take needless pains to prove yourself a foolish boy, Richard; and
+if I go not to my mother at once, I fear I shall learn to despise
+you--which I would not willingly.'
+
+'Despise me! Do you take me for a coward then, Dorothy?'
+
+'I say not that. I doubt not, for the matter of swords and pistols, you
+are much like other male creatures; but I protest I could never love a
+man who preferred my company to the service of his king.'
+
+She glided into the alley and sped along its vaulted twilight, her white
+dress gleaming and clouding by fits as she went.
+
+The youth stood for a moment petrified, then started to overtake her,
+but stood stock-still at the entrance of the alley, and followed her
+only with his eyes as she went.
+
+When Dorothy reached the house, she did not run up to her room that she
+might weep unseen. She was still too much annoyed with Richard to regret
+having taken such leave of him. She only swallowed down a little
+balloonful of sobs, and went straight into the parlour, where her mother
+and Mr. Herbert still sat, and resumed her seat in the bay window. Her
+heightened colour, an occasional toss of her head backwards, like that
+with which a horse seeks ease from the bearing-rein, generally followed
+by a renewal of the attempt to swallow something of upward tendency,
+were the only signs of her discomposure, and none of them were observed
+by her mother or her guest. Could she have known, however, what feelings
+had already begun to rouse themselves in the mind of him whose
+boyishness was an offence to her, she would have found it more difficult
+to keep such composure.
+
+Dorothy's was a face whose forms were already so decided that, should no
+softening influences from the central regions gain the ascendancy,
+beyond a doubt age must render it hard and unlovely. In all the
+roundness and freshness of girlhood, it was handsome rather than
+beautiful, beautiful rather than lovely. And yet it was strongly
+attractive, for it bore clear indication of a nature to be trusted. If
+her grey eyes were a little cold, they were honest eyes, with a rare
+look of steadfastness; and if her lips were a little too closely
+pressed, it was clearly from any cause rather than bad temper. Neither
+head, hands, nor feet were small, but they were fine in form and
+movement; and for the rest of her person, tall and strong as Richard
+was, Dorothy looked further advanced in the journey of life than he.
+
+She needed hardly, however, have treated his indifference to the
+politics of the time with so much severity, seeing her own acquaintance
+with and interest in them dated from that same afternoon, during which,
+from lack of other employment, and the weariness of a long morning of
+slow, dismal rain, she had been listening to Mr. Herbert as he dwelt
+feelingly on the arrogance of puritan encroachment, and the grossness of
+presbyterian insolence both to kingly prerogative and episcopal
+authority, and drew a touching picture of the irritant thwartings and
+pitiful insults to which the gentle monarch was exposed in his attempts
+to support the dignity of his divine office, and to cast its protecting
+skirt over the defenceless church; and if it was with less sympathy that
+he spoke of the fears which haunted the captive metropolitan, Dorothy at
+least could detect no hidden sarcasm in the tone in which he expressed
+his hope that Laud's devotion to the beauty of holiness might not result
+in the dignity of martyrdom, as might well be feared by those who were
+assured that the whole guilt of Strafford lay in his return to his duty,
+and his subsequent devotion to the interests of his royal master: to all
+this the girl had listened, and her still sufficiently uncertain
+knowledge of the affairs of the nation had, ere the talk was over,
+blossomed in a vague sense of partizanship. It was chiefly her desire
+after the communion of sympathy with Richard that had led her into the
+mistake of such a hasty disclosure of her new feelings.
+
+But her following words had touched him--whether to fine issues or not
+remained yet poised on the knife-edge of the balancing will. His first
+emotion partook of anger. As soon as she was out of sight a spell seemed
+broken, and words came.
+
+'A boy, indeed, mistress Dorothy!' he said. 'If ever it come to what
+certain persons prophesy, you may wish me in truth, and that for the
+sake of your precious bishops, the boy you call me now. Yes, you are
+right, mistress, though I would it had been another who told me so! Boy
+indeed I am--or have been--without a thought in my head but of her. The
+sound of my father's voice has been but as the wind of the winnowing
+fan. In me it has found but chaff. If you will have me take a side,
+though, you will find me so far worthy of you that I shall take the side
+that seems to me the right one, were all the fair Dorothies of the
+universe on the other. In very truth I should be somewhat sorry to find
+the king and the bishops in the right, lest my lady should flatter
+herself and despise me that I had chosen after her showing, forsooth!
+This is master Herbert's doing, for never before did I hear her speak
+after such fashion.'
+
+While he thus spoke with himself, he stood, like the genius of the spot,
+a still dusky figure on the edge of the night, into which his dress of
+brown velvet, rich and sombre at once in the sunlight, all but merged.
+Nearly for the first time in his life he was experiencing the difficulty
+of making up his mind, not, however, upon any of the important
+questions, his inattention to which had exposed him to such sudden and
+unexpected severity, but merely as to whether he should seek her again
+in the company of her mother and Mr. Herbert, or return home. The result
+of his deliberation, springing partly, no doubt, from anger, but that of
+no very virulent type, was, that he turned his back on the alley, passed
+through a small opening in the yew hedge, crossed a neglected corner of
+woodland, by ways better known to him than to any one else, and came out
+upon the main road leading to the gates of his father's park.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+RICHARD AND HIS FATHER.
+
+
+Richard Heywood, as to bodily fashion, was a tall and already powerful
+youth. The clear brown of his complexion spoke of plentiful sunshine and
+air. A merry sparkle in the depths of his hazel eyes relieved the
+shadows of rather notably heavy lids, themselves heavily
+overbrowed--with a suggestion of character which had not yet asserted
+itself to those who knew him best. Correspondingly, his nose, although
+of a Greek type, was more notable for substance than clearness of line
+or modelling; while his lips had a boyish fulness along with a
+definiteness of bow-like curve, which manly resolve had not yet begun to
+compress and straighten out. His chin was at least large enough not to
+contradict the promise of his face; his shoulders were square, and his
+chest and limbs well developed: altogether it was at present a fair
+tabernacle--of whatever sort the indwelling divinity might yet turn out,
+fashioning it further after his own nature.
+
+His father and he were the only male descendants of an old Monmouthshire
+family, of neither Welsh nor Norman, but as pure Saxon blood as might be
+had within the clip of the ocean. Roger, the father, had once only or
+twice in his lifetime been heard boast, in humorous fashion, that
+although but a simple squire, he could, on this side the fog of
+tradition, which nearer or further shrouds all origin, count a longer
+descent than any of the titled families in the county, not excluding the
+earl of Worcester himself. His character also would have gone far to
+support any assertion he might have chosen to make as to the purity of
+his strain. A notable immobility of nature--his friends called it
+firmness, his enemies obstinacy; a seeming disregard of what others
+might think of him; a certain sternness of manner--an unreadiness, as it
+were, to open his door to the people about him; a searching regard with
+which he was wont to peruse the face of anyone holding talk with him,
+when he seemed always to give heed to the looks rather than the words of
+him who spoke; these peculiarities had combined to produce a certain awe
+of him in his inferiors, and a dislike, not unavowed, in his equals.
+With his superiors he came seldom in contact, and to them his behaviour
+was still more distant and unbending. But, although from these causes he
+was far from being a favourite in the county, he was a man of such known
+and acknowledged probity that, until of late, when party spirit ran high
+and drew almost everybody, whether of consequence or not, to one side or
+the other, there was nobody who would not have trusted Roger Heywood to
+the uttermost. Even now, foes as well as friends acknowledged that he
+was to be depended upon; while his own son looked up to him with a
+reverence that in some measure overshadowed his affection. Such a
+character as this had necessarily been slow in formation, and the
+opinions which had been modified by it and had reacted upon it, had been
+as unalterably as deliberately adopted. But affairs had approached a
+crisis between king and parliament before one of his friends knew that
+there were in his mind any opinions upon them in process of
+formation--so reserved and monosyllabic had been his share in any
+conversation upon topics which had for a long time been growing every
+hour of more and more absorbing interest to all men either of
+consequence, intelligence, property, or adventure. At last, however, it
+had become clear, to the great annoyance of not a few amongst his
+neighbours, that Heywood's leanings were to the parliament. But he had
+never yet sought to influence his son in regard to the great questions
+at issue.
+
+His house was one of those ancient dwellings which have grown under the
+hands to fit the wants of successive generations, and look as if they
+had never been other than old; two-storied at most, and many-gabled,
+with marvellous accretions and projections, the haunts of yet more
+wonderful shadows. There, in a room he called his study, shabby and
+small, containing a library more notable for quality and selection than
+size, Richard the next morning sought and found him.
+
+'Father!' he said, entering with some haste after the usual request for
+admission.
+
+'I am here, my son,' answered Roger, without lifting his eyes from the
+small folio in which he was reading.
+
+'I want to know, father, whether, when men differ, a man is bound to
+take a side.'
+
+'Nay, Richard, but a man is bound NOT to take a side save upon reasons
+well considered and found good.'
+
+'It may be, father, if you had seen fit to send me to Oxford, I should
+have been better able to judge now.'
+
+'I had my reasons, son Richard. Readier, perhaps, you might have been,
+but fitter--no. Tell me what points you have in question.'
+
+'That I can hardly say, sir. I only know there are points at issue
+betwixt king and parliament which men appear to consider of mightiest
+consequence. Will you tell me, father, why you have never instructed me
+in these affairs of church and state? I trust it is not because you
+count me unworthy of your confidence.'
+
+'Far from it, my son. My silence hath respect to thy hearing and to the
+judgment yet unawakened in thee. Who would lay in the arms of a child
+that which must crush him to the earth? Years did I take to meditate ere
+I resolved, and I know not yet if thou hast in thee the power of
+meditation.'
+
+'At least, father, I could try to understand, if you would unfold your
+mind.'
+
+'When you know what the matters at issue are, my son,--that is, when you
+are able to ask me questions worthy of answer, I shall be ready to
+answer thee, so far as my judgment will reach.'
+
+'I thank you, father. In the meantime I am as one who knocks, and the
+door is not opened unto him.'
+
+'Rather art thou as one who loiters on the door-step, and lifts up
+neither ring nor voice.'
+
+'Surely, sir, I must first know the news.'
+
+'Thou hast ears; keep them open. But at least you know, my son, that on
+the twelfth day of May last my lord of Strafford lost his head.'
+
+'Who took it from him, sir? King or parliament?'
+
+'Even that might be made a question; but I answer, the High Court of
+Parliament, my son.'
+
+'Was the judgment a right one or a wrong, sir? Did he deserve the doom?'
+
+'Ah, there you put a question indeed! Many men say RIGHT, and many men
+say WRONG. One man, I doubt me much, was wrong in the share HE bore
+therein.'
+
+'Who was he, sir?'
+
+'Nay, nay, I will not forestall thine own judgment. But, in good sooth,
+I might be more ready to speak my mind, were it not that I greatly doubt
+some of those who cry loudest for liberty. I fear that had they once the
+power, they would be the first to trample her under foot. Liberty with
+some men means MY liberty to do, and THINE to suffer. But all in good
+time, my son! The dawn is nigh.'
+
+'You will tell me at least, father, what is the bone of contention?'
+
+'My son, where there is contention, a bone shall not fail. It is but a
+leg-bone now; it will be a rib to-morrow, and by and by doubtless it
+will be the skull itself.'
+
+'If you care for none of these things, sir, will not master Flowerdew
+have a hard name for you? I know not what it means, but it sounds of the
+gallows,' said Richard, looking rather doubtful as to how his father
+might take it.
+
+'Possibly, my son, I care more for the contention than the bone, for
+while thieves quarrel honest men go their own ways. But what ignorance I
+have kept thee in, and yet left thee to bear the reproach of a puritan!'
+said the father, smiling grimly. 'Thou meanest master Flowerdew would
+call me a Gallio, and thou takest the Roman proconsul for a
+gallows-bird! Verily thou art not destined to prolong the renown of thy
+race for letters. I marvel what thy cousin Thomas would say to the
+darkness of thy ignorance.'
+
+'See what comes of not sending me to Oxford, sir: I know not who is my
+cousin Thomas.'
+
+'A man both of learning and wisdom, my son, though I fear me his diet is
+too strong for the stomach of this degenerate age, while the dressing of
+his dishes is, on the other hand, too cunningly devised for their
+liking. But it is no marvel thou shouldest be ignorant of him, being as
+yet no reader of books. Neither is he a close kinsman, being of the
+Lincolnshire branch of the Heywoods.'
+
+'Now I know whom you mean, sir; but I thought he was a writer of stage
+plays, and such things as on all sides I hear called foolish, and
+mummery.'
+
+'There be among those who call themselves the godly, who will endure no
+mummery but of their own inventing. Cousin Thomas hath written a
+multitude of plays, but that he studied at Cambridge, and to good
+purpose, this book, which I was reading when you entered, bears good
+witness.'
+
+'What is the book, father?'
+
+'Stay, I will read thee a portion. The greater part is of learning
+rather than wisdom--the gathered opinions of the wise and good
+concerning things both high and strange; but I will read thee some
+verses bearing his own mind, which is indeed worthy to be set down with
+theirs.'
+
+He read that wonderful poem ending the second Book of the Hierarchy, and
+having finished it looked at his son.
+
+'I do not understand it, sir,' said Richard.
+
+'I did not expect you would,' returned his father. 'Here, take the book,
+and read for thyself. If light should dawn upon the page, as thou
+readest, perhaps thou wilt understand what I now say--that I care but
+little for the bones concerning which king and parliament contend, but I
+do care that men--thou and I, my son--should be free to walk in any path
+whereon it may please God to draw us. Take the book, my son, and read
+again. But read no farther save with caution, for it dealeth with many
+things wherein old Thomas is too readily satisfied with hearsay for
+testimony.'
+
+Richard took the small folio and carried it to his own chamber, where he
+read and partly understood the poem. But he was not ripe enough either
+in philosophy or religion for such meditations. Having executed his
+task, for as such he regarded it, he turned to look through the strange
+mixture of wisdom and credulity composing the volume. One tale after
+another, of witch, and demon, and magician, firmly believed and honestly
+recorded by his worthy relative, drew him on, until he sat forgetful of
+everything but the world of marvels before him--to none of which,
+however, did he accord a wider credence than sprung from the interest of
+the moment. He was roused by a noise of quarrel in the farmyard, towards
+which his window looked, and, laying aside reading, hastened out to
+learn the cause.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE WITCH.
+
+
+It was a bright Autumn morning. A dry wind had been blowing all night
+through the shocks, and already some of the farmers had begun to carry
+to their barns the sheaves which had stood hopelessly dripping the day
+before. Ere Richard reached the yard, he saw, over the top of the wall,
+the first load of wheat-sheaves from the harvest-field, standing at the
+door of the barn, and high-uplifted thereon the figure of Faithful
+Stopchase, one of the men, a well-known frequenter of puritan assemblies
+all the country round, who was holding forth, and that with much
+freedom, in tones that sounded very like vituperation, if not
+malediction, against some one invisible. He soon found that the object
+of his wrath was a certain Welshwoman, named Rees, by her neighbours
+considered objectionable on the ground of witchcraft, against whom this
+much could with truth be urged, that she was so far from thinking it
+disreputable, that she took no pains to repudiate the imputation of it.
+Her dress, had it been judged by eyes of our day, would have been
+against her, but it was only old-fashioned, not even antiquated: common
+in Queen Elizabeth's time, it lingered still in remote country places--a
+gown of dark stuff, made with a long waist and short skirt over a huge
+farthingale; a ruff which stuck up and out, high and far, from her
+throat; and a conical Welsh hat invading the heavens. Stopchase, having
+descried her in the yard, had taken the opportunity of breaking out upon
+her in language as far removed from that of conventional politeness as
+his puritanical principles would permit. Doubtless he considered it a
+rebuking of Satan, but forgot that, although one of the godly, he could
+hardly on that ground lay claim to larger privilege in the use of bad
+language than the archangel Michael. For the old woman, although too
+prudent to reply, she scorned to flee, and stood regarding him fixedly.
+Richard sought to interfere and check the torrent of abuse, but it had
+already gathered so much head, that the man seemed even unaware of his
+attempt. Presently, however, he began to quail in the midst of his
+storming. The green eyes of the old woman, fixed upon him, seemed to be
+slowly fascinating him. At length, in the very midst of a volley of
+scriptural epithets, he fell suddenly silent, turned from her, and, with
+the fork on which he had been leaning, began to pitch the sheaves into
+the barn. The moment he turned his back, Goody Rees turned hers, and
+walked slowly away.
+
+She had scarcely reached the yard gate, however, before the cow-boy, a
+delighted spectator and auditor of the affair, had loosed the fierce
+watch-dog, which flew after her. Fortunately Richard saw what took
+place, but the animal, which was generally chained up, did not heed his
+recall, and the poor woman had already felt his teeth, when Richard got
+him by the throat. She looked pale and frightened, but kept her
+composure wonderfully, and when Richard, who was prejudiced in her
+favour from having once heard Dorothy speak friendlily to her, expressed
+his great annoyance that she should have been so insulted on his
+father's premises, received his apologies with dignity and good faith.
+He dragged the dog back, rechained him, and was in the act of
+administering sound and righteous chastisement to the cow-boy, when
+Stopchase staggered, tumbled off the cart, and falling upon his head,
+lay motionless. Richard hurried to him, and finding his neck twisted and
+his head bent to one side, concluded he was killed. The woman who had
+accompanied him from the field stood for a moment uttering loud cries,
+then, suddenly bethinking herself, sped after the witch. Richard was
+soon satisfied he could do nothing for him.
+
+Presently the woman came running back, followed at a more leisurely pace
+by Goody Rees, whose countenance was grave, and, even to the twitch
+about her mouth, inscrutable. She walked up to where the man lay, looked
+at him for a moment or two as if considering his case, then sat down on
+the ground beside him, and requested Richard to move him so that his
+head should lie on her lap. This done, she laid hold of it, with a hand
+on each ear, and pulled at his neck, at the same time turning his head
+in the right direction. There came a snap, and the neck was straight.
+She then began to stroke it with gentle yet firm hand. In a few moments
+he began to breathe. As soon as she saw his chest move, she called for a
+wisp of hay, and having shaped it a little, drew herself from under his
+head, substituting the hay. Then rising without a word she walked from
+the yard. Stopchase lay for a while, gradually coming to himself, then
+scrambled all at once to his feet, and staggered to his pitchfork, which
+lay where it had fallen. 'It is of the mercy of the Lord that I fell not
+upon the prongs of the pitchfork,' he said, as he slowly stooped and
+lifted it. He had no notion that he had lain more than a few seconds;
+and of the return of Goody Rees and her ministrations he knew nothing;
+while such an awe of herself and her influences had she left behind her,
+that neither the woman nor the cow-boy ventured to allude to her, and
+even Richard, influenced partly, no doubt, by late reading, was more
+inclined to think than speak about her. For the man himself, little
+knowing how close death had come to him, but inwardly reproached because
+of his passionate outbreak, he firmly believed that he had had a narrow
+escape from the net of the great fowler, whose decoy the old woman was,
+commissioned not only to cause his bodily death, but to work in him
+first such a frame of mind as should render his soul the lawful prey of
+the enemy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+A CHAPTER OF FOOLS.
+
+
+The same afternoon, as it happened, a little company of rustics, who had
+just issued from the low hatch-door of the village inn, stood for a
+moment under the sign of the Crown and Mitre, which swung huskily
+creaking from the bough of an ancient thorn tree, then passed on to the
+road, and took their way together.
+
+'Hope you then,' said one of them, as continuing their previous
+conversation, 'that we shall escape unhurt? It is a parlous business.
+Not as one of us is afeard as I knows on. But the old earl, he do have a
+most unregenerate temper, and you had better look to 't, my masters.'
+
+'I tell thee, master Upstill, it's not the old earl as I'm afeard on,
+but the young lord. For thou knows as well as ere a one it be not
+without cause that men do call him a wizard, for a wizard he be, and
+that of the worst sort.'
+
+'We shall be out again afore sundown, shannot we?' said another. 'That I
+trust.'
+
+'Up to the which hour the High Court of Parliament assembled will have
+power to protect its own--eh, John Croning?'
+
+'Nay, that I cannot tell. It be a parlous job, and for mine own part,
+whether for the love I bear to the truth, or the hatred I cherish toward
+the scarlet Antichrist, with her seven tails--'
+
+'Tush, tush, John! Seven heads, man, and ten horns. Those are the
+numbers master Flowerdew read.'
+
+'Nay, I know not for your horns; but for the rest I say seven tails. Did
+not honest master Flowerdew set forth unto us last meeting that the
+scarlet woman sat upon seven hills--eh? Have with you there, master
+Sycamore!'
+
+'Well, for the sake of sound argument, I grant you. But we ha' got to do
+with no heads nor no tails, neither--save and except as you may say the
+sting is in the tail; and then, or I greatly mistake, it's not seven
+times seven as will serve to count the stings, come of the tails what
+may.'
+
+'Very true,' said another; 'it be the stings and not the tails we want
+news of. But think you his lordship will yield them up without
+gainsaying to us the messengers of the High Parliament now assembled?'
+
+'For mine own part,' said John Croning, 'though I fear it come of the
+old Adam yet left in me, I do count it a sorrowful thing that the earl
+should be such a vile recusant. He never fails with a friendly word, or
+it may be a jest--a foolish jest--but honest, for any one gentle or
+simple he may meet. More than once has he boarded me in that fashion.
+What do you think he said to me, now, one day as I was a mowin' of the
+grass in the court, close by the white horse that spout up the water
+high as a house from his nose-drills? Says he to me--for he come down
+the grand staircase, and steps out and spies me at the work with my old
+scythe, and come across to me, and says he, "Why, Thomas," says he, not
+knowin' of my name, "Why, Thomas," says he, "you look like old Time
+himself a mowing of us all down," says he. "For sure, my lord," says I,
+"your lordship reads it aright, for all flesh is grass, and all the
+glory of man is as the flower of the field." He look humble at that,
+for, great man as he be, his earthly tabernacle, though more than
+sizeable, is but a frail one, and that he do know. And says he, "Where
+did you read that, Thomas?" "I am not a larned man, please your
+lordship," says I, "and I cannot honestly say I read it nowheres, but I
+heerd the words from a book your lordship have had news of: they do call
+it the Holy Bible. But they tell me that they of your lordship's
+persuasion like it not." "You are very much mistaken there, Thomas,"
+says he. "I read my Bible most days, only not the English Bible, which
+is full of errors, but the Latin, which is all as God gave it," says he.
+And thereby I had not where to answer withal.'
+
+'I fear you proved a poor champion of the truth, master Croning.'
+
+'Confess now, Cast-down Upstill, had he not both sun and wind of
+me--standing, so to say, on his own hearth-stone? Had it not been so, I
+could have called hard names with the best of you, though that is by
+rights the gift of the preachers of the truth. See how the good master
+Flowerdew excelleth therein, sprinkling them abroad from the
+watering-pot of the gospel. Verily, when my mind is too feeble to grasp
+his argument, my memory lays fast hold upon the hard names, and while I
+hold by them, I have it all in a nutshell.'
+
+Fortified occasionally by a pottle of ale, and keeping their spirits
+constantly stirred by much talking, they had been all day occupied in
+searching the Catholic houses of the neighbourhood for arms. What
+authority they had for it never came to be clearly understood. Plainly
+they believed themselves possessed of all that was needful, or such men
+would never have dared it. As it was, they prosecuted it with such a
+bold front, that not until they were gone did it occur to some, who had
+yielded what arms they possessed, to question whether they had done
+wisely in acknowledging such fellows as parliamentary officials without
+demanding their warrant. Their day's gleanings up to this point--of
+swords and pikes, guns and pistols, they had left in charge of the host
+of the inn whence they had just issued, and were now bent on crowning
+their day's triumph with a supreme act of daring--the renown of which
+they enlarged in their own imaginations, while undermining the courage
+needful for its performance, by enhancing its terrors as they went.
+
+At length two lofty hexagonal towers appeared, and the consciousness
+that the final test of their resolution drew nigh took immediate form in
+a fluttering at the heart, which, however, gave no outward sign but that
+of silence; and indeed they were still too full of the importance of
+unaccustomed authority to fear any contempt for it on the part of
+others.
+
+It happened that at this moment Raglan Castle was full of merry-making
+upon occasion of the marriage of one of lady Herbert's
+waiting-gentlewomen to an officer of the household; and in these
+festivities the earl of Worcester and all his guests were taking a part.
+
+Among the numerous members of the household was one who, from being a
+turnspit, had risen, chiefly in virtue of an immovably lugubrious
+expression of countenance, to be the earl's fool. From this peculiarity
+his fellow-servants had given him the nickname of The Hangman; but the
+man himself had chosen the role of a puritan parson, as affording the
+best ground-work for the display of a humour suitable to the expression
+of countenance with which his mother had endowed him. That mother was
+Goody Rees, concerning whom, as already hinted, strange things were
+whispered. In the earlier part of his career the fool had not
+unfrequently found his mother's reputation a sufficient shelter from
+persecution; and indeed there might have been reason to suppose that it
+was for her son's sake she encouraged her own evil repute, a distinction
+involving considerable risk, seeing the time had not yet arrived when
+the disbelief in such powers was sufficiently advanced for the safety of
+those reported to possess them. In her turn, however, she ran a risk
+somewhat less than ordinary from the fact that her boy was a domestic in
+the family of one whose eldest son, the heir to the earldom, lay under a
+similar suspicion; for not a few of the household were far from
+satisfied that lord Herbert's known occupations in the Yellow Tower were
+not principally ostensible, and that he and his man had nothing to do
+with the black art, or some other of the many regions of occult science
+in which the ambition after unlawful power may hopefully exercise
+itself.
+
+Upon occasion of a family fete, merriment was in those days carried
+further, on the part of both masters and servants, than in the greatly
+altered relations and conditions of the present day would be desirable,
+or, indeed, possible. In this instance, the fun broke out in the
+arranging of a mock marriage between Thomas Rees, commonly called Tom
+Fool, and a young girl who served under the cook. Half the jest lay in
+the contrast between the long face of the bridegroom, both congenitally
+and wilfully miserable, and that of the bride, broad as a harvest moon,
+and rosy almost to purple. The bridegroom never smiled, and spoke with
+his jaws rather than his lips; while the bride seldom uttered a syllable
+without grinning from ear to ear, and displaying a marvellous
+appointment of huge and brilliant teeth. Entering solemnly into the
+joke, Tom expressed himself willing to marry the girl, but represented,
+as an insurmountable difficulty, that he had no clothes for the
+occasion. Thereupon the earl, drawing from his pocket his bunch of keys,
+directed him to go and take what he liked from his wardrobe. Now the
+earl was a man of large circumference, and the fool as lank in person as
+in countenance.
+
+Tom took the keys and was some time gone, during which many conjectures
+were hazarded as to the style in which he would choose to appear. When
+he re-entered the great hall, where the company was assembled, the roar
+of laughter which followed his appearance made the glass of its great
+cupola ring again. For not merely was he dressed in the earl's beaver
+hat and satin cloak, splendid with plush and gold and silver lace, but
+he had indued a corresponding suit of his clothes as well, even to his
+silk stockings, garters, and roses, and with the help of many pillows
+and other such farcing, so filled the garments which otherwise had hung
+upon him like a shawl from a peg, and made of himself such a 'sweet
+creature of bombast' that, with ludicrous unlikeness of countenance, he
+bore in figure no distant resemblance to the earl himself.
+
+Meantime lady Elizabeth had been busy with the scullery-maid, whom she
+had attired in a splendid brocade of her grandmother's, with all
+suitable belongings of ruff, high collar, and lace wings, such as Queen
+Elizabeth is represented with in Oliver's portrait. Upon her appearance,
+a few minutes after Tom's, the laughter broke out afresh, in redoubled
+peals, and the merriment was at its height, when the warder of one of
+the gates entered and whispered in his master's ear the arrival of the
+bumpkins, and their mission announced, he informed his lordship, with
+all the importance and dignity they knew how to assume. The earl burst
+into a fresh laugh. But presently it quavered a little and ceased, while
+over the amusement still beaming on his countenance gathered a slight
+shade of anxiety, for who could tell what tempest such a mere whirling
+of straws might not forerun?
+
+A few words of the warder's had reached Tom where he stood a little
+aside, his solemn countenance radiating disapproval of the tumultuous
+folly around him. He took three strides towards the earl.
+
+'Wherein lieth the new jest?' he asked, with dignity.
+
+'A set of country louts, my lord,' answered the earl, 'are at the gate,
+affirming the right of search in this your lordship's house of Raglan.'
+
+'For what?'
+
+'Arms, my lord.'
+
+'And wherefore? On what ground?'
+
+'On the ground that your lordship is a vile recusant--a papist, and
+therefore a traitor, no doubt, although they use not the word,' said the
+earl.
+
+'I shall be round with them,' said Tom, embracing the assumed
+proportions in front of him, and turning to the door.
+
+Ere the earl had time to conceive his intent, he had hurried from the
+hall, followed by fresh shouts of laughter. For he had forgotten to
+stuff himself behind, and, when the company caught sight of his back as
+he strode out, the tenuity of the foundation for such a 'huge hill of
+flesh' was absurd as Falstaff's ha'p'orth of bread to the 'intolerable
+deal of sack.'
+
+But the next moment the earl had caught the intended joke, and although
+a trifle concerned about the affair, was of too mirth-loving a nature to
+interfere with Tom's project, the result of which would doubtless be
+highly satisfactory--at least to those not primarily concerned. He
+instantly called for silence, and explained to the assembly what he
+believed to be Tom Fool's intent, and as there was nothing to be seen
+from the hall, the windows of which were at a great height from the
+floor, and Tom's scheme would be fatally imperilled by the visible
+presence of spectators, from some at least of whom gravity of demeanour
+could not be expected, gave hasty instructions to several of his sons
+and daughters to disperse the company to upper windows having a view of
+one or the other court, for no one could tell where the fool's humour
+might find its principal arena. The next moment, in the plain dress of
+rough brownish cloth, which he always wore except upon state occasions,
+he followed the fool to the gate, where he found him talking through the
+wicket-grating to the rustics, who, having passed drawbridge and
+portcullises, of which neither the former had been raised nor the latter
+lowered for many years, now stood on the other side of the gate
+demanding admittance. In the parley, Tom Fool was imitating his master's
+voice and every one of the peculiarities of his speech to perfection,
+addressing them with extreme courtesy, as if he took them for gentlemen
+of no ordinary consideration,--a point in his conception of his part
+which he never forgot throughout the whole business. To the dismay of
+his master he was even more than admitting, almost boasting, that there
+was an enormous quantity of weapons in the castle--sufficient at least
+to arm ten thousand horsemen!--a prodigious statement, for, at the
+uttermost, there was not more than the tenth part of that amount--still
+a somewhat larger provision no doubt than the intruders had expected to
+find! The pseudo-earl went on to say that the armoury consisted of one
+strong room only, the door of which was so cunningly concealed and
+secured that no one but himself knew where it was, or if found could
+open it. But such he said was his respect to the will of the most august
+parliament, that he would himself conduct them to the said armoury, and
+deliver over upon the spot into their safe custody the whole mass of
+weapons to carry away with them. And thereupon he proceeded to open the
+gate.
+
+By this time the door of the neighbouring guard-room was crowded with
+the heads of eager listeners, but the presence of the earl kept them
+quiet, and at a sign from him they drew back ere the men entered. The
+earl himself took a position where he would be covered by the opening
+wicket.
+
+Tom received them into bodily presence with the notification that,
+having suspected their object, he had sent all his people out of the
+way, in order to avoid the least danger of a broil. Bowing to them with
+the utmost politeness as they entered, he requested them to step forward
+into the court while he closed the wicket behind them, but took the
+opportunity of whispering to one of the men just inside the door of the
+guardhouse, who, the moment Tom had led the rustics away, approached the
+earl, and told him what he had said.
+
+'What can the rascal mean?' said the earl to himself; but he told the
+man to carry the fool's message exactly as he had received it, and
+quietly followed Tom and his companions, some of whom, conceiving fresh
+importance from the overstrained politeness with which they had been
+received, were now attempting a transformation of their usual loundering
+gait into a martial stride, with the result of a foolish strut, very
+unlike the dignified progress of the sham earl, whose weak back roused
+in them no suspicion, and who had taken care they should not see his
+face. Across the paved court, and through the hall to the inner court,
+Tom led them, and the earl followed.
+
+The twilight was falling. The hall was empty of life, and filled with a
+sombre dusk, echoing to every step as they passed through it. They did
+not see the flash of eyes and glimmer of smiles from the minstrel's
+gallery, and the solitude, size, and gloom had, even on their dull
+natures, a palpable influence. The whole castle seemed deserted as they
+followed the false earl across the second court--with the true one
+stealing after them like a knave--little imagining that bright eyes were
+watching them from the curtains of every window like stars from the
+clear spaces and cloudy edges of heaven. To the north-west corner of the
+court he led them, and through a sculptured doorway up the straight wide
+ascent of stone called the grand staircase. At the top he turned to the
+right, along a dim corridor, from which he entered a suite of bedrooms
+and dressing-rooms, over whose black floors he led the trampling
+hob-nailed shoes without pity either for their polish or the labour of
+the housemaids in restoring it.
+
+In this way he reached the stair in the bell-tower, ascending which he
+brought them into a narrow dark passage ending again in a downward
+stair, at the foot of which they found themselves in the long
+picture-gallery, having entered it in the recess of one of its large
+windows. At the other end of the gallery he crossed into the
+dining-room, then through an ante-chamber entered the drawing-room,
+where the ladies, apprised of their approach, kept still behind curtains
+and high chairs, until they had passed through, on their way to cross
+the archway of the main entrance, and through the library gain the
+region of household economy and cookery. Thither I will not drag my
+reader after them. Indeed the earl, who had been dogging them like a
+Fate, ever emerging on their track but never beheld, had already began
+to pay his part of the penalty of the joke in fatigue, for he was not
+only unwieldy in person, but far from robust, being very subject to
+gout. He owed his good spirits to a noble nature, and not to animal
+well-being. When they crossed from the picture-gallery to the
+dining-room, he went down the stair between, and into the oak-parlour
+adjoining the great hall. There he threw himself into an easy chair
+which always stood for him in the great bay window, looking over the
+moat to the huge keep of the castle, and commanding through its western
+light the stone bridge which crossed it. There he lay back at his ease,
+and, instructed by the message Tom had committed to the serjeant of the
+guard, waited the result.
+
+As for his double, he went stalking on in front of his victims, never
+turning to show his face; he knew they would follow, were it but for the
+fear of being left alone. Close behind him they kept, scarce daring to
+whisper from growing awe of the vast place. The fumes of the beer had by
+this time evaporated, and the heavy obscurity which pervaded the whole
+building enhanced their growing apprehensions. On and on the fool led
+them, up and down, going and returning, but ever in new tracks, for the
+marvellous old place was interminably burrowed with connecting passages
+and communications of every sort--some of them the merest ducts which
+had to be all but crept through, and which would have certainly arrested
+the progress of the earl had he followed so far: no one about the place
+understood its "crenkles" so well as Tom. For the greater part of an
+hour he led them thus, until, having been on their legs the whole day,
+they were thoroughly wearied as well as awe-struck. At length, in a
+gloomy chamber, where one could not see the face of another, the
+pseudo-earl turned full upon them, and said in his most solemn tones:--
+
+'Arrived thus far, my masters, it is borne in upon me with rebuke, that
+before undertaking to guide you to the armoury, I should have acquainted
+you with the strange fact that at times I am myself unable to find the
+place of which we are in search; and I begin to fear it is so now, and
+that we are at this moment the sport of a certain member of my family of
+whom it may be your worships have heard things not more strange than
+true. Against his machinations I am powerless. All that is left us is to
+go to him and entreat him to unsay his spells.'
+
+A confused murmur of objections arose.
+
+'Then your worships will remain here while I go to the Yellow Tower, and
+come to you again?' said the mock earl, making as if he would leave
+them.
+
+But they crowded round him with earnest refusals to be abandoned; for in
+their very souls they felt the fact that they were upon enchanted
+ground--and in the dark.
+
+'Then follow me,' he said, and conducted them into the open air of the
+inner court, almost opposite the archway in its buildings leading to the
+stone bridge, whose gothic structure bestrid the moat of the keep.
+
+For Raglan Castle had this peculiarity, that its keep was surrounded by
+a moat of its own, separating it from the rest of the castle, so that,
+save by bridge, no one within any more than without the walls could
+reach it. On to the bridge Tom led the way, followed by his dupes--now
+full in the view of the earl where he sat in his parlour window. When
+they had reached the centre of it, however, and glancing up at the awful
+bulk of stone towering above them, its walls strangely dented and
+furrowed, so as to such as they, might well suggest frightful means to
+wicked ends, they stood stock-still, refusing to go a step further;
+while their chief speaker, Upstill, emboldened by anger, fear, and the
+meek behaviour of the supposed earl, broke out in a torrent of
+arrogance, wherein his intention was to brandish the terrors of the High
+Parliament over the heads of his lordship of Worcester and all
+recusants. He had not got far, however, before a shrill whistle pierced
+the air, and the next instant arose a chaos of horrible, appalling, and
+harrowing noises, 'such a roaring,' in the words of their own report of
+the matter to the reverend master Flowerdew, 'as if the mouth of hell
+had been wide open, and all the devils conjured up'--doubtless they
+meant by the arts of the wizard whose dwelling was that same tower of
+fearful fame before which they now stood. The skin-contracting chill of
+terror uplifted their hair. The mystery that enveloped the origin of the
+sounds gave them an unearthliness which froze the very fountains of
+their life, and rendered them incapable even of motion. They stared at
+each other with a ghastly observance, which descried no comfort, only
+like images of horror. 'Man's hand is not able to taste' how long they
+might have thus stood, nor 'his tongue to conceive' what the
+consequences might have been, had not a more healthy terror presently
+supervened. Across the tumult of sounds, like a fiercer flash through
+the flames of a furnace, shot a hideous, long-drawn yell, and the same
+instant came a man running at full speed through the archway from the
+court, casting terror-stricken glances behind him, and shouting with a
+voice half-choked to a shriek--
+
+'Look to yourselves, my masters; the lions are got loose!'
+
+All the world knew that ever since King James had set the fashion by
+taking so much pleasure in the lions at the Tower, strange beasts had
+been kept in the castle of Raglan.
+
+The new terror broke the spell of the old, and the parliamentary
+commissioners fled. But which was the way from the castle? Which the
+path to the lions' den? In an agony of horrible dread, they rushed
+hither and thither about the court, where now the white horse, as steady
+as marble, should be when first they crossed it, was, to their excited
+vision, prancing wildly about the great basin from whose charmed circle
+he could not break, foaming, at the mouth, and casting huge water-jets
+from his nostrils into the perturbed air; while from the surface of the
+moat a great column of water shot up nearly as high as the citadel,
+whose return into the moat was like a tempest, and with all the
+elemental tumult was mingled the howling of wild beasts. The doors of
+the hall and the gates to the bowling green being shut, the poor
+wretches could not find their way out of the court, but ran from door to
+door like madmen, only to find all closed against them. From every
+window around the court--from the apartments of the waiting gentlewomen,
+from the picture-gallery, from the officers' rooms, eager and merry eyes
+looked down on the spot, themselves unseen and unsuspected, for all
+voices were hushed, and for anything the bumpkins heard or saw they
+might have been in a place deserted of men, and possessed only by evil
+spirits, whose pranks were now tormenting them. At last Upstill, who had
+fallen on the bridge at his first start, and had ever since been rushing
+about with a limp and a leap alternated, managed to open the door of the
+hall, and its eastern door having been left open, shot across and into
+the outer court, where he made for the gate, followed at varied distance
+by the rest of the routed commissioners of search, as each had
+discovered the way his forerunner fled. With trembling hands Upstill
+raised the latch of the wicket, and to his delight found it unlocked. He
+darted through, passed the twin portcullises, and was presently
+thundering over the drawbridge, which, trembling under his heavy steps,
+seemed on the point of rising to heave him back into the jaws of the
+lion, or, worse still, the clutches of the enchanter. Not one looked
+behind him, not even when, having passed through the white stone gate,
+also purposely left open for their escape, and rattled down the
+multitude of steps that told how deep was the moat they had just
+crossed, where the last of them nearly broke his neck by rolling almost
+from top to bottom, they reached the outermost, the brick gate, and so
+left the awful region of enchantment and feline fury commingled. Not
+until the castle was out of sight, and their leader had sunk senseless
+on the turf by the roadside, did they dare a backward look. The moment
+he came to himself they started again for home, at what poor speed they
+could make, and reached the Crown and Mitre in sad plight, where,
+however, they found some compensation in the pleasure of setting forth
+their adventures--with the heroic manner in which, although vanquished
+by the irresistible force of enchantment, they had yet brought off their
+forces without the loss of a single man. Their story spread over the
+country, enlarged and embellished at every fresh stage in its progress.
+
+When the tale reached mother Rees, it filled her with fresh awe of the
+great magician, the renowned lord Herbert. She little thought the whole
+affair was a jest of her own son's. Firmly believing in all kinds of
+magic and witchcraft, but as innocent of conscious dealing with the
+powers of ill as the whitest-winged angel betwixt earth's garret and
+heaven's threshold, she owed her evil repute amongst her neighbours to a
+rare therapeutic faculty, accompanied by a keen sympathetic instinct,
+which greatly sharpened her powers of observation in the quest after
+what was amiss; while her touch was so delicate, so informed with
+present mind, and came therefore into such rapport with any living
+organism, the secret of whose suffering it sought to discover, that
+sprained muscles, dislocated joints, and broken bones seemed at its soft
+approach to re-arrange their disturbed parts, and yield to the power of
+her composing will as to a re-ordering harmony. Add to this, that she
+understood more of the virtues of some herbs than any doctor in the
+parish, which, in the condition of general practice at the time, is not
+perhaps to say much, and that she firmly believed in the might of
+certain charms, and occasionally used them--and I have given reason
+enough why, while regarded by all with disapprobation--she should be by
+many both courted and feared. For her own part she had a leaning to the
+puritans, chiefly from respect to the memory of a good-hearted, weak,
+but intellectually gifted, and, therefore, admired husband; but the
+ridicule of her yet more gifted son had a good deal shaken this
+predilection, so that she now spent what powers of discrimination and
+choice she possessed solely upon persons, heedless of principles in
+themselves, and regarding them only in their vital results. Hence, it
+was a matter of absolute indifference to her which of the parties now
+dividing the country was in the right, or which should lose, which win,
+provided no personal evil befel the men or women for whom she cherished
+a preference. Like many another, she was hardly aware of the
+jurisdiction of conscience, save in respect of immediate personal
+relations.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ANIMADVERSIONS.
+
+
+From the time when the conversation recorded had in some measure
+dispelled the fog between them, Roger and Richard Heywood drew rapidly
+nearer to each other. The father had been but waiting until his son
+should begin to ask him questions, for watchfulness of himself and
+others had taught him how useless information is to those who have not
+first desired it, how poor in influence, how soon forgotten; and now
+that the fitting condition had presented itself, he was ready: with less
+of reserve than in the relation between them was common amongst the
+puritans, he began to pour his very soul into that of his son. All his
+influence went with that party which, holding that the natural flow of
+the reformation of the church from popery had stagnated in episcopacy,
+consisted chiefly of those who, in demanding the overthrow of that form
+of church government, sought to substitute for it what they called
+presbyterianism; but Mr. Heywood belonged to another division of it
+which, although less influential at present, was destined to come by and
+by to the front, in the strength of the conviction that to stop with
+presbyterianism was merely to change the name of the swamp--a party
+whose distinctive and animating spirit was the love of freedom, which
+indeed, degenerating into a passion among its inferior members, broke
+out, upon occasion, in the wildest vagaries of speech and doctrine, but
+on the other hand justified itself in its leaders, chief amongst whom
+were Milton and Cromwell, inasmuch as they accorded to the consciences
+of others the freedom they demanded for their own--the love of liberty
+with them not meaning merely the love of enjoying freedom, but that
+respect for the thing itself which renders a man incapable of violating
+it in another.
+
+Roger Heywood was, in fact, already a pupil of Milton, whose anonymous
+pamphlet of 'Reformation touching Church Discipline' had already reached
+him, and opened with him the way for all his following works.
+
+Richard, with whom my story has really to do, but for the understanding
+of whom it is necessary that the character and mental position of his
+father should in some measure be set forth, proved an apt pupil, and was
+soon possessed with such a passion for justice and liberty, as embodied
+in the political doctrines now presented for his acceptance, that it was
+impossible for him to understand how any honest man could be of a
+different mind. No youth, indeed, of simple and noble nature, as yet
+unmarred by any dominant phase of selfishness, could have failed to
+catch fire from the enthusiasm of such a father, an enthusiasm glowing
+yet restrained, wherein party spirit had a less share than
+principle--which, in relation to such a time, is to say much. Richard's
+heart swelled within him at the vistas of grandeur opened by his
+father's words, and swelled yet higher when he read to him passages from
+the pamphlet to which I have referred. It seemed to him, as to most
+young people under mental excitement, that he had but to tell the facts
+of the case to draw all men to his side, enlisting them in the army
+destined to sweep every form of tyranny, and especially spiritual
+usurpation and arrogance, from the face of the earth.
+
+Being one who took everybody at the spoken word, Richard never thought
+of seeking Dorothy again at their former place of meeting. Nor, in the
+new enthusiasm born in him, did his thoughts for a good many days turn
+to her so often, or dwell so much upon her, as to cause any keen sense
+of their separation. The flood of new thoughts and feelings had
+transported him beyond the ignorant present. In truth, also, he was a
+little angry with Dorothy for showing a foolish preference for the
+church party, so plainly in the wrong was it! And what could SHE know
+about the question by his indifference to which she had been so
+scandalised, but to which he had been indifferent only until rightly
+informed thereon! If he had ever given her just cause to think him
+childish, certainly she should never apply the word to him again! If he
+could but see her, he would soon convince her--indeed he MUST see
+her--for the truth was not his to keep, but to share! It was his duty to
+acquaint her with the fact that the parliament was the army of God,
+fighting the great red dragon, one of whose seven heads was prelacy, the
+horn upon it the king, and Laud its crown. He wanted a stroll--he would
+take the path through the woods and the shrubbery to the old sun-dial.
+She would not be there, of course, but he would walk up the pleached
+alley and call at the house.
+
+Reasoning thus within himself one day, he rose and went. But, as he
+approached the wood, Dorothy's great mastiff, which she had reared from
+a pup with her own hand, came leaping out to welcome him, and he was
+prepared to find her not far off.
+
+When he entered the yew-circle, there she stood leaning on the dial, as
+if, like old Time, she too had gone to sleep there, and was dreaming
+ancient dreams over again. She did not move at the first sounds of his
+approach; and when at length, as he stood silent by her side, she lifted
+her head, but without looking at him, he saw the traces of tears on her
+cheeks. The heart of the youth smote him.
+
+'Weeping, Dorothy?' he said.
+
+'Yes,' she answered simply.
+
+'I trust I am not the cause of your trouble, Dorothy?'
+
+'You!' returned the girl quickly, and the colour rushed to her pale
+cheeks. 'No, indeed. How should you trouble me? My mother is ill.'
+
+Considering his age, Richard was not much given to vanity, and it was
+something better that prevented him from feeling pleased at being thus
+exonerated: she looked so sweet and sad that the love which new
+interests had placed in abeyance returned in full tide. Even when a
+child, he had scarcely ever seen her in tears; it was to him a new
+aspect of her being.
+
+'Dear Dorothy!' he said, 'I am very much grieved to learn this of your
+beautiful mother.'
+
+'She IS beautiful,' responded the girl, and her voice was softer than he
+had ever heard it before; 'but she will die, and I shall be left alone.'
+
+'No, Dorothy! that you shall never be,' exclaimed Richard, with a
+confidence bordering on presumption.
+
+'Master Herbert is with her now,' resumed Dorothy, heedless of his
+words.
+
+'You do not mean her life is even now in danger?' said Richard, in a
+tone of sudden awe.
+
+'I hope not, but, indeed, I cannot tell. I left master Herbert
+comforting her with the assurance that she was taken away from the evil
+to come. "And I trust, madam," the dear old man went on to say, "that my
+departure will not long be delayed, for darkness will cover the earth,
+and gross darkness the people." Those were his very words.'
+
+'Nay, nay!' said Richard, hastily; 'the good man is deceived; the people
+that sit in darkness shall see a great light.'
+
+The girl looked at him with strange interrogation.
+
+'Do not be angry, sweet Dorothy,' Richard went on. 'Old men may mistake
+as well as youths. As for the realm of England, the sun of righteousness
+will speedily arise thereon, for the dawn draws nigh; and master Herbert
+may be just as far deceived concerning your mother's condition, for she
+has been but sickly for a long time, and yet has survived many winters.'
+
+Dorothy looked at him still, and was silent. At length she spoke, and
+her words came slowly and with weight.
+
+'And what prophet's mantle, if I may make so bold, has fallen upon
+Richard Heywood, that the word in his mouth should outweigh that of an
+aged servant of the church? Can it be that the great light of which he
+speaks is Richard Heywood himself?'
+
+'As master Herbert is a good man and a servant of God,' said Richard,
+coldly, stung by her sarcasm, but not choosing to reply to it, 'his word
+weighs mightily; but as a servant of the church his word is no weightier
+than my father's, who is also a minister of the true tabernacle, that
+wherein all who are kings over themselves are priests unto God--though
+truly he pretends to no prophecy beyond the understanding of the signs
+of the times.'
+
+Dorothy saw that a wonderful change, such as had been incredible upon
+any but the witness of her own eyes and ears, had passed on her old
+playmate. He was in truth a boy no longer. Their relative position was
+no more what she had been of late accustomed to consider it. But with
+the change a gulf had begun to yawn between them.
+
+'Alas, Richard!' she said, mistaking what he meant by the signs of the
+times, 'those who arrogate the gift of the Holy Ghost, while their sole
+inspiration is the presumption of their own hearts and an overweening
+contempt of authority, may well mistake signs of their own causing for
+signs from heaven. I but repeat the very words of good master Herbert.'
+
+'I thought such swelling words hardly sounded like your own, Dorothy.
+But tell me, why should the persuasion of man or woman hang upon the
+words of a fellow-mortal? Is not the gift of the Spirit free to each who
+asks it? And are we not told that each must be fully persuaded in his
+own mind?'
+
+'Nay, Richard, now I have thee! Hang you not by the word of your father,
+who is one, and despise the authority of the true church, which is
+many?'
+
+'The true church were indeed an authority, but where shall we find it?
+Anyhow, the true church is one thing, and prelatical episcopacy another.
+But I have yet to learn what authority even the true church could have
+over a man's conscience.'
+
+'You need to be reminded, Richard, that the Lord of the church gave
+power to his apostles to bind or loose.'
+
+'I do not need to be so reminded, Dorothy, but I do not need to be shown
+first that that power was over men's consciences; and second, that it
+was transmitted to others by the apostles waiving the question as to the
+doubtful ordination of English prelates.'
+
+Fire flashed from Dorothy's eyes.
+
+'Richard Heywood,' she said, 'the demon of spiritual pride has already
+entered into you, and blown you up with a self-sufficiency which I never
+saw in you before, or I would never, never have companied with you, as I
+am now ashamed to think I have done so long, even to the danger of my
+soul's health.'
+
+'In that case I may comfort myself, mistress Dorothy Vaughan,' said
+Richard, 'that you will no longer count me a boy! But do you then no
+longer desire that I should take one part OR the other and show myself a
+man? Am I man enough yet for the woman thou art, Dorothy?--But,
+Dorothy,' he added, with sudden change of tone, for she had in anger
+turned to leave him, 'I love you dearly, and I am truly sorry if I have
+spoken so as to offend you. I came hither eager to share with you the
+great things I have learned since you left me with just contempt a
+fortnight ago.'
+
+'Then it is I whose foolish words have cast you into the seat of the
+scorner! Alas! alas! my poor Richard! Never, never more, while you thus
+rebel against authority and revile sacred things, will I hold counsel
+with you.'
+
+And again she turned to go.
+
+'Dorothy!' cried the youth, turning pale with agony to find on the brink
+of what an abyss of loss his zeal had set him, 'wilt thou, then, never
+speak to me more, and I love thee as the daylight?'
+
+'Never more till thou repent and turn. I will but give thee one piece of
+counsel, and then leave thee--if for ever, that rests with thee. There
+has lately appeared, like the frog out of the mouth of the dragon, a
+certain tractate or treatise, small in bulk, but large with the wind of
+evil doctrine. Doubtless it will reach your father's house ere long, if
+it be not, as is more likely, already there, for it is the vile work of
+one they call a puritan, though where even the writer can vainly imagine
+the purity of such work to lie, let the pamphlet itself raise the
+question. Read the evil thing--or, I will not say read it, but glance
+the eye over it. It is styled "Animadversions upon--." Truly, I cannot
+recall the long-drawn title. It is filled, even as a toad with poison,
+so full of evil and scurrilous sayings against good men, rating and
+abusing them as the very off-scouring of the earth, that you cannot yet
+be so far gone in evil as not to be reclaimed by seeing whither such men
+and their inspiration would lead you. Farewell, Richard.'
+
+With the words, and without a look, Dorothy, who had been standing
+sideways in act to go, swept up the pleached alley, her step so stately
+and her head so high that Richard, slowly as she walked away, dared not
+follow her, but stood 'like one forbid.' When she had vanished, and the
+light shone in full at the far end, he gave a great sigh and turned
+away, and the old dial was forsaken.
+
+The scrap of title Dorothy had given was enough to enable Richard to
+recognise the pamphlet as one a copy of which his father had received
+only a few days before, and over the reading of which they had again and
+again laughed unrestrainedly. As he walked home he sought in vain to
+recall anything in it deserving of such reprobation as Dorothy had
+branded it withal. Had it been written on the other side no search would
+have been necessary, for party spirit (from which how could such a youth
+be free, when the greatest men of his time were deeply tainted?), while
+it blinds the eyes in one direction, makes them doubly keen in another.
+As it was, the abuse in the pamphlet referred to, appeared to him only
+warrantable indignation; and, the arrogance of an imperfect love leading
+him to utter desertion of his newly-adopted principles, he scorned as
+presumptuous that exercise of her own judgment on the part of Dorothy
+which had led to their separation, bitterly resenting the change in his
+playmate, who, now an angry woman, had decreed his degradation from the
+commonest privileges of friendship, until such time as he should abjure
+his convictions, become a renegade to the truth, and abandon the hope of
+resulting freedom which the strife of parties held out--an act of
+tyranny the reflection upon which raised such a swelling in his throat
+as he had never felt but once before, when a favourite foal got staked
+in trying to clear a fence. Having neither friend nor sister to whom to
+confess that he was in trouble--have confided it he could not in any
+case, seeing it involved blame of the woman his love for whom now first,
+when on the point of losing her for ever, threatened to overmaster
+him--he wandered to the stables, which he found empty of men and nearly
+so of horses, half-involuntarily sought the stall of the mare his father
+had given him on his last birthday, laid his head on the neck bent round
+to greet him, and sighed a sore response to her soft, low, tremulous
+whinny.
+
+As he stood thus, overcome by the bitter sense of wrong from the one he
+loved best in the world, something darkened the stable-door, and a voice
+he knew reached his ear. Mistaking the head she saw across an empty
+stall for that of one of the farm-servants, Goody Rees was calling aloud
+to know if he wanted a charm for the toothache.
+
+Richard looked up.
+
+'And what may your charm be, mistress Rees?' he asked.
+
+'Aha! is it thou, young master?' returned the woman. 'Thou wilt marvel
+to see me about the place so soon again, but verily desired to know how
+that godly man, Faithful Stopchase, found himself after his fall.'
+
+'Nay, mistress Rees, make no apology for coming amongst thy friends. I
+warrant thee against further rudeness of man or beast. I have taken them
+to task, and truly I will break his head who wags tongue against thee.
+As for Stopchase, he does well enough in all except owing thee thanks
+which he declines to pay. But for thy charm, good mistress Rees, what is
+it--tell me?'
+
+She took a step inside the door, sent her small eyes peering first into
+every corner her sight could reach, and then said:
+
+'Are we alone--we two, master Richard?'
+
+'There's a cat in the next stall, mistress: if she can hear, she can't
+speak.'
+
+'Don't be too sure of that, master Richard. Be there no one else?'
+
+'Not a body; soul there may be--who knows?'
+
+'I know there is none. I will tell thee my charm, or what else I may
+that thou would wish to know; for he is a true gentleman who will help a
+woman because she is a woman, be she as old and ugly as Goody Rees
+herself. Hearken, my pretty sir: it is the tooth of a corpse, drawn
+after he hath lain a se'en-night in the mould: wilt buy, my master? Or
+did not I see thee now asking comfort from thy horse for the--'
+
+She paused a moment, peered narrowly at him from under lowered eyebrows,
+and went on:
+
+'--heartache, eh, master Richard? Old eyes can see through velvet
+doublets.'
+
+'All the world knows yours can see farther than other people's,'
+returned Richard. 'Heaven knows whence they have their sharpness. But
+suppose it were a heartache now, have you got e'er a charm to cure
+that?'
+
+'The best of all charms, my young master, is a kiss from the maiden; and
+what would thou give me for the spell that should set her by thy side at
+the old dial, under a warm harvest moon, all the long hours 'twixt
+midnight and the crowing of the black cock--eh, my master? What wilt
+thou give me?'
+
+'Not a brass farthing, if she came not of her own good will,' murmured
+Richard, turning towards his mare. 'But come, mistress Rees, you know
+you couldn't do it, even if you were the black witch the neighbours
+would have you--though I, for my part, will not hear a word against
+you--never since you set my poor old dog upon his legs again--though to
+be sure he will die one of these days, and that no one can help--dogs
+have such short lives, poor fools!'
+
+'Thou knows not what old mother Rees can do. Tell me, young master, did
+she ever say and not do--eh, now?'
+
+'You said you would cure my dog, and you did,' answered Richard.
+
+'And I say now, if thou will, I will set thee and her together by the
+old dial to-morrow night, and it shall be a warm and moonlit night on
+purpose for ye, an ye will.'
+
+'It were to no good purpose, mistress Rees, for we parted this day--and
+that for ever, I much fear me,' said Richard with a deep sigh, but
+getting some little comfort even out of a witch's sympathy.
+
+'Tut, tut, tut! Lovers' quarrels! Who knows not what they mean? Crying
+and kissing--crying and kissing--that's what they mean. Come now--what
+did thou and she quarrel about?'
+
+The old woman, if not a witch, at least looked very like one, with her
+two hands resting on the wide round ledge of her farthingale, her head
+thrown back, and from under her peaked hat that pointed away behind, her
+two greenish eyes peering with a half-coaxing, yet sharp and probing
+gaze into those of the youth.
+
+But how could he make a confidante of one like her? What could she
+understand of such questions as had raised the wall of partition betwixt
+him and Dorothy? Unwilling to offend her, however, he hesitated to give
+her offer a plain refusal, and turning away in silence, affected to have
+caught sight of something suspicious about his mare's near hock.
+
+'I see, I see!' said the old woman grimly, but not ill-naturedly, and
+nodded her head, so that her hat described great arcs across the sky;
+'thou art ashamed to confess that thou lovest thy father's whims more
+than thy lady's favours. Well, well! Such lovers are hardly for my
+trouble!'
+
+But here came the voice of Mr. Heywood, calling his groom. She started,
+glanced around her as if seeking a covert, then peered from the door,
+and glided noiselessly out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+PREPARATIONS.
+
+
+Great was the merriment in Raglan Castle over the discomfiture of the
+bumpkins, and many were the compliments Tom received in parlour,
+nursery, kitchen, guard-room, everywhere, on the success of his
+hastily-formed scheme for the chastisement of their presumption. The
+household had looked for a merry time on the occasion of the wedding,
+but had not expected such a full cup of delight as had been pressed out
+for them betwixt the self-importance of the overweening yokels and the
+inventive faculties of Tom Fool. All the evening, one standing in any
+open spot of the castle might have heard, now on the one, now on the
+other side, renewed bursts of merriment ripple the air; but as the still
+autumn night crept on, the intervals between grew longer and longer,
+until at length all sounds ceased, and silence took up her ancient
+reign, broken only by the occasional stamp of a horse or howl of a
+watch-dog.
+
+But the earl, who, from simplicity of nature and peace of conscience
+combined, was perhaps better fitted for the enjoyment of the joke, in a
+time when such ludifications were not yet considered unsuitable to the
+dignity of the highest position, than any other member of his household,
+had, through it all, showed a countenance in which, although eyes, lips,
+and voice shared in the laughter, there yet lurked a thoughtful doubt
+concerning the result. For he knew that, in some shape or other, and
+that certainly not the true one, the affair would be spread over the
+country, where now prejudice against the Catholics was strong and
+dangerous in proportion to the unreason of those who cherished it. Now,
+also, it was becoming pretty plain that except the king yielded every
+prerogative, and became the puppet which the mingled pride and
+apprehension of the Parliament would have him, their differences must
+ere long be referred to the arbitration of the sword, in which case
+there was no shadow of doubt in the mind of the earl as to the part
+befitting a peer of the realm. The king was a protestant, but no less
+the king; and not this man, but his parents, had sinned in forsaking the
+church--of which sin their offspring had now to bear the penalty,
+reaping the whirlwind sprung from the stormy seeds by them sown. For
+what were the puritans but the lawfully-begotten children of the so
+called reformation, whose spirit they inherited, and in whose footsteps
+they so closely followed? In the midst of such reflections, dawned
+slowly in the mind of the devout old man the enchanting hope that
+perhaps he might be made the messenger of God to lead back to the true
+fold the wandering feet of his king. But, fail or speed in any result,
+so long as his castle held together, it should stand for the king.
+Faithful catholic as he was, the brave old man was English to the
+backbone.
+
+And there was no time to lose. This visit of search, let it have
+originated how it might, and be as despicable in itself as it was
+ludicrous in its result, showed but too clearly how strong the current
+of popular feeling was setting against all the mounds of social
+distinction, and not kingly prerogative alone. What preparations might
+be needful, must be prudent.
+
+That same night, then, long after the rest of the household had retired,
+three men took advantage of a fine half-moon to make a circuit of the
+castle, first along the counterscarp of the moat, and next along all
+accessible portions of the walls and battlements. They halted often,
+and, with much observation of the defences, held earnest talk together,
+sometimes eagerly contending rather than disputing, but far more often
+mutually suggesting and agreeing. At length one of them, whom the others
+called Caspar, retired, and the earl was left with his son Edward, lord
+Herbert, the only person in the castle who had gone to neither window
+nor door to delight himself with the discomfiture of the parliamentary
+commissioners.
+
+They entered the long picture gallery, faintly lighted from its large
+windows to the court, but chiefly from the oriel which formed the
+northern end of it, where they now sat down, the earl being, for the
+second time that night, weary. Behind them was a long dim line of
+portraits, broken only by the great chimney-piece supported by human
+figures, all of carved stone, and before them, nearly as dim, was the
+moon-massed landscape--a lovely view of the woodland, pasture, and red
+tilth to the northward of the castle.
+
+They sat silent for a while, and the younger said:
+
+'I fear you are fatigued, my lord. It is late for you to be out of bed;
+nature is mortal.'
+
+'Thou sayest well; nature is mortal, my son. But therein lies the
+comfort--it cannot last. It were hard to say whether of the two houses
+stands the more in need of the hand of the maker.'
+
+'Were it not for villanous saltpetre, my lord, the castle would hold out
+well enough.'
+
+'And were it not for villanous gout, which is a traitor within it, I see
+not why this other should not hold out as long. Be sure, Herbert, I
+shall not render the keep for the taking of the outworks.'
+
+'I fear,' said his son, wishing to change the subject, 'this part where
+we now are is the most liable to hurt from artillery.'
+
+'Yes, but the ground in front is not such as they would readiest plant
+it upon,' said the earl. 'Do not let us forecast evil, only prepare for
+it.'
+
+'We shall do our best, my lord--with your lordship's good counsel to
+guide us.'
+
+'You shall lack nothing, Herbert, that either counsel or purse of mine
+may reach unto.'
+
+'I thank your lordship, for much depends upon both. And so I fear will
+his majesty find--if it comes to the worst.'
+
+A brief pause followed.
+
+'Thinkest thou not, Herbert,' said the earl, slowly and thoughtfully,
+'it ill suits that a subject should have and to spare, and his liege go
+begging?'
+
+'My father is pleased to say so.'
+
+'I am but evil pleased to say so. Bethink thee, son--what man can be
+pleased to part with his money? And while my king is poor, I must be
+rich for him. Thou wilt not accuse me, Herbert, after I am gone to the
+rest, that I wasted thy substance, lad?'
+
+'So long as you still keep wherewithal to give, I shall be content, my
+lord.'
+
+'Well, time will show. I but tell thee what runneth in my mind, for thou
+and I, Herbert, have bosomed no secrets. I will to bed. We must go the
+round again to-morrow--with the sun to hold as a candle.'
+
+The next day the same party made a similar circuit three times--in the
+morning, at noon, and in the evening--that the full light might uncover
+what the shadows had hid, and that the shadows might show what a
+perpendicular light could not reveal. There is all the difference as to
+discovery whether a thing is lying under the shadow of another, or
+casting one of its own.
+
+After this came a review of the outer fortifications--if, indeed, they
+were worthy of the name--enclosing the gardens, the old tilting yard,
+now used as a bowling-green, the home-farmyard, and other such outlying
+portions under the stewardship of sir Ralph Blackstone and the
+governorship of Charles Somerset, the earl's youngest son. It was here
+that the most was wanted; and the next few days were chiefly spent in
+surveying these works, and drawing plans for their extension,
+strengthening, and connection--especially about the stables, armourer's
+shop, and smithy, where the building of new defences was almost
+immediately set on foot.
+
+A thorough examination of the machinery of the various portcullises and
+drawbridges followed; next an overhauling of the bolts, chains, and
+other defences of the gates. Then came an inspection of the ordnance,
+from cannons down to drakes, through a gradation of names as uncouth to
+our ears, and as unknown to the artillery descended from them, as many
+of the Christian names of the puritans are to their descendants of the
+present day. At length, to conclude the inspection, lord Herbert and the
+master of the armoury held consultation with the head armourer, and the
+mighty accumulation of weapons of all sorts was passed under the most
+rigid scrutiny; many of them were sent to the forge, and others carried
+to the ground-floor of the keep.
+
+Presently, things began to look busy in a quiet way about the place. Men
+were at work blasting the rocks in a quarry not far off, whence laden
+carts went creeping to the castle; but this was oftener in the night.
+Some of them drove into the paved court, for here and there a buttress
+was wanted inside, and of the battlements not a few were weather-beaten
+and out of repair. These the earl would have let alone, on the ground
+that they were no longer more than ornamental, and therefore had better
+be repaired AFTER the siege, if such should befall, for the big guns
+would knock them about like cards; but Caspar reminded him that every
+time the ball from a cannon, culvering, or saker missed the parapet, it
+remained a sufficient bar to the bullet that might equally avail to
+carry off the defenceless gunner. The earl, however, although he
+yielded, maintained that the flying of the wall when struck was a more
+than counterbalancing danger.
+
+The stock of provisions began to increase. The dry larder, which lay
+under the court, between the kitchen and buttery, was by degrees filled
+with gammons and flitches of bacon, well dried and smoked. Wheat,
+barley, oats, and pease were stored in the granary, and potatoes in a
+pit dug in the orchard.
+
+Strange faces in the guard-room caused wonderings and questions amongst
+the women. The stables began to fill with horses, and 'more man' to go
+about the farmyard and outhouses.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+REFLECTIONS.
+
+
+Left alone with Lady, his mare, Richard could not help brooding--rather
+than pondering--over what the old woman had said. Not that for a moment
+he contemplated as a possibility the acceptance of the witch's offer. To
+come himself into any such close relations with her as that would imply,
+was in repulsiveness second only to the idea of subjecting Dorothy to
+her influences. For something to occupy his hands, that his mind might
+be restless at will, he gave his mare a careful currying, then an extra
+feed of oats, and then a gallop; after which it was time to go to bed.
+
+I doubt if anything but the consciousness of crime will keep healthy
+youth awake, and as such consciousness is generally far from it, youth
+seldom counts the watches of the night. Richard soon fell fast asleep,
+and dreamed that his patron saint--alas for his protestantism!--appeared
+to him, handed him a lance headed with a single flashing diamond, and
+told him to go and therewith kill the dragon. But just as he was asking
+the way to the dragon's den, that he might perform his behest, the saint
+vanished, and feeling the lance melting away in his grasp, he gradually
+woke to find it gone.
+
+After a long talk with his father in the study, he was left to his own
+resources for the remainder of the day; and as it passed and the night
+drew on, the offer of the witch kept growing upon his imagination, and
+his longing to see Dorothy became stronger and stronger, until at last
+it was almost too intense to be borne. He had never before known such a
+possession, and was more than half inclined to attribute it to the arts
+of mother Rees.
+
+His father was busy in his study below, writing letters--an employment
+which now occupied much of his time; and Richard sat alone in a chamber
+in the upper part of one of the many gables of the house, which he had
+occupied longer than he could remember. Its one small projecting
+lozenge-paned window looked towards Dorothy's home. Some years ago he
+had been able to see her window, from it through a gap in the trees, by
+favour of which, indeed, they had indulged in a system of communications
+by means of coloured flags--so satisfactory that Dorothy not only
+pressed into the service all the old frocks she could find, but got into
+trouble by cutting up one almost new for the enlargement of the somewhat
+limited scope of their telegraphy. In this window he now sat, sending
+his soul through the darkness, milky with the clouded light of half an
+old moon, towards the ancient sun-dial, where Time stood so still that
+sometimes Richard had known an hour there pass in a moment.
+
+Never until now had he felt enmity in space: it had been hitherto rather
+as a bridge to bear him to Dorothy than a gulf to divide him from her
+presence; but now, through the interpenetrative power of feeling, their
+alienation had affected all around as well as within him, and space
+appeared as a solid enemy, and darkness as an unfriendly enchantress,
+each doing what it could to separate betwixt him and the being to whom
+his soul was drawn as--no, there was no AS for such drawing. No
+opposition of mere circumstances could have created the feeling; it was
+the sense of an inward separation taking form outwardly. For Richard was
+now but too well convinced that he had no power of persuasion equal to
+the task of making Dorothy see things as he saw them. The dividing
+influence of imperfect opposing goods is potent as that of warring good
+and evil, with this important difference, that the former is but for a
+season, and will one day bind as strongly as it parted, while the latter
+is essential, absolute, impassible, eternal.
+
+To Dorothy, Richard seemed guilty of overweening arrogance and its
+attendant, presumption; she could not see the form ethereal to which he
+bowed. To Richard, Dorothy appeared the dupe of superstition; he could
+not see the god that dwelt within the idol. To Dorothy, Richard seemed
+to be one who gave the holy name of truth to nothing but the offspring
+of his own vain fancy. To Richard, Dorothy appeared one who so little
+loved the truth that she was ready to accept anything presented to her
+as such, by those who themselves loved the word more than the spirit,
+and the chrysalis of safety better than the wings of power. But it is
+only for a time that any good can to the good appear evil, and at this
+very moment, Nature, who in her blindness is stronger to bind than the
+farthest-seeing intellect to loose, was urging him into her presence;
+and the heart of Dorothy, notwithstanding her initiative in the
+separation, was leaning as lovingly, as sadly after the youth she had
+left alone with the defaced sun-dial, the symbol of Time's weariness.
+Had they, however, been permitted to meet as they would, the natural
+result of ever-renewed dissension would have been a thorough separation
+in heart, no heavenly twilights of loneliness giving time for the love
+which grows like the grass to recover from the scorching heat of
+intellectual jar and friction.
+
+The waning moon at length peered warily from behind a bank of cloud, and
+her dim light melting through the darkness filled the night with a dream
+of the day. Richard was no more of a poet or dreamer of dreams than is
+any honest youth so long as love holds the bandage of custom away from
+his eyes. The poets are they who all their life long contrive to see
+over or through the bandage; but they would, I doubt, have but few
+readers, had not nature decreed that all youths and maidens shall, for a
+period, be it long or short, become aware that they too are of the race
+of the singers--shall, in the journey of their life, at least pass
+through the zone of song: some of them recognise it as the region of
+truth, and continue to believe in it still when it seems to have
+vanished from around them; others scoff as it disappears, and curse
+themselves for dupes. Through this zone Richard was now passing. Hence
+the moon wore to him a sorrowful face, and he felt a vague sympathy in
+her regard, that of one who was herself in trouble, half the light of
+her lord's countenance withdrawn. For science had not for him interfered
+with the shows of things by a partial revelation of their realities. He
+had not learned that the face of the moon is the face of a corpse-world;
+that the sadness upon it is the sadness of utter loss; that her light
+has in it no dissolved smile, is but the reflex from a lifeless mirror;
+that of all the orbs we know best she can have least to do with lovers'
+longings and losses, she alone having no love left in her--the cold
+cinder of a quenched world. Not an out-burnt cinder, though! she needs
+but to be cast again into the furnace of the sun.
+
+As it was, Richard had gazed at her hardly for a minute when he found
+the tears running down his face, and starting up, ashamed of the unmanly
+weakness, hardly knew what he was doing before he found himself in the
+open air. From the hall clock came the first stroke of twelve as he
+closed the door behind him. It was the hour at which mother Rees had
+offered him a meeting with Dorothy; but it was assuredly with no
+expectation of seeing her that he turned his steps towards her dwelling.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+AN ADVENTURE.
+
+
+When he reached the spot at which he usually turned off by a gap in the
+hedge to NEEDLE his way through the unpathed wood, he yielded to the
+impulses of memory and habit, and sought the yew-circle, where for some
+moments he stood by the dumb, disfeatured stone, which seemed to slumber
+in the moonlight, a monument slowly vanishing from above a vanished
+grave. Indeed it might well have been the grave of buried Time, for what
+fitter monument could he have than a mutilated sun-dial, what better
+enclosure than such a hedge of yews, and more suitable light than that
+of the dying moon? Or was it but that the heart of the youth, receiving
+these things as into a concave mirror, reprojected them into space, all
+shadowy with its own ghostliness and gloom? Close by the dial, like the
+dark way into regions where time is not, yawned the mouth of the
+pleached alley. Beyond that was her window, on which the moon must now
+be shining. He entered the alley, and walked softly towards the house.
+Suddenly, down the dark tunnel came rushing upon him Dorothy's mastiff,
+with a noise as of twenty soft feet, and a growl as if his throat had
+been full of teeth--changing to a boisterous welcome when he discovered
+who the stranger was. Fearful of disturbing the household, Richard soon
+quieted the dog, which was in the habit of obeying him almost as readily
+as his mistress, and, fearful of disturbing sleepers or watchers,
+approached the house like a thief. To gain a sight of Dorothy's window
+he had to pass that of the parlour, and then the porch, which he did on
+the grass, that his steps might be noiseless. But here the dog started
+from his heel, and bounded into the porch, leading after him the eyes of
+Richard, who thereupon saw what would have else remained
+undiscovered--two figures, namely, standing in its deep shadow. Judging
+it his part, as a friend of the family, to see who, at so late an hour,
+and so near the house, seemed thus to avoid discovery, Richard drew
+nearer, and the next moment saw that the door was open behind them, and
+that they were Dorothy and a young man.
+
+'The gates will be shut,' said Dorothy.
+
+'It is no matter; old Eccles will open to me at any hour,' was the
+answer.
+
+'Still it were well you went without delay,' said Dorothy; and her voice
+trembled a little, for she had caught sight of Richard.
+
+Now not only are anger and stupidity near of kin, but when a man whose
+mental movements are naturally deliberate, is suddenly spurred, he is in
+great danger of acting like a fool, and Richard did act like a fool. He
+strode up to the entrance of the porch, and said,
+
+'Do you not hear the lady, sir? She tells you to go.'
+
+A voice as cool and self-possessed as the other was hasty and perturbed,
+replied,
+
+'I am much in the wrong, sir, if the lady do not turn the command upon
+yourself. Until you have obeyed it, she may perhaps see reason for
+withdrawing it in respect of me.'
+
+Richard stepped into the porch, but Dorothy glided between them, and
+gently pushed him out.
+
+'Richard Heywood!' she said.
+
+'Whew!' interjected the stranger, softly.
+
+'You can claim no right,' she went on, 'to be here at this hour. Pray
+go; you will disturb my mother.'
+
+'Who is this man, then, whose right seems acknowledged?' asked Richard,
+in ill-suppressed fury.
+
+'When you address me like a gentleman, such as I used to believe you--'
+
+'May I presume to ask when you ceased to regard me as a gentleman,
+mistress Dorothy?'
+
+'As soon as I found that you had learned to despise law and religion,'
+answered the girl. 'Such a one will hardly succeed in acting the part of
+a gentleman, even had he the blood of the Somersets in his veins.'
+
+'I thank you, mistress Dorothy,' said the stranger, 'and will profit by
+the plain hint. Once more tell me to go, and I will obey.'
+
+'He must go first,' returned Dorothy.
+
+Richard had been standing as if stunned, but now with an effort
+recovered himself.
+
+'I will wait for you,' he said, and turned away.
+
+'For whom, sir?' asked Dorothy, indignantly.
+
+'You have refused me the gentleman's name,' answered Richard: 'perhaps I
+may have the good fortune to persuade himself to be more obliging.'
+
+'I shall not keep you waiting long,' said the young man significantly,
+as Richard walked away.
+
+To do Richard justice, and greatly he needs it, I must make the remark
+that such had been the intimacy betwixt him and Dorothy, that he might
+well imagine himself acquainted with all the friends of her house. But
+the intimacy had been confined to the children; the heads of the two
+houses, although good neighbours, had not been drawn towards each other,
+and their mutual respect had not ripened into friendship. Hence many of
+the family and social relations of each were unknown to the other; and
+indeed both families led such a retired life that the children knew
+little of their own relatives even, and seldom spoke of any.
+
+Lady Scudamore, the mother of the stranger, was first cousin to lady
+Vaughan. They had been very intimate as girls, but had not met for
+years--hardly since the former married sir John, the son of one of King
+James's carpet-knights. Hearing of her cousin's illness, she had come to
+visit her at last, under the escort of her son. Taken with his new
+cousin, the youth had lingered and lingered; and in fact Dorothy had
+been unable to get rid of him before an hour strange for leave-taking in
+such a quiet and yet hospitable neighbourhood.
+
+Richard took his stand on the side of the public road opposite the gate;
+but just ere Scudamore came, which was hardly a minute after, a cloud
+crept over the moon, and, as he happened to stand in a line with the
+bole of a tree, Scudamore did not catch sight of him. When he turned to
+walk along the road, Richard thought he avoided him, and, making a great
+stride or two after him, called aloud--
+
+'Stop, sir, stop. You forget your appointments over easily, I think.'
+
+'Oh, you ARE there!' said the youth, turning.
+
+'I am glad you acknowledge my presence,' said Richard, not the better
+pleased with his new acquaintance that his speech and behaviour had an
+easy tone of superiority, which, if indefinably felt by the home-bred
+lad, was not therefore to be willingly accorded. His easy carriage, his
+light step, his still shoulders and lithe spine, indicated both birth
+and training.
+
+'Just the night for a serenade,' he went on, heedless of Richard's
+remark, '--bright, but not too bright; cloudy, but not too cloudy.'
+
+'Sir!' said Richard, amazed at his coolness.
+
+'Oh, you want to quarrel with me!' returned the youth. 'But it takes two
+to fight as well as to kiss, and I will not make one to-night. I know
+who you are well enough, and have no quarrel with you, except indeed it
+be true--as indeed it must, for Dorothy tells me so--that you have
+turned roundhead as well as your father.'
+
+'What right have you to speak so familiarly of mistress Dorothy?' said
+Richard.
+
+'It occurs to me,' replied Scudamore, airily, 'that I had better ask you
+by what right you haunt her house at midnight. But I would not willingly
+cross you in cold blood. I wish you good a night, and better luck next
+time you go courting.'
+
+The moon swam from behind a cloud, and her over ripe and fading light
+seemed to the eyes of Richard to gather upon the figure before him and
+there revive. The youth had on a doublet of some reddish colour, ill
+brought out by the moonlight, but its silver lace and the rapier hilt
+inlaid with silver shone the keener against it. A short cloak hung from
+his left shoulder, trimmed also with silver lace, and a little cataract
+of silver fringe fell from the edges of his short trousers into the wide
+tops of his boots, which were adorned with ruffles. He wore a large
+collar of lace, and cuffs of the same were folded back from his bare
+hands. A broad-brimmed beaver hat, its silver band fastened with a jewel
+holding a plume of willowy feathers, completed his attire, which he wore
+with just the slightest of a jaunty air. It was hardly the dress for a
+walk at midnight, but he had come in his mother's carriage, and had to
+go home without it.
+
+Alas now for Richard's share in the freedom to which he had of late
+imagined himself devoted! No sooner had the words last spoken entered
+his ears than he was but a driven slave ready to rush into any quarrel
+with the man who spoke them. Ere he had gone three paces he had stepped
+in front of him.
+
+'Whatever rights mistress Dorothy may have given you,' he said, 'she had
+none to transfer in respect of my father. What do you mean by calling
+him a roundhead?'
+
+'Why, is he not one?' asked the youth, simply, keeping his ground, in
+spite of the unpleasant proximity of Richard's person. 'I am sorry to
+have wronged him, but I mistook him for a ringleader of the same name. I
+heartily beg your pardon.'
+
+'You did not mistake,' said Richard stupidly.
+
+'Then I did him no wrong,' rejoined the youth, and once more would have
+gone his way.
+
+But Richard, angrier than ever at finding he had given him such an easy
+advantage, moved with his movement, and kept rudely in front of him,
+provoking a quarrel--in clownish fashion, it must be confessed.
+
+'By heaven,' said Scudamore, 'if Dorothy had not begged me not to fight
+with you--,' and as he spoke he slipped suddenly past his antagonist,
+and walked swiftly away. Richard plunged after him, and seized him
+roughly by the shoulder. Instantaneously he wheeled on the very foot
+whence he was taking the next stride, and as he turned his rapier
+gleamed in the moonlight. The same moment it left his hand, he scarce
+knew how, and flew across the hedge. Richard, who was unarmed, had
+seized the blade, and, almost by one and the same movement of his wrist,
+wrenched the hilt from the grasp of his adversary, and flung the thing
+from him. Then closing with the cavalier, slighter and less skilled in
+such encounters, the roundhead almost instantly threw him upon the turf
+that bordered the road.
+
+'Take that for drawing on an unarmed man,' he said.
+
+No reply came. The youth lay stunned.
+
+Then compassion woke in the heart of the angry Richard, and he hastened
+to his help. Ere he reached him, however, he made an attempt to rise,
+but only to stagger and fall again.
+
+'Curse you for a roundhead!' he cried; 'you've twisted some of my
+tackle. I can't stand.'
+
+'I'm sorry,' returned Richard, 'but why did you bare bilbo on a naked
+man? A right malignant you are!'
+
+'Did I?' returned Scudamore. 'You laid hands on me so suddenly! I ask
+your pardon.'
+
+Accepting the offered aid of Richard, he rose; but his right knee was so
+much hurt that he could not walk a step without great pain. Full of
+regret for the suffering he had caused, Richard lifted him in his arms,
+and seated him on a low wall of earth, which was all that here inclosed
+lady Vaughan's shrubbery; then, breaking through the hedge on the
+opposite side of the way, presently returned with the rapier, and handed
+it to him. Scudamore accepted it courteously, with difficulty replaced
+it in its sheath, rose, and once more attempted to walk, but gave a
+groan, and would have fallen had not Richard caught him.
+
+'The devil is in it!' he cried, with more annoyance than anger. 'If I am
+not in my place at my lord's breakfast to-morrow, there will be
+questioning. That I had leave to accompany my mother makes the mischief.
+If I had stole away, it would be another matter. It will be hard to bear
+rebuke, and no frolic.'
+
+'Come home with me,' said Richard. 'My father will do his best to atone
+for the wrong done by his son.'
+
+'Set foot across the threshold of a roundhead fanatic! In the way of
+hospitality! Not if the choice lay betwixt that and my coffin!' cried
+the cavalier.
+
+'Then let me carry you back to lady Vaughan's,' said Richard, with a
+torturing pang of jealousy, which only his sense of right, now
+thoroughly roused, enabled him to defy.
+
+'I dare not. I should terrify my mother, and perhaps kill my cousin.'
+
+'Your mother! your cousin!' cried Richard.
+
+'Yes,' returned Scudamore; 'my mother is there, on a visit to her cousin
+lady Vaughan.'
+
+'Alas, I am more to blame than I knew!' said Richard.
+
+'No,' Scudamore went on, heedless of Richard's lamentation. 'I must
+crawl back to Raglan as I may. If I get there before the morning, I
+shall be able to show reason why I should not wait upon my lord at his
+breakfast.'
+
+'You belong to the earl's household, then?' said Richard.
+
+'Yes; and I fear I shall be grey-headed before I belong to anything
+else. He makes much of the ancient customs of the country: I would he
+would follow them. In the good old times I should have been a squire at
+least by now, if, indeed, I had not earned my spurs; but his lordship
+will never be content without me to hand him his buttered egg at
+breakfast, and fill his cup at dinner with his favourite claret. And so
+I am neither more nor less than a page, which rhymes with my age better
+than suits it. But the earl has a will of his own. He is a master worth
+serving though. And there is my lady Elizabeth and my lady Mary--not to
+mention my lord Herbert!--But,' he concluded, rubbing his injured knee
+with both hands, 'why do I prate of them to a roundhead?'
+
+'Why indeed?' returned Richard. 'Are they not, the earl and all his
+people, traitors, and that of the worst? Are they not the enemies of the
+truth--worshippers of idols, bowing the knee to a woman, and kissing the
+very toes of an old man so in love with ignorance, that he tortures the
+philosopher who tells him the truth about the world and its motions?'
+
+'Go on, master Roundhead! I can chastise you, and that you know. This
+cursed knee--'
+
+'I will stand unarmed within your thrust, and never budge a foot,' said
+Richard. 'But no,' he added, 'I dare not, lest I should further injure
+one I have wronged already. Let there be a truce between us.'
+
+'I am no papist,' returned Scudamore. 'I speak only as one of the earl's
+household--true men all. For them I cast the word in your teeth, you
+roundhead traitor! For myself I am of the English church.'
+
+'It is but the wolf and the wolf's cub,' said. Richard. 'Prelatical
+episcopacy is but the old harlot veiled, or rather, forsooth, her bloody
+scarlet blackened in the sulphur fumes of her coming desolation.'
+
+'Curse on, roundhead,' sighed the youth; 'I must crawl home.'
+
+Once more he rose and made an effort to walk. But it was of no use: walk
+he could not.
+
+'I must wait till the morning,' he said, 'when some Christian waggoner
+may be passing. Leave me in peace.'
+
+'Nay, I am no such boor!' said Richard. 'Do you think you could ride?'
+
+'I could try.'
+
+'I will bring you the best mare in Gwent. But tell me your name, that I
+may know with whom I have the honour of a feud.'
+
+'My name is Rowland Scudamore,' answered the youth. 'Yours I know
+already, and roundhead as you are, you have some smatch of honour in
+you.'
+
+With an air of condescension he held out his hand, which his adversary,
+oppressed with a sense of the injury he had done him, did not refuse.
+
+Richard hurried home, and to the stable, where he saddled his mare. But
+his father, who was still in his study, heard the sound of her hoofs in
+the paved yard, and met him as he led her out on the road, with an
+inquiry as to his destination at such an hour. Richard told him that he
+had had a quarrel with a certain young fellow of the name of Scudamore,
+a page of the earl of Worcester, whom he had met at lady Vaughan's: and
+recounted the result.
+
+'Was your quarrel a just one, my son?'
+
+'No sir. I was in the wrong.'
+
+'Then you are so far in the right now. And you are going to help him
+home?'
+
+'Yes, sir.'
+
+'Have you confessed yourself in the wrong?'
+
+'Yes, sir.'
+
+'Then go, my son, but beware of private quarrel in such a season of
+strife. This youth and thyself may meet some day in mortal conflict on
+the battle-field; and for my part--I know not how it may be with
+another--in such a case I would rather slay my friend than my enemy.'
+
+Enlightened by the inward experience of the moment, Richard was able to
+understand and respond to the feeling. How different a sudden action
+flashed off the surface of a man's nature may be from that which, had
+time been given, would have unfolded itself from its depths!
+
+Bare-headed, Roger Heywood walked beside his son as he led the mare to
+the spot where Scudamore perforce awaited his return. They found him
+stretched on the roadside, plucking handfuls of grass, and digging up
+the turf with his fingers, thus, and thus alone, betraying that he
+suffered. Mr. Heywood at first refrained from any offer of hospitality,
+believing he would be more inclined to accept it after he had proved the
+difficulty of riding, in which case a previous refusal might stand in
+the way. But although a slight groan escaped as they lifted him to the
+saddle, he gathered up the reins at once, and sat erect while they
+shortened the stirrup-leathers. Lady seemed to know what was required of
+her, and stood as still as a vaulting horse until Richard took the
+bridle to lead her away.
+
+'I see!' said Scudamore; 'you can't trust me with your horse!'
+
+'Not so, sir,' answered Mr. Heywood. 'We cannot trust the horse with
+you. It is quite impossible for you to ride so far alone. If you will
+go, you must submit to the attendance of my son, on which I am sorry to
+think you have so good a claim. But will you not yet change your mind
+and be our guest--for the night at least? We will send a messenger to
+the castle at earliest dawn.'
+
+Scudamore declined the invitation, but with perfect courtesy, for there
+was that about Roger Heywood which rendered it impossible for any man
+who was himself a gentleman, whatever his judgment of him might be, to
+show him disrespect. And the moment the mare began to move, he felt no
+further inclination to object to Richard's company at her head, for he
+perceived that, should she prove in the least troublesome, it would be
+impossible for him to keep his seat. He did not suffer so much, however,
+as to lose all his good spirits, or fail in his part of a conversation
+composed chiefly of what we now call chaff, both of them for a time
+avoiding all such topics as might lead to dispute, the one from a sense
+of wrong already done, the other from a vague feeling that he was under
+the protection of the foregone injury.
+
+'Have you known my cousin Dorothy long?' asked Scudamore.
+
+'Longer than I can remember,' answered Richard.
+
+'Then you must be more like brother and sister than lovers.'
+
+'That, I fear, is her feeling,' replied Richard, honestly.
+
+'You need not think of me as a rival,' said Scudamore. 'I never saw the
+young woman in my life before, and although anything of yours, being a
+roundhead's, is fair game--'
+
+'Your humble servant, sir Cavalier!' interjected Richard. 'Pray use your
+pleasure.'
+
+'I tell you plainly,' Scudamore went on, without heeding the
+interruption, 'though I admire my cousin, as I do any young woman, if
+she be but a shade beyond the passable--'
+
+'The ape! The coxcomb!' said Richard to himself.
+
+'I am not, therefore, dying for her love; and I give you this one honest
+warning that, though I would rather see mistress Dorothy in her
+winding-sheet than dame to a roundhead, I should be--yes, I MAY be a
+more dangerous rival in respect of your mare, than of any lady YOU are
+likely to set eyes upon.'
+
+'What do you mean?' said Richard gruffly.
+
+'I mean that, the king having at length resolved to be more of a monarch
+and less of a saint--'
+
+'A saint!' echoed Richard, but the echo was rather a loud one, for it
+startled his mare and shook her rider.
+
+'Don't shout like that!' cried the cavalier, with an oath. 'Saint or
+sinner, I care not. He is my king, and I am his soldier. But with this
+knee you have given me, I shall be fitter for garrison than
+field-duty--damn it.'
+
+'You do not mean that his majesty has declared open war against the
+parliament?' exclaimed Richard.
+
+'Faithless puritan, I do,' answered Scudamore. 'His majesty has at
+length--with reluctance, I am sorry to hear--taken up arms against his
+rebellious subjects. Land will be cheap by-and-by.'
+
+'Many such rumours have reached us,' returned Richard, quietly. 'The
+king spares no threats; but for blows--well!'
+
+'Insolent fanatic!' shouted Vaughan, 'I tell you his majesty is on his
+way from Scotland with an army of savages; and London has declared for
+the king.'
+
+Richard and his mare simultaneously quickened their pace.
+
+'Then it is time you were in bed, Mr Scudamore, for my mare and I will
+be wanted,' he cried. 'God be praised! I thank you for the good news. It
+makes me young again to hear it.'
+
+'What the devil do you mean by jerking this cursed knee of mine so?'
+shouted Scudamore. 'Faith, you were young enough in all conscience
+already, you fool! You want to keep me in bed, as well as send me there!
+Well out of the way, you think! But I give you honest warning to look
+after your mare, for I vow I have fallen in love with her. She's worth
+three, at least, of your mistress Dorothies.'
+
+'You talk like a Dutch boor,' said Richard.
+
+'Saith an English lout,' retorted Scudamore. 'But, all things being
+lawful in love and war, not to mention hate and rebellion, this mare, if
+I am blessed with a chance, shall be--well, shall be translated.'
+
+'You mean from Redware to Raglan.'
+
+'Where she shall be entertained in a manner worthy of her, which is
+saying no little, if all her paces and points be equal to her walk and
+her crest.'
+
+'I trust you will be more pitiful to my poor Lady,' said Richard,
+quietly. 'If all they say be true, Raglan stables are no place for a
+mare of her breeding.'
+
+'What do you mean, roundhead?'
+
+'Folk say your stables at Raglan are like other some Raglan matters--of
+the infernal sort.'
+
+Scudamore was silent for a moment.
+
+'Whether the stables be under the pavement or over the leads,' he
+returned at last, 'there are not a few in them as good as she--of which
+I hope to satisfy my Lady some day,' he added, patting the mare's neck.
+
+'Wert thou not hurt already, I would pitch thee out of the saddle,' said
+Richard.
+
+'Were I not hurt in the knee, thou couldst not,' said Scudamore.
+
+'I need not lay hand upon thee. Wert thou as sound in limb as thou art
+in wind, thou wouldst feel thyself on the road ere thou knewest thou
+hadst taken leave of the saddle--did I but give the mare the sign she
+knows.'
+
+'By God's grace,' said the cavalier, 'she shall be mine, and teach me
+the trick of it.'
+
+Richard answered only with a grim laugh, and again, but more gently this
+time, quickened the mare's pace. Little more had passed between them
+when the six-sided towers of Raglan rose on their view.
+
+Richard had, from childhood, been familiar with their aspect, especially
+that of the huge one called the Yellow Tower, but he had never yet been
+within the walls that encircled them. At any time during his life,
+almost up to the present hour, he might have entered without question,
+for the gates were seldom closed and never locked, the portcullises,
+sheathed in the wall above, hung moveless in their rusty chains, and the
+drawbridges spanned the moat from scarp to counterscarp, as if from the
+first their beams had rested there in solid masonry. And still, during
+the day, there was little sign of change, beyond an indefinable presence
+of busier life, even in the hush of the hot autumnal noon. But at night
+the drawbridges rose and the portcullises descended--each with its own
+peculiar creak, and jar, and scrape, setting the young rooks cawing in
+reply from every pinnacle and tree-top--never later than the last moment
+when the warder could see anything larger than a cat on the brow of the
+road this side the village. For who could tell when, or with what force
+at their command, the parliament might claim possession? And now another
+of the frequent reports had arrived, that the king had at length
+resorted to arms. It was altogether necessary for such as occupied a
+stronghold, unless willing to yield it to the first who demanded
+entrance, to keep watch and ward.
+
+Admitted at the great brick gate, the outermost of all, and turning
+aside from the steps leading up to the white stone gate and main
+entrance beyond, with its drawbridge and double portcullis, Richard, by
+his companion's directions, led his mare to the left, and, rounding the
+moat of the citadel, sought the western gate of the castle, which seemed
+to shelter itself under the great bulk of the Yellow Tower, the cannon
+upon more than one of whose bastions closely commanded it, and made up
+for its inferiority in defence of its own.
+
+Scudamore had scarcely called, ere the warder, who had been waked by the
+sound of the horse's feet, began to set the machinery of the portcullis
+in motion.
+
+'What! wounded already, master Scudamore!' he cried, as they rode under
+the archway.
+
+'Yes, Eccles,' answered Scudamore, '--wounded and taken prisoner, and
+brought home for ransom!'
+
+As they spoke, Richard made use of his eyes, with a vague notion that
+some knowledge of the place might one day or other be of service, but it
+was little he could see. The moon was almost down, and her low light,
+prolific of shadows, shone straight in through the lifted portcullis,
+but in the gateway where they stood, there was nothing for her to show
+but the groined vault, the massy walls, and the huge iron-studded gate
+beyond.
+
+'Curse you for a roundhead!' cried Scudamore, in the wrath engendered of
+a fierce twinge, as Heywood sought to help his lamed leg over the
+saddle.
+
+'Dismount on this side then,' said Richard, regardless of the insult.
+
+But the warder had caught the word.
+
+'Roundhead!' he exclaimed.
+
+Scudamore did not answer until he found himself safe on his feet, and by
+that time he had recovered his good manners.
+
+'This is young Mr. Heywood of Redware,' he said, and moved towards the
+wicket, leaning on Richard's arm.
+
+But the old warder stepped in front, and stood between them and the
+gate.
+
+'Not a damned roundhead of the pack shall set foot across this
+door-sill, so long as I hold the gate,' he cried, with a fierce gesture
+of the right arm. And therewith he set his back to the wicket.
+
+'Tut, tut, Eccles!' returned Scudamore impatiently. 'Good words are
+worth much, and cost little.'
+
+'If the old dog bark, he gives counsel,' rejoined Eccles, immovable.
+
+Heywood was amused, and stood silent, waiting the result. He had no
+particular wish to enter, and yet would have liked to see what could be
+seen of the court.
+
+'Where the doorkeeper is a churl, what will folk say of the master of
+the house?' said Scudamore.
+
+'They may say as they list; it will neither hurt him nor me,' said
+Eccles.
+
+'Make haste, my good fellow, and let us through,' pleaded Scudamore. 'By
+Saint George! but my leg is in great pain. I fear the knee-cap is
+broken, in which case I shall not trouble thee much for a week of
+months.'
+
+As he spoke, he stood leaning on Richard's arm, and behind them stood
+Lady, still as a horse of bronze.
+
+'I will but drop the portcullis,' said the warder, 'and then I will
+carry thee to thy room in my arms. But not a cursed roundhead shall
+enter here, I swear.'
+
+'Let us through at once,' said Scudamore, trying the imperative.
+
+'Not if the earl himself gave the order,' persisted the man.
+
+'Ho! ho! what is that you say? Let the gentlemen through,' cried a voice
+from somewhere.
+
+The warder opened the wicket immediately, stepped inside, and held it
+open while they entered, nor uttered another word. But as soon as
+Richard had got Scudamore clear of the threshold, to which he lent not a
+helping finger, he stepped quietly out again, closed the wicket behind
+him, and taking Lady by the bridle, led her back over the bridge towards
+the bowling-green.
+
+Scudamore had just time to whisper to Heywood, 'It is my master, the
+earl himself,' when the voice came again.
+
+'What! wounded, Rowland? How is this? And who have you there?'
+
+But that moment Richard heard the sound of his mare's hoofs on the
+bridge, and leaving Scudamore to answer for them both, bounded back to
+the wicket, darted through, and called her by name. Instantly she stood
+stock still, notwithstanding a vicious kick in the ribs from Eccles, not
+unseen of Heywood. Enraged at the fellow's insolence, he dealt him a
+sudden blow that stretched him at the mare's feet, vaulted into the
+saddle, and had reached the outer gate before he had recovered himself.
+The sleepy porter had just let him through, when the warder's signal to
+let no one out reached him. Richard turned with a laugh.
+
+'When next you catch a roundhead,' he said, 'keep him;' and giving Lady
+the rein, galloped off, leaving the porter staring after him through the
+bars like a half-roused wild beast.
+
+Not doubting the rumour of open hostilities, the warder's design had
+been to secure the mare, and pretend she had run away, for a good horse
+was now more precious than ever.
+
+The earl's study was over the gate, and as he suffered much from gout
+and slept ill, he not unfrequently sought refuge in the night-watches
+with his friends Chaucer, Gower, and Shakspere.
+
+Richard drew rein at the last point whence the castle would have been
+visible in the daytime. All he saw was a moving light. The walls whence
+it shone were one day to be as the shell around the kernel of his
+destiny.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+LOVE AND WAR.
+
+
+When Richard reached home and recounted the escape he had had, an
+imprecation, the first he had ever heard him utter, broke from his
+father's lips. With the indiscrimination of party spirit, he looked upon
+the warder's insolence and attempted robbery as the spirit and behaviour
+of his master, the earl being in fact as little capable of such conduct
+as Mr. Heywood himself.
+
+Immediately after their early breakfast the next morning, he led his son
+to a chamber in the roof, of the very existence of which he had been
+ignorant, and there discovered to him good store of such armour of both
+kinds as was then in use, which for some years past he had been quietly
+collecting in view of the time--which, in the light of the last rumour,
+seemed to have at length arrived--when strength would have to decide the
+antagonism of opposed claims. Probably also it was in view of this time,
+seen from afar in silent approach, that, from the very moment when he
+took his education into his own hands, he had paid thorough attention to
+Richard's bodily as well as mental accomplishment, encouraging him in
+all manly sports, such as wrestling, boxing, and riding to hounds, with
+the more martial training of sword-exercises, with and without the
+target, and shooting with the carbine and the new-fashioned flint-lock
+pistols.
+
+The rest of the morning Richard spent in choosing a headpiece, and mail
+plates for breast, back, neck, shoulders, arms, and thighs. The next
+thing was to set the village tailor at work upon a coat of that thick
+strong leather, dressed soft and pliant, which they called buff, to wear
+under his armour. After that came the proper equipment of Lady, and that
+of the twenty men whom his father expected to provide from amongst his
+own tenants, and for whom he had already a full provision of clothing
+and armour; they had to be determined on, conferred with, and fitted,
+one by one, so as to avoid drawing attention to the proceeding. Hence
+both Mr. Heywood and Richard had enough to do, and the more that
+Faithful Stopchase, on whom was their chief dependence, had not yet
+recovered sufficiently from the effects of his fall to be equal to the
+same exertion as formerly--of which he was the more impatient that he
+firmly believed he had been a special object of Satanic assault, because
+of the present value of his counsels, and the coming weight of his deeds
+on the side of the well-affected. Thus occupied, the weeks passed into
+months.
+
+During this time Richard called again and again upon Dorothy, ostensibly
+to inquire after her mother. Only once, however, did she appear, when
+she gave him to understand she was so fully occupied, that, although
+obliged by his attention, he must not expect to see her again.
+
+'But I will be honest, Richard,' she added, 'and let you know plainly
+that, were it otherwise in respect of my mother, I yet should not see
+you, for you and I have parted company, and are already so far asunder
+on different roads that I must bid you farewell at once while yet we can
+hear each other speak.'
+
+There was no anger, only a cold sadness in her tone and manner, while
+her bearing was stately as towards one with whom she had never had
+intimacy. Even her sadness seemed to Richard to have respect to the
+hopeless condition of her mother's health, and not at all to the changed
+relation between him and her.
+
+'I trust, at least, mistress Dorothy,' he said, with some bitterness,
+'you will grant me the justice that what I do, I do with a good
+conscience. After all that has been betwixt us I ask for no more.'
+
+'What more could the best of men ask for?'
+
+'I, who am far from making any claim to rank with such--'
+
+'I am glad to know it,' interjected Dorothy.
+
+'--am yet capable of hoping that an eye at once keener and kinder than
+yours may see conscience at the very root of the actions which you,
+Dorothy, will doubtless most condemn.'
+
+Was this the boy she had despised for indifference?
+
+'Was it conscience drove you to sprain my cousin Rowland's knee?' she
+asked.
+
+Richard was silent for a moment. The sting was too cruel.
+
+'Pray hesitate not to say so, if such be your conviction,' added
+Dorothy.
+
+'No,' replied Richard, recovering himself. 'I trust it is not such a
+serious matter as you say; but any how it was not conscience but
+jealousy and anger that drove me to that wrong.'
+
+'Did you see the action such at the time?'
+
+'No, surely; else I would not have been guilty of that for which I am
+truly sorry now.'
+
+'Then, perhaps, the day will come when, looking back on what you do now,
+you will regard it with the like disapprobation.--God grant it may!' she
+added, with a deep sigh.
+
+'That can hardly be, mistress Dorothy. I am, in the matters to which you
+refer, under the influence of no passion, no jealousy, no self-seeking,
+no--'
+
+'Perhaps a deeper search might discover in you each and all of the
+bosom-sins you so stoutly abjure,' interrupted Dorothy. 'But it is
+needless for you to defend yourself to me; I am not your judge.'
+
+'So much the better for me!' returned Richard; 'I should else have an
+unjust as well as severe one. I, on my part, hope the day may come when
+you will find something to repent of in such harshness towards an old
+friend whom you choose to think in the wrong.'
+
+'Richard Heywood, God is my witness it is no choice of mine. I have no
+choice: what else is there to think? I know well enough what you and
+your father are about. But there is nothing save my own conscience and
+my mother's love I would not part with to be able to believe you
+honourably right in your own eyes--not in mine--God forbid! That can
+never be--not until fair is foul and foul is fair.'
+
+So saying, she held out her hand.
+
+'God be between thee and me, Dorothy!' said Richard, with solemnity, as
+he took it in his.
+
+He spoke with a voice that seemed to him far away and not his own. Until
+now he had never realized the idea of a final separation between him and
+Dorothy; and even now, he could hardly believe she was in earnest, but
+felt, rather, like a child whose nurse threatens to forsake him on the
+dark road, and who begins to weep only from the pitiful imagination of
+the thing, and not any actual fear of her carrying the threat into
+execution. The idea of retaining her love by ceasing to act on his
+convictions--the very possibility of it--had never crossed the horizon
+of his thoughts. Had it come to him as the merest intellectual notion,
+he would have perceived at once, of such a loyal stock did he come, and
+so loyal had he himself been to truth all his days, that to act upon her
+convictions instead of his own would have been to widen a gulf at least
+measurable, to one infinite and impassable.
+
+She withdrew the hand which had solemnly pressed his, and left the room.
+For a moment he stood gazing after her. Even in that moment, the vague
+fear that she would not come again grew to a plain conviction, and
+forcibly repressing the misery that rose in bodily presence from his
+heart to his throat, he left the house, hurried down the pleached alley
+to the old sun-dial, threw himself on the grass under the yews, and wept
+and longed for war.
+
+But war was not to be just yet. Autumn withered and sank into winter.
+The rain came down on the stubble, and the red cattle waded through red
+mire to and from their pasture; the skies grew pale above, and the earth
+grew bare beneath; the winds grew sharp and seemed unfriendly; the
+brooks ran foaming to the rivers, and the rivers ran roaring to the
+ocean. Then the earth dried a little, and the frost came, and swelled
+and hardened it; the snow fell and lay, vanished and came again. But
+even out of the depth of winter, quivered airs and hints of spring,
+until at last the mighty weakling was born. And all this time rumour
+beat the alarum of war, and men were growing harder and more determined
+on both sides--some from self-opinion, some from party spirit, some from
+prejudice, antipathy, animosity, some from sense of duty, mingled more
+and less with the alloys of impulse and advantage. But he who was most
+earnest on the one side was least aware that he who was most earnest on
+the other was honest as himself. To confess uprightness in one of the
+opposite party, seemed to most men to involve treachery to their own; or
+if they were driven to the confession, it was too often followed with an
+attempt at discrediting the noblest of human qualities.
+
+The hearts of the two young people fared very much as the earth under
+the altered skies of winter, and behaved much as the divided nation. A
+sense of wrong endured kept both from feeling at first the full sorrow
+of their separation; and by the time that the tide of memory had flowed
+back and covered the rock of offence, they had got a little used to the
+dulness of a day from which its brightest hour had been blotted. Dorothy
+learned very soon to think of Richard as a prodigal brother beyond seas,
+and when they chanced to meet, which was but seldom, he was to her as a
+sad ghost in a dream. To Richard, on the other hand, she looked a lovely
+but scarce worshipful celestial, with merely might enough to hold his
+heart, swelling with a sense of wrong, in her hand, and squeeze it very
+hard. His consolation was that he suffered for the truth's sake, for to
+decline action upon such insight as he had had, was a thing as
+impossible as to alter the relations between the parts of a sphere.
+Dorothy longed for peace, and the return of the wandering chickens of
+the church to the shelter of her wings, to be led by her about the paled
+yard of obedience, picking up the barley of righteousness; Richard
+longed for the trumpet-blast of Liberty to call her sons together--to a
+war whose battles should never cease until men were free to worship God
+after the light he had lighted within them, and the dragon of priestly
+authority should breathe out his last fiery breath, no more to drive the
+feebler brethren to seek refuge in the house of hypocrisy.
+
+At home Dorothy was under few influences except those of her mother,
+and, through his letters, of Mr. Matthew Herbert. Upon the former a
+lovely spiritual repose had long since descended. Her anxieties were
+only for her daughter, her hopes only for the world beyond the grave.
+The latter was a man of peace, who, having found in the ordinances of
+his church everything to aid and nothing to retard his spiritual
+development, had no conception of the nature of the puritanical
+opposition to its government and rites. Through neither could Dorothy
+come to any true idea of the questions which agitated the politics of
+both church and state. To her, the king was a kind of demigod, and every
+priest a fountain of truth. Her religion was the sedate and dutiful
+acceptance of obedient innocence, a thing of small account indeed where
+it is rooted only in sentiment and customary preference, but of
+inestimable value in such cases as hers, where action followed upon
+acceptance.
+
+Richard, again, was under the quickening masterdom of a well-stored,
+active mind, a strong will, a judgment that sought to keep its balance
+even, and whose descended scale never rebounded, a conscience which,
+through all the mists of human judgment, eyed ever the blotted glimmer
+of some light beyond; and all these elements of power were gathered in
+his own father, in whom the customary sternness of the puritan parent
+had at length blossomed in confidence, a phase of love which, to such a
+mind as Richard's, was even more enchanting than tenderness. To be
+trusted by such a father, to feel his mind and soul present with him,
+acknowledging him a fit associate in great hopes and noble aims, was
+surely and ought to be, whatever the sentimentalist may say, some
+comfort for any sorrow a youth is capable of, such being in general only
+too lightly remediable. I wonder if any mere youth ever suffered, from a
+disappointment in love, half the sense of cureless pain which, with one
+protracted pang, gnaws at the heart of the avaricious old man who has
+dropt a sovereign into his draw-well.
+
+But the relation of Dorothy and Richard, although ordinary in outward
+appearance, was of no common kind; and while these two thus fell apart
+from each other in their outer life, each judging the other insensible
+to the call of highest rectitude, neither of them knew how much his or
+her heart was confident of the other's integrity. In respect of them,
+the lovely simile, in Christabel, of the parted cliffs, may be carried a
+little farther, for, under the dreary sea flowing between them, the rock
+was one still. Such a faith may sometimes, perhaps often does, lie in
+the heart like a seed buried beyond the reach of the sun, thoroughly
+alive though giving no sign: to grow too soon might be to die. Things
+had indeed gone farther with Dorothy and Richard, but the lobes of their
+loves had never been fairly exposed to the sun and wind ere the swollen
+clods of winter again covered them.
+
+Once, in the cold noon of a lovely day of frost, when the lightest step
+crackled with the breaking of multitudinous crystals, when the trees
+were fringed with furry white, and the old spider-webs glimmered like
+filigrane of fairy silver, they met on a lonely country-road. The sun
+shone red through depths of half-frozen vapour, and tinged the whiteness
+of death with a faint warmth of feeling and hope. Along the rough lane
+Richard walked reading what looked like a letter, but was a copy his
+father had procured of a poem still only in manuscript--the Lycidas of
+Milton. In the glow to which the alternating hot and cold winds of
+enthusiasm and bereavement had fanned the fiery particle within him,
+Richard was not only able to understand and enjoy the thought of which
+the poem was built, but was borne aloft on its sad yet hopeful melodies
+as upon wings of an upsoaring seraph. The flow of his feeling suddenly
+broken by an almost fierce desire to share with Dorothy the tenderness
+of the magic music of the stately monody, and then, ere the answering
+waves of her emotion had subsided, to whisper to her that the marvellous
+spell came from the heart of the same wonderful man from whose brain had
+issued, like Pallas from Jove's,--what?--Animadversions upon the
+Remonstrants Defence against Smectymnus, the pamphlet which had so
+roused all the abhorrence her nature was capable of--he lifted his head
+and saw her but a few paces from him. Dorothy caught a glimpse of a
+countenance radiant with feeling, and eyes flashing through a watery
+film of delight; her own eyes fell; she said, 'Good morning, Richard!'
+and passed him without deflecting an inch. The bird of song folded its
+wings and called in its shining; the sun lost half his red beams; the
+sprinkled seed pearls vanished, and ashes covered the earth; he folded
+the paper, laid it in the breast of his doublet, and walked home through
+the glittering meadows with a fresh hurt in his heart.
+
+Dorothy's time and thoughts were all but occupied with the nursing of
+her mother, who, contrary to the expectation of her friends, outlived
+the winter, and revived as the spring drew on. She read much to her.
+Some of the best books had drifted into the house and settled there,
+but, although English printing was now nearly two centuries old, they
+were not many. We must not therefore imagine, however, that the two
+ladies were ill supplied with spiritual pabulum. There are few houses of
+the present day in which, though there be ten times as many books, there
+is so much strong food; if there was any lack, it was rather of
+diluents. Amongst those she read were Queen Elizabeth's Homilies,
+Hooker's Politie, Donne's Sermons, and George Herbert's Temple, to the
+dying lady only less dear than her New Testament.
+
+But even with this last, it was only through sympathy with her mother
+that Dorothy could come into any contact. The gems of the mind, which
+alone could catch and reflect such light, lay as yet under the soil, and
+much ploughing and breaking of the clods was needful ere they could come
+largely to the surface. But happily for Dorothy, there were amongst the
+books a few of those precious little quartos of Shakspere, the first
+three books of the Faerie Queene, and the Countess of Pembroke's
+Arcadia, then much read, if we may judge from the fact that, although it
+was not published till after the death of Sidney, the eighth edition of
+it had now been nearly ten years in lady Vaughan's possession.
+
+Then there was in the drawing-room an old spinnet, sadly out of tune, on
+which she would yet, in spite of the occasional jar and shudder of
+respondent nerves, now and then play at a sitting all the little music
+she had learned, and with whose help she had sometimes even tried to
+find out an air for words that had taken her fancy.
+
+Also, she had the house to look after, the live stock to see to, her dog
+to play with and teach, a few sad thoughts and memories to discipline, a
+call now and then from a neighbour, or a longer visit from some old
+friend of her mother's to receive, and the few cottagers on all that was
+left of the estate of Wyfern to care for; so that her time was tolerably
+filled up, and she felt little need of anything more to occupy at least
+her hours and days.
+
+Meanwhile, through all nature's changes, through calm and tempest, rain
+and snow, through dull refusing winter, and the first passing visits of
+open-handed spring, the hearts of men were awaiting the outburst of the
+thunder, the blue peaks of whose cloud-built cells had long been visible
+on the horizon of the future. Every now and then they would start and
+listen, and ask each other was it the first growl of the storm, or but
+the rumbling of the wheels of the government. To the dwellers in Raglan
+Castle it seemed at least a stormy sign--of which the news reached them
+in the dull November weather--that the parliament had set a guard upon
+Worcester House in the Strand, and searched it for persons suspected of
+high treason--lord Herbert, doubtless, first of all, the direction and
+strength of whose political drift, suspicious from the first because of
+his religious persuasion, could hardly be any longer doubtful to the
+most liberal of its members.
+
+The news of the terrible insurrection of the catholics in Ireland
+followed.
+
+Richard kept his armour bright, his mare in good fettle, himself and his
+men in thorough exercise, read and talked with his father, and waited,
+sometimes with patience, sometimes without.
+
+At length, in the early spring, the king withdrew to York, and a
+body-guard of the gentlemen of the neighbourhood gathered around him.
+Richard renewed the flints of his carbine and pistols.
+
+In April, the king, refused entrance into the town of Hull, proclaimed
+the governor a traitor. The parliament declared the proclamation a
+breach of its privileges. Richard got new girths.
+
+The summer passed in various disputes. Towards its close the governor of
+Portsmouth declined to act upon a commission to organize the new levies
+of the parliament, and administered instead thereof an oath of
+allegiance to the garrison and inhabitants. Thereupon the place was
+besieged by Essex; the king proclaimed him a traitor, and the parliament
+retorted by declaring the royal proclamation a libel. Richard had his
+mare new-shod.
+
+On a certain day in August, the royal standard, with the motto, 'Give to
+Caesar his due,' was set up at Nottingham. Richard mounted his mare, and
+taking leave of his father, led Stopchase and nineteen men more, all
+fairly mounted, to offer his services to the parliament, as represented
+by the earl of Essex.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+DOROTHY'S REFUGE.
+
+
+With the decay of summer, lady Vaughan began again to sink, and became
+at length so weak that Dorothy rarely left her room. The departure of
+Richard Heywood to join the rebels affected her deeply. The report of
+the utter rout of the parliamentary forces at Edgehill, lighted up her
+face for the last time with a glimmer of earthly gladness, which the
+very different news that followed speedily extinguished; and after that
+she declined more rapidly. Mrs. Rees told Dorothy that she would yield
+to the first frost. But she lingered many weeks. One morning she signed
+to her daughter to come nearer that she might speak to her.
+
+'Dorothy,' she whispered, 'I wish much to see good Mr. Herbert. Prithee
+send for him. I know it is an evil time for him to travel, being an old
+man and feeble, but he will do his endeavour to come to me, I know, if
+but for my husband's sake, whom he loved like a brother. I cannot die in
+peace without first taking counsel with him how best to provide for the
+safety of my little ewe-lamb until these storms are overblown. Alas!
+alas! I did look to Richard Heywood--'
+
+She could say no more.
+
+'Do not take thought about the morrow for me any more than you would for
+yourself, madam,' said Dorothy. 'You know master Herbert says the one is
+as the other.'
+
+She kissed her mother's hand as she spoke, then hastened from the room,
+and despatched a messenger to Llangattock.
+
+Before the worthy man arrived, lady Vaughan was speechless. By signs and
+looks, definite enough, and more eloquent than words, she committed
+Dorothy to his protection, and died.
+
+Dorothy behaved with much calmness. She would not, in her mother's
+absence, act so as would have grieved her presence. Little passed
+between her and Mr. Herbert until the funeral was over. Then they talked
+of the future. Her guardian wished much to leave everything in charge of
+the old bailiff, and take her with him to Llangattock; but he hesitated
+a little because of the bad state of the roads in winter, much because
+of their danger in the troubled condition of affairs, and most of all
+because of the uncertain, indeed perilous position of the Episcopalian
+clergy, who might soon find themselves without a roof to shelter them.
+Fearing nothing for himself, he must yet, in arranging for Dorothy,
+contemplate the worst of threatening possibilities; and one thing was
+pretty certain, that matters must grow far worse before they could even
+begin to mend.
+
+But they had more time for deliberation given them than they would
+willingly have taken. Mr. Herbert had caught cold while reading the
+funeral service, and was compelled to delay his return. The cold settled
+into a sort of low fever, and for many weeks he lay helpless. During
+this time the sudden affair at Brentford took place, after which the
+king, having lost by it far more than he had gained, withdrew to Oxford,
+anxious to re-open the treaty which the battle had closed.
+
+The country was now in a sad state. Whichever party was uppermost in any
+district, sought to ruin all of the opposite faction. Robbery and
+plunder became common, and that not only on the track of armies or the
+route of smaller bodies of soldiers, for bands of mere marauders, taking
+up the cry of the faction that happened in any neighbourhood to have the
+ascendancy, plundered houses, robbed travellers, and were guilty of all
+sorts of violence. Hence it had become as perilous to stay at home in an
+unfortified house as to travel; and many were the terrors which during
+the winter tried the courage of the girl, and checked the recovery of
+the old man. At length one morning, after a midnight alarm, Mr. Herbert
+thus addressed Dorothy, as she waited upon him with his breakfast:
+
+'It fears me much, my dear Dorothy, that the time will be long ere any
+but fortified places will be safe abodes. It is a question in my mind
+whether it would not be better to seek refuge for you--. But stay; let
+me suggest my proposal, rather than startle you with it in sudden form
+complete. You are related to the Somersets, are you not?'
+
+'Yes--distantly.'
+
+'Is the relationship recognized by them?'
+
+'I cannot tell, sir. I do not even distinctly know what the relationship
+is. And assuredly, sir, you mean not to propose that I should seek
+safety from bodily peril with a household which is, to say the least, so
+unfriendly to the doctrines you and my blessed mother have always taught
+me! You cannot, or indeed, must you not have forgotten that they are
+papists?'
+
+Dorothy had been educated in such a fear of the catholics, and such a
+profound disapproval of those of their doctrines rejected by the
+reformers of the church of England, as was only surpassed in intensity
+by her absolute abhorrence of the assumptions and negations of the
+puritans. These indeed roused in her a certain sense of disgust which
+she had never felt in respect of what were considered by her teachers
+the most erroneous doctrines of the catholics. But Mr. Herbert, although
+his prejudices were nearly as strong, and his opinions, if not more
+indigenous at least far better acclimatised than hers, had yet reaped
+this advantage of a longer life, that he was better able to atone his
+dislike of certain opinions with personal regard for those who held
+them, and therefore did not, like Dorothy, recoil from the idea of
+obligation to one of a different creed--provided always that creed was
+catholicism and not puritanism. For to the church of England, the
+catholics, in the presence of her more rampant foes, appeared harmless
+enough now.
+
+He believed that the honourable feelings of lord Worcester and his
+family would be hostile to any attempt to proselytize his ward. But as
+far as she was herself concerned, he trusted more to the strength of her
+prejudices than the rectitude of her convictions, honest as the girl
+was, to prevent her from being over-influenced by the change of
+spiritual atmosphere; for in proportion to the simplicity of her
+goodness must be her capacity for recognizing the goodness of others,
+catholics or not, and for being wrought upon by the virtue that went out
+from them. His hope was, that England would have again become the abode
+of peace, long ere any risk to her spiritual well-being should have been
+incurred by this mode of securing her bodily safety and comfort.
+
+But there was another fact, in the absence of which he would have had
+far more hesitation in seeking for his ewe-lamb the protection of sheep,
+the guardians of whose spiritual fold had but too often proved wolves in
+sheep-dogs' clothing: within the last few days the news had reached him
+that an old friend named Bayly, a true man, a priest of the English
+church and a doctor of divinity, had taken up his abode in Raglan castle
+as one of the household--chaplain indeed, as report would have it,
+though that was hard of belief, save indeed it were for the sake of the
+protestants within its walls. However that might be, there was a true
+shepherd to whose care to entrust his lamb; and it was mainly on the
+strength of this consideration that he had concluded to make his
+proposal to Dorothy--namely, that she should seek shelter within the
+walls of Raglan castle until the storm should be so far over-blown, as
+to admit either of her going to Llangattock or returning to her own
+home. He now discussed the matter with her in full, and, notwithstanding
+her very natural repugnance to the scheme, such was Dorothy's confidence
+in her friend that she was easily persuaded of its wisdom. What the more
+inclined her to yield was, that Mr. Heywood had written her a letter,
+hardly the less unwelcome for the kindness of its tone, in which he
+offered her the shelter and hospitality of Redware 'until better days.'
+
+'Better days!' exclaimed Dorothy with contempt. 'If such days as he
+would count better should ever arrive, his house is the last place where
+I would have them find me!'
+
+She wrote a polite but cold refusal, and rejoiced in the hope that he
+would soon hear of her having sought and found refuge in Raglan with the
+friends of the king.
+
+Meanwhile Mr. Herbert had opened communication with Dr. Bayly, had
+satisfied himself that he was still a true son of the church, and had
+solicited his friendly mediation towards the receiving of mistress
+Dorothy Vaughan into the family of the marquis of Worcester, to the
+dignity of which title the earl had now been raised--the parliament, to
+be sure, declining to acknowledge the patent conferred by his majesty,
+but that was of no consequence in the estimation of those chiefly
+concerned.
+
+On a certain spring morning, then, the snow still lying in the hollows
+of the hills, Thomas Bayly came to Wyfern to see his old friend Matthew
+Herbert. He was a courteous little man, with a courtesy librating on a
+knife-edge of deflection towards obsequiousness on the one hand and
+condescension on the other, for neither of which, however, was his
+friend Herbert an object. His eye was keen, and his forehead good, but
+his carriage inclined to the pompous, and his speech to the formal,
+ornate, and prolix. The shape of his mouth was honest, but the closure
+of the lips indicated self-importance. The greeting between them was
+simple and genuine, and ere they parted, Bayly had promised to do his
+best in representing the matter to the marquis, his daughter-in-law,
+lady Margaret, the wife of lord Herbert, and his daughter, lady Anne,
+who, although the most rigid catholic in the house, was already the
+doctor's special friend.
+
+It would have been greatly unlike the marquis or any of his family to
+refuse such a prayer. Had not their house been for centuries the abode
+of hospitality, the embodiment of shelter? On the mere representation of
+Dr. Bayly, and the fact of the relationship, which, although distant,
+was well enough known, within two days mistress Dorothy Vaughan received
+an invitation to enter the family of the marquis, as one of the
+gentlewomen of lady Margaret's suite. It was of course gratefully
+accepted, and as soon as Mr. Herbert thought himself sufficiently
+recovered to encounter the fatigues of travelling, he urged on the
+somewhat laggard preparations of Dorothy, that he might himself see her
+safely housed on his way to Llangattock, whither he was most anxious to
+return.
+
+It was a lovely spring morning when they set out together on horseback
+for Raglan. The sun looked down like a young father upon his
+earth-mothered children, peeping out of their beds to greet him after
+the long winter night. The rooks were too busy to caw, dibbling deep in
+the soft red earth with their great beaks. The red cattle, flaked with
+white, spotted the clear fresh green of the meadows. The bare trees had
+a kind of glory about them, like old men waiting for their youth, which
+might come suddenly. A few slow clouds were drifting across the pale
+sky. A gentle wind was blowing over the wet fields, but when a cloud
+swept before the sun, it blew cold. The roads were bad, but their horses
+were used to such, and picked their way with the easy carefulness of
+experience. The winter might yet return for a season, but this day was
+of the spring and its promises. Earth and air, field and sky were full
+of peace. But the heart of England was troubled--troubled with passions
+both good and evil--with righteous indignation and unholy scorn, with
+the love of liberty and the joy of license, with ambition and
+aspiration.
+
+No honest heart could yield long to the comforting of the fair world,
+knowing that some of her fairest fields would soon be crimsoned afresh
+with the blood of her children. But Dorothy's sadness was not all for
+her country in general. Had she put the question honestly to her heart,
+she must have confessed that even the loss of her mother had less to do
+with a certain weight upon it, which the loveliness of the spring day
+seemed to render heavier, than the rarely absent feeling rather than
+thought, that the playmate of her childhood, and the offered lover of
+her youth, had thrown himself with all the energy of dawning manhood
+into the quarrel of the lawless and self-glorifying. Nor was she
+altogether free from a sense of blame in the matter. Had she been less
+imperative in her mood and bearing, more ready to give than to require
+sympathy,--but ah! she could not change the past, and the present was
+calling upon her.
+
+At length the towers of Raglan appeared, and a pang of apprehension shot
+through her bosom. She was approaching the unknown. Like one on the
+verge of a second-sight, her history seemed for a moment about to reveal
+itself--where it lay, like a bird in its egg, within those massive
+walls, warded by those huge ascending towers. Brought up in a retirement
+that some would have counted loneliness, and although used to all gentle
+and refined ways, yet familiar with homeliness and simplicity of mode
+and ministration, she could not help feeling awed at the prospect of
+entering such a zone of rank and stateliness and observance as the
+household of the marquis, who lived like a prince in expenditure,
+attendance, and ceremony. She knew little of the fashions of the day,
+and, like many modest young people, was afraid she might be guilty of
+some solecism which would make her appear ill-bred, or at least awkward.
+Since her mother left her, she had become aware of a timidity to which
+she had hitherto been a stranger. 'Ah!' she said to herself, 'if only my
+mother were with me!'
+
+At length they reached the brick gate, were admitted within the outer
+wall, and following the course taken by Scudamore and Heywood, skirted
+the moat which enringed the huge blind citadel or keep, and arrived at
+the western gate. The portcullis rose to admit them, and they rode into
+the echoes of the vaulted gateway. Turning to congratulate Dorothy on
+their safe arrival, Mr. Herbert saw that she was pale and agitated.
+
+'What ails my child?' he said in a low voice, for the warder was near.
+
+'I feel as if entering a prison,' she replied, with a shiver.
+
+'Is thy God the God of the grange and not of the castle?' returned the
+old man.
+
+'But, sir,' said Dorothy, 'I have been accustomed to a liberty such as
+few have enjoyed, and these walls and towers--'
+
+'Heed not the look of things,' interrupted her guardian. 'Believe in the
+Will that with a thought can turn the shadow of death into the morning,
+give gladness for weeping, and the garment of praise for the spirit of
+heaviness.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+RAGLAN CASTLE.
+
+
+While he yet spoke, their horses, of their own accord, passed through
+the gate which Eccles had thrown wide to admit them, and carried them
+into the Fountain court. Here, indeed, was a change of aspect! All that
+Dorothy had hitherto contemplated was the side of the fortress which
+faced the world--frowning and defiant, although here and there on the
+point of breaking into a half smile, for the grim, suspicious,
+altogether repellent look of the old feudal castle had been gradually
+vanishing in the additions and alterations of more civilised times. But
+now they were in the heart of the building, and saw the face which the
+house of strength turned upon its own people. The spring sunshine filled
+half the court; over the rest lay the shadow of the huge keep, towering
+massive above the three-storied line of building which formed the side
+next it. Here was the true face of the Janus-building, full of eyes and
+mouths; for many bright windows looked down into the court, in some of
+which shone the smiling faces of children and ladies peeping out to see
+the visitors, whose arrival had been announced by the creaking chains of
+the portcullis; and by the doors issued and entered, here a lady in rich
+attire, there a gentlemen half in armour, and here again a serving man
+or maid. Nearly in the centre of the quadrangle, just outside the shadow
+of the keep, stood the giant horse, rearing in white marble, almost
+dazzling in the sunshine, from whose nostrils spouted the jets of water
+which gave its name to the court. Opposite the gate by which they
+entered was the little chapel, with its triple lancet windows, over
+which lay the picture-gallery with its large oriel lights. Far above
+their roof, ascended from behind that of the great hall, with its fine
+lantern window seated on the ridge. From the other court beyond the
+hall, that upon which the main entrance opened, came the sounds of heavy
+feet in intermittent but measured tread, the clanking of arms, and a
+returning voice of loud command: the troops of the garrison were being
+exercised on the slabs of the pitched court.
+
+From each of the many doors opening into the court they had entered, a
+path, paved with coloured tiles, led straight through the finest of turf
+to the marble fountain in the centre, into whose shadowed basin the
+falling water seemed to carry captive as into a prison the sunlight it
+caught above. Its music as it fell made a lovely but strange and sad
+contrast with the martial sounds from beyond.
+
+It was but a moment they had to note these things; eyes and ears
+gathered them all at once. Two of the warder's men already held their
+horses, while two other men, responsive to the warder's whistle, came
+running from the hall and helped them to dismount. Hardly had they
+reached the ground ere a man-servant came, who led the way to the left
+towards a porch of carved stone on the same side of the court. The door
+stood open, revealing a flight of stairs, rather steep, but wide and
+stately, going right up between two straight walls. At the top stood
+lady Margaret's gentleman usher, Mr. Harcourt by name, who received them
+with much courtesy, and conducting them to a small room on the left of
+the landing, went to announce their arrival to lady Margaret, to whose
+private parlour this was the antechamber. Returning in a moment, he led
+them into her presence.
+
+She received them with a frankness which almost belied the stateliness
+of her demeanour. Through the haze of that reserve which a consciousness
+of dignity, whether true or false, so often generates, the genial
+courtesy of her Irish nature, for she was an O'Brien, daughter of the
+earl of Thomond, shone clear, and justified her Celtic origin.
+
+'Welcome, cousin!' she said, holding out her hand while yet distant half
+the length of the room, across which, upborne on slow firm foot, she
+advanced with even, stately motion, 'And you also, reverend sir,' she
+went on, turning to Mr. Herbert. 'I am told we are indebted to you for
+this welcome addition to our family--how welcome none can tell but
+ladies shut up like ourselves.'
+
+Dorothy was already almost at her ease, and the old clergyman soon found
+lady Margaret so sensible and as well as courteous--prejudiced yet
+further in her favour, it must be confessed, by the pleasant pretence
+she made of claiming cousinship on the ground of the identity of her
+husband's title with his surname--that, ere he left the castle, liberal
+as he had believed himself, he was nevertheless astonished to find how
+much of friendship had in that brief space been engendered in his bosom
+towards a catholic lady whom he had never before seen.
+
+Since the time of Elizabeth, when the fear and repugnance of the nation
+had been so greatly and justly excited by the apparent probability of a
+marriage betwixt their queen and the detested Philip of Spain, a
+considerable alteration had been gradually wrought in the feelings of a
+large portion of it in respect of their catholic countrymen--a fact
+which gave strength to the position of the puritans in asserting the
+essential identity of episcopalian with catholic politics. Almost forty
+years had elapsed since the Gunpowder Plot; the queen was a catholic;
+the episcopalian party was itself at length endangered by the extension
+and development of the very principles on which they had themselves
+broken away from the church of Rome; and the catholics were friendly to
+the government of the king, under which their condition was one of
+comfort if not influence, while under that of the parliament they had
+every reason to anticipate a revival of persecution. Not a few of them
+doubtless cherished the hope that this revelation of the true spirit of
+dissent would result in driving the king and his party back into the
+bosom of the church.
+
+The king, on the other hand, while only too glad to receive what aid he
+might from the loyal families of the old religion, yet saw that much
+caution was necessary lest he should alienate the most earnest of his
+protestant friends by giving ground for the suspicion that he was
+inclined to purchase their co-operation by a return to the creed of his
+Scottish grandmother, Mary Stuart, and his English
+great-great-grand-mother, Margaret Tudor.
+
+On the part of the clergy there had been for some time a considerable
+tendency, chiefly from the influence of Laud, to cultivate the same
+spirit which actuated the larger portion of the catholic priesthood; and
+although this had never led to retrograde movement in regard to their
+politics, the fact that both were accounted by a third party, and that
+far the most dangerous to either of the other two, as in spirit and
+object one and the same, naturally tended to produce a more indulgent
+regard of each other than had hitherto prevailed. And hence, in part, it
+was that it had become possible for episcopalian Dr. Bayly to be an
+inmate of Raglan Castle, and for good, protestant Matthew Herbert to
+seek refuge for his ward with good catholic lady Margaret.
+
+Eager to return to the duties of his parish, through his illness so long
+neglected, Mr. Herbert declined her ladyship's invitation to dinner,
+which, she assured him, consulting a watch that she wore in a ring on
+her little finger, must be all but ready, seeing it was now a quarter to
+eleven, and took his leave, accompanied by Dorothy's servant to bring
+back the horse--if indeed they should be fortunate enough to escape the
+requisition of both horses by one party or the other. At present,
+however, the king's affairs continued rather on the ascendant, and the
+name of the marquis in that country was as yet a tower of strength.
+Dorothy's horse was included in the hospitality shown his mistress, and
+taken to the stables--under the mid-day shadow of the Library Tower.
+
+As soon as the parson was gone, lady Margaret touched a small silver
+bell which hung in a stand on the table beside her.
+
+'Conduct mistress Dorothy Vaughan to her room, wait upon her there, and
+then attend her hither,' she said to the maid who answered it. 'I would
+request a little not unneedful haste, cousin,' she went on, 'for my lord
+of Worcester is very precise in all matters of household order, and
+likes ill to see any one enter the dining-room after he is seated. It is
+his desire that you should dine at his table to-day. After this I must
+place you with the rest of my ladies, who dine in the housekeeper's
+room.'
+
+'As you think proper, madam,' returned Dorothy, a little disappointed,
+but a little relieved also.
+
+'The bell will ring presently,' said lady Margaret, 'and a quarter of an
+hour thereafter we shall all be seated.'
+
+She was herself already dressed--in a pale-blue satin, with full skirt
+and close-fitting, long-peaked boddice, fastened in front by several
+double clasps set with rubies; her shoulders were bare, and her sleeves
+looped up with large round star-like studs, set with diamonds, so that
+her arms also were bare to the elbows. Round her neck was a short string
+of large pearls.
+
+'You take no long time to attire yourself, cousin,' said her ladyship,
+kindly, when Dorothy returned.
+
+'Little time was needed, madam,' answered Dorothy; 'for me there is but
+one colour. I fear I shall show but a dull bird amidst the gay plumage
+of Raglan. But I could have better adorned myself had not I heard the
+bell ere I had begun, and feared to lose your ladyship's company, and in
+very deed make my first appearance before my lord as a transgressor of
+the laws of his household.'
+
+'You did well, cousin Dorothy; for everything goes by law and order
+here. All is reason and rhyme too in this house. My lord's father,
+although one of the best and kindest of men, is, as I said, somewhat
+precise, and will, as he says himself, be king in his own
+kingdom--thinking doubtless of one who is not such. I should not talk
+thus with you, cousin, were you like some young ladies I know; but there
+is that about you which pleases me greatly, and which I take to indicate
+discretion. When first I came to the house, not having been accustomed
+to so severe a punctuality, I gave my lord no little annoyance; for,
+oftener than once or twice, I walked into his dining-room not only after
+grace had been said, but after the first course had been sent down to
+the hall-tables. My lord took his revenge in calling me the wild
+Irishwoman.'
+
+Here she laughed very sweetly.
+
+'The only one,' she resumed, 'who does here as he will, is my husband.
+Even lord Charles, who is governor of the castle, must be in his place
+to the moment; but for my husband--.'
+
+The bell rang a second time. Lady Margaret rose, and taking Dorothy's
+arm, led her from the room into a long dim-lighted corridor. Arrived at
+the end of it, where a second passage met it at right angles, she
+stopped at a door facing them.
+
+'I think we shall find my lord of Worcester here,' she said in a
+whisper, as she knocked and waited a response. 'He is not here,' she
+said. 'He expects me to call on him as I pass. We must make haste.'
+
+The second passage, in which were several curves and sharp turns, led
+them to a large room, nearly square, in which were two tables covered
+for about thirty. By the door and along the sides of the room were a
+good many gentlemen, some of them very plainly dressed, and others in
+gayer attire, amongst whom Dorothy, as they passed through, recognised
+her cousin Scudamore. Whether he saw and knew her she could not tell.
+Crossing a small antechamber they entered the drawing-room, where stood
+and sat talking a number of ladies and gentlemen, to some of whom lady
+Margaret spoke and presented her cousin, greeting others with a familiar
+nod or smile, and yet others with a stately courtesy. Then she said,
+
+'Ladies, I will lead the way to the dining-room. My lord marquis would
+the less willingly have us late that something detains himself.'
+
+Those who dined in the marquis's room followed her. Scarcely had she
+reached the upper end of the table when the marquis entered, followed by
+all his gentlemen, some of whom withdrew, their service over for the
+time, while others proceeded to wait upon him and his family, with any
+of the nobility who happened to be his guests at the first table.
+
+'I am the laggard to-day, my lady,' he said, cheerily, as he bore his
+heavy person up the room towards her. 'Ah!' he went on, as lady Margaret
+stepped forward to meet him, leading Dorothy by the hand, 'who is this
+sober young damsel under my wild Irishwoman's wing? Our young cousin
+Vaughan, doubtless, whose praises my worthy Dr. Bayly has been sounding
+in my ears?'
+
+He held out his hand to Dorothy, and bade her welcome to Raglan.
+
+The marquis was a man of noble countenance, of the type we are ready to
+imagine peculiar to the great men of the time of queen Elizabeth. To
+this his unwieldy person did not correspond, although his movements were
+still far from being despoiled of that charm which naturally belonged to
+all that was his. Nor did his presence owe anything to his dress, which
+was of that long-haired coarse woollen stuff they called frieze, worn,
+probably, by not another nobleman in the country, and regarded as fitter
+for a yeoman. His eyes, though he was yet but sixty-five or so, were
+already hazy, and his voice was husky and a little broken--results of
+the constantly poor health and frequent suffering he had had for many
+years; but he carried it all 'with'--to quote the prince of courtesy,
+sir Philip Sydney--'with a right old man's grace, that will seem
+livelier than his age will afford him.'
+
+The moment he entered, the sewer in the antechamber at the other end of
+the room had given a signal to one waiting at the head of the stair
+leading down to the hall, and his lordship was hardly seated,
+ere--although the kitchen was at the corner of the pitched court
+diagonally opposite--he bore the first dish into the room, followed by
+his assistants, laden each with another.
+
+Lady Margaret made Dorothy sit down by her. A place on her other side
+was vacant.
+
+'Where is this truant husband of thine, my lady?' asked the marquis, as
+soon as Dr. Bayly had said grace. 'Know you whether he eats at all, or
+when, or where? It is now three days since he has filled his place at
+thy side, yet is he in the castle. Thou knowest, my lady, I deal not
+with him, who is so soon to sit in this chair, as with another, but I
+like it not. Know you what occupies him to day?'
+
+'I do not, my lord,' answered lady Margaret. 'I have had but one glimpse
+of him since the morning, and if he looks now as he looked then, I fear
+your lordship would be minded rather to drive him from your table than
+welcome him to a seat beside you.'
+
+As she spoke, lady Margaret caught a glimpse of a peculiar expression on
+Scudamore's face, where he stood behind his master's chair.
+
+'Your page, my lord,' she said, 'seems to know something of him: if it
+pleased you to put him to the question--'
+
+'Hey, Scudamore!' said the marquis without turning his head; 'what have
+you seen of my lord Herbert?'
+
+'As much as could be seen of him, my lord,' answered Scudamore. 'He was
+new from the powder-mill, and his face and hands were as he had been
+blown three times up the hall chimney.'
+
+'I would thou didst pay more heed to what is fitting, thou monkey, and
+knewest either place or time for thy foolish jests! It will be long ere
+thou soil one of thy white fingers for king or country,' said the
+marquis, neither angrily nor merrily. 'Get another flask of claret,' he
+added, 'and keep thy wit for thy mates, boy.'
+
+Dorothy cast one involuntary glance at her cousin. His face was red as
+fire, but, as it seemed to her, more with suppressed amusement than
+shame. She had not been much longer in the castle before she learned
+that, in the opinion of the household, the marquis did his best, or
+worst rather, to ruin young Scudamore by indulgence. The judgment,
+however, was partly the product of jealousy, although doubtless the
+marquis had in his case a little too much relaxed the bonds of
+discipline. The youth was bright and ready, and had as yet been found
+trustworthy; his wit was tolerable, and a certain gay naivete of speech
+and manner set off to the best advantage what there was of it; but his
+laughter was sometimes mischievous, and on the present occasion Dorothy
+could not rid herself of the suspicion that he was laughing in his
+sleeve at his master, which caused her to redden in her turn. Scudamore
+saw it, and had his own fancies concerning the phenomenon.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE TWO MARQUISES.
+
+
+Dinner over, lady Margaret led Dorothy back to her parlour, and there
+proceeded to discover what accomplishments and capabilities she might
+possess. Finding she could embroider, play a little on the spinnet, sing
+a song, and read aloud both intelligibly and pleasantly, she came to the
+conclusion that the country-bred girl was an acquisition destined to
+grow greatly in value, should the day ever arrive--which heaven
+forbid!--when they would have to settle down to the monotony of a
+protracted siege. Remarking, at length, that she looked weary, she sent
+her away to be mistress of her time till supper, at half-past five.
+
+Weary in truth with her journey, but still more weary from the multitude
+and variety of objects, the talk, and the constant demand of the general
+strangeness upon her attention and one form or other of suitable
+response, Dorothy sought her chamber. But she scarcely remembered how to
+reach it. She knew it lay a floor higher, and easily found the stair up
+which she had followed her attendant, for it rose from the landing of
+the straight ascent by which she had entered the house. She could hardly
+go wrong either as to the passage at the top of it, leading back over
+the room she had just left below, but she could not tell which was her
+own door. Fearing to open the wrong one, she passed it and went on to
+the end of the corridor, which was very dimly lighted. There she came to
+an open door, through which she saw a small chamber, evidently not meant
+for habitation. She entered. A little light came in through a crossed
+loophole, sufficient to show her the bare walls, with the plaster
+sticking out between the stones, the huge beams above, and in the middle
+of the floor, opposite the loop-hole, a great arblast or cross-bow, with
+its strange machinery. She had never seen one before, but she knew
+enough to guess at once what it was. Through the loophole came a sweet
+breath of spring air, and she saw trees bending in the wind, heard their
+faint far-off rustle, and saw the green fields shining in the sun.
+
+Partly from having been so much with Richard, her only playmate, who was
+of an ingenious and practical turn, a certain degree of interest in
+mechanical forms and modes had been developed in Dorothy, sufficient at
+least to render her unable to encounter such an implement without
+feeling a strong impulse to satisfy herself concerning its mechanism,
+its motion, and its action. Approaching it cautiously and curiously, as
+if it were a live thing, which might start up and fly from, or perhaps
+at her, for what she knew, she gazed at it for a few moments with eyes
+full of unuttered questions, then ventured to lay gentle hold upon what
+looked like a handle. To her dismay, a wheezy bang followed, which
+seemed to shake the tower. Whether she had discharged an arrow, or an
+iron bolt, or a stone, or indeed anything at all, she could not tell,
+for she had not got so far in her observations as to perceive even that
+the bow was bent. Her heart gave a scared flutter, and she started back,
+not merely terrified, but ashamed also that she should initiate her life
+in the castle with meddling and mischief, when a low gentle laugh behind
+her startled her yet more, and looking round with her heart in her
+throat, she perceived in the half-light of the place a man by the wall
+behind the arblast watching her. Her first impulse was to run, and the
+door was open; but she thought she owed an apology ere she retreated.
+What sort of person he was she could not tell, for there was not light
+enough to show a feature of his face.
+
+'I ask your pardon,' she said; 'I fear I have done mischief.'
+
+'Not the least,' returned the man, in a gentle voice, with a tone of
+amusement in it.
+
+'I had never seen a great cross-bow,' Dorothy went on, anxious to excuse
+her meddling. 'I thought this must be one, but I was so stupid as not to
+perceive it was bent, and that that was the--the handle--or do you call
+it the trigger?--by which you let it go.'
+
+The man, who had at first taken her for one of the maids, had by this
+time discovered from her tone and speech that she was a lady.
+
+'It is a clumsy old-fashioned thing,' he returned, 'but I shall not
+remove it until I can put something better in its place; and it would be
+a troublesome affair to get even a demiculverin up here, not to mention
+the bad neighbour it would be to the ladies'chambers. I was just making
+a small experiment with it on the force of springs. I believe I shall
+yet prove that much may be done with springs--more perhaps, and
+certainly at far less expense, than with gunpowder, which costs greatly,
+is very troublesome to make, occupies much space, and is always like an
+unstable, half-treacherous friend within the gates--to say nothing of
+the expense of cannon--ten times that of an engine of timber and
+springs. See what a strong chain your shot has broken! Shall I show you
+how the thing works?'
+
+He spoke in a gentle, even rapid voice, a little hesitating now and
+then, more, through the greater part of this long utterance, as if he
+were thinking to himself than addressing another. Neither his tone nor
+manner were those of an underling, but Dorothy's startled nerves had
+communicated their tremor to her modesty, and with a gentle 'No, sir, I
+thank you; I must be gone,' she hurried away.
+
+Daring now a little more for fear of worse, the first door she tried
+proved that of her own room, and it was with a considerable sense of
+relief, as well as with weariness and tremor, that she nestled herself
+into the high window-seat, and looked out into the quadrangle. The
+shadow of the citadel had gone to pay its afternoon visit to the other
+court, and that of the gateway was thrown upon the chapel, partly
+shrouding the white horse, whose watery music was now silent, but
+allowing one red ray, which entered by the iron grating above the solid
+gates, to fall on his head, and warm its cold whiteness with a tinge of
+delicate pink. The court was more still and silent than in the morning;
+only now and then would a figure pass from one door to another, along
+the side of the buildings, or by one of the tiled paths dividing the
+turf. A large peacock was slowly crossing the shadowed grass with a
+stately strut and rhythmic thrust of his green neck. The moment he came
+out into the sunlight, he spread his wheeled fan aloft, and slowly
+pirouetting, if the word can be allowed where two legs are needful, in
+the very acme of vanity, turned on all sides the quivering splendour of
+its hundred eyes, where blue and green burst in the ecstasy of their
+union into a vapour of gold, that the circle of the universe might see.
+And truly the bird's vanity had not misled his judgment: it was a sight
+to make the hearts of the angels throb out a dainty phrase or two more
+in the song of their thanksgiving. Some pigeons, white, and blue-grey,
+with a lovely mingling and interplay of metallic lustres on their
+feathery throats, but with none of that almost grotesque obtrusion of
+over-driven individuality of kind, in which the graciousness of common
+beauty is now sacrificed to the whim of the fashion the vulgar fancier
+initiates, picked up the crumbs under the windows of lady Margaret's
+nursery, or flew hither and thither among the roofs with wapping and
+whiffling wing.
+
+But still from the next court came many and various mingling noises. The
+sounds of drill had long ceased, but those of clanking hammers were
+heard the more clearly, now one, now two, now several together. The
+smaller, clearer one was that of the armourer, the others those of the
+great smithy, where the horse-shoes were made, the horses shod, the
+smaller pieces of ordnance repaired, locks and chains mended, bolts
+forged, and, in brief, every piece of metal about the castle, from the
+cook's skillet to the winches and chains of the drawbridges, set right,
+renewed, or replaced. The forges were far from where she sat, outside
+the farthest of the two courts, across which, and the great hall
+dividing them, the clink, clink, the clank, and the ringing clang,
+softened by distance and interposition, came musical to her ear. The
+armourer's hammer was the keener, the quicker, the less intermittent,
+and yet had the most variations of time and note, as he shifted the
+piece on his anvil, or changed breastplate for gorget, or greave for
+pauldron--or it might be sword for pike-head or halbert. Mingled with it
+came now and then the creak and squeak of the wooden wheel at the
+draw-well near the hall-door in the farther court, and the muffled
+splash of the bucket as it struck the water deep in the shaft. She even
+thought she could hear the drops dripping back from it as it slowly
+ascended, but that was fancy. Everywhere arose the auricular vapour, as
+it were, of action, undefined and indefinable, the hum of the human
+hive, compounded of all confluent noises--the chatter of the servants'
+hall and the nursery, the stamping of horses, the ringing of harness,
+the ripping of the chains of kenneled dogs, the hollow stamping of heavy
+boots, the lowing of cattle, with sounds besides so strange to the ears
+of Dorothy that they set her puzzling in vain to account for them; not
+to mention the chaff of the guard-rooms by the gates, and the scolding
+and clatter of the kitchen. This last, indeed, was audible only when the
+doors were open, for the walls of the kitchen, whether it was that the
+builders of it counted cookery second only to life, or that this had
+been judged, from the nature of the ground outside, the corner of all
+the enclosure most likely to be attacked, were far thicker than those of
+any of the other towers, with the one exception of the keep itself.
+
+As she sat listening to these multitudinous exhalations of life around
+her, yet with a feeling of loneliness and a dim sense of captivity, from
+the consciousness that huge surrounding walls rose between her and the
+green fields, of which, from earliest memory, she had been as free as
+the birds and beetles, a white rabbit, escaped from the arms of its
+owner, little Mary Somerset, lady Margaret's only child, a merry but
+delicate girl not yet three years old, suddenly darted like a flash of
+snow across the shadowy green, followed in hot haste a moment after by a
+fine-looking boy of thirteen and two younger girls, after whom toddled
+tiny Mary. Dorothy sat watching the pursuit, accompanied with sweet
+outcry and frolic laughter, when in a moment the sounds of their
+merriment changed to shrieks of terror, and she saw a huge mastiff come
+bounding she knew not whence, and rush straight at the rabbit, fierce
+and fast. When the little creature saw him, struck with terror it
+stopped dead, cowered on the sward, and was stock still. But Henry
+Somerset, who was but a few paces from it, reached it before the dog,
+and caught it up in his arms. The rush of the dog threw him down, and
+they rolled over and over, Henry holding fast the poor rabbit.
+
+By this time Dorothy was half-way down the stair: the moment she caught
+sight of the dog she had flown to the rescue. When she issued from the
+porch at the foot of the grand staircase, Henry was up again, and
+running for the house with the rabbit yet safe in his arms, pursued by
+the mastiff. Evidently the dog had not harmed him--but he might get
+angry. The next moment she saw, to her joy and dismay both at once, that
+it was her own dog.
+
+'Marquis! Marquis!' she cried, calling him by his name.
+
+He abandoned the pursuit at once, and went bounding to her. She took him
+by the back of the neck, and the displeasure manifest upon the
+countenance of his mistress made him cower at her feet, and wince from
+the open hand that threatened him. The same instant a lattice window
+over the gateway was flung open, and a voice said--
+
+'Here I am. Who called me?'
+
+Dorothy looked up. The children had vanished with their rescued darling.
+There was not a creature in the court but herself, and there was the
+marquis, leaning half out of the window, and looking about.
+
+'Who called me?' he repeated--angrily, Dorothy thought.
+
+All at once the meaning of it flashed upon her, and she was
+confounded--ready to sink with annoyance. But she was not one to
+hesitate when a thing HAD to be done. Keeping her hold of the dog's
+neck, for his collar was gone, she dragged him half-way towards the
+gate, then turning up to the marquis a face like a peony, replied--
+
+'I am the culprit, my lord.'
+
+'By St. George! you are a brave damsel, and there is no culpa that I
+know of, except on the part of that intruding cur.'
+
+'And the cur's mistress, my lord. But, indeed, he is no cur, but a true
+mastiff.'
+
+'What! is the animal thy property, fair cousin? He is more than I
+bargained for.'
+
+'He is mine, my lord, but I left him chained when I set out from Wyfern
+this morning. That he got loose I confess I am not astonished, neither
+that he tracked me hither, for he has the eyes of a gaze-hound, and the
+nose of a bloodhound; but it amazes me to find him in the castle.'
+
+'That must be inquired into,' said the marquis.
+
+'I am very sorry he has carried himself so ill, my lord. He has put me
+to great shame. But he hath more in him than mere brute, and understands
+when I beg you to pardon him. He misbehaved himself on purpose to be
+taken to me, for at home no one ever dares punish him but myself.'
+
+The marquis laughed.
+
+'If you are so completely his mistress then, why did you call on me for
+help?'
+
+'Pardon me, my lord; I did not so.'
+
+'Why, I heard thee call me two or three times!'
+
+'Alas, my lord! I called him Marquis when he was a pup. Everybody about
+Redware knows Marquis.'
+
+The animal cocked his ears and started each time his name was uttered,
+and yet seemed to understand well enough that ALL the talk was about him
+and his misdeeds.
+
+'Ah! ha!' said his lordship, with a twinkle in his eye, 'that begets
+complications. Two marquises in Raglan? Two kings in England! The thing
+cannot be. What is to be done?'
+
+'I must take him back, my lord! I cannot send him, for he would not go.
+I dread they will not be able to hold him chained; in which evil case I
+fear me I shall have to go, my lord, and take the perils of the time as
+they come.'
+
+'Not of necessity so, cousin, while you can choose between us;--although
+I freely grant that a marquis with four legs is to be preferred before a
+marquis with only two.--But what if you changed his name?'
+
+'I fear it could not be done, my lord. He has been Marquis all his
+life.'
+
+'And I have been marquis only six months! Clearly he hath the better
+right--. But there would be constant mistakes between us, for I cannot
+bring myself to lay aside the honour his majesty hath conferred upon me,
+"which would be worn now in its newest gloss, not cast aside so soon,"
+as master Shakspere says. Besides, it would be a slight to his majesty,
+and that must not be thought of--not for all the dogs in parliament or
+out of it. No--it would breed factions in the castle too. No; one of us
+two must die.'
+
+'Then, indeed, I must go,' said Dorothy, her voice trembling as she
+spoke; for although the words of the marquis were merry, she yet feared
+for her friend.
+
+'Tut! tut! let the older marquis die: he has enjoyed the title; I have
+not. Give him to Tom Fool: he will drown him in the moat. He shall be
+buried with honour--under his rival's favourite apple-tree in the
+orchard. What more could dog desire?'
+
+'No, my lord,' answered Dorothy. 'Will you allow me to take my leave? If
+I only knew where to find my horse!'
+
+'What! would you saddle him yourself, cousin Vaughan?'
+
+'As well as e'er a knave in your lordship's stables. I am very sorry to
+displease you, but to my dog's death I cannot and will not consent.
+Pardon me, my lord.'
+
+The last words brought with them a stifled sob, for she scarcely doubted
+any more that he was in earnest.
+
+'It is assuredly not gratifying to a marquis of the king's making to
+have one of a damsel's dubbing take the precedence of him. I fear you
+are a roundhead and hold by the parliament. But no--that cannot be, for
+you are willing to forsake your new cousin for your old dog. Nay, alas!
+it is your old cousin for your young dog. Puritan! puritan! Well, it
+cannot be helped. But what! you would ride home alone! Evil men are
+swarming, child. This sultry weather brings them out like flies.'
+
+'I shall not be alone, my lord. Marquis will take good care of me.'
+
+'Indeed, my lord marquis will pledge himself to nothing outside his own
+walls.'
+
+'I meant the dog, my lord.'
+
+'Ah! you see how awkward it is. However, as you will not choose between
+us--and to tell the truth, I am not yet quite prepared to die--we must
+needs encounter what is inevitable. I will send for one of the keepers
+to take him to the smithy, and get him a proper collar--one he can't
+slip like that he left at home--and a chain.'
+
+'I must go with him myself, my lord. They will never manage him else.'
+
+'What a demon you have brought into my peaceable house! Go with him, by
+all means. And mind you choose him a kennel yourself.--You do not desire
+him in your chamber, do you, mistress?'
+
+Dorothy secretly thought it would be the best place for him, but she was
+only too glad to have his life spared.
+
+'No, my lord, I thank you,' she said. '--I thank your lordship with all
+my heart.'
+
+The marquis disappeared from the window. Presently young Scudamore came
+into the court from the staircase by the gate, and crossed to the
+hall--in a few minutes returning with the keeper. The man would have
+taken the dog by the neck to lead him away, but a certain form of canine
+curse, not loud but deep, and a warning word from Dorothy, made him
+withdraw his hand.
+
+'Take care, Mr. Keeper,' she said, 'he is dangerous. I will go with him
+myself, if thou wilt show me whither.'
+
+'As it please you, mistress,' answered the keeper, and led the way
+across the court.
+
+'Have you not a word to throw at a poor cousin, mistress Dorothy?' said
+Rowland, when the man was a pace or two in advance.
+
+'No, Mr. Scudamore,' answered Dorothy; 'not until we have first spoken
+in my lord Worcester's or my lady Margaret's presence.'
+
+Scudamore fell behind, followed her a little way, and somewhere
+vanished.
+
+Dorothy followed the keeper across the hall, the size of which, its
+height especially, and the splendour of its windows of stained glass,
+almost awed her; then across the next court to the foot of the Library
+Tower forming the south-east corner of it, near the two towers flanking
+the main entrance. Here a stair led down, through the wall, to a lower
+level outside, where were the carpenters' and all other workshops, the
+forges, the stables, and the farmyard buildings.
+
+As it happened, when Dorothy entered the smithy, there was her own
+little horse being shod, and Marquis and he interchanged a whine and a
+whinny of salutation, while the men stared at the bright apparition of a
+young lady in their dingy regions. Having heard her business, the
+head-smith abandoned everything else to alter an iron collar, of which
+there were several lying about, to fit the mastiff, the presence of
+whose mistress proved entirely necessary. Dorothy had indeed to put it
+on him with her own hands, for at the sound of the chain attached to it
+he began to grow furious, growling fiercely. When the chain had been
+made fast with a staple driven into a strong kennel-post, and his
+mistress proceeded to take her leave of him, his growling changed to the
+most piteous whining; but when she actually left him there, he flew into
+a rage of indignant affection. After trying the strength of his chain,
+however, by three or four bounds, each so furious as to lay him
+sprawling on his back, he yielded to the inevitable, and sullenly crept
+into his kennel, while Dorothy walked back to the room which had already
+begun to seem to her a cell.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE MAGICIAN'S VAULT.
+
+
+Dorothy went straight to lady Margaret's parlour, and made her humble
+apology for the trouble and alarm her dog had occasioned. Lady Margaret
+assured her that the children were nothing the worse, not having been
+even much terrified, for the dog had not gone a hair's-breadth beyond
+rough play. Poor bunny was the only one concerned who had not yet
+recovered his equanimity. He did not seem positively hurt, she said, but
+as he would not eat the lovely clover under his nose where he lay in
+Molly's crib, it was clear that the circulation of his animal spirits
+had been too rudely checked. Thereupon Dorothy begged to be taken to the
+nursery, for, being familiar with all sorts of tame animals, she knew
+rabbits well. As she stood with the little creature in her arms, gently
+stroking its soft whiteness, the children gathered round her, and she
+bent herself to initiate a friendship with them, while doing her best to
+comfort and restore their favourite. Success in the latter object she
+found the readiest way to the former. Under the sweet galvanism of her
+stroking hand the rabbit was presently so much better that when she
+offered him a blade of the neglected clover, the equilateral triangle of
+his queer mouth was immediately set in motion, the trefoil vanished, and
+when he was once more placed in the crib he went on with his meal as if
+nothing had happened. The children were in ecstasies, and cousin Dorothy
+was from that moment popular and on the way to be something better.
+
+When supper time came, lady Margaret took her again to the dining-room,
+where there was much laughter over the story of the two marquises, lord
+Worcester driving the joke in twenty different directions, but so kindly
+that Dorothy, instead of being disconcerted or even discomposed thereby,
+found herself emboldened to take a share in the merriment. When the
+company rose, lady Margaret once more led her to her own room, where,
+working at her embroidery frame, she chatted with her pleasantly for
+some time. Dorothy would have been glad if she had set her work also,
+for she could ill brook doing nothing. Notwithstanding her quietness of
+demeanour, amounting at times to an appearance of immobility, her nature
+was really an active one, and it was hard for her to sit with her hands
+in her lap. Lady Margaret at length perceived her discomfort.
+
+'I fear, my child, I am wearying you,' she said.
+
+'It is only that I want something to do, madam,' said Dorothy.
+
+'I have nothing at hand for you to-night,' returned lady Margaret.
+'Suppose we go and find my lord;--I mean my own lord Herbert. I have not
+seen him since we broke fast together, and you have not seen him at all.
+I am afraid he must think of leaving home again soon, he seems so
+anxious to get something or other finished.'
+
+As she spoke, she pushed aside her frame, and telling Dorothy to go and
+fetch herself a cloak, went into the next room, whence she presently
+returned, wrapped in a hooded mantle. As soon as Dorothy came, she led
+her along the corridor to a small lobby whence a stair descended to the
+court, issuing close by the gate.
+
+'I shall never learn my way about,' said Dorothy. 'If it were only the
+staircases, they are more than my memory will hold.'
+
+Lady Margaret gave a merry little laugh.
+
+'Harry set himself to count them the other day,' she said. 'I do not
+remember how many he made out altogether, but I know he said there were
+at least thirty stone ones.'
+
+Dorothy's answer was an exclamation.
+
+But she was not in the mood to dwell upon the mere arithmetic of
+vastness. Invaded by the vision of the mighty structure, its aspect
+rendered yet more imposing by the time which now suited with it, she
+forgot lady Margaret's presence, and stood still to gaze.
+
+The twilight had deepened half-way into night. There was no moon, and in
+the dusk the huge masses of building rose full of mystery and awe. Above
+the rest, the great towers on all sides seemed by indwelling might to
+soar into the regions of air. The pile stood there, the epitome of the
+story of an ancient race, the precipitate from its vanished life--a hard
+core that had gathered in the vaporous mass of history--the all of solid
+that remained to witness of the past.
+
+She came again to herself with a start. Lady Margaret had stood quietly
+waiting for her mood to change. Dorothy apologised, but her mistress
+only smiled and said,
+
+'I am in no haste, child. I like to see another impressed as I was when
+first I stood just where you stand now. Come, then, I will show you
+something different.'
+
+She led the way along the southern side of the court until they came to
+the end of the chapel, opposite which an archway pierced the line of
+building, and revealed the mighty bulk of the citadel, the only portion
+of the castle, except the kitchen-tower, continuing impregnable to
+enlarged means of assault: gunpowder itself, as yet far from perfect in
+composition and make, and conditioned by clumsy, uncertain, and
+ill-adjustable artillery, was nearly powerless against walls more than
+ten feet in thickness.
+
+I have already mentioned that one peculiarity of Raglan was a distinct
+moat surrounding its keep. Immediately from the outer end of the
+archway, a Gothic bridge of stone led across this thirty-foot moat to a
+narrow walk which encompassed the tower. The walk was itself encompassed
+and divided from the moat by a wall with six turrets at equal distances,
+surmounted by battlements. At one time the sole entrance to the tower
+had been by a drawbridge dropping across the walk to the end of the
+stone bridge, from an arched door in the wall, whose threshold was some
+ten or twelve feet from the ground; but another entrance had since been
+made on the level of the walk, and by it the two ladies now entered.
+Passing the foot of a great stone staircase, they came to the door of
+what had, before the opening of the lower entrance, been a vaulted
+cellar, probably at one time a dungeon, at a later period a place of
+storage, but now put to a very different use, and wearing a stranger
+aspect than it could ever have borne at any past period of its story--a
+look indeed of mystery inexplicable.
+
+When Dorothy entered she found herself in a large place, the form of
+which she could ill distinguish in the dull light proceeding from the
+chinks about the closed doors of a huge furnace. The air was filled with
+gurglings and strange low groanings, as of some creature in dire pain.
+Dorothy had as good nerves as ever woman, yet she could not help some
+fright as she stood alone by the door and stared into the gloomy
+twilight into which her companion had advanced. As her eyes became used
+to the ruddy dusk, she could see better, but everywhere they lighted on
+shapes inexplicable, whose forms to the first questioning thought
+suggested instruments of torture; but cruel as some of them looked, they
+were almost too strange, contorted, fantastical for such. Still, the
+wood-cuts in a certain book she had been familiar with in childhood,
+commonly called Fox's Book of Martyrs, kept haunting her mind's eye--and
+were they not Papists into whose hands she had fallen? she said to
+herself, amused at the vagaries of her own involuntary suggestions.
+
+Among the rest, one thing specially caught her attention, both from its
+size and its complicated strangeness. It was a huge wheel standing near
+the wall, supported between two strong uprights--some twelve or fifteen
+feet in diameter, with about fifty spokes, from every one of which hung
+a large weight. Its grotesque and threatful character was greatly
+increased by the mingling of its one substance with its many shadows on
+the wall behind it. So intent was she upon it that she started when lady
+Margaret spoke.
+
+'Why, mistress Dorothy!' she said, 'you look as if you had wandered into
+St. Anthony's cave! Here is my lord Herbert to welcome his cousin.'
+
+Beside her stood a man rather under the middle stature, but as his back
+was to the furnace this was about all Dorothy could discover of his
+appearance, save that he was in the garb of a workman, with bare head
+and arms, and held in his hand a long iron rod ending in a hook.
+
+'Welcome, indeed, cousin Vaughan!' he said heartily, but without
+offering his hand, which in truth, although an honest, skilful, and
+well-fashioned hand, was at the present moment far from fit for a lady's
+touch.
+
+There was something in his voice not altogether strange to Dorothy, but
+she could not tell of whom or what it reminded her.
+
+'Are you come to take another lesson on the cross-bow?' he asked with a
+smile.
+
+Then she knew he was the same she had met in the looped chamber beside
+the arblast. An occasional slight halt, not impediment, in his speech,
+was what had remained on her memory. Did he always dwell only in the
+dusky borders of the light?
+
+Dorothy uttered a little 'Oh!' of surprise, but immediately recovering
+herself, said,
+
+'I am sorry I did not know it was you, my lord. I might by this time
+have been capable of discharging bolt or arrow with good aim in defence
+of the castle.'
+
+'It is not yet too late, I hope,' returned the workman-lord. 'I confess
+I was disappointed to find your curiosity went no further. I hoped I had
+at last found a lady capable of some interest in pursuits like mine. For
+my lady Margaret here, she cares not a straw for anything I do, and
+would rather have me keep my hands clean than discover the mechanism of
+the primum mobile!
+
+'Yes, in truth, Ned,' said his wife, 'I would rather have thee with fair
+hands in my sweet parlour, than toiling and moiling in this dirty
+dungeon, with no companion but that horrible fire-engine of thine,
+grunting and roaring all night long.'
+
+'Why, what do you make of Caspar Kaltoff, my lady?'
+
+'I make not much of him.'
+
+'You misjudge his goodfellowship then.'
+
+'Truly, I think not well of him: he always hath secrets with thee, and I
+like it not.'
+
+'That they are secrets is thine own fault, Peggy. How can I teach thee
+my secrets if thou wilt not open thine ears to hear them?'
+
+'I would your lordship would teach me!' said Dorothy. 'I might not be an
+apt pupil, but I should be both an eager and a humble one.'
+
+'By St. Patrick! mistress Dorothy, but you go straight to steal my
+husband's heart from me. "Humble," forsooth! and "eager" too! Nay! nay!
+If I have no part in his brain, I can the less yield his heart.'
+
+'What would be gladly learned would be gladly taught, cousin,' said lord
+Herbert.
+
+'There! there!' exclaimed lady Margaret; 'I knew it would be so. You
+discharge your poor dull apprentice the moment you find a clever one!'
+
+'And why not? I never was able to teach thee anything.'
+
+'Ah, Ned, there you are unkind indeed!' said lady Margaret, with
+something in her voice that suggested the water-springs were swelling.
+
+'My shamrock of four!' said her husband in the tenderest tone, 'I but
+jested with thee. How shouldst thou be my pupil in anything I can teach?
+I am yours in all that is noble and good. I did not mean to vex you,
+sweet heart.'
+
+''Tis gone again, Ned,' she answered, smiling. 'Give cousin Dorothy her
+first lesson.'
+
+'It shall be that, then, to which I sought in vain to make thee listen
+this very morning--a certain great saying of my lord of Verulam,
+mistress Dorothy. I had learnt it by heart that I might repeat it word
+for word to my lady, but she would none of it.'
+
+'May I not hear it, madam?' said Dorothy.
+
+'We will both hear it, Herbert, if you will pardon your foolish wife and
+admit her to grace.' And as she spoke she laid her hand on his sooty
+arm.
+
+He answered her only with a smile, but such a one as sufficed.
+
+'Listen then, ladies both,' he said. 'My lord of Verulam, having quoted
+the words of Solomon, "The glory of God is to conceal a thing, but the
+glory of the king is to find it out," adds thus, of his own thought
+concerning them,--"as if," says my lord, "according to the innocent play
+of children, the divine majesty took delight to hide his works, to the
+end to have them found out, and as if kings could not obtain a greater
+honour than to be God's playfellows in that game, considering the great
+commandment of wits and means, whereby nothing needeth to be hidden from
+them."'
+
+'That was very well for my lord of--what did'st thou call him, Ned?'
+
+'Francis Bacon, lord Verulam,' returned Herbert, with a queer smile.
+
+'Very well for my lord of Veryflam!' resumed lady Margaret, with a mock,
+yet bewitching affectation of innocence and ignorance; 'but tell me had
+he?--nay, I am sure he had not a wild Irishwoman sitting breaking her
+heart in her bower all day long for his company. He could never else
+have had the heart to say it.--Mistress Dorothy,' she went on, 'take the
+counsel of a forsaken wife, and lay it to thy heart: never marry a man
+who loves lathes and pipes and wheels and water and fire, and I know not
+what. But do come in ere bed-time, Herbert, and I will sing thee the
+sweetest of English ditties, and make thee such a sack-posset as never
+could be made out of old Ireland any more than the song.'
+
+But her husband that moment sprang from her side, and shouting 'Caspar!
+Caspar!' bounded to the furnace, reached up with his iron rod into the
+darkness over his head, caught something with the hooked end of it, and
+pulled hard. A man who from somewhere in the gloomy place had responded
+like a greyhound to his master's call, did the like on the other side.
+Instantly followed a fierce, protracted, sustained hiss, and in a moment
+the place was filled with a white cloud, whence issued still the hideous
+hiss, changing at length to a roar. Lady Margaret turned in terror, ran
+out of the keep, and fled across the bridge and through the archway
+before she slackened her pace. Dorothy followed, but more composedly,
+led by duty, not driven by terror, and indeed reluctantly forsaking a
+spot where was so much she did not understand.
+
+They had fled from the infant roar of the 'first stock-father' of
+steam-engines, whose cradle was that feudal keep, eight centuries old.
+
+That night Dorothy lay down weary enough. It seemed a month since she
+had been in her own bed at Wyfern, so many new and strange things had
+crowded into her house, hitherto so still. Every now and then the
+darkness heaved and rippled with some noise of the night. The stamping
+of horses, and the ringing of their halter chains, seemed very near her.
+She thought she heard the howl of Marquis from afar, and said to
+herself, 'The poor fellow cannot sleep! I must get my lord to let me
+have him in my chamber.' Then she listened a while to the sweet flow of
+the water from the mouth of the white horse, which in general went on
+all night long. Suddenly came an awful sound--like a howl also, but such
+as never left the throat of dog. Again and again at intervals it came,
+with others like it but not the same, torturing the dark with a dismal
+fear. Dorothy had never heard the cry of a wild beast, but the
+suggestion that these might be such cries, and the recollection that she
+had heard such beasts were in Raglan Castle, came together to her mind.
+She was so weary, however, that worse noises than these could hardly
+have kept her awake; not even her weariness could prevent them from
+following her into her dreams.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+SEVERAL PEOPLE
+
+
+Lord Worcester had taken such a liking to Dorothy, partly at first
+because of the good store of merriment with which she and her mastiff
+had provided him, that he was disappointed when he found her place was
+not to be at his table but the housekeeper's. As he said himself,
+however, he did not meddle with women's matters, and indeed it would not
+do for lady Margaret to show her so much favour above her other women,
+of whom at least one was her superior in rank, and all were relatives as
+well as herself.
+
+Dorothy did not much relish their society, but she had not much of it
+except at meals, when, however, they always treated her as an
+interloper. Every day she saw more or less of lady Margaret, and found
+in her such sweetness, if not quite evenness of temper, as well as
+gaiety of disposition, that she learned to admire as well as love her.
+Sometimes she had her to read to her, sometimes to work with her, and
+almost every day she made her practise a little on the harpsichord.
+Hence she not only improved rapidly in performance, but grew capable of
+receiving more and more delight from music. There was a fine little
+organ in the chapel, on which blind young Delaware, the son of the
+marquis's master of the horse, used to play delightfully; and although
+she never entered the place, she would stand outside listening to his
+music for an hour at a time in the twilight, or sometimes even after
+dark. For as yet she indulged without question all the habits of her
+hitherto free life, as far as was possible within the castle walls, and
+the outermost of these were of great circuit, enclosing lawns,
+shrubberies, wildernesses, flower and kitchen gardens, orchards, great
+fish-ponds, little lakes with fountains, islands, and summer-houses--not
+to mention the farmyard, and indeed a little park, in which were some of
+the finest trees upon the estate.
+
+The gentlewomen with whom Dorothy was, by her position in the household,
+associated, were three in number. One was a rather elderly, rather
+plain, rather pious lady, who did not insist on her pretensions to
+either of the epithets. The second was a short, plump, round-faced,
+good-natured, smiling woman of sixty,--excelling in fasts and
+mortifications, which somehow seemed to agree with her body as well as
+her soul. The third was only two or three years older than Dorothy, and
+was pretty, except when she began to speak, and then for a moment there
+was a strange discord in her features. She took a dislike to Dorothy, as
+she said herself, the instant she cast her eyes upon her. She could not
+bear that prim, set face, she said. The country-bred heifer evidently
+thought herself superior to every one in the castle. She was persuaded
+the minx was a sly one, and would carry tales. So judged mistress Amanda
+Serafina Fuller, after her kind. Nor was it wonderful that, being such
+as she was, she should recoil with antipathy from one whose nature had a
+tendency to ripen over soon, and stunt its slow orbicular expansion to
+the premature and false completeness of a narrow and self-sufficing
+conscientiousness.
+
+Doubtless if Dorothy had shown any marked acknowledgment of the
+precedency of their rights--any eagerness to conciliate the aborigines
+of the circle, the ladies would have been more friendly inclined; but
+while capable of endless love and veneration, there was little of the
+conciliatory in her nature. Hence Mrs. Doughty looked upon her with a
+rather stately, indifference, my lady Broughton with a mild wish to save
+her poor, proud, protestant soul, and mistress Amanda Serafina said she
+hated her; but then ever since the Fall there has been a disproportion
+betwixt the feelings of young ladies and the language in which they
+represent them. Mrs. Doughty neglected her, and Dorothy did not know it;
+lady Broughton said solemn things to her, and she never saw the point of
+them; but when mistress Amanda half closed her eyes and looked at her in
+snake-Geraldine fashion, she met her with a full, wide-orbed,
+questioning gaze, before which Amanda's eyes dropped, and she sank full
+fathom five towards the abyss of real hatred.
+
+During the dinner hour, the three generally talked together in an
+impregnable manner--not that they were by any means bosom-friends, for
+two of them had never before united in anything except despising good,
+soft lady Broughton. When they were altogether in their mistress's
+presence, they behaved to Dorothy and to each other with studious
+politeness.
+
+The ladies Elizabeth and Anne, had their gentlewomen also, in all only
+three, however, who also ate at the housekeeper's table, but kept
+somewhat apart from the rest--yet were, in a distant way, friendly to
+Dorothy.
+
+But hers, as we have seen, was a nature far more capable of attaching
+itself to a few than of pleasing many; and her heart went out to lady
+Margaret, whom she would have come ere long to regard as a mother, had
+she not behaved to her more like an elder sister. Lady Margaret's own
+genuine behaviour had indeed little of the matronly in it; when her
+husband came into the room, she seemed to grow instantly younger, and
+her manner changed almost to that of a playful girl. It is true, Dorothy
+had been struck with the dignity of her manner amid all the frankness of
+her reception, but she soon found that, although her nature was full of
+all real dignities, that which belonged to her carriage never appeared
+in the society of those she loved, and was assumed only, like the thin
+shelter of a veil, in the presence of those whom she either knew or
+trusted less. Before her ladies, she never appeared without some
+restraint--manifest in a certain measuredness of movement, slowness of
+speech, and choice of phrase; but before a month was over, Dorothy was
+delighted to find that the reserve instantly vanished when she happened
+to be left alone with her.
+
+She took an early opportunity of informing her mistress of the
+relationship between herself and Scudamore, stating that she knew little
+or nothing of him, having seen him only once before she came to the
+castle. The youth on his part took the first fitting opportunity of
+addressing her in lady Margaret's presence, and soon they were known to
+be cousins all over the castle.
+
+With lady Margaret's help, Dorothy came to a tolerable understanding of
+Scudamore. Indeed her ladyship's judgment seemed but a development of
+her own feeling concerning him.
+
+'Rowland is not a bad fellow,' she said, 'but I cannot fully understand
+whence he comes in such grace with my lord Worcester. If it were my
+husband now, I should not marvel: he is so much occupied with things and
+engines, that he has as little time as natural inclination to doubt any
+one who will only speak largely enough to satisfy his idea. But my lord
+of Worcester knows well enough that seldom are two things more unlike
+than men and their words. Yet that is not what I mean to say of your
+cousin: he is no hypocrite--means not to be false, but has no rule of
+right in him so far as I can find. He is pleasant company; his gaiety,
+his quips, his readiness of retort, his courtesy and what not, make him
+a favourite; and my lord hath in a manner reared him, which goes to
+explain much. He is quick yet indolent, good-natured but selfish,
+generous but counting enjoyment the first thing,--though, to speak truth
+of him, I have never known him do a dishonourable action. But, in a
+word, the star of duty has not yet appeared above his horizon. Pardon
+me, Dorothy, if I am severe upon him. More or less I may misjudge him,
+but this is how I read him; and if you wonder that I should be able so
+to divide him, I have but to tell you that I should be unapt indeed if I
+had not yet learned of my husband to look into the heart of both men and
+things.'
+
+'But, madam,' Dorothy ventured to say, 'have you not even now told me
+that from very goodness my lord is easily betrayed?'
+
+'Well replied, my child! It is true, but only while he has had no reason
+to mistrust. Let him once perceive ground for dissatisfaction or
+suspicion, and his eye is keen as light itself to penetrate and
+unravel.'
+
+Such good qualities as lady Margaret accorded her cousin were of a sort
+more fitted to please a less sedate and sober-minded damsel than
+Dorothy, who was fashioned rather after the model of a puritan than a
+royalist maiden. Pleased with his address and his behaviour to herself
+as she could hardly fail to be, she yet felt a lingering mistrust of
+him, which sprang quite as much from the immediate impression as from
+her mistress's judgment of him, for it always gave her a sense of not
+coming near the real man in him. There is one thing a hypocrite even can
+never do, and that is, hide the natural signs of his hypocrisy; and
+Rowland, who was no hypocrite, only a man not half so honourable as he
+chose to take himself for, could not conceal his unreality from the eyes
+of his simple country cousin. Little, however, did Dorothy herself
+suspect whence she had the idea,--that it was her girlhood's converse
+with real, sturdy, honest, straight-forward, simple manhood, in the
+person of the youth of fiery temper, and obstinate, opinionated,
+sometimes even rude behaviour, whom she had chastised with terms of
+contemptuous rebuke, which had rendered her so soon capable of
+distinguishing between a profound and a shallow, a genuine and an unreal
+nature, even when the latter comprehended a certain power of
+fascination, active enough to be recognisable by most of the women in
+the castle.
+
+Concerning this matter, it will suffice to say that lord Worcester--who
+ruled his household with such authoritative wisdom that honest Dr. Bayly
+avers he never saw a better-ordered family--never saw a man drunk or
+heard an oath amongst his servants, all the time he was chaplain in the
+castle,--would have been scandalized to know the freedoms his favourite
+indulged himself in, and regarded as privileged familiarities.
+
+There was much coming and going of visitors--more now upon state
+business than matters of friendship or ceremony; and occasional solemn
+conferences were held in the marquis's private room, at which sometimes
+lord John, who was a personal friend of the king's, and sometimes lord
+Charles, the governor of the castle, with perhaps this or that officer
+of dignity in the household, would be present; but whoever was or was
+not present, lord Herbert when at home was always there, sometimes alone
+with his father and commissioners from the king. His absences, however,
+had grown frequent now that his majesty had appointed him general of
+South Wales, and he had considerable forces under his command--mostly
+raised by himself, and maintained at his own and his father's expense.
+
+It was some time after Dorothy had twice in one day met him darkling,
+before she saw him in the light, and was able to peruse his countenance,
+which she did carefully, with the mingled instinct and insight of
+curious and thoughtful girlhood. He had come home from a journey,
+changed his clothes, and had some food; and now he appeared in his
+wife's parlour--to sun himself a little, he said. When he entered,
+Dorothy, who was seated at her mistress's embroidery frame, while she
+was herself busy mending some Flanders lace, rose to leave the room. But
+he prayed her to be seated, saying gayly,
+
+'I would have you see, cousin, that I am no beast of prey that loves the
+darkness. I can endure the daylight. Come, my lady, have you nothing to
+amuse your soldier with? No good news to tell him? How is my little
+Molly?'
+
+During the conjugal talk that followed, his cousin had good opportunity
+of making her observations. First she saw a fair, well-proportioned
+forehead, with eyes whose remarkable clearness looked as if it owed
+itself to the mingling of manly confidence with feminine trustfulness.
+They were dark, not very large, but rather prominent, and full of light.
+His nose was a little aquiline, and perfectly formed. A soft obedient
+moustache, brushed thoroughly aside, revealed right generous lips, about
+which hovered a certain sweetness ever ready to break into the blossom
+of a smile. That and a small tuft below was all the hair he wore upon
+his face. Rare conjunction, the whole of the countenance was remarkable
+both for symmetry and expression--the latter mainly a bright
+intelligence; and if, strangely enough, the predominant sweetness and
+delicacy at first suggested genius unsupported by practical faculty,
+there was a plentifulness and strength in the chin which helped to
+correct the suggestion, and with the brightness and prominence of the
+eyes and the radiance of the whole, to give a brave, almost bold look to
+a face which could hardly fail to remind those who knew them of the
+lovely verses of Matthew Raydon, describing that of sir Philip Sidney:
+
+ A sweet attractive kinde of grace,
+ A full assurance given by lookes,
+ Continuall comfort in a face,
+ The lineaments of Gospell-bookes;
+ I trowe that countenance cannot lie
+ Whose thoughts are legible in the eie.
+
+Notwithstanding the disadvantages of the fashion, in the mechanical
+pursuits to which he had hitherto devoted his life, he wore, like
+Milton's Adam, his wavy hair down to his shoulders. In his youth, it had
+been thick and curling; now it was thinner and straighter, yet curled
+where it lay. His hands were small, with the taper fingers that indicate
+the artist, while his thumb was that of the artizan, square at the tip,
+with the first joint curved a good deal back. That they were hard and
+something discoloured was not for Dorothy to wonder at, when she
+remembered what she had both heard and seen of his occupations.
+
+I may here mention that what aided Dorothy much in the interpretation of
+lord Herbert's countenance and the understanding of his character--for
+it was not on this first observation of him that she could discover all
+I have now set down--and tended largely to the development of the
+immense reverence she conceived for him, was what she saw of his
+behaviour to his father one evening not long after, when, having been
+invited to the marquis's table, she sat nearly opposite him at supper.
+With a willing ear and ready smile for every one who addressed him,
+notably courteous where all were courteous, he gave chief observance,
+amounting to an almost tender homage, to his father. His thoughts seemed
+to wait upon him with a fearless devotion. He listened intently to all
+his jokes, and laughed at them heartily, evidently enjoying them even
+when they were not very good; spoke to him with profound though easy
+respect; made haste to hand him whatever he seemed to want, preventing
+Scudamore; and indeed conducted himself like a dutiful youth, rather
+than a man over forty. Their confident behaviour, wherein the authority
+of the one and the submission of the other were acknowledged with
+co-relative love, was beautiful to behold.
+
+When husband and wife had conferred for a while, the former stretched on
+a settee embroidered by the skilful hands of the latest-vanished
+countess, his mother, and the latter seated near him on a narrow
+tall-backed chair, mending her lace, there came a pause in their
+low-toned conversation, and his lordship looking up seemed anew to
+become aware of the presence of Dorothy.
+
+'Well, cousin,' he said, 'how have you fared since we half-saw each
+other a fortnight ago?'
+
+'I have fared well indeed, my lord, I thank you,' said Dorothy, 'as your
+lordship may judge, knowing whom I serve. In two short weeks my lady
+loads me with kindness enough to requite the loyalty of a life.'
+
+'Look you, cousin, that I should believe such laudation of any less than
+an angel?' said his lordship with mock gravity.
+
+'No, my lord,' answered Dorothy.
+
+There was a moment's pause; then lord Herbert laughed aloud.
+
+'Excellent well, mistress Dorothy!' he cried. 'Thank your cousin, my
+lady, for a compliment worthy of an Irishwoman.'
+
+'I thank you, Dorothy,' said her mistress; 'although, Irishwoman as I
+am, my lord hath put me out of love with compliments.'
+
+'When they are true and come unbidden, my lady,' said Dorothy.
+
+'What! are there such compliments, cousin?' said lord Herbert.
+
+'There are birds of Paradise, my lord, though rarely encountered.'
+
+'Birds of Paradise indeed! they alight not in this world. Birds of
+Paradise have no legs, they say.
+
+'They need them not, my lord. Once alighted, they fly no more.'
+
+'How is it then they alight so seldom?'
+
+'Because men shoo them away. One flew now from my heart to seek my
+lady's, but your lordship frighted it.'
+
+'And so it flew back to Paradise--eh, mistress Dorothy?' said lord
+Herbert, smiling archly.
+
+The supper bell rang, and instead of replying, Dorothy looked up for her
+dismissal.
+
+'Go to supper, my lady,' said lord Herbert. 'I have but just dined, and
+will see what Caspar is about.'
+
+'I want no supper but my Herbert,' returned lady Margaret. 'Thou wilt
+not go to that hateful workshop?'
+
+'I have so little time at home now--'
+
+'That you must spend it from your lady?--Go to supper, Dorothy.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+HUSBAND AND WIFE
+
+
+'What an old-fashioned damsel it is!' said lord Herbert when Dorothy had
+left the room.
+
+'She has led a lonely life,' answered lady Margaret, 'and has read a
+many old-fashioned books.'
+
+'She seems a right companion for thee, Peggy, and I am glad of it, for I
+shall be much from thee--more and more, I fear, till this bitter weather
+be gone by.'
+
+'Alas, Ned! hast thou not been more than much from me already? Thou wilt
+certainly be killed, though thou hast not yet a scratch on thy blessed
+body. I would it were over and all well!'
+
+'So would I--and heartily, dear heart! In very truth I love fighting as
+little as thou. But it is a thing that hath to be done, though small
+honour will ever be mine therefrom, I greatly fear me. It is one of
+those affairs in which liking goes farther than goodwill, and as I say,
+I love it not, only to do my duty. Hence doubtless it comes that no luck
+attends me. God knows I fear nothing a man ought not to fear--he is my
+witness--but what good service of arms have I yet rendered my king? It
+is but thy face, Peggy, that draws the smile from me. My heart is heavy.
+See how my rascally Welsh yielded before Gloucester, when the rogue
+Waller stole a march upon them--and I must be from thence! Had I but
+been there instead of at Oxford, thinkest thou they would have laid down
+their arms nor struck a single blow? I like not killing, but I can kill,
+and I can be killed. Thou knowest, sweet wife, thy Ned would not run.'
+
+'Holy mother!' exclaimed lady Margaret.
+
+'But I have no good luck at fighting,' he went on. 'And how again at
+Monmouth, the hare-hearts with which I had thought to garrison the place
+fled at the bare advent of that same parliament beagle, Waller! By St.
+George! it were easier to make an engine that should mow down a thousand
+brave men with one sweep of a scythe--and I could make it--than to put
+courage into the heart of one runaway rascal. It makes me mad to think
+how they have disgraced me!'
+
+'But Monmouth is thine own again, Herbert!'
+
+'Yes--thanks to the love they bear my father, not to my generalship! Thy
+husband is a poor soldier, Peggy: he cannot make soldiers.'
+
+'Then why not leave the field to others, and labour at thy engines,
+love? If thou wilt, I tell thee what--I will doff my gown, and in
+wrapper and petticoat help thee, sweet. I will to it with bare arms like
+thine own.'
+
+'Thou wouldst like Una make a sunshine in the shady place, Margaret. But
+no. Poor soldier as I am, I will do my best, even where good fortune
+fails me, and glory awaits not my coming. Thou knowest that at fourteen
+days' warning I brought four thousand foot and eight hundred horse again
+to the siege of Gloucester. It would ill befit my father's son to spare
+what he can when he is pouring out his wealth like water at the feet of
+his king. No, wife; the king shall not find me wanting, for in serving
+my king, I serve my God; and if I should fail, it may hold that an
+honest failure comes nigh enough a victory to be set down in the
+chronicles of the high countries. But in truth it presses on me sorely,
+and I am troubled at heart that I should be so given over to failure.'
+
+'Never heed it, my lord. The sun comes out clear at last maugre all the
+region fogs.'
+
+'Thanks, sweet heart! Things do look up a little in the main, and if the
+king had but a dozen more such friends as my lord marquis, they would
+soon be well. Why, my dove of comfort, wouldst thou believe it?--I did
+this day, as I rode home to seek thy fair face, I did count up what sums
+he hath already spent for his liege; and indeed I could not recollect
+them all, but I summed up, of pounds already spent by him on his
+majesty's behalf, well towards a hundred and fifty thousand! And thou
+knowest the good man, that while he giveth generously like the great
+Giver, he giveth not carelessly, but hath respect to what he spendeth.'
+
+'Thy father, Ned, is loyalty and generosity incarnate. If thou be but
+half so good a husband as thy father is a subject, I am a happy woman.'
+
+'What! know'st thou not yet thy husband, Peggy?'
+
+'In good soberness, though, Ned, surely the saints in heaven will never
+let such devotion fail of its end.'
+
+'My father is but one, and the king's foes are many. So are his
+friends--but they are lukewarm compared to my father--the rich ones of
+them, I mean. Would to God I had not lost those seven great troop-horses
+that the pudding-fisted clothiers of Gloucester did rob me of! I need
+them sorely now. I bought them with mine own--or rather with thine,
+sweet heart. I had been saving up the money for a carcanet for thy fair
+neck.'
+
+'So my neck be fair in thine eyes, my lord, it may go bare and be well
+clad. I should, in sad earnest, be jealous of the pretty stones didst
+thou give my neck one look the more for their presence. Here! thou
+may'st sell these the next time thou goest London-wards.'
+
+As she spoke, she put up her hand to unclasp her necklace of large
+pearls, but he laid his hand upon it, saying,
+
+'Nay, Margaret, there is no need. My father is like the father in the
+parable: he hath enough and to spare. I did mean to have the money of
+him again, only as the vaunted horses never came, but were swallowed up
+of Gloucester, as Jonah of the whale, and have not yet been cast up
+again, I could not bring my tongue to ask him for it; and so thy neck is
+bare of emeralds, my dove.'
+
+ 'Back and sides go bare, go bare,'
+
+sang lady Margaret with a merry laugh;
+
+ 'Both foot and hand go cold;'
+
+here she paused for a moment, and looked down with a shining
+thoughtfulness; then sang out clear and loud, with bold alteration of
+bishop Stills' drinking song,
+
+ 'But, heart, God send thee love enough,
+ Of the new that will never be old.'
+
+'Amen, my dove!'said lord Herbert.
+
+'Thou art in doleful dumps, Ned. If we had but a masque for thee, or a
+play, or even some jugglers with their balls!'
+
+'Puh, Peggy! thou art masque and play both in one; and for thy jugglers,
+I trust I can juggle better at my own hand than any troop of them from
+furthest India. Sing me a song, sweet heart.'
+
+'I will, my love,' answered lady Margaret.
+
+Rising, she went to the harpsichord, and sang, in sweet unaffected
+style, one of the songs of her native country, a merry ditty, with a
+breathing of sadness in the refrain of it, like a twilight wind in a bed
+of bulrushes.
+
+'Thanks, my love,' said lord Herbert, when she had finished. 'But I
+would I could tell its hidden purport; for I am one of those who think
+music none the worse for carrying with it an air of such sound as speaks
+to the brain as well as the heart.'
+
+Lady Margaret gave a playful sigh.
+
+'Thou hast one fault, my Edward--thou art a stranger to the tongue in
+which, through my old nurse's tales, I learned the language of love. I
+cannot call it my mother-tongue, but it is my love-tongue. Why, when
+thou art from me, I am loving thee in Irish all day long, and thou never
+knowest what my heart says to thee! It is a sad lack in thy
+all-completeness, dear heart. But, I bethink me, thy new cousin did sing
+a fair song in thy own tongue the other day, the which if thou canst
+understand one straw better than my Irish, I will learn it for thy sake,
+though truly it is Greek to me. I will send for her. Shall I?'
+
+As she spoke she rose and rang the bell on the table, and a little page,
+in waiting in the antechamber, appeared, whom she sent to desire the
+attendance of mistress Dorothy Vaughan.
+
+'Come, child,' said her mistress as she entered, 'I would have thee sing
+to my lord the song that wandering harper taught thee.'
+
+'Madam, I have learned of no wandering harper: your ladyship means
+mistress Amanda's Welsh song! shall I call her?' said Dorothy,
+disappointed.
+
+'I mean thee, and thy song, thou green linnet!' rejoined lady Margaret.
+'What song was it of which I said to thee that the singer deserved, for
+his very song's sake, that whereof he made his moan? Whence thou hadst
+it, from harper or bagpiper, I care not.'
+
+'Excuse me, madam, but why should I sing that you love not to hear?'
+
+'It is not I would hear it, child, but I would have my lord hear it. I
+would fain prove to him that there are songs in plain English, as he
+calls it, that have as little import, even to an English ear, as the
+plain truth-speaking Irish ditties which he will not understand. I say
+"WILL not," because our bards tell us that Irish was the language of
+Adam and Eve while yet in Paradise, and therefore he could by instinct
+understand it an' he would, even as the chickens understand their
+mother-tongue.'
+
+'I will sing it at your desire, madam; but I fear the worse fault will
+lie in the singing.'
+
+She seated herself at the harpsichord, and sang the following song with
+much feeling and simplicity. The refrain of the song, if it may be so
+called, instead of closing each stanza, preluded it.
+
+ O fair, O sweet, when I do look on thee,
+ In whom all joys so well agree,
+ Heart and soul do sing in me.
+ This you hear is not my tongue,
+ Which once said what I conceived,
+ For it was of use bereaved,
+ With a cruel answer stung.
+ No, though tongue to roof be cleaved,
+ Fearing lest he chastis'd be,
+ Heart and soul do sing in me.
+
+ O fair, O sweet, &c.
+ Just accord all music makes:
+ In thee just accord excelleth,
+ Where each part in such peace dwelleth,
+ One of other beauty takes.
+ Since then truth to all minds telleth
+ That in thee lives harmony,
+ Heart and soul do sing in me.
+
+ O fair, O sweet, &c.
+ They that heaven have known, do say
+ That whoso that grace obtaineth
+ To see what fair sight there reigneth,
+ Forced is to sing alway;
+ So then, since that heaven remaineth
+ In thy face, I plainly see,
+ Heart and soul do sing in me.
+
+ O fair, O sweet, &c.
+ Sweet, think not I am at ease,
+ For because my chief part singeth;
+ This song from death's sorrow springeth,
+ As to Swan in last disease;
+ For no dumbness nor death bringeth
+ Stay to true love's melody:
+ Heart and soul do sing in me.
+
+'There!' cried lady Margaret, with a merry laugh. 'What says the English
+song to my English husband?'
+
+'It says much, Margaret,' returned lord Herbert, who had been listening
+intently; 'it tells me to love you for ever.--What poet is he who wrote
+the song, mistress Dorothy? He is not of our day--that I can tell but
+too plainly. It is a good song, and saith much.'
+
+'I found it near the end of the book called "The Countess of Pembroke's
+Arcadia,"' replied Dorothy.
+
+'And I knew it not! Methought I had read all that man of men ever
+wrote,' said lord Herbert. 'But I may have read it, and let it slip. But
+now that, by the help of the music and thy singing, cousin Dorothy, I am
+come to understand it, truly I shall forget it no more. Where got'st
+thou the music, pray?'
+
+'It says in the book it was fitted to a certain Spanish tune, the name
+of which I knew not, and yet know not how to pronounce; but I had the
+look of the words in my head, and when I came upon some Spanish songs in
+an old chest at home, and, turning them over, saw those words, I knew I
+had found the tune to sir Philip's verses.'
+
+'Tell me then, my lord, why you are pleased with the song,' said lady
+Margaret, very quietly.
+
+'Come, mistress Dorothy,' said lord Herbert, 'repeat the song to my
+lady, slowly, line by line, and she will want no exposition thereon.'
+
+When Dorothy had done as he requested, lady Margaret put her arm round
+her husband's neck, laid her cheek to his, and said,
+
+'I am a goose, Ned. It is a fair and sweet song. I thank you, Dorothy.
+You shall sing it to me another time when my lord is away, and I shall
+love to think my lord was ill content with me when I called it a foolish
+thing. But my Irish was a good song too, my lord.'
+
+'Thy singing of it proves it, sweet heart.--But come, my fair minstrel,
+thou hast earned a good guerdon: what shall I give thee in return for
+thy song?'
+
+'A boon, a boon, my lord!' cried Dorothy.
+
+'It is thine ere thou ask it,' returned his lordship, merrily following
+up the old-fashioned phrase with like formality.
+
+'I must then tell my lord what hath been in my foolish mind ever since
+my lady took me to the keep, and I saw his marvellous array of engines.
+I would glady understand them, my lord. Who can fail to delight in such
+inventions as bring about that which before seemed impossible?'
+
+Here came a little sigh with the thought of her old companion Richard,
+and the things they had together contrived. Already, on the mist of
+gathering time, a halo had begun to glimmer about his head, puritan,
+fanatic, blasphemer even, as she had called him.
+
+Lord Herbert marked the soundless sigh.
+
+'You shall not sigh in vain, mistress Dorothy,' he said, 'for anything I
+can give you. To one who loves inventions it is easy to explain them. I
+hoped you had a hankering that way when I saw you look so curiously at
+the cross-bow ere you discharged it.'
+
+'Was it then charged, my lord?'
+
+'Indeed, as it happened, it was. A great steel-headed arrow lay in the
+groove. I ought to have taken that away when I bent it. Some passing
+horseman may have carried it with him in the body of his plunging
+steed.'
+
+'Oh, my lord!' cried Dorothy, aghast.
+
+'Pray, do not be alarmed, cousin: I but jested. Had anything happened,
+we should have heard of it. It was not in the least likely. You will not
+be long in this house before you learn that we do not speak by the card
+here. We jest not a little. But in truth I was disappointed when I found
+your curiosity so easily allayed.'
+
+'Indeed, my lord, it was not allayed, and is still unsatisfied. But I
+had no thought who it was offered me the knowledge I craved. Had I
+known, I should never have refused the lesson so courteously offered.
+But I was a stranger in the castle, and I thought--I feared I'
+
+'You did even as prudence required, cousin Dorothy. A young maiden
+cannot be too chary of unbuckling her enchanted armour so long as the
+country is unknown to her. But it would be hard if she were to suffer
+for her modesty. You shall be welcome to my cave. I trust you will not
+find it as the cave of Trophonius to you. If I am not there--and it is
+not now as it has been, when you might have found me in it every day,
+and almost every hour of the day; but if I be not there, do not fear
+Caspar Kaltoff, who is a worthy man, and as my right hand to do the
+things my brain deviseth. I will speak to him of thee. He is full of
+trust and worthiness, and, although not of gentle blood, is sprung from
+a long race of artificers, the cloak of whose gathered skill seems to
+have fallen on him. He hath been in my service now for many years, but
+you will be the first lady, gentle cousin, who has ever in all that time
+wished us good speed in our endeavours. How few know,' he went on
+thoughtfully, after a pause, 'what a joy lies in making things obey
+thoughts! in calling out of the mind, as from the vasty-deep, and
+setting in visible presence before the bodily eye, that which till then
+had neither local habitation nor name! Some such marvels I have to
+show--for marvels I must call them, although it is my voice they have
+obeyed to come; and I never lose sight of the marvel even while amusing
+myself with the merest toy of my own invention.'
+
+He paused, and Dorothy ventured to speak.
+
+'I thank you, my lord, with all my heart. When have I leave to visit
+those marvels?'
+
+'When you please. If I am not there, Caspar will be. If Caspar is not
+there, you will find the door open, for to enter that chamber without
+permission would be a breach of law such as not a soul in Raglan would
+dare be guilty of. And were it not so, there are few indeed in the place
+who would venture to set foot in it if I were absent, for it is not
+outside the castle walls only that I am looked upon as a magician. The
+armourer firmly believes that with a word uttered in my den there, I
+could make the weakest wall of the castle impregnable, but that it would
+be at too great a cost. If you come to-morrow morning you will find me
+almost certainly. But in case you should find neither of us--do not
+touch anything; be content with looking--for fear of mischance. Engines
+are as tickle to meddle with as incantations themselves.'
+
+'If I know myself, you may trust me, my lord,' said Dorothy, to which he
+replied with a smile of confidence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+DOROTHY'S INITIATION.
+
+
+There was much about the castle itself to interest Dorothy. She had
+already begun the attempt to gather a clear notion of its many parts and
+their relations, but the knowledge of the building could not well
+advance more rapidly than her acquaintance with its inmates, for little
+was to be done from the outside alone, and she could not bear to be met
+in strange places by strange people. So that part of her education--I
+use the word advisedly, for to know all about the parts of an old
+building may do more for the education of minds of a certain stamp than
+the severest course of logic--must wait upon time and opportunity.
+
+Every day, often twice, sometimes thrice, she would visit the
+stable-yard, and have an interview first with the chained Marquis, and
+then with her little horse. After that she would seldom miss looking in
+at the armourer's shop, and spending a few minutes in watching him at
+his work, so that she was soon familiar with all sorts of armour
+favoured in the castle. The blacksmiths' and the carpenters' shops were
+also an attraction to her, and it was not long before she knew all the
+artisans about the place. There were the farm and poultry yards too,
+with which kinds of place she was familiar--especially with their
+animals and all their ways. The very wild beasts in their dens in the
+solid basement of the kitchen tower--a panther, two leopards, an ounce,
+and a toothless old lion had already begun to know her a little, for she
+never went near their cages without carrying them something to eat. For
+all these visits there was plenty of room, lady Margaret never requiring
+much of her time in the early part of the day, and finding the reports
+she brought of what was going on always amusing. And now the orchards
+and gardens would soon be inviting, for the heart of the world was
+already sending up its blood to dye the apple blossoms.
+
+But all the opportunities she yet had were less than was needful for the
+development of such a mind as Dorothy's, which, powerful in itself,
+needed to be roused, and was slow in its movements except when excited
+by a quick succession of objects, or the contact of a kindred but busier
+nature. It was lacking not only in generative, but in self-moving
+energy. Of self-sustaining force she had abundance.
+
+There was a really fine library in the castle, to which she had free
+access, and whence, now and then, lady Margaret would make her bring a
+book from which to read aloud, while she and her other ladies were at
+work; but books were not enough to rouse Dorothy, and when inclined to
+read she would return too exclusively to what she already knew, making
+little effort to extend her gleaning-ground.
+
+From this fragment of analysis it will be seen that the new resource
+thus opened to her might prove of more consequence than, great as were
+her expectations from it, she was yet able to anticipate. But infinitely
+greater good than any knowledge of his mechanical triumphs could bring
+her, was on its way to Dorothy along the path of growing acquaintance
+with the noble-minded inventor himself.
+
+The next morning, then, she was up before the sun, and, sitting at her
+window, awaited his arrival. The moment he shone upon the gilded cock of
+the bell tower, she rose and hastened out, eager to taste of the sweets
+promised her; stood a moment to gaze on the limpid stream ever flowing
+from the mouth of the white horse, and wonder whence that and the
+whale-spouts he so frequently sent aloft from his nostrils came; then
+passing through the archway and over the bridge, found herself at the
+magician's door. For a moment she hesitated: from within came such a
+tumult of hammering, that plainly it was of no use to knock, and she
+could not at once bring herself to enter unannounced and uninvited. But
+confidence in lord Herbert soon aroused her courage, and gently she
+opened the door and peeped in. There he stood, in a linen frock that
+reached from his neck to his knees, already hard at work at a small
+anvil on a bench, while Caspar was still harder at work at a huge anvil
+on the ground in front of a forge. This, with the mighty bellows
+attached to it, occupied one of the six sides of the room, and the great
+roaring, hissing thing that had so frightened lady Margaret, now silent
+and cold, occupied another. Neither of the men saw her. So she entered,
+closed the door, and approached lord Herbert, but he continued unaware
+of her presence until she spoke. Then he ceased his hammering, turned,
+and greeted her with his usual smile of sincerity absolute.
+
+'Are you always as true to your appointments, cousin?' he said, and
+resumed his hammering.
+
+'It was hardly an appointment, my lord, and yet here I am,' said
+Dorothy.
+
+'And you mean to infer that----?'
+
+'An appointment is no slight matter, my lord, or one that admits of
+breaking.'
+
+'Right,' returned his lordship, still hammering at the thin plate of
+whitish metal growing thinner and thinner under his blows. Dorothy
+glanced around her for a moment.
+
+'I would not be troublesome, my lord,' she said; 'but would you tell me
+in a few words what it is you make here?'
+
+'Had I three tongues, and thou three ears,' answered lord Herbert, 'I
+could not. But look round thee, cousin, and when thou spiest the thing
+that draws thine eye more than another, ask me concerning that, and I
+will tell thee.'
+
+Hardly had Dorothy, in obedience, cast her eyes about the place, ere
+they lighted on the same huge wheel which had before chiefly attracted
+her notice.
+
+'What is that great wheel for, with such a number of weights hung to
+it?' she asked.
+
+'For a memorial,' replied lord Herbert, 'of the folly of the man who
+placeth his hopes in man. That wonderful engine; it is now nearly three
+years since I showed it to his blessed majesty in the Tower of London,
+also with him to the dukes of Richmond and Hamilton, and two
+extraordinary ambassadors besides, but of them all no man hath ever
+sought to look upon it again. It is a form of the Proteus-like perpetuum
+mobile--a most incredible thing if not seen.'
+
+He then proceeded to show her how, as every spoke passed the highest
+point, the weight attached to it immediately hung a foot farther from
+the centre of the wheel, and as every spoke passed the lowest point, its
+weight returned a foot nearer to the centre, thus causing the leverage
+to be greater always on one and the same side of the wheel. Few of my
+readers will regret so much as myself that I am unable to give them the
+constructive explanation his lordship gave Dorothy as to the shifting of
+the weights. Whether she understood it or not, I cannot tell either, but
+that is of less consequence. Before she left the workshop that morning,
+she had learned that a thousand knowledges are needed to build up the
+pyramid on whose top alone will the bird of knowledge lay her new egg.
+
+When he had finished his explanation, lord Herbert returned to his work,
+leaving Dorothy again to her own observations. And now she would gladly
+have questioned him about the huge mass of brick and iron, which, now
+standing silent, cold, and motionless as death, had that night seemed
+alive with the fierce energy of flame, and yet sorely driven, sighing,
+and groaning, and furiously hissing; but as it was not now at work, she
+thought it would be better to wait an opportunity when it should be in
+the agony of its wrestle with whatever unseen enemy it coped withal. She
+did not know that, the first of its race, it was not quite equal to the
+task the magician had imposed upon it, but that its descendants would at
+length become capable of doing a thousand times as much, with the
+swinging joy of conscious might, with the pant of the giant, not the
+groan of the overtasked stripling urging his last effort.
+
+She was standing by a chest, examining the strangely elaborate and
+mysterious-looking scutcheon of its lock, when his lordship's hammering
+ceased, and presently she found that he was by her side.
+
+'That escutcheon is the best thing of the kind I have yet made,' he
+said. 'A humour I have, never to be contented to produce any invention
+the second time, without appearing refined. The lock and key of this are
+in themselves a marvel, for the little triangle screwed key weighs no
+more than a shilling, and yet it bolts and unbolts an hundred bolts
+through fifty staples round about the chest, and as many more from both
+sides and ends, and at the self-same time shall fasten it to a place
+beyond a man's natural strength to take it away. But the best thing is
+the escutcheon; for the owner of it, though a woman, may with her own
+delicate hand vary the ways of coming to open the lock ten millions of
+times, beyond the knowledge of the smith that made it, or of me who
+invented it. If a stranger open it, it setteth an alarm agoing, which
+the stranger cannot stop from running out; and besides, though none
+should be within hearing, yet it catcheth his hand, as a trap doth a
+fox; and though far from maiming him, yet it leaveth such a mark behind
+it, as will discover him if suspected; the escutcheon or lock plainly
+showing what moneys he hath taken out of the box to a farthing, and how
+many times opened since the owner hath been at it.'
+
+He then showed her how to set it, left the chest open, and gave her the
+key off his bunch that she might use it more easily. Ere she returned
+it, she had made herself mistress of the escutcheon as far as the mere
+working of it was concerned, as she proved to the satisfaction of the
+inventor.
+
+Her docility and quickness greatly pleased him. He opened a cabinet, and
+after a search in its drawers, took from it a little thing, in form and
+colour like a plum, which he gave her, telling her to eat it. She saw
+from his smile that there was something at the back of the playful
+request, and for a moment hesitated, but reading in his countenance that
+he wished her at least to make the attempt, she put it in her mouth.
+
+She was gagged. She could neither open nor shut her mouth a hair's
+breadth, could neither laugh, cry out, nor make any noise beyond an ugly
+one she would not make twice. The tears came into her eyes, for her
+position was ludicrous, and she imagined that his lordship was making
+game of her. A girl less serious or more merry would have been moved
+only to laughter.
+
+But lord Herbert hastened to relieve her. On the application of a tiny
+key, fixed with a joint in a finger-ring, the little steel bolts it had
+thrown out in every direction returned within the plum, and he drew it
+from her mouth.
+
+'You little fool!' he said, with indescribable sweetness, for he saw the
+tears in her eyes; 'did you think I would hurt you?'
+
+'No, my lord; but I did fear you were going to make game of me. I could
+not have borne Caspar to see me so.'
+
+'Alas, my poor child!' he rejoined, 'you have come to the wrong house if
+you cannot put up with a little chafing. There!' he added, putting the
+plum in her hand, 'it is an untoothsome thing, but the moment may come
+when you will find it useful enough to repay you for the annoyance of a
+smile that had in it ten times more friendship than merriment.'
+
+'I ask your pardon, my lord,' said Dorothy, by this time blushing deep
+with shame of her mistrust and over-sensitiveness, and on the point of
+crying downright. But his lordship smiled so kindly that she took heart
+and smiled again.
+
+He then showed her how to raise the key hid in the ring, and how to
+unlock the plum.
+
+'Do not try it on yourself,' he said, as he put the ring on her finger;
+'you might find that awkward.'
+
+'Be sure I shall avoid it, my lord,' returned Dorothy.
+
+'And do not let any one know you have such a thing,' he said, 'or that
+there is a key in your ring.'
+
+'I will try not, my lord.'
+
+The breakfast bell rang.
+
+'If you will come again after supper,' he said, as he pulled off his
+linen frock, 'I will show you my fire-engine at work, and tell you all
+that is needful to the understanding thereof;--only you must not publish
+it to the world,' he added, 'for I mean to make much gain by my
+invention.'
+
+Dorothy promised, and they parted--lord Herbert for the marquis's
+parlour, Dorothy for the housekeeper's room, and Caspar for the third
+table in the great hall.
+
+After breakfast Dorothy practised with her plum until she could manage
+it with as much readiness as ease. She found that it was made of steel,
+and that the bolts it threw out upon the slightest pressure were so
+rounded and polished that they could not hurt, while nothing but the key
+would reduce them again within their former sheath.
+
+END OF VOLUME I.
+
+
+
+
+START OF VOLUME II
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+THE FIRE-ENGINE.
+
+
+As soon as supper was over in the housekeeper's room, Dorothy sped to
+the keep, where she found Caspar at work.
+
+'My lord is not yet from supper, mistress,' he said. 'Will it please you
+wait while he comes?'
+
+Had it been till midnight, so long as there was a chance of his
+appearing, Dorothy would have waited. Caspar did his best to amuse her,
+and succeeded,--showing her one curious thing after another,--amongst
+the rest a watch that seemed to want no winding after being once set
+agoing, but was in fact wound up a little by every opening of the case
+to see the dial. All the while the fire-engine was at work on its
+mysterious task, with but now and then a moment's attention from Caspar,
+a billet of wood or a shovelful of sea-coal on the fire, a pull at a
+cord, or a hint from the hooked rod. The time went rapidly.
+
+Twilight was over, Caspar had lighted his lamp, and the moon had risen,
+before lord Herbert came.
+
+'I am glad to find you have patience as well as punctuality in the
+catalogue of your virtues, mistress Dorothy,' he said as he entered. 'I
+too am punctual, and am therefore sorry to have failed now, but it is
+not my fault: I had to attend my father. For his sake pardon me.'
+
+'It were but a small matter, my lord, even had it been uncompelled, to
+keep an idle girl waiting.'
+
+'I think not so,' returned lord Herbert. 'But come now, I will explain
+to you my wonderful fire-engine.'
+
+As he spoke, he took her by the hand, and led her towards it. The
+creature blazed, groaned, and puffed, but there was no motion to be seen
+about it save that of the flames through the cracks in the door of the
+furnace, neither was there any clanking noise of metal. A great rushing
+sound somewhere in the distance, that seemed to belong to it, yet
+appeared too far off to have any connection with it.
+
+'It is a noisy thing,' he said, as they stood before it, 'but when I
+make another, it shall do its work that thou wouldst not hear it outside
+the door. Now listen to me for a moment, cousin. Should it come to a
+siege and I not at Raglan--the wise man will always provide for the
+worst--Caspar will be wanted everywhere. Now this engine is essential to
+the health and comfort, if not to the absolute life of the castle, and
+there is no one at present capable of managing it save us two. A very
+little instruction, however, would enable any one to do so: will you
+undertake it, cousin, in case of need?'
+
+'Make me assured that I can, and I will, my lord,' answered Dorothy.
+
+'A good and sufficing answer,' returned his lordship, with a smile of
+satisfaction. 'First then,' he went on, 'I will show you wherein lies
+its necessity to the good of the castle. Come with me, cousin Dorothy.'
+
+He led the way from the room, and began to ascend the stair which rose
+just outside it. Dorothy followed, winding up through the thickness of
+the wall. And now she could not hear the engine. As she went up,
+however, certain sounds of it came again, and grew louder till they
+seemed close to her ears, then gradually died away and once more ceased.
+But ever, as they ascended, the rushing sound which had seemed connected
+with it, although so distant, drew nearer and nearer, until, having
+surmounted three of the five lofty stories of the building, they could
+scarcely hear each other speak for the roar of water, falling in
+intermittent jets. At last they came out on the top of the wall, with
+nothing between them and the moat below but the battlemented parapet,
+and behold! the mighty tower was roofed with water: a little tarn filled
+all the space within the surrounding walk. It undulated in the moonlight
+like a subsiding storm, and beat the encircling banks. For into its
+depths shot rather than poured a great volume of water from a huge
+orifice in the wall, and the roar and the rush were tremendous. It was
+like the birth of a river, bounding at once from its mountain rock, and
+the sound of its fall indicated the great depth of the water into which
+it plunged. Solid indeed must be the walls that sustained the outpush of
+such a weight of water!
+
+'You see now, cousin, what yon fire-souled slave below is labouring at,'
+said his lordship. 'His task is to fill this cistern, and that he can in
+a few hours; and yet, such a slave is he, a child who understands his
+fetters and the joints of his bones can guide him at will.'
+
+'But, my lord,' questioned Dorothy, 'is there not water here to supply
+the castle for months? And there is the draw-well in the pitched court
+besides.'
+
+'Enough, I grant you,' he replied, 'for the mere necessities of life.
+But what would come of its pleasures? Would not the beleaguered ladies
+miss the bounty of the marble horse? Whence comes the water he gives so
+freely that he needeth not to drink himself? He would thirst indeed but
+for my water-commanding fiend below. Or how would the birds fare, were
+the fountains on the islands dry in the hot summer? And what would the
+children say if he ceased to spout? And how would my lord's tables fare,
+with the armed men besetting every gate, the fish-ponds dry, and the
+fish rotting in the sun? See you, mistress Dorothy? And for the
+draw-well, know you not wherein lies the good of a tower stronger than
+all the rest? Is it not built for final retreat, the rest of the castle
+being at length in the hands of the enemy? Where then is your
+draw-well?'
+
+'But this tower, large as it is, could not receive those now within the
+walls of the castle,' said Dorothy.
+
+'They will be fewer ere its shelter is needful.'
+
+It was his tone quite as much as the words that drove a sudden sickness
+to the heart of the girl: for one moment she knew what siege and battle
+meant. But she recovered herself with a strong effort, and escaped from
+the thought by another question.
+
+'And whence comes all this water, my lord?' she said, for she was one
+who would ask until she knew all that concerned her.
+
+'Have you not chanced to observe a well in my workshop below, on the
+left-hand side of the door, not far from the great chest?'
+
+'I have observed it, my lord.'
+
+'That is a very deep well, with a powerful spring. Large pipes lead from
+all but the very bottom of that to my fire-engine. The fuller the well,
+the more rapid the flow into the cistern, for the shallower the water,
+the more labour falls to my giant. He is finding it harder work now. But
+you see the cistern is nearly full.'
+
+'Forgive me, my lord, if I am troubling you,' said Dorothy, about to ask
+another question.
+
+'I delight in the questions of the docile,' said his lordship. 'They are
+the little children of wisdom. There! that might be out of the book of
+Ecclesiasticus,' he added, with a merry laugh. 'I might pass that off on
+Dr. Bayly for my father's: he hath already begun to gather my father's
+sayings into a book, as I have discovered. But, prithee, cousin, let not
+my father know of it.'
+
+'Fear not me, my lord,' returned Dorothy. 'Having no secrets of my own
+to house, it were evil indeed to turn my friends' out of doors.'
+
+'Why, that also would do for Dr. Bayly! Well said, Dorothy! Now for thy
+next question.'
+
+'It is this, my lord: having such a well in your foundations, whence the
+need of such a cistern on your roof? I mean now as regards the provision
+of the keep itself in case of ultimate resort.'
+
+'In coming to deal with a place of such strength as this,' replied his
+lordship, '--I mean the keep whereon we now stand, not the castle,
+which, alas! hath many weak points--the enemy would assuredly change the
+siege into a blockade; that is, he would try to starve instead of fire
+us out; and, procuring information sufficiently to the point, would be
+like enough to dig deep and cut the water-veins which supply that well;
+and thereafter all would depend on the cistern. From the moment
+therefore when the first signs of siege appear, it will be wisdom and
+duty on the part of the person in charge to keep it constantly
+full--full as a cup to the health of the king. I trust however that such
+will be the good success of his majesty's arms that the worst will only
+have to be provided against, not encountered.--But there is more in it
+yet. Come hither, cousin. Look down through this battlement upon the
+moat. You see the moon in it? No? That is because it is covered so thick
+with weeds. When you go down, mark how low it is. There is little
+defence in the moat that a boy might wade through. I have allowed it to
+get shallow in order to try upon its sides a new cement I have lately
+discovered; but weeks and weeks have passed, and I have never found the
+leisure, and now I am sure I never shall until this rebellion is
+crushed. It is time I filled it. Pray look down upon it, cousin. In
+summer it will be full of the loveliest white water-lilies, though now
+you can see nothing but green weeds.'
+
+He had left her side and gone a few paces away, but kept on speaking.
+
+'One strange thing I can tell you about them, cousin--the roots of that
+whitest of flowers make a fine black dye! What apophthegm founded upon
+that, thinkest thou, my father would drop for Dr Bayly?'
+
+'You perplex me much, my lord,' said Dorothy. 'I cannot at all perceive
+your lordship's drift.'
+
+'Lay a hand on each side of the battlement where you now stand; lean
+through it and look down. Hold fast and fear nothing.' Dorothy did as
+she was desired, and thus supported gazed upon the moat below, where it
+lay a mere ditch at the foot of the lofty wall.
+
+'My lord, I see nothing,' she said, turning to him, as she thought; but
+he had vanished.
+
+Again she looked at the moat, and then her eyes wandered away over the
+castle. The two courts and their many roofs, even those of all the
+towers, except only the lofty watch-tower on the western side, lay bare
+beneath her, in bright moonlight, flecked and blotted with shadows, all
+wondrous in shape and black as Erebus.
+
+Suddenly, she knew not whence, arose a frightful roaring, a hollow
+bellowing, a pent-up rumbling. Seized by a vague terror, she clung to
+the parapet and trembled. But even the great wall beneath her, solid as
+the earth itself, seemed to tremble under her feet, as with some inward
+commotion or dismay. The next moment the water in the moat appeared to
+rush swiftly upwards, in wild uproar, fiercely confused, and covered
+with foam and spray. To her bewildered eyes, it seemed to heap itself
+up, wave upon furious wave, to reach the spot where she stood, greedy to
+engulf her. For an instant she fancied the storming billows pouring over
+the edge of the battlement, and started back in such momentary agony as
+we suffer in dreams. Then, by a sudden rectification of her vision, she
+perceived that what she saw was in reality a multitude of fountain jets
+rushing high towards their parent-cistern, but far-failing ere they
+reached it. The roar of their onset was mingled with the despairing
+tumult of their defeat, and both with the deep tumble and wallowing
+splash of the water from the fire-engine, which grew louder and louder
+as the surface of the water in the reservoir sank. The uproar ceased as
+suddenly as it had commenced, but the moat mirrored a thousand moons in
+the agitated waters which had overwhelmed its mantle of weeds.
+
+'You see now,' said lord Herbert, rejoining her while still she gazed,
+'how necessary the cistern is to the keep? Without it, the few poor
+springs in the moat would but sustain it as you saw it. From here I can
+fill it to the brim.'
+
+'I see,' answered Dorothy. 'But would not a simple overflow serve,
+carried from the well through the wall?'
+
+'It would, were there no other advantages with which this mode
+harmonised. I must mention one thing more--which I was almost
+forgetting, and which I cannot well show you to-night--namely, that I
+can use this water not only as a means of defence in the moat, but as an
+engine of offence also against any one setting unlawful or hostile foot
+upon the stone bridge over it. I can, when I please, turn that bridge,
+the same by which you cross to come here, into a rushing aqueduct, and
+with a torrent of water sweep from it a whole company of invaders.'
+
+'But would they not have only to wait until the cistern was empty?'
+
+'As soon and so long as the bridge is clear, the outflow ceases. One
+sweep, and my water-broom would stop, and the rubbish lie sprawling
+under the arch, or half-way over the court. And more still,' he added
+with emphasis: 'I COULD make it boiling!'
+
+'But your lordship would not?' faltered Dorothy.
+
+'That might depend,' he answered with a smile. Then changing his tone in
+absolute and impressive seriousness, 'But this is all nothing but
+child's play,' he said, 'compared with what is involved in the matter of
+this reservoir. The real origin of it was its needfulness to the
+perfecting of my fire-engine.'
+
+'Pardon me, my lord, but it seems to me that without the cistern there
+would be no need for the engine. How should you want or how could you
+use the unhandsome thing? Then how should the cistern be necessary to
+the engine?'
+
+'Handsome is that handsome does,' returned his lordship. 'Truly, cousin
+Dorothy, you speak well, but you must learn to hear better. I did not
+say that the cistern existed for the sake of the engine, but for the
+sake of the perfecting of the engine. Cousin Dorothy, I will give you
+the largest possible proof of my confidence in you, by not only
+explaining to you the working of my fire-engine, but acquainting
+you--only you must not betray me!'
+
+'I, in my turn,' said Dorothy, 'will give your lordship, if not the
+strongest, yet a very strong proof of my confidence: I promise to keep
+your secret before knowing what it is.'
+
+'Thanks, cousin. Listen then: That engine is a mingling of discovery and
+invention such as hath never had its equal since first the mechanical
+powers were brought to the light. For this shall be as a soul to animate
+those, all and each--lever, screw, pulley, wheel, and axle--what you
+will. No engine of mightiest force ever for defence or assault invented,
+let it be by Archimedes himself, but could by my fire-engine be rendered
+tenfold more mighty for safety or for destruction, although as yet I
+have applied it only to the blissful operation of lifting water, thus
+removing the curse of it where it is a curse, and carrying it where the
+parched soil cries for its help to unfold the treasures of its thirsty
+bosom. My fire-engine shall yet uplift the nation of England above the
+heads of all richest and most powerful nations on the face of the whole
+earth. For when the troubles of this rebellion are over, which press so
+heavily on his majesty and all loyal subjects, compelling even a
+peaceful man like myself to forsake invention for war, and the workman's
+frock which I love, for the armour which I love not, when peace shall
+smile again on the country, and I shall have time to perfect the work of
+my hands, I shall present it to my royal master, a magical supremacy of
+power, which shall for ever raise him and his royal progeny above all
+use or need of subsidies, ship-money, benevolences, or taxes of whatever
+sort or name, to rule his kingdom as independent of his subjects in
+reality as he is in right; for this water-commanding engine, which God
+hath given me to make, shall be the source of such wealth as no
+accountant can calculate. For herewith may marsh-land be thoroughly
+drained, or dry land perfectly watered; great cities kept sweet and
+wholesome; mines rid of the water gathering from springs therein, so as
+he may enrich himself withal; houses be served plentifully on every
+stage; and gardens in the dryest summer beautified and comforted with
+fountains. Which engine when I found that it was in the power of my
+hands to do, as well as of my heart to conceive that it might be done, I
+did kneel down and give humble thanks from the bottom of my heart to the
+omnipotent God whose mercies are fathomless, for his vouchsafing me an
+insight into so great a secret of nature and so beneficial to all
+mankind as this my engine.'
+
+With all her devotion to the king, and all her hatred and contempt of
+the parliament and the puritans, Dorothy could not help a doubt whether
+such independence might be altogether good either for the king himself
+or the people thus subjected to his will. But the farther doubt did not
+occur to her whether a pre-eminence gained chiefly by wealth was one to
+be on any grounds desired for the nation, or, setting that aside, was
+one which carried a single element favourable to perpetuity.
+
+All this time they had been standing on the top of the keep, with the
+moonlight around them, and in their ears the noise of the water flowing
+from the dungeon well into the sky-roofed cistern. But now it came in
+diminished flow.
+
+'It is the earth that fails in giving, not my engine in taking,' said
+lord Herbert as he turned to lead the way down the winding stair. Ever
+as they went, the noise of the water grew fainter and the noise of the
+engine grew louder, but just as they stepped from the stair, it gave a
+failing stroke or two, and ceased. A dense white cloud met them as they
+entered the vault.
+
+'Stopped for the night, Caspar?' said his lordship.
+
+'Yes, my lord; the well is nearly out.'
+
+'Let it sleep,' returned his master; 'like a man's heart it will fill in
+the night. Thank God for the night and darkness and sleep, in which good
+things draw nigh like God's thieves, and steal themselves in--water into
+wells, and peace and hope and courage into the minds of men. Is it not
+so, my cousin?'
+
+Dorothy did not answer in words, but she looked up in his face with a
+reverence in her eyes that showed she understood him. And this was one
+of the idolatrous catholics! It was neither the first nor the last of
+many lessons she had to receive, in order to learn that a man may be
+right although the creed for which he is and ought to be ready to die,
+may contain much that is wrong. Alas! that so few, even of such men,
+ever reflect, that it is the element common to all the creeds which
+gives its central value to each.
+
+'I cannot show you the working of the engine to-night,' said lord
+Herbert. 'Caspar has decreed otherwise.'
+
+'I can soon set her agoing again, my lord,' said Caspar.
+
+'No, no. We must to the powder-mill, Caspar. Mistress Dorothy will come
+again to-morrow, and you must yourself explain to her the working and
+management of it, for I shall be away. And do not fear to trust my
+cousin, Caspar, although she be a soft-handed lady. Let her have the
+brute's halter in her own hold.'
+
+Filled with gratitude for the trust he reposed in her, Dorothy took her
+leave, and the two workmen immediately abandoned their shop for the
+night, leaving the door wide open behind them to let out the vapours of
+the fire-engine, in the confidence that no unlicensed foot would dare to
+cross the threshold, and betook themselves to the powder-mill, where
+they continued at work the greater part of the night.
+
+His lordship was unfavourable to the storing of powder because of the
+danger, seeing they could, on his calculation, from the materials lying
+ready for mixing, in one week prepare enough to keep all the ordnance on
+the castle walls busy for two. But indeed he had not such a high opinion
+of gunpowder but that he believed engines for projection, more powerful
+as well as less expensive, could be constructed, after the fashion of
+ballista or catapult, by the use of a mode he had discovered of
+immeasurably increasing the strength of springs, so that stones of a
+hundredweight might be thrown into a city from a quarter of a mile's
+distance without any noise audible to those within. It was this device
+he was brooding over when Dorothy came upon him by the arblast. Nor did
+the conviction arise from any prejudice against fire-arms, for he had,
+among many other wonderful things of the sort, in cannons, sakers,
+harquebusses, muskets, musquetoons, and all kinds, invented a pistol to
+discharge a dozen times with one loading, and without so much as new
+priming being once requisite, or the possessor having to change it out
+of one hand into the other, or stop his horse.
+
+One who had happened to see lord Herbert as he went about within his
+father's walls, busy yet unhasting, earnest yet cheerful, rapid in all
+his movements yet perfectly composed, would hardly have imagined that a
+day at a time, or perhaps two, was all he was now able to spend there,
+days which were to him as breathing-holes in the ice to the wintered
+fishes. For not merely did he give himself to the enlisting of large
+numbers of men, but commanded both horse and foot, meeting all expenses
+from his own pocket, or with the assistance of his father. A few months
+before the period at which my story has arrived, he had in eight days
+raised six regiments, fortified Monmouth and Chepstow, and garrisoned
+half-a-dozen smaller but yet important places. About a hundred noblemen
+and gentlemen whom he had enrolled as a troop of life-guards, he
+furnished with the horses and arms which they were unable to provide
+with sufficient haste for themselves. So prominent indeed were his
+services on behalf of the king, that his father was uneasy because of
+the jealousy and hate it would certainly rouse in the minds of some of
+his majesty's well-wishers--a just presentiment, as his son had too good
+reason to acknowledge after he had spent a million of money, besides the
+labour and thought and dangerous endeavour of years, in the king's
+service.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+MOONLIGHT AND APPLE-BLOSSOMS.
+
+
+The next morning, immediately after breakfast, lord Herbert set out for
+Chepstow first and then Monmouth, both which places belonged to his
+father, and were principal sources of his great wealth.
+
+Still, amid the rush of the changeful tides of war around them, and the
+rumour of battle filling the air, all was peaceful within the defences
+of Raglan, and its towers looked abroad over a quiet country, where the
+cattle fed and the green wheat grew. On the far outskirts of vision,
+indeed, a smoke might be seen at times from the watch-tower, and across
+the air would come the dull boom of a great gun from one of the
+fortresses, at which lady Margaret's cheek would turn pale; but,
+although every day something was done to strengthen the castle, although
+masons were at work here and there about the walls like bees, and Caspar
+Kaltoff was busy in all directions, now mounting fresh guns, now
+repairing steel cross-bows, now getting out of the armoury the queerest
+oldest-fashioned engines to place wherever available points could be
+found, there was no hurry and no confusion, and indeed so little
+appearance of unusual activity, that an unmilitary stranger might have
+passed a week in the castle without discovering that preparations for
+defence were actively going on. All around them the buds were creeping
+out, uncurling, spreading abroad, straightening themselves, smoothing
+out the creases of their unfolding, and breathing the air of heaven--in
+some way very pleasant to creatures with roots as well as to creatures
+with legs. The apple-blossoms came out, and the orchard was lovely as
+with an upward-driven storm of roseate snow. Ladies were oftener seen
+passing through the gates and walking in the gardens--where the
+fountains had begun to play, and the swans and ducks on the lakes felt
+the return of spring in every fibre of their webby feet and cold scaly
+legs.
+
+And Dorothy sat as it were at the spring-head of the waters, for,
+through her dominion over the fire-engine, she had become the naiad of
+Raglan. The same hour in which lord Herbert departed she went to
+Kaltoff, and was by him instructed in its mysteries. On the third day
+after, so entirely was the Dutchman satisfied with her understanding and
+management of it, that he gave up to her the whole water-business. And
+now, as I say, she sat at the source of all the streams and fountains of
+the place, and governed them all. The horse of marble spouted and ceased
+at her will, but in general she let the stream from his mouth flow all
+day long. Every water-cock on the great tower was subject to her. From
+the urn of her pleasure the cistern was daily filled, and from the
+summit of defence her flood went pouring into the moat around its feet,
+until it mantled to the brim, turning the weeds into a cold shadowy
+pavement of green for a foil to its pellucid depth. She understood all
+the secrets of the aqueous catapult, at which its contriver had little
+more than hinted on that memorable night when he disclosed so much, and
+believed she could arrange it for action without assistance. At the same
+time her new responsibilities required but a portion of her leisure, and
+lady Margaret was not the less pleased with the wise-headed girl, whose
+manners and mental ways were such a contrast to her own, that her
+husband considered her fit to be put in charge of his darling invention.
+But Dorothy kept silence concerning the trust to all but her mistress,
+who, on her part, was prudent enough to avoid any allusion which might
+raise yet higher the jealousy of her associates, by whom she was already
+regarded as supplanting them in the favour of their mistress.
+
+One lovely evening in May, the moon at the full, the air warm yet fresh,
+the apple-blossoms at their largest, with as yet no spot upon their fair
+skin, and the nightingales singing out of their very bones, the season,
+the hour, the blossoms, and the moon had invaded every chamber in the
+castle, seized every heart of both man and beast, and turned all into
+one congregation of which the nightingales were the priests. The cocks
+were crowing as if it had been the dawn itself instead of its ghost they
+saw; the dogs were howling, but whether that was from love or hate of
+the moon, I cannot tell; the pigeons were cooing; the peacock had turned
+his train into a paralune, understanding well that the carnival could
+not be complete without him and his; and the wild beasts were restless,
+uttering a short yell now and then, at least aware that something was
+going on. All the inhabitants of the castle were out of doors, the
+ladies and gentlemen in groups here and there about the gardens and
+lawns and islands, and the domestics, and such of the garrison as were
+not on duty, wandering hither and thither where they pleased, careful
+only not to intrude on their superiors.
+
+Lady Margaret was walking with her step-son Henry on a lawn under the
+northern window of the picture-gallery, and there the ladies Elizabeth
+and Anne joined them--the former a cheerful woman, endowed with a large
+share of her father's genial temperament; joke or jest would moult no
+feather in lady Elizabeth's keeping; the latter quiet, sincere, and
+reverent. The marquis himself, notwithstanding a slight attack of the
+gout, had hobbled on his stick to a chair set for him on the same lawn.
+Beside him sat lady Mary, younger than the other two, and specially
+devoted to her father.
+
+Their gentlewomen were also out, flitting in groups that now and then
+mingled and changed. Rowland Scudamore joined lady Margaret's people,
+and in a moment lady Broughton was laughing merrily. But mistress
+Doughty walked on with straight neck, as if there were nobody but
+herself in heaven or on the earth, although mortals were merry by her
+side, and nightingales singing themselves to death over her head. Behind
+them came Amanda Serafina, with her eyes on her feet, and the corners of
+her pretty mouth drawn down in contempt of nobody in particular. Now and
+then Scudamore, when satisfied with his own pretty wit, would throw a
+glance behind him, and she, somehow or other, would, without change of
+muscle, let him know that she had heard him. This group sauntered into
+the orchard.
+
+After them came Dorothy with Dr Bayly, talking of their common friend
+Mr. Matthew Herbert, and following them into the orchard, wandered about
+among the trees, under the curdled moonlight of the apple-blossoms, amid
+the challenges and responses of five or six nightingales, that sang as
+if their bodies had dwindled under the sublimating influences of music,
+until, with more than cherubic denudation, their sum of being was
+reduced to a soul and a throat.
+
+Moonlight, apple-blossoms, nightingales, with the souls of men and women
+for mirrors and reflectors! The picture is for the musician not the
+painter, either him of words or him of colours. It was like a lovely
+show in the land of dreams, even to the living souls that moved in and
+made part of it. The earth is older now, colder at the heart, a little
+nearer to the fate of cold-hearted things, which is to be slaves and
+serve without love; but she has still the same moonlight, the same
+apple-blossoms, the same nightingales, and we have the same hearts, and
+so can understand it. But, alas! how differently should we come in
+amongst the accessories of such a picture! For we men at least are all
+but given over to ugliness, and, artistically considered, even
+vulgarity, in the matter of dress, wherein they, of all generations of
+English men and women, were too easily supreme both as to form and
+colour. Hence, while they are an admiration to us, we shall be but a
+laughter to those that come behind us, and that whether their fashions
+be better than ours or no, for nothing is so ridiculous as ugliness out
+of date. The glimmer of gold and silver, the glitter of polished steel,
+the flashing of jewels, and the flowing of plumes, went well. But, so
+canopied with loveliness, so besung with winged passion, so clothed that
+even with the heavenly delicacies enrounding them they blended
+harmoniously, their moonlit orchard was an island beat by the waves of
+war, its air would quiver and throb by fits, shaken with the roar of
+cannon, and might soon gleam around them with the whirring sweep of the
+troopers' broad blades; while all throughout the land, the hateful demon
+of party spirit tore wide into gashes the wounds first made by
+conscience in the best, and by prejudice in the good.
+
+The elder ladies had floated away together between the mossy stems,
+under the canopies of blossoms; Rowland had fallen behind and joined the
+waiting Amanda, and the two were now flitting about like moths in the
+moonshine; Dorothy and Dr. Bayly had halted in an open spot, like a
+moonlight impluvium, the divine talking eagerly to the maiden, and the
+maiden looking up at the moon, and heeding the nightingales more than
+the divine.
+
+'CAN they be English nightingales?' said Dorothy thoughtfully.
+
+The doctor was bewildered for a moment. He had been talking about
+himself, not the nightingales, but he recovered himself like a
+gentleman.
+
+'Assuredly, mistress Dorothy,' he replied; 'this is the land of their
+birth. Hither they come again when the winter is over.'
+
+'Yes; they take no part in our troubles. They will not sing to comfort
+our hearts in the cold; but give them warmth enough, and they sing as
+careless of battle-fields and dead men as if they were but moonlight and
+apple-blossoms.'
+
+'Is it not better so?' returned the divine after a moment's thought.
+'How would it be if everything in nature but re-echoed our moan?'
+
+Dorothy looked at the little man, and was in her turn a moment silent.
+
+'Then,' she said, 'we must see in these birds and blossoms, and that
+great blossom in the sky, so many prophets of a peaceful time and a
+better country, sent to remind us that we pass away and go to them.'
+
+'Nay, my dear mistress Dorothy!' returned the all but obsequious doctor;
+'such thoughts do not well befit your age, or rather, I would say, your
+youth. Life is before you, and life is good. These evil times will go
+by, the king shall have his own again, the fanatics will be scourged as
+they deserve, and the church will rise like the phoenix from the ashes
+of her purification.'
+
+'But how many will lie out in the fields all the year long, yet never
+see blossoms or hear nightingales more!' said Dorothy.
+
+'Such will have died martyrs,' rejoined the doctor.
+
+'On both sides?' suggested Dorothy.
+
+Again for a moment the good man stood checked. He had not even thought
+of the dead on the other side.
+
+'That cannot be,' he said. And Dorothy looked up again at the moon.
+
+But she listened no more to the songs of the nightingales, and they left
+the orchard together in silence.
+
+'Come, Rowland, we must not be found here alone,' said Amanda, who saw
+them go. 'But tell me one thing first: is mistress Dorothy Vaughan
+indeed your cousin?'
+
+'She is indeed. Her mother and mine were cousins german--sisters'
+children.'
+
+'I thought it could not be a near cousinship. You are not alike at all.
+Hear me, Rowland, but let it die in your ear--I love not mistress
+Dorothy.'
+
+'And the reason, lovely hater? "Is not the maiden fair to see?" as the
+old song says. I do not mean that she is fair as some are fair, but she
+will pass; she offends not.'
+
+'She is fair enough--not beautiful, not even pleasing; but, to be just,
+the demure look she puts on may bear the fault of that. Rowland, I would
+not speak evil of any one, but your cousin is a hypocrite. She is false
+at heart, and she hates me. Trust me, she but bides her time to let me
+know it--and you too, my Rowland.'
+
+'I am sure you mistake her, Amanda,' said Scudamore. 'Her looks are but
+modest, and her words but shy, for she came hither from a lonely house.
+I believe she is honest and good.'
+
+'Seest thou not then how that she makes friends with none but her
+betters? Already hath she wound herself around my lady's heart,
+forsooth! and now she pays her court to the puffing chaplain! Hast thou
+never observed, my Rowland, how oft she crosses the bridge to the yellow
+tower? What seeks she there? Old Kaltoff, the Dutchman, it can hardly
+be. I know she thinks to curry with my lord by pretending to love locks
+and screws and pistols and such like. "But why should she haunt the
+place when my lord is not there?" you will ask. Her pretence will hold
+the better for it, no doubt, and Caspar will report concerning her. And
+if she pleases my lord well, who knows but he may give her a pair of
+watches to hang at her ears, or a box that Paracelsus himself could not
+open without the secret as well as the key? I have heard of both such.
+They say my lord hath twenty cartloads of quite as wonderful things in
+that vault he calls his workshop. Hast thou never marked the huge
+cabinet of black inlaid with silver, that stands by the wall--fitter
+indeed for my lady's chamber than such a foul place?'
+
+'I have seen it,' answered Scudamore.
+
+'I warrant me it hath store of gewgaws fit for a duchess.'
+
+'Like enough,' assented Rowland.
+
+'If mistress Dorothy were to find the way through my lord's favour into
+that cabinet--truly it were nothing to thee or me, Rowland.'
+
+'Assuredly not. It would be my lord's own business.'
+
+'Once upon a time I was sent to carry my young lady Raven thither--to
+see my lord earn his bread, as said my lady: and what should my lord but
+give her no less than a ball of silver which, thrown into a vessel of
+water at any moment would plainly tell by how much it rose above the
+top, the very hour and minute of the day or night, as well and truly as
+the castle-clock itself. Tell me not, Rowland, that the damsel hath no
+design in it. Her looks betoken a better wisdom. Doth she not, I ask
+your honesty, far more resemble a nose-pinched puritan than a loyal
+maiden?'
+
+Thus amongst the apple-blossoms talked Amanda Serafina.
+
+'Prithee, be not too severe with my cousin, Amanda,' pleaded Scudamore.
+'She is much too sober to please my fancy, but wherefore should I for
+that hate her? And if she hath something the look of a long-faced
+fanatic, thou must think, she hath but now, as it were, lost her
+mother.'
+
+'But now! And I never knew mine! Ah, Rowland, how lonely is the world!'
+
+'Lovely Amanda!' said Rowland.
+
+So they passed from the orchard and parted, fearful of being missed.
+
+How should such a pair do, but after its kind? Life was dull without
+love-making, so they made it. And the more they made, the more they
+wanted to make, until casual encounters would no longer serve their
+turn.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+THE ENCHANTED CHAIR.
+
+
+In the castle things went on much the same, nor did the gathering tumult
+without wake more than an echo within. Yet a cloud slowly deepened upon
+the brow of the marquis, and a look of disquiet, to be explained neither
+by the more frequent returns of his gout, nor by the more lengthened
+absences of his favourite son. In his judgment the king was losing
+ground, not only in England but in the deeper England of its men. Lady
+Margaret also, for all her natural good spirits and light-heartedness,
+showed a more continuous anxiety than was to be accounted for by her
+lord's absences and the dangers he had to encounter: little Molly, the
+treasure of her heart next to her lord, had never been other than a
+delicate child, but now had begun to show signs of worse than weakness
+of constitution, and the heart of the mother was perpetually brooding
+over the ever-present idea of her sickly darling.
+
+But she always did her endeavour to clear the sky of her countenance
+before sitting down with her father-in-law at the dinner-table, where
+still the marquis had his jest almost as regularly as his claret,
+although varying more in quality and quantity both--now teasing his son
+Charles about the holes in his pasteboard, as he styled the castle
+walls; now his daughter Anne about a design, he and no one else
+attributed to her, of turning protestant and marrying Dr. Bayly; now Dr.
+Bayly about his having been discovered blowing the organ in the chapel
+at high mass, as he said; for when no new joke was at hand he was fain
+to content himself with falling back upon old ones. The first of these
+mentioned was founded on the fact, as undeniable as deplorable, of the
+weakness of many portions of the defences, to remedy which, as far as
+might be, was for the present lord Charles's chief endeavour, wherein he
+had the best possible adviser, engineer, superintendent, and workman,
+all in the person of Caspar Kaltoff. The second jest of the marquis was
+a pure invention upon the liking of lady Anne for the company and
+conversation of the worthy chaplain. The last mentioned was but an
+exaggeration of the following fact.
+
+One evening the doctor came upon young Delaware, loitering about the
+door of the chapel, with as disconsolate a look as his lovely sightless
+face was ever seen to wear, and, inquiring what was amiss with him,
+learned that he could find no one to blow the organ bellows for him. The
+youth had for years, boy as he still was, found the main solace of his
+blindness in the chapel-organ, upon which he would have played from
+morning to night could he have got any one to blow as long. The doctor,
+then, finding the poor boy panting for music like the hart for the
+water-brooks, but with no Jacob to roll the stone from the well's mouth
+that he might water the flocks of his thirsty thoughts, made willing
+proffer of his own exertions to blow the bellows of the organ, so long
+as the somewhat wheezy bellows of his body would submit to the task.
+
+By degrees however the good doctor had become so absorbed in the sounds
+that rushed, now wailing, now jubilant, now tender as a twilight wind,
+now imperious as the voice of the war-tempest, from the fingers of the
+raptured boy, that the reading of the first vesper-psalm had commenced
+while he was yet watching the slow rising index, in the expectation that
+the organist was about to resume. The voice of his Irish
+brother-chaplain, Sir Toby Mathews, roused him from his reverie of
+delight, and as one ashamed he stole away through the door that led from
+the little organ loft into the minstrel's gallery in the great hall, and
+so escaped the catholic service, but not the marquis's roasting. Whether
+the music had any share in the fact that the good man died a good
+catholic at last, I leave to the speculation of who list.
+
+Lady Margaret continued unchangingly kind to Dorothy; and the tireless
+efforts of the girl to amuse and please poor little Molly, whom the
+growing warmth of the season seemed to have no power to revive, awoke
+the deep gratitude of a mother. This, as well as her husband's absences,
+may have had something to do with the interest she began to take in the
+engine of which Dorothy had assumed the charge, for which she had always
+hitherto expressed a special dislike, professing to regard it as her
+rival in the affections of her husband, but after which she would now
+inquire as Dorothy's baby, and even listen with patience to her
+expositions of its wonderful construction and capabilities. Ere long
+Dorothy had a tale to tell her in connection with the engine, which,
+although simple and uneventful enough, she yet found considerably more
+interesting, as involving a good deal of at least mental adventure on
+the part of her young cousin.
+
+One evening, after playing with little Molly for an hour, then putting
+her to bed and standing by her crib until she fell asleep, Dorothy ran
+to see to her other baby; for the cistern had fallen rather lower than
+she thought well, and she was going to fill it. She found Caspar had
+lighted the furnace as she had requested; she set the engine going, and
+it soon warmed to its work.
+
+The place was hot, and Dorothy was tired. But where in that wide and not
+over-clean place should she find anything fitter than a grindstone to
+sit upon? Never yet, through all her acquaintance with the workshop, had
+she once seated herself in it. Looking about, however, she soon espied,
+almost hidden in the corner of a recess behind the furnace, what seemed
+an ordinary chair, such as stood in the great hall for the use of the
+family when anything special was going on there. With some trouble she
+got it out, dusted it, and set it as far from the furnace as might be,
+consistently with watching the motions of the engine. But the moment she
+sat down in it, she was caught and pinned so fast that she could
+scarcely stir hand or foot, and could no more leave it again than if she
+had been paralyzed in every limb. One scream she uttered of mingled
+indignation and terror, fancying herself seized by human arms; but when
+she found herself only in the power of one of her cousin's curiosities,
+she speedily quieted herself and rested in peace, for Caspar always paid
+a visit to the workshop the last thing before going to bed. The pressure
+of the springs that had closed the trap did not hurt her in the
+least--she was indeed hardly sensible of it; but when she made the least
+attempt to stir, the thing showed itself immovably locked, and she had
+too much confidence in the workmanship of her cousin and Caspar to dream
+of attempting to open it: that she knew must be impossible. The worst
+that threatened her was that the engine might require some attention
+before the hour, or perhaps two, which must elapse ere Caspar came would
+be over, and she did not know what the consequences might be.
+
+As it happened, however, something either in the powder-mill or about
+the defences detained Caspar far beyond his usual hour for retiring, and
+the sultriness of the weather having caused him a headache, he
+represented to himself that, with mistress Dorothy tending the engine,
+who knew where and would be sure to find him upon the least occasion,
+there could be no harm in his going to bed without paying his usual
+precautionary visit to the keep.
+
+So Dorothy sat, and waited in vain. The last drops of the day trickled
+down the side of the world, the night filled the crystal globe from its
+bottom of rock to its cover of blue aether, and the red glow of the
+furnace was all that lighted the place. She waited and waited in her
+mind; but Caspar did not come. She began to feel miserable. The furnace
+fire sank, and the rush of the water grew slower and slower, and ceased.
+Caspar did not come. The fire sank lower and lower, its red eye dimmed,
+darkened, went out. Still Caspar did not come. Faint fears began to
+gather about poor Dorothy's heart. It was clear at last that there she
+must be all the night long, and who could tell how far into the morning?
+It was good the night was warm, but it would be very dreary. And then to
+be fixed in one position for so long! The thought of it grew in misery
+faster than the thing itself. The greater torment lies always in the
+foreboding. She felt almost as if she were buried alive. Having their
+hands tied even, is enough to drive strong men almost crazy. Nor, firm
+of heart as she was, did no evils of a more undefined and less
+resistible character claim a share in her fast-rising apprehensions; she
+began to discover that she too was assailable by the terror of the
+night, although she had not hitherto been aware of it, no one knowing
+what may lie unhatched in his mind, waiting the concurrence of vital
+conditions.
+
+But Dorothy was better able to bear up under such assaults than
+thousands who believe nothing of many a hideous marvel commonly accepted
+in her day; and anyhow the unavoidable must be encountered, if not with
+indifference, yet with what courage may be found responsive to the call
+of the will. So, with all her energy, a larger store than she knew, she
+braced herself to endure. As to any attempt to make herself heard, she
+knew from the first that was of doubtful result, and now must certainly
+be of no avail when all but the warders were asleep. But to spend the
+night thus was a far less evil than to be discovered by the staring
+domestics, and exposed to the open merriment of her friends, and the
+hidden mockery of her enemies. As to Caspar, she was certain of his
+silence. So she sat on, like the lady in Comus, 'in stony fetters fixed
+and motionless;' only, as she said to herself, there was no attendant
+spirit to summon Caspar, who alone could take the part of Sabrina, and
+'unlock the clasping charm.' Little did Dorothy think, as in her dreary
+imprisonment she recalled that marvellous embodiment of unified strength
+and tenderness, as yet unacknowledged of its author, that it was the
+work of the same detestable fanatic who wrote those appalling
+'Animadversions, &c.'
+
+She grew chilly and cramped. The night passed very slowly. She dozed and
+woke, and dozed again. At last, from very weariness of both soul and
+body, she fell into a troubled sleep, from which she woke suddenly with
+the sound in her ears of voices whispering. The confidence of lord
+Herbert, both in the evil renown of his wizard cave and the character of
+his father's household, seemed mistaken. Still the subdued manner of
+their conversation appeared to indicate it was not without some awe that
+the speakers, whoever they were, had ventured within the forbidden
+precincts; their whispers, indeed, were so low that she could not say of
+either voice whether it belonged to man or woman. Her first idea was to
+deliver herself from the unpleasantness of her enforced espial by the
+utterance of some frightful cry such as would at the same time punish
+with the pains of terror their fool-hardy intrusion. But the spur of the
+moment was seldom indeed so sharp with Dorothy as to drive her to act
+without reflection, and a moment showed her that such persons being in
+the marquis's household as would meet in the middle of the night, and on
+prohibited ground, apparently for the sake of avoiding discovery, and
+even then talked in whispers, he had a right to know who they were: to
+act from her own feelings merely would be to fail in loyalty to the head
+of the house. Who could tell what might not be involved in it? For was
+it not thus that conspiracy and treason walked? And any alarm given them
+now might destroy every chance of their discovery. She compelled herself
+therefore to absolute stillness, immeasurably wretched, with but one
+comfort--no small one, however, although negative--that their words
+continued inaudible, a fact which doubtless saved much dispute betwixt
+her propriety and her loyalty.
+
+Long time their talk lasted. Every now and then they would start and
+listen--so Dorothy interpreted sudden silence and broken renewals. The
+genius of the place, although braved, had yet his terrors. At length she
+heard something like a half-conquered yawn, and soon after the voices
+ceased.
+
+Again a weary time, and once more she fell asleep. She woke in the grey
+of the morning, and after yet two long hours, but of more hopeful
+waiting, she heard Caspar's welcome footsteps, and summoned all her
+strength to avoid breaking down on his entrance. His first look of
+amazement she tried to answer with a smile, but at the expression of
+pitiful dismay which followed when another glance had revealed the cause
+of her presence, she burst into tears. The honest man was full of
+compunctious distress at the sight of the suffering his breach of custom
+had so cruelly prolonged.
+
+'And I haf bin slap in mine bed!' he exclaimed with horror at the
+contrast.
+
+Had she been his daughter and his mistress both in one, he could not
+have treated her with greater respect or tenderness. Of course he set
+about relieving her at once, but this was by no means such an easy
+matter as Dorothy had expected. For the key of the chair was in the
+black cabinet; the black cabinet was secured with one of lord Herbert's
+marvellous locks; the key of that lock was in lord Herbert's pocket, and
+lord Herbert was either in bed at Chepstow or Monmouth or Usk or
+Caerlyon, or on horseback somewhere else, nobody in Raglan knew where.
+But Caspar lost no time in unavailing moan. He proceeded at once to
+light a fire on his forge hearth, and in the course of a few minutes had
+fashioned a pick-lock, by means of which, after several trials and
+alterations, at length came the welcome sound of the yielding bolts, and
+Dorothy rose from the terrible chair. But so benumbed were all her limbs
+that she escaped being relocked in it only by the quick interposition of
+Caspar's arms. He led her about like a child, until at length she found
+them sufficiently restored to adventure the journey to her chamber, and
+thither she slowly crept. Few of the household were yet astir, and she
+met no one. When she was covered up in bed, then first she knew how cold
+she was, and felt as if she should never be warm again.
+
+At last she fell asleep, and slept long and soundly. Her maid went to
+call her, but finding it difficult to wake her, left her asleep, and did
+not return until breakfast was over. Then finding her still asleep she
+became a little anxious, and meeting mistress Amanda, told her she was
+afraid mistress Dorothy was ill. But mistress Amanda was herself sleepy
+and cross, and gave her a sharp answer, whereupon the girl went to lady
+Broughton. She, however, being on her way to morning mass, for it was
+Sunday, told her to let mistress Dorothy have her sleep out.
+
+The noise of horses' hoofs upon the paving of the stone court roused
+her, and then in came the sounds of the organ from the chapel. She rose
+confounded, and hurrying to the window drew back the curtain. The same
+moment lord Herbert walked from the hall into the fountain-court in
+riding dress, followed by some forty or fifty officers, the noise of
+whose armour and feet and voices dispelled at once the dim Sabbath
+feeling that hung vapour-like about the place. They gathered around the
+white horse, leaning or sitting on the marble basin, some talking in
+eager groups, others folding their arms in silence, listening, or lost
+heedless in their own thoughts, while their leader entered the staircase
+door at the right-hand corner of the western gate, the nearest way to
+his wife's apartment of the building.
+
+Now Dorothy had gone to sleep in perplexity, and all through her dreams
+had been trying to answer the question what course she should take with
+regard to the nocturnal intrusion. If she told lady Margaret she could
+but go with it to the marquis, and he was but just recovering from an
+attack of the gout, and ought not to be troubled except it were
+absolutely necessary. Was it, or was it not, necessary? Or was there no
+one else to whom she might with propriety betake herself in her
+doubt--lord Charles or Dr. Bayly? But here now was lord Herbert come
+back, and doubt there was none any more. She dressed herself in
+tremulous haste, and hurried to lady Margaret's room, where she hoped to
+see him. No one was there, and she tried the nursery, but finding only
+Molly and her attendant, returned to the parlour, and there seated
+herself to wait, supposing lady Margaret and he had gone together to
+morning service.
+
+They had really gone to the oak parlour, whither the marquis generally
+made his first move after an attack that had confined him to his room;
+for in the large window of that parlour, occupying nearly the whole side
+of it towards the moat, he generally sat when well enough to be about
+and take cognizance of what was going on; and there they now found him.
+
+'Welcome home, Herbert!' he said, kindly, holding out his hand. 'And how
+does my wild Irishwoman this morning? Crying her eyes out because her
+husband is come back, eh?--But, Herbert, lad, whence is all that noise
+of spurs and scabbards--and in the fountain court, too? I heard them go
+clanking and clattering through the hall like a torrent of steel! Here I
+sit, a poor gouty old man, deserted of my children and servants--all
+gone to church--to serve a better Master--not a page or a maid left me
+to send out to see and bring me word what is the occasion thereof! I was
+on the point of hobbling to the door myself when you came.'
+
+'Being on my way to the forest of Dean, my lord, and coming round by
+Raglan to inquire after you and my lady, I did bring with me some of my
+officers to dine and drink your lordship's health on our way.'
+
+'You shall all be welcome, though I fear I shall not make one,' said the
+marquis, with a grimace, for just then he had a twinge of the gout.
+
+'I am sorry to see you suffer, sir,' said his son.
+
+'Man is born unto trouble as the sparks fly upward,' returned the
+marquis, giving a kick with the leg which contained his inheritance; and
+then came a pause, during which lady Margaret left the room.
+
+'My lord,' said Herbert at length, with embarrassment, and forcing
+himself to speak, 'I am sorry to trouble you again, after all the money,
+enough to build this castle from the foundations--'
+
+'Ah! ha!' interjected the marquis, but lord Herbert went on--
+
+'which you have already spent on behalf of the king, my master, but--'
+
+'YOUR master, Herbert!' said the marquis, testily. 'Well?'
+
+'I must have some more money for his pressing necessities.' In his
+self-compulsion he had stumbled upon the wrong word.
+
+'MUST you?' cried the marquis angrily. 'Pray take it.'
+
+And drawing the keys of his treasury from the pocket of his frieze coat,
+he threw them down on the table before him. Lord Herbert reddened like a
+girl, and looked as much abashed as if he had been caught in something
+of which he was ashamed. One moment he stood thus, then said,
+
+'Sir, the word was out before I was aware. I do not intend to put it
+into force. I pray will you put up your key again?'
+
+'Truly, son,' replied the marquis, still testily, but in a milder tone,
+'I shall think my keys not safe in my pocket whilst you have so many
+swords by your side; nor that I have the command of my house whilst you
+have so many officers in it; nor that I am at my own disposal, whilst
+you have so many commanders.'
+
+'My lord,' replied Herbert, 'I do not intend that they shall stay in the
+castle; I mean they shall be gone.'
+
+'I pray, let them. And have care that MUST do not stay behind,' said the
+marquis. 'But let them have their dinner first, lad.'
+
+Lord Herbert bowed, and left the room. Thereupon, in the presence of
+lady Margaret, who just then re-entered, good Dr. Bayly, who,
+unperceived by lord Herbert in his pre-occupation, had been present
+during the interview, stepped up to the marquis and said:
+
+'My good lord, the honourable confidence your lordship has reposed in me
+boldens me to do my duty as, in part at least, your lordship's humble
+spiritual adviser.'
+
+'Thou shouldst want no boldening to do thy duty, doctor,' said the
+marquis, making a wry face.
+
+'May I then beg of your lordship to consider whether you have not been
+more severe with your noble son than the occasion demanded, seeing not
+only was the word uttered by a lapse of the tongue, but yourself heard
+my lord express much sorrow for the overslip?'
+
+'What!' said lady Herbert, something merrily, but looking in the face of
+her father-in-law with a little anxious questioning in her eyes, 'has my
+lord been falling out with my Ned?'
+
+'Hark ye, daughter!' answered the marquis, his face beaming with
+restored good-humour, for the twinge in his toe had abated, 'and you
+too, my good chaplain!--if my son be dejected, I can raise him when I
+please; but it is a question, if he should once take a head, whether I
+could bring him lower when I list. Ned was not wont to use such
+courtship to me, and I believe he intended a better word for his father;
+but MUST was for the king.'
+
+Returning to her own room, lady Margaret found Dorothy waiting for her.
+
+'Well, my little lig-a-bed!' she said sweetly, 'what is amiss with thee?
+Thou lookest but soberly.'
+
+'I am well, madam; and that I look soberly,' said Dorothy, 'you will not
+wonder when I tell you wherefore. But first, if it please you, I would
+pray for my lord's presence, that he too may know all.'
+
+'Holy mother! what is the matter, child?' cried lady Margaret, of late
+easily fluttered. 'Is it my lord Herbert you mean, or my lord of
+Worcester?'
+
+'My lord Herbert, my lady. I dread lest he should be gone ere I have
+found a time to tell him.'
+
+'He rides again after dinner,' said lady Margaret.
+
+'Then, dear my lady, if you would keep me from great doubt and disquiet,
+let me have the ear of my lord for a few moments.'
+
+Lady Margaret rang for her page, and sent him to find his master and
+request his presence in her parlour.
+
+Within five minutes lord Herbert was with them, and within five more,
+Dorothy had ended her tale of the night, uninterrupted save by lady
+Margaret's exclamations of sympathy.
+
+'And now, my lord, what am I to do?' she asked in conclusion.
+
+Lord Herbert made no answer for a few moments, but walked up and down
+the room. Dorothy thought he looked angry as well as troubled. He burst
+at length into a laugh, however, and said merrily,
+
+'I have it, ladies! I see how we may save my father much annoyance
+without concealment, for nothing must be concealed from him that in any
+way concerns the house. But the annoyance arising from any direct
+attempt at discovering the wrongdoers would be endless, and its failure
+almost certain. But now, as I would plan it, instead of trouble my
+father shall have laughter, and instead of annoyance such a jest as may
+make him good amends for the wrong done him by the breach of his
+household laws. Caspar has explained to you all concerning the
+water-works, I believe, cousin?'
+
+'All, my lord. I may without presumption affirm that I can, so long as
+there arises no mishap, with my own hand govern them all. Caspar has for
+many weeks left everything to me, save indeed the lighting of the
+furnace-fire.'
+
+'That is as I would have it, cousin. So soon then as it is dark this
+evening, you will together, you and Caspar, set the springs which lie
+under the first stone of the paving of the bridge. Thereafter, as you
+know, the first foot set upon it will drop the drawbridge to the stone
+bridge, and the same instant convert the two into an aqueduct, filled
+with a rushing torrent from the reservoir, which will sweep the
+intruders away. Before they shall have either gathered their discomfited
+wits or raised their prostrate bones, my father will be out upon them,
+nor shall they find shelter for their shame ere every soul in the castle
+has witnessed their disgrace.'
+
+'I had thought of the plan, my lord; but I dreaded the punishment might
+be too severe, not knowing what the water might do upon them.'
+
+'There will be no danger to life, and little to limb,' said his
+lordship. 'The torrent will cease flowing the moment they are swept from
+the bridge. But they shall be both bruised and shamed; and,' added his
+lordship, with an oath such as seldom crossed his lips, 'in such times
+as these, they will well deserve what shall befall them. Intruding
+hounds!--But you must take heed, cousin Dorothy, that you forget not
+that you have yourself done. Should you have occasion to go on the
+bridge after setting your vermin-trap, you must not omit to place your
+feet precisely where Caspar will show you, else you will have to ride a
+watery horse half-way, mayhap to the marble one--except indeed he throw
+you from his back against the chapel-door.'
+
+When her husband talked in long sentences, as he was not unfrequently
+given to do, lady Margaret, even when their sequences were not very
+clear, seldom interrupted him: she had learned that she gained more by
+letting him talk on; for however circuitous the route he might take, he
+never forgot where he was going. He might obscure his object, but there
+it always was. He was now again walking up and down the room, and,
+perceiving that he had not yet arranged all to his satisfaction, she
+watched him with merriment in her Irish eyes, and waited.
+
+'I have it!' he cried again. 'It shall be so, and my father shall thus
+have immediate notice. The nights are weekly growing warmer, and he will
+not therein be tempted to his hurt. Our trusty and well-beloved cousin
+Dorothy, we herewith, in presence of our liege and lovely lady, appoint
+thee our deputy during our absence. No one but thyself hath a right to
+cross the bridge after dark, save Caspar and the governor, whom with my
+father I shall inform and warn concerning what is to be done. But I will
+myself adjust the escape, so that the torrent shall not fall too
+powerful; Caspar must connect it with the drawbridge, whose fall will
+then open it. And pray remind him to see first that all the hinges and
+joints concerned be well greased, that it may fall instantly.'
+
+So saying, he left the room, and sought out Caspar, with whom he
+contrived the ringing of a bell in the marquis's chamber by the
+drawbridge in its fall, the arrangement for which Caspar was to carry
+out that same evening after dark. He next sought his father, and told
+him and his brother Charles the whole story; nor did he find himself
+wrong in his expectation that the prospect of so good a jest would go
+far to console the marquis for the annoyance of finding that his
+household was not quite such a pattern one as he had supposed. That
+there was anything of conspiracy or treachery involved, he did not for a
+moment believe.
+
+After dinner, while the horses were brought out, lord Herbert went again
+to his wife's room. There was little Molly waiting to bid him good-bye,
+and she sat upon his knee until it was time for him to go. The child's
+looks made his heart sad, and his wife could not restrain her tears when
+she saw him gaze upon her so mournfully. It was with a heavy heart that,
+when the moment of departure came, he rose, gave her into her mother's
+arms, clasped them both in one embrace, and hurried from the room. He
+ought to be a noble king for whom such men and women make such
+sacrifices.
+
+To witness such devotion on the part of personages to whom she looked up
+with such respect and confidence, would have been in itself more than
+sufficient to secure for its object the unquestioning partisanship of
+Dorothy; partisan already, it raised her prejudice to a degree of
+worship which greatly narrowed what she took for one of the widest gulfs
+separating her from the creed of her friends. The favourite dogma of the
+school-master-king, the offspring of his pride and weakness, had found
+fitting soil in Dorothy. When, in the natural growth of the confidence
+reposed in her by her protectors, she came to have some idea of the
+immensity of the sums spent by them on behalf of his son, had, indeed,
+ere the close of another year read the king's own handwriting and
+signature in acknowledgment of a debt of a quarter of a million, she
+took it only as an additional sign--for additional proof there was no
+room--of their ever admirable devotion to his divine right. That the
+marquis and his son were catholics served but to glorify the right to
+which a hostile faith yielded such practical homage.
+
+Immediately after nightfall she repaired to Caspar, and between them
+everything was speedily arranged for the carrying out of lord Herbert's
+counter-plot.
+
+But night after night passed, and the bell in the marquis's room
+remained voiceless.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+MOLLY AND THE WHITE HORSE.
+
+
+Meantime lord Herbert came and went. There was fighting here and
+fighting there, castles taken, defended, re-taken, here a little success
+and there a worse loss, now on this side and now on that; but still, to
+say the best, the king's affairs made little progress; and for Mary
+Somerset, her body and soul made progress in opposite directions.
+
+There was a strange pleasant mixture of sweet fretfulness and trusting
+appeal in her. Children suffer less because they feel that all is right
+when father or mother is with them; grown people from whom this faith
+has vanished ere it has led them to its original fact, may well be
+miserable in their sicknesses.
+
+She lay moaning one night in her crib, when suddenly she opened her eyes
+and saw her mother's hand pressed to her forehead. She was imitative,
+like most children, and had some very old-fashioned ways of speech.
+
+'Have you got a headache, madam?' she asked.
+
+'Yes, my Molly,' answered her mother.
+
+'Then you will go to mother Mary. She will take you on her knee, madam.
+Mothers is for headaches. Oh me! my headache, madam!'
+
+The poor mother turned away. It was more than she could bear alone.
+Dorothy entered the room, and she rose and left it, that she might go to
+mother Mary as the child had said.
+
+Dorothy's cares were divided between the duties of naiad and nursemaid,
+for the child clung to her as to no one else except her mother. The
+thing that pleased her best was to see the two whale-like spouts rise
+suddenly from the nostrils of the great white horse, curve away from
+each other aloft in the air, and fall back into the basin on each side
+of him. 'See horse spout,' she would say moanfully; and that instant, if
+Dorothy was not present, a messenger would be despatched to her. On a
+bright day this would happen repeatedly. For the sake of renewing her
+delight, the instant she turned from it, satisfied for the moment, the
+fountain ceased to play, and the horse remained spoutless, awaiting the
+revival of the darling's desire; for she was not content to see him
+spouting: she must see him spout. Then again she would be carried forth
+to the verge of the marble basin, and gazing up at the rearing animal
+would say, in a tone daintily wavering betwixt entreaty and command,
+'Spout, horse, spout,' and Dorothy, looking down from the far-off summit
+of the tower, and distinguishing by the attitude of the child the moment
+when she uttered her desire, would instantly, with one turn of her hand,
+send the captive water shooting down its dark channel to reascend in
+sunny freedom.
+
+If little Mary Somerset was counted a strange child, the wisdom with
+which she was wise is no more unnatural because few possess it, than the
+death of such is premature because they are yet children. They are small
+fruits whose ripening has outstripped their growth. Of such there are
+some who, by the hot-house assiduities of their friends, heating them
+with sulphurous stoves, and watering them with subacid solutions, ripen
+into insufferable prigs. For them and for their families it is well that
+Death the gardener should speedily remove them into the open air. But
+there are others who, ripening from natural, that is divine causes and
+influences, are the daintiest little men and women, gentle in the utmost
+peevishness of their lassitude, generous to share the gifts they most
+prize, and divinely childlike in their repentances. Their falling from
+the stalk is but the passing from the arms of their mothers into those
+of--God knows whom--which is more than enough.
+
+The chief part of little Molly's religious lessons, I do not mean
+training, consisted in a prayer or two in rhyme, and a few verses of the
+kind then in use among catholics. Here is a prayer which her nurse
+taught her, as old, I take it, as Chaucer's time at least:--
+
+ Hail be thou, Mary, that high sittest in throne!
+ I beseech thee, sweet lady, grant me my boon--
+ Jesus to love and dread, and my life to amend soon,
+ And bring me to that bliss that never shall be done.
+
+And here are some verses quite as old, which her mother taught her. I
+give them believing that in understanding and coming nearer to our
+fathers and mothers who are dead, we understand and come nearer to our
+brothers and sisters who are alive. I change nothing but the spelling,
+and a few of the forms of the words.
+
+ Jesu, Lord, that madest me,
+ And with thy blessed blood hast bought,
+ Forgive that I have grieved thee
+ With word, with will, and eke with thought.
+
+ Jesu, for thy wounds' smart,
+ On feet and on thine hands two,
+ Make me meek and low of heart,
+ And thee to love as I should do.
+
+ Jesu, grant me mine asking,
+ Perfect patience in my disease,
+ And never may I do that thing
+ That should thee in any wise displease.
+
+ Jesu, most comfort for to see
+ Of thy saints every one,
+ Comfort them that careful be,
+ And help them that be woe-begone.
+
+ Jesu, keep them that be good,
+ And amend them that have grieved thee,
+ And send them fruits of early food,
+ As each man needeth in his degree.
+
+ Jesu, that art, without lies,
+ Almighty God in trinity,
+ Cease these wars, and send us peace
+ With lasting love and charity.
+
+ Jesu, that art the ghostly stone
+ Of all holy church in middle-earth,
+ Bring thy folds and flocks in one,
+ And rule them rightly with one herd.
+
+ Jesu, for thy blissful blood,
+ Bring, if thou wilt, those souls to bliss
+ From whom I have had any good,
+ And spare that they have done amiss.
+
+This old-fashioned hymn lady Margaret had learned from her grandmother,
+who was an Englishwoman of the pale. She also had learned it from her
+grandmother.
+
+One day, by some accident, Dorothy had not reached her post of naiad
+before Molly arrived in presence of her idol, the white horse, her usual
+application to which was thence for the moment in vain. Having waited
+about three seconds in perfect patience, she turned her head slowly
+round, and gazed in her nurse's countenance with large questioning eyes,
+but said nothing. Then she turned again to the horse. Presently a smile
+broke over her face, and she cried in the tone of one who had made a
+great discovery,
+
+'Horse has ears of stone: he cannot hear, Molly.'
+
+Instantly thereupon she turned her face up to the sky, and said,
+
+'Dear holy Mary, tell horse to spout.'
+
+That moment up into the sun shot the two jets. Molly clapped her little
+hands with delight and cried,
+
+'Thanks, dear holy Mary! I knowed thou would do it for Molly. Thanks,
+madam!'
+
+The nurse told the story to her mistress, and she to Dorothy. It set
+both of them feeling, and Dorothy thinking besides.
+
+'It cannot be,' she thought, 'but that a child's prayer will reach its
+goal, even should she turn her face to the west or the north instead of
+up to the heavens! A prayer somewhat differs from a bolt or a bullet.'
+
+'How you protestants CAN live without a woman to pray to!' said lady
+Margaret.
+
+'Her son Jesus never refused to hear a woman, and I see not wherefore I
+should go to his mother, madam,' said Dorothy, bravely.
+
+'Thou and I will not quarrel, Dorothy,' returned lady Margaret sweetly;
+'for sure am I that would please neither the one nor the other of them.'
+
+Dorothy kissed her hand, and the subject dropped.
+
+After that, Molly never asked the horse to spout, or if she happened to
+do so, would correct herself instantly, and turn her request to the
+mother Mary. Nor did the horse ever fail to spout, notwithstanding an
+evil thought which arose in the protestant part of Dorothy's mind--the
+temptation, namely, to try the effect upon Molly of a second failure.
+All the rest of her being on the instant turned so violently protestant
+against the suggestion, that no parley with it was possible, and the
+conscience of her intellect cowered before the conscience of her heart.
+
+It was from this fancy of the child's for the spouting of the horse that
+it came to be known in the castle that mistress Dorothy was ruler of
+Raglan waters. In lord Herbert's absence not a person in the place but
+she and Caspar understood their management, and except lady Margaret,
+the marquis, and lord Charles, no one besides even knew of the existence
+of such a contrivance as the water-shoot or artificial cataract.
+
+Every night Dorothy and Caspar together set the springs of it, and every
+morning Caspar detached the lever connecting the stone with the
+drawbridge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+THE DAMSEL WHICH FELL SICK.
+
+
+From within the great fortress, like the rough husk whence the green
+lobe of a living tree was about to break forth, a lovely child-soul,
+that knew neither of war nor ambition, knew indeed almost nothing save
+love and pain, was gently rising as from the tomb. The bonds of the
+earthly life that had for ever conferred upon it the rights and
+privileges of humanity were giving way, and little, white-faced,
+big-eyed Molly was leaving father and mother and grandfather and
+spouting horse and all, to find--what?--To find what she wanted, and
+wait a little for what she loved.
+
+One sultry evening in the second week of June, the weather had again got
+inside the inhabitants of the castle, forming different combinations
+according to the local atmosphere it found in each. Clouds had been
+slowly steaming up all day from several sides of the horizon, and as the
+sun went down, they met in the zenith. Not a wing seemed to be abroad
+under heaven, so still was the region of storms. The air was hot and
+heavy and hard to breathe--whether from lack of life, or too much of it,
+oppressing the narrow and weak recipients thereof, as the sun oppresses
+and extinguishes earthly fires, I at least cannot say. It was weather
+that made SOME dogs bite their masters, made most of the maids
+quarrelsome, and all the men but one or two more or less sullen, made
+Dorothy sad, Molly long after she knew not what, her mother weep, her
+grandfather feel himself growing old, and the hearts of all the lovers,
+within and without the castle, throb for the comfort of each other's
+lonely society. The fish lay still in the ponds, the pigeons sat
+motionless on the roof-ridges, and the fountains did not play; for
+Dorothy's heart was so heavy about Molly, that she had forgotten them.
+
+The marquis, fond of all his grandchildren, had never taken special
+notice of Molly beyond what she naturally claimed as youngest. But when
+it appeared that she was one of the spring-flowers of the human family,
+so soon withdrawing thither whence they come, he found that she began to
+pull at his heart, not merely with the attraction betwixt childhood and
+age, in which there is more than the poets have yet sung, but with the
+dearness which the growing shadow of death gives to all upon whom it
+gathers. The eyes of the child seemed to nestle into his bosom. Every
+morning he paid her a visit, and every morning it was clear that little
+Molly's big heart had been waiting for him. The young as well as the old
+recognize that they belong to each other, despite the unwelcome
+intervention of wrinkles and baldness and toothlessness. Molly's eyes
+brightened when she heard his steps at the door, and ere he had come
+within her sight, where she lay half-dressed on her mother's bed, tented
+in its tall carved posts and curtains of embroidered silk, the figures
+on which gave her so much trouble all the half-delirious night long, her
+arms would be stretched out to him, and the words would be trembling on
+her lips, 'Prithee, tell me a tale, sir.'
+
+'Which tale wouldst thou have, my Molly?' the grandsire would say: it
+was the regular form of each day's fresh salutation; and the little one
+would answer, 'Of the good Jesu,' generally adding, 'and of the damsel
+which fell sick and died.'
+
+Torn as the country was, all the good grandparents, catholic and
+protestant, royalist and puritan, told their children the same tales
+about the same man; and I suspect there was more then than there is now
+of that kind of oral teaching, for which any amount of books written for
+children is a sadly poor substitute.
+
+Although Molly asked oftenest for the tale of the damsel who came alive
+again at the word of the man who knew all about death, she did not limit
+her desires to the repetition of what she knew already; and in order to
+keep his treasure supplied with things new as well as old, the marquis
+went the oftener to his Latin bible to refresh his memory for Molly's
+use, and was in both ways, in receiving and in giving, a gainer. When
+the old man came thus to pour out his wealth to the child, lady Margaret
+then first became aware what a depth both of religious knowledge and
+feeling there was in her father-in-law. Neither sir Toby Mathews, nor
+Dr. Bayly, who also visited her at times, ever, with the torch of their
+talk, lighted the lamps behind those great eyes, whose glass was growing
+dull with the vapours from the grave; but her grandfather's voice, the
+moment he began to speak to her of the good Jesu, brought her soul to
+its windows.
+
+This sultry evening Molly was restless. 'Madam! madam!' she kept calling
+to her mother--for, like so many of such children, her manners and modes
+of speech resembled those of grown people, 'What wouldst thou, chicken?'
+her mother would ask. 'Madam, I know not,' the child would answer.
+Twenty times in an hour, as the evening went on, almost the same words
+would pass between them. At length, once more, 'Madam! madam!' cried the
+child. 'What would my heart's treasure?' said the mother; and Molly
+answered, 'Madam, I would see the white horse spout.'
+
+With a glance and sign to her mistress. Dorothy rose and crept from the
+room, crossed the court and the moat, and dragged her heavy heart up the
+long stair to the top of the keep. Arrived there, she looked down
+through a battlement, and fixed her eyes on a certain window, whence
+presently she caught the wave of a signal-handkerchief.
+
+At the open window stood lady Margaret with Molly in her arms. The night
+was so warm that the child could take no hurt; and indeed what could
+hurt her, with the nameless fever-moth within, fretting a passage for
+the new winged body which, in the pains of a second birth, struggled to
+break from its dying chrysalis.
+
+'Now, Molly, tell the horse to spout,' said lady Margaret, with such
+well-simulated cheerfulness as only mothers can put on with hearts ready
+to break.
+
+'Mother Mary, tell the horse to spout,' said Molly; and up went the
+watery parabolas.
+
+The old flame of delight flushed the child's cheek, like the flush in
+the heart of a white rose. But it died almost instantly, and murmuring,
+'Thanks, good madam!' whether to mother Mary or mother Margaret little
+mattered, Molly turned towards the bed, and her mother knew at her heart
+that the child sought her last sleep--as we call it, God forgive us our
+little faith! 'Madam!' panted the child, as she laid her down.
+'Darling?' said the mother. 'Madam, I would see my lord marquis.' 'I
+will send and ask him to come.' 'Let Robert say that Molly is
+going--going--where is Molly going, madam?' 'Going to mother Mary,
+child,' answered lady Margaret, choking back the sobs that would have
+kept the tears company. 'And the good Jesu?' 'Yes.'--'And the good God
+over all?' 'Yes, yes.' 'I want to tell my lord marquis. Pray, madam, let
+him come, and quickly.'
+
+His lordship entered, pale and panting. He knew the end was approaching.
+Molly stretched out to him one hand instead of two, as if her hold upon
+earth were half yielded. He sat down by the bedside, and wiped his
+forehead with a sigh.
+
+'Thee tired too, marquis?' asked the odd little love-bird.
+
+'Yes, I am tired, my Molly. Thou seest I am so fat.'
+
+'Shall I ask the good mother, when I go to her, to make thee spare like
+Molly?'
+
+'No, Molly, thou need'st not trouble her about that. Ask her to make me
+good.'
+
+'Would it then be easier to make thee good than to make thee spare,
+marquis?'
+
+'No, child--much harder, alas!'
+
+'Then why--?' began Molly; but the marquis perceiving her thought, made
+haste to prevent it, for her breath was coming quick and weak.
+
+'But it is so much better worth doing, you see. If she makes me good,
+she will have another in heaven to be good to.'
+
+'Then I know she will. But I will ask her. Mother Mary has so many to
+mind, she might be forgetting.'
+
+After this she lay very quiet with her hand in his. All the windows of
+the room were open, and from the chapel came the mellow sounds of the
+organ. Delaware had captured Tom Fool and got him to blow the bellows,
+and through the heavy air the music surged in. Molly was dozing a
+little, and she spoke as one that speaks in a dream.
+
+'The white horse is spouting music,' she said. 'Look! See how it goes up
+to mother Mary. She twists it round her distaff and spins it with her
+spindle. See, marquis, see! Spout, horse, spout.'
+
+She lay silent again for a long time. The old man sat holding her hand;
+her mother sat on the farther side of the bed, leaning against one of
+the foot-posts, and watching the white face of her darling with eyes in
+which love ruled distraction. Dorothy sat in one of the window-seats,
+and listened to the music, which still came surging in, for still the
+fool blew the bellows, and the blind youth struck the keys. And still
+the clouds gathered overhead and sunk towards the earth; and still the
+horse, which Dorothy had left spouting, threw up his twin-fountain,
+whose musical plash in the basin as it fell mingled with the sounds of
+the organ.
+
+'What is it?' said Molly, waking up. 'My head doth not ache, and my
+heart doth not beat, and I am not affrighted. What is it? I am not
+tired. Marquis, are you no longer tired? Ah, now I know! He cometh! He
+is here!--Marquis, the good Jesu wants Molly's hand. Let him have it,
+marquis. He is lifting me up. I am quite well--quite--'
+
+The sentence remained broken. The hand which the marquis had yielded,
+with the awe of one in bodily presence of the Holy, and which he saw
+raised as if in the grasp of one invisible, fell back on the bed, and
+little Molly was quite well.
+
+But she left sick hearts behind. The mother threw herself on the bed,
+and wailed aloud. The marquis burst into tears, left the room, and
+sought his study. Mechanically he took his Confessio Amantis, and sat
+down, but never opened it; rose again and took his Shakespere, opened
+it, but could not read; rose once more, took his Vulgate, and read:
+
+'Quid turbamini, et ploratis? puella non est mortua, sed dormit.'
+
+He laid that book also down, fell on his knees, and prayed for her who
+was not dead but sleeping.
+
+Dorothy, filled with awe, rather from the presence of the mother of the
+dead than death itself, and feeling that the mother would rather be
+alone with her dead, also left the room, and sought her chamber, where
+she threw herself upon the bed. All was still save the plashing of the
+fountain, for the music from the chapel had ceased.
+
+The storm burst in a glare and a peal. The rain fell in straight lines
+and huge drops, which came faster and faster, drowning the noise of the
+fountain, till the sound of it on the many roofs of the place was like
+the trampling of an army of horsemen, and every spout was gurgling
+musically with full throat. The one court was filled with a clashing
+upon its pavement, and the other with a soft singing upon its grass,
+with which mingled a sound as of little castanets from the broad leaves
+of the water-lilies in the moat. Ever and anon came the lightning, and
+the great bass of the thunder to fill up the psalm.
+
+At the first thunderclap lady Margaret fell on her knees and prayed in
+an agony for the little soul that had gone forth into the midst of the
+storm. Like many women she had a horror of lightning and thunder, and it
+never came into her mind that she who had so loved to see the horse
+spout was far more likely to be revelling in the elemental tumult, with
+all the added ecstasy of new-born freedom and health, than to be
+trembling like her mortal mother below.
+
+Dorothy was not afraid, but she was heavy and weary; the thunder seemed
+to stun her and the lightning to take the power of motion from the shut
+eyelids through which it shone. She lay without moving, and at length
+fell fast asleep.
+
+To the marquis alone of the mourners the storm came as a relief to his
+overcharged spirit. He had again opened his New Testament, and tried to
+read; but if the truths which alone can comfort are not at such a time
+present to the spirit, the words that embody them will seldom be of much
+avail. When the thunder burst he closed the book and went to the window,
+flung it wide, and looked out into the court. Like a tide from the
+plains of innocent heaven through the sultry passionate air of the
+world, came the coolness to his brow and heart. Oxygen, ozone, nitrogen,
+water, carbonic acid, is it? Doubtless--and other things, perhaps, which
+chemistry cannot detect. Nevertheless, give its parts what names you
+will, its whole is yet the wind of the living God to the bodies of men,
+his spirit to their spirits, his breath to their hearts. When I learn
+that there is no primal intent--only chance--in the unspeakable joy that
+it gives, I shall cease to believe in poetry, in music, in woman, in
+God. Nay, I must have already ceased to believe in God ere I could
+believe that the wind that bloweth where it listeth is free because God
+hath forgotten it, and that it bears from him no message to me.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+THE CATARACT.
+
+
+In the midst of a great psalm, on the geyser column of which his spirit
+was borne heavenward, young Delaware all of a sudden found the keys dumb
+beneath his helpless fingers: the bellows was empty, the singing thing
+dead. He called aloud, and his voice echoed through the empty chapel,
+but no living response came back. Tom Fool had grown weary and forsaken
+him. Disappointed and baffled, he rose and left the chapel, not
+immediately from the organ loft, by a door and a few upward steps
+through the wall to the minstrels' gallery, as he had entered, but by
+the south door into the court, his readiest way to reach the rooms he
+occupied with his father, near the marquis's study. Hardly another door
+in either court was ever made fast except this one, which, merely in
+self-administered flattery of his own consequence, the conceited
+sacristan who assumed charge of the key, always locked at night. But
+there was no reason why Delaware should pay any respect to this, or
+hesitate to remove the bar securing one-half of the door, without which
+the lock retained no hold.
+
+Although Tom had indeed deserted his post, the organist was mistaken as
+to the cause and mode of his desertion: oppressed like every one else
+with the sultriness of the night, he had fallen fast asleep, leaning
+against the organ. The thunder only waked him sufficiently to render him
+capable of slipping from the stool on which he had lazily seated himself
+as he worked the lever of the bellows, and stretching himself at full
+length upon the floor; while the coolness that by degrees filled the air
+as the rain kept pouring, made his sleep sweeter and deeper. He lay and
+snored till midnight.
+
+A bell rang in the marquis's chamber.
+
+It was one of his lordship's smaller economic maxims that in every
+house, and the larger the house the more necessary its observance, the
+master thereof should have his private rooms as far apart from each
+other as might, with due respect to general fitness, be arranged for, in
+order that, to use his own figure, he might spread his skirts the wider
+over the place, and chiefly the part occupied by his own family and
+immediate attendants--thereby to give himself, without paying more
+attention to such matters than he could afford, a better chance of
+coming upon the trace of anything that happened to be going amiss.
+'For,' he said, 'let a man have ever so many responsible persons about
+him, the final responsibility of his affairs yet returns upon himself.'
+Hence, while his bedroom was close to the main entrance, that is the
+gate to the stone court, the room he chose for retirement and study was
+over the western gate, that of the fountain-court, nearly a whole side
+of the double quadrangle away from his bedroom, and still farther from
+the library, which was on the other side of the main entrance--whence,
+notwithstanding, he would himself, gout permitting, always fetch any
+book he wanted. It was, therefore, no wonder that, being now in his
+study, the marquis, although it rang loud, never heard the bell which
+Caspar had hung in his bedchamber. He was, however, at the moment,
+looking from a window which commanded the very spot--namely, the mouth
+of the archway--towards which the bell would have drawn his attention.
+
+The night was still, the rain was over, and although the moon was
+clouded, there was light enough to recognise a known figure in any part
+of the court, except the shadowed recess where the door of the chapel
+and the archway faced each other, and the door of the hall stood at
+right angles to both.
+
+Came a great clang that echoed loud through the court, followed by the
+roar of water. It sounded as if a captive river had broken loose, and
+grown suddenly frantic with freedom. The marquis could not help starting
+violently, for his nerves were a good deal shaken. The same instant, ere
+there was time for a single conjecture, a torrent, visible by the light
+of its foam, shot from the archway, hurled itself against the chapel
+door, and vanished. Sad and startled as he was, lord Worcester,
+requiring no explanation of the phenomenon now that it was completed,
+laughed aloud and hurried from the room.
+
+When he had screwed his unwieldy form to the bottom of the stair, and
+came out into the court, there was Tom Fool flying across the turf in
+mortal terror, his face white as another moon, and his hair standing on
+end--visibly in the dull moonshine.
+
+His terror had either deafened him, or paralysed the nerves of his
+obedience, for the first call of his master was insufficient to stop
+him. At the second, however, he halted, turned mechanically, went to him
+trembling, and stood before him speechless. But when the marquis, to
+satisfy himself that he was really as dry as he seemed, laid his hand on
+his arm, the touch brought him to himself, and, assisted by his master's
+questions, he was able to tell how he had fallen asleep in the chapel,
+had waked but a minute ago, had left it by the minstrels' gallery, had
+reached the floor of the hall, and was approaching the western door,
+which was open, in order to cross the court to his lodging near the
+watch-tower, when a hellish explosion, followed by the most frightful
+roaring, mingled with shrieks and demoniacal laughter, arrested him; and
+the same instant, through the open door, he saw, as plainly as he now
+saw his noble master, a torrent rush from the archway, full of dim
+figures, wallowing and shouting. The same moment they all vanished, and
+the flood poured into the hall, wetting him to the knees, and almost
+carrying him off his legs.
+
+Here the marquis professed profound astonishment, remarking that the
+water must indeed have been thickened with devils to be able to lay hold
+of Tom's legs.
+
+'Then,' pursued Tom, reviving a little, 'I summoned up all my courage--'
+
+'No great feat,' said the marquis.
+
+But Tom went on unabashed.
+
+'I summoned up the whole of my courage,' he repeated, 'stepped out of
+the hall, carefully examined the ground, looked through the archway, saw
+nothing, and was walking slowly across the court to my lodging,
+pondering with myself whether to call my lord governor or sir Toby
+Mathews, when I heard your lordship call me.'
+
+'Tom! Tom! thou liest,' said the marquis. 'Thou wast running as if all
+the devils in hell had been at thy heels.'
+
+Tom turned deadly pale, a fresh access of terror overcoming his new-born
+hardihood.
+
+'Who were they, thinkest thou, whom thou sawest in the water, Tom?'
+resumed his master. 'For what didst thou take them?'
+
+Tom shook his head with an awful significance, looked behind him, and
+said nothing.
+
+Perceiving there was no more to be got out of him, the marquis sent him
+to bed. He went off shivering and shaking. Three times ere he reached
+the watch-tower his face gleamed white over his shoulder as he went. The
+next day he did not appear. He thought himself he was doomed, but his
+illness was only the prostration following upon terror.
+
+In the version of the story which he gave his fellow-servants, he
+doubtless mingled the after visions of his bed with what he had when
+half-awake seen and heard through the mists of his startled imagination.
+His tale was this--that he saw the moat swell and rise, boil over in a
+mass, and tumble into the court as full of devils as it could hold,
+swimming in it, floating on it, riding it aloft as if it had been a
+horse; that in a moment they had all vanished again, and that he had not
+a doubt the castle was now swarming with them--in fact, he had heard
+them all the night long.
+
+The marquis walked up to the archway, saw nothing save the grim wall of
+the keep, impassive as granite crag, and the ground wet a long way
+towards the white horse; and never doubting he had lost his chance by
+taking Tom for the culprit, contented himself with the reflection that,
+whoever the night-walkers were, they had received both a fright and a
+ducking, and betook himself to bed, where, falling asleep at length, he
+saw little Molly in the arms of mother Mary, who, presently changing to
+his own lady Anne that left him about a year before little Molly came,
+held out a hand to him to help him up beside them, whereupon the bubble
+sleep, unable to hold the swelling of his gladness, burst, and he woke
+just as the first rays of the sun smote the gilded cock on the
+bell-tower.
+
+The noise of the falling drawbridge and the out-rushing water had roused
+Dorothy also, with most of the lighter sleepers in the castle; but when
+she and all the rest whose windows were to the fountain court, ran to
+them and looked out, they saw nothing but the flight of Tom Fool across
+the turf, its arrest by his master, and their following conference. The
+moon had broken through the clouds, and there was no mistaking either of
+their persons.
+
+Meantime, inside the chapel door stood Amanda and Rowland, both
+dripping, and one of them crying as well. Thither, as into a safe
+harbour, the sudden flood had cast them; and it indicated no small
+amount of ready faculty in Scudamore that, half-stunned as he was, he
+yet had the sense, almost ere he knew where he was, to put up the long
+bar that secured the door.
+
+All the time that the marquis was drawing his story from Tom, they stood
+trembling, in great bewilderment yet very sensible misery, bruised,
+drenched, and horribly frightened, more even at what might be than by
+what had been. There was only one question, but that was hard to answer:
+what were they to do next? Amanda could contribute nothing towards its
+solution, for tears and reproaches resolve no enigmas. There were many
+ways of issue, whereof Rowland knew several; but their watery trail, if
+soon enough followed, would be their ruin as certainly as
+Hop-o'-my-Thumb's pebbles were safety to himself and his brothers. He
+stood therefore the very bond slave of perplexity, 'and, like a neutral
+to his will and matter, did nothing.'
+
+Presently they heard the approaching step of the marquis, which every
+one in the castle knew. It stopped within a few feet of them, and
+through the thick door they could hear his short asthmatic breathing.
+
+They kept as still as their trembling, and the mad beating of their
+hearts, would permit. Amanda was nearly out of her senses, and thought
+her heart was beating against the door, and not against her own ribs.
+But the marquis never thought of the chapel, having at once concluded
+that they had fled through the open hall. Had he not, however, been so
+weary and sad and listless, he would probably have found them, for he
+would at least have crossed the hall to look into the next court, and,
+the moon now shining brightly, the absence of all track on the floor
+where the traces of the brief inundation ceased, would have surely
+indicated the direction in which they had sought refuge.
+
+The acme of terror happily endured but a moment. The sound of his
+departing footsteps took the ghoul from their hearts; they began to
+breathe, and to hope that the danger was gone. But they waited long ere
+at last they ventured, like wild animals overtaken by the daylight, to
+creep out of their shelter and steal back like shadows--but separately,
+Amanda first, and Scudamore some slow minutes after--to their different
+quarters. The tracks they could not help leaving in-doors were dried up
+before the morning.
+
+Rowland had greater reason to fear discovery than any one else in the
+castle, save one, would in like circumstances have had, and that one was
+his bedfellow in the ante-chamber to his master's bedroom. Through this
+room his lordship had to pass to reach his own; but so far was he from
+suspecting Rowland, or indeed any gentleman of his retinue, that he
+never glanced in the direction of his bed, and so could not discover
+that he was absent from it. Had Rowland but caught a glimpse of his own
+figure as he sneaked into that room five minutes after the marquis had
+passed through it, believing his master was still in his study, where he
+had left his candles burning, he could hardly for some time have had his
+usual success in regarding himself as a fine gentleman.
+
+Amanda Serafina did not show herself for several days. A bad cold in her
+head luckily afforded sufficient pretext for the concealment of a bad
+bruise upon her cheek. Other bruises she had also, but they, although
+more severe, were of less consequence.
+
+For a whole fortnight the lovers never dared exchange a word.
+
+In the morning the marquis was in no mood to set any inquiry on foot.
+His little lamb had vanished from his fold, and he was sad and lonely.
+Had it been otherwise, possibly the shabby doublet in which Scudamore
+stood behind his chair the next morning, might have set him thinking;
+but as it was, it fell in so well with the gloom in which his own spirit
+shrouded everything, that he never even marked the change, and ere long
+Rowland began to feel himself safe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+AMANDA--DOROTHY--LORD HERBERT.
+
+
+So also did Amanda; but not the less did she cherish feelings of revenge
+against her whom she more than suspected of having been the contriver of
+her harmful discomfiture. She felt certain that Dorothy had laid the
+snare into which they had fallen, with the hope if not the certainty of
+catching just themselves two in it, and she read in her, therefore,
+jealousy and cruelty as well as coldness and treachery. Rowland on the
+other hand was inclined to attribute the mishap to the displeasure of
+lord Herbert, whose supernatural acquirements, he thought, had enabled
+him both to discover and punish their intrusion. Amanda, nevertheless,
+kept her own opinion, and made herself henceforth all eyes and ears for
+Dorothy, hoping ever to find a chance of retaliating, if not in kind yet
+in plentiful measure of vengeance. Dorothy's odd ways, lawless
+movements, and what the rest of the ladies counted her vulgar tastes,
+had for some time been the subject of remark to the gossiping portion of
+the castle community; and it seemed to Amanda that in watching and
+discovering what she was about when she supposed herself safe from the
+eyes of her equals and superiors, lay her best chance of finding a mode
+of requital. Nor was she satisfied with observation, but kept her mind
+busy on the trail, now of one, now of another vague-bodied revenge.
+
+The charge of low tastes was founded upon the fact that there was not an
+artisan about the castle, from Caspar downwards, whom Dorothy did not
+know and address by his name; but her detractors, in drawing their
+conclusions from it, never thought of finding any related significance
+in another fact, namely, that there was not a single animal either, of
+consequence enough to have a name, which did not know by it. There were
+very few of the animals indeed which did not know her in return, if not
+by her name, yet by her voice or her presence--some of them even by her
+foot or her hand. She would wander about the farmyard and stables for an
+hour at a time, visiting all that were there, and specially her little
+horse, which she had long, oh, so long ago! named Dick, nor had taken
+his name from him any more than from Marquis.
+
+The charge of lawlessness in her movements was founded on another fact
+as well, namely, that she was often seen in the court after dusk, and
+that not merely in running across to the keep, as she would be doing at
+all hours, but loitering about, in full view of the windows. It was not
+denied that this took place only when the organ was playing--but then
+who played the organ? Was not the poor afflicted boy, barring the blank
+of his eyes, beautiful as an angel? And was not mistress Dorothy too
+deep to be fathomed? And so the tattling streams flowed on, and the ears
+of mistress Amanda willingly listened to their music, nor did she
+disdain herself to contribute to the reservoir in which those of the
+castle whose souls thirsted after the minutiae of live biography,
+accumulated their stores of fact and fiction, conjecture and falsehood.
+
+Lord Herbert came home to bury his little one, and all that was left
+behind of her was borne to the church of St. Cadocus, the parish church
+of Raglan, and there laid beside the marquis's father and mother. He
+remained with them a fortnight, and his presence was much needed to
+lighten the heavy gloom that had settled over both his wife and his
+father.
+
+As if it were not enough to bury the bodies of the departed, there are
+many, and the marquis and his daughter-in-law were of the number, who in
+a sense seek to bury their souls as well, making a graveyard of their
+own spirits, and laying the stone of silence over the memory of the
+dead. Such never speak of them but when compelled, and then almost as if
+to utter their names were an act of impiety. Not In Memoriam but In
+Oblivionem should be the inscription upon the tombs they raise. The
+memory that forsakes the sunlight, like the fishes in the underground
+river, loses its eyes; the cloud of its grief carries no rainbow; behind
+the veil of its twin-future burns no lamp fringing its edges with the
+light of hope. I can better, however, understand the hopelessness of the
+hopeless than their calmness along with it. Surely they must be upheld
+by the presence within them of that very immortality, against whose
+aurora they shut to their doors, then mourn as if there were no such
+thing.
+
+Radiant as she was by nature, lady Margaret, when sorrow came, could do
+little towards her own support. The marquis said to himself, 'I am
+growing old, and cannot smile at grief so well as once on a day. Sorrow
+is a hawk more fell than I had thought.' The name of little Molly was
+never mentioned between them. But sudden floods of tears were the signs
+of the mother's remembrance; and the outbreak of ambushed sighs, which
+he would make haste to attribute to the gout, the signs of the
+grandfather's.
+
+Dorothy, too, belonged in tendency to the class of the unspeaking. Her
+nature was not a bright one. Her spirit's day was evenly, softly lucent,
+like one of those clouded calm grey mornings of summer, which seem more
+likely to end in rain than sunshine.
+
+Lord Herbert was of a very different temperament. He had hope enough in
+his one single nature to serve the whole castle, if only it could have
+been shared. The veil between him and the future glowed as if on fire
+with mere radiance, and about to vanish in flame. It was not that he
+more than one of the rest imagined he could see through it. For him it
+was enough that beyond it lay the luminous. His eyes, to those that
+looked on him, were lighted with its reflex.
+
+Such as he, are, by those who love them not, misjudged as shallow. Depth
+to some is indicated by gloom, and affection by a persistent
+brooding--as if there were no homage to the past of love save sighs and
+tears. When they meet a man whose eyes shine, whose step is light, on
+whose lips hovers a smile, they shake their heads and say, 'There goes
+one who has never loved, and who therefore knows not sorrow.' And the
+man is one of those over whom death has no power; whom time nor space
+can part from those he loves; who lives in the future more than in the
+past! Has not his being ever been for the sake of that which was yet to
+come? Is not his being now for the sake of that which it shall be? Has
+he not infinitely more to do with the great future than the little past?
+The Past has descended into hell, is even now ascending glorified, and
+will, in returning cycle, ever and again greet our faith as the more and
+yet more radiant Future.
+
+But even lord Herbert had his moments of sad longing after his dainty
+Molly. Such moments, however, came to him, not when he was at home with
+his wife, but when he rode alone by his troops on a night march, or
+when, upon the eve of an expected battle, he sought sleep that he might
+fight the better on the morrow.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+THE GREAT MOGUL.
+
+
+One evening, Tom Fool, and a groom, his particular friend, were taking
+their pastime after a somewhat selfish fashion, by no means newly
+discovered in the castle--that of teasing the wild beasts. There was one
+in particular, a panther, which, in a special dislike to grimaces, had
+discovered a special capacity for being teased. Betwixt two of the bars
+of his cage, therefore, Tom was busy presenting him with one hideous
+puritanical face after another, in full expectation of a satisfactory
+outburst of feline rancour. But to their disappointment, the panther on
+this occasion seemed to have resolved upon a dignified resistance to
+temptation, and had withdrawn in sultry displeasure to the back of his
+cage, where he lay sideways, deigning to turn neither his back nor his
+face towards the inferior animal, at whom to cast but one glance, he
+knew, would be to ruin his grand Oriental sulks, and fly at the hideous
+ape-visage insulting him in his prison. It was tiresome of the brute.
+Tom Fool grew more daring and threw little stones at him, but the
+panther seemed only to grow the more imperturbable, and to heed his
+missiles as little as his grimaces.
+
+At length, proceeding from bad to worse, as is always the way with
+fools, born or made, Tom betook himself to stronger measures.
+
+The cages of the wild beasts were in the basement of the kitchen tower,
+with a little semicircular yard of their own before them. They were
+solid stone vaults, with open fronts grated with huge iron bars--our
+ancestors, whatever were their faults, did not err in the direction of
+flimsiness. Between two of these bars, then, Tom, having procured a long
+pole, proceeded to poke at the beast; but he soon found that the pole
+thickened too rapidly towards the end he held, to pass through the bars
+far enough to reach him. Thereupon, in utter fool-hardiness, backed by
+the groom, he undid the door a little way, and, his companion
+undertaking to prevent it from opening too far, pushed in the pole till
+it went right in the creature's face. One hideous yell--and neither of
+them knew what was occurring till they saw the tail of the panther
+disappearing over the six-foot wall that separated the cages from the
+stableyard. Tom fled at once for the stair leading up to the
+stone-court, while the groom, whose training had given him a better
+courage, now supplemented by the horror of possible consequences, ran to
+warn the stablemen and get help to recapture the animal.
+
+The uproariest tumult of maddest barking which immediately arose from
+the chained dogs, entered the ears of all in the castle, at least every
+one possessed of dog-sympathies, and penetrated even those of the rather
+deaf host of the White Horse in Raglan village. Dorothy, sitting in her
+room, of course, heard it, and hearing it, equally of course, hurried to
+see what was the matter. The marquis heard it where he sat in his study,
+but was in no such young haste as Dorothy: it was only after a little,
+when he found the noise increase, and certain other sounds mingle with
+it, that he rose in some anxiety and went to discover the cause.
+
+Halfway across the stone court, Dorothy met Tom running, and the moment
+she saw his face, knew that something serious had happened.
+
+'Get indoors, mistress,' he said, almost rudely, 'the devil is to pay
+down in the yard.' and ran on. 'Shut your door, master cook,' she heard
+him cry as he ran. 'The Great Mogul is out.'
+
+And as she ran too, she heard the door of the kitchen close with a great
+bang.
+
+But Dorothy was not running after the fool, or making for any door but
+that at the bottom of the library tower; for the first terror that
+crossed her mind was the possible fate of Dick, and the first comfort
+that followed, the thought of Marquis; so she was running straight for
+the stable-yard, where the dogs, to judge by the way they tore their
+throats with barking, seemed frantic with rage.
+
+No doubt the panther, when he cleared the wall, hoped exultant to find
+himself in the savage forest, instead of which he came down on the top
+of a pump, fell on the stones, and the same instant was caught in a
+hurricane of canine hate. A little hurt and a good deal frightened, for
+he had not endured such long captivity without debasement, he glared
+around him with sneaking enquiry. But the walls were lofty and he saw no
+gate, and feeling unequal at the moment to the necessary spring, he
+crept almost like a snake under what covert seemed readiest, and
+disappeared--just as the groom entering by a door in one of the walls
+began to look about for him in a style wherein caution predominated.
+Seeing no trace of him, and concluding that, as he had expected, the
+clamour of the dogs had driven him further, he went on, crossing the
+yard to find the men, whose voices he heard on the green at the back of
+the rick-yard, when suddenly he found that his arm was both broken and
+torn. The sight of the blood completed the mischief, and he fell down in
+a swoon.
+
+Meantime Dorothy had reached the same door in the wall of the
+stableyard, and peeping in saw nothing but the dogs raging and RUGGING
+at their chains as if they would drag the earth itself after them to
+reach the enemy. She was one of those on whose wits, usually sedate in
+their motions, all sorts of excitement, danger amongst the rest, operate
+favourably. When she specially noticed the fury of Marquis, the same
+moment she perceived the danger in which he, that was, all the dogs,
+would be, if the panther should attack them one by one on the chain; not
+one of them had a chance. With the thought, she sped across the space
+between her and Marquis, who--I really cannot say WHICH concerning such
+a dog--was fortunately not very far from the door. Feeling him a little
+safer now that she stood by his side, she resumed her ocular search for
+the panther, or any further sign of his proximity, but with one hand on
+the dog's collar, ready in an instant to seize it with both, and unclasp
+it.
+
+Nor had she to look long, for all the dogs were straining their chains
+in one direction, and all their lines converged upon a little dark shed,
+where stood a cart: under the cart, between its lower shafts, she caught
+a doubtful luminousness, as if the dark while yet dark had begun to
+throb with coming light. This presently seemed to resolve itself, and
+she saw, vaguely but with conviction, two huge lamping cat-eyes. I will
+not say she felt no fear, but she was not terrified, for she had great
+confidence in Marquis. One moment she stood bethinking herself, and one
+glance she threw at the spot where her mastiff's chain was attached to
+his collar: she would fain have had him keep the latter to defend his
+neck and throat: but alas! it was as she knew well enough before--the
+one was riveted to the other, and the two must go together.
+
+And now first, as she raised her head from the momentary inspection, she
+saw the groom lying on the ground within a few yards of the shed. Her
+first thought was that the panther had killed him, but ere a second had
+time to rise in her mind, she saw the terrible animal creeping out from
+under the cart, with his chin on the ground, like the great cat he was,
+and making for the man.
+
+The brute had got the better of his fall, and finding he was not
+pursued, the barking of the dogs, to which in moderation he was
+sufficiently accustomed, had ceased to confuse him, he had recovered his
+awful self, and was now scenting prey. Had the man made a single
+movement he would have been upon him like lightning; but the few moments
+he took in creeping towards him, gave Dorothy all the time she needed.
+With resolute, though trembling hands, she undid Marquis's collar.
+
+The instant he was free, the fine animal went at the panther straight
+and fast like a bolt from a cross-bow. But Dorothy loved him too well to
+lose a moment in sending even a glance after him. Leaving him to his
+work, she flew to hers, which lay at the next kennel, that of an Irish
+wolf-hound, whose curling lip showed his long teeth to the very root,
+and whose fury had redoubled at the sight of his rival shooting past him
+free for the fight. So wildly did he strain upon his collar, that she
+found it took all her strength to unclasp it. In a much shorter time,
+however, than she fancied, O'Brien too was on the panther, and the
+sounds of cano-feline battle seemed to fill every cranny of her brain.
+
+But now she heard the welcome cries of men and clatter of weapons. Some,
+alarmed by Tom Fool, came rushing from the guard-rooms down the stair,
+and others, chiefly farm-servants and grooms, who had heard the
+frightful news from two that were in the yard when the panther bounded
+over the wall, were approaching from the opposite side, armed with
+scythes and pitchforks, the former more dangerous to their bearers than
+to the beast.
+
+Dorothy, into whom, girl as she was, either Bellona or Diana, or both,
+had entered, was now thoroughly excited by the conflict she ruled,
+although she had not wasted a moment in watching it. Having just undone
+the collar of the fourth dog, she was hounding him on with a cry, little
+needed, as she flew to let go the fifth, a small bull-terrier, mad with
+rage and jealousy, when the crowd swept between her and her game. The
+beast was captured, and the dogs taken off him, ere the terrier had had
+a taste or Dorothy a glimpse of the battle.
+
+As the men with cart-ropes dragged the panther away, terribly torn by
+the teeth of the dogs, and Tom Fool was following them, with his hands
+in his pockets, looking sheepish because of the share he had had in
+letting him loose, and the share he had not had in securing him again,
+Dorothy was looking about for her friend Marquis. All at once he came
+bounding up to her, and, exultant in the sense of accomplished duty,
+leaped up against her, at once turning her into a sanguineous object
+frightful to behold; for his wounds were bad, although none of them were
+serious except one in his throat. This upon examination she found so
+severe that to replace his collar was out of the question. Telling him
+therefore to follow her, in the confidence that she might now ask for
+him what she would, she left the yard, went up the stair, and was
+crossing the stone court with the trusty fellow behind her, making a red
+track all the way, when out of the hall came the marquis, looking a
+little frightened. He started when he saw her, and turned pale, but
+perceiving instantly from her look that, notwithstanding the condition
+of her garments, she was unhurt, he cast a glance at her now rather
+disreputable-looking attendant, and said,
+
+'I told you so, mistress Dorothy! Now I understand! It is that precious
+mastiff of yours, and no panther of mine, that has been making this
+uproar in my quiet house! Nay, but he looks evil enough for any devil's
+work! Prithee keep him off me.'
+
+He drew back, for the dog, not liking the tone in which he addressed his
+mistress, had taken a step nearer to him.
+
+'My lord,' said Dorothy, as she laid hold of the animal, for the first
+and only time in her life a little inclined to be angry with her
+benefactor, 'you do my poor Marquis wrong. At the risk of his own life
+he has just saved your lordship's groom, Shafto, from being torn in
+pieces by the Great Mogul.'
+
+While she spoke, some of those of the garrison who had been engaged in
+securing the animal came up into the court, and attracted the marquis's
+attraction by their approach, which, in the relaxation of discipline
+consequent on excitement, was rather tumultuous. At their head was lord
+Charles, who had led them to the capture, and without whose ruling
+presence the enemy would not have been re-caged in twice the time. As
+they drew near, and saw Dorothy stand in battle-plight, with her dog
+beside her, even in their lord's presence they could not resist the
+impulse to cheer her. Annoyed at their breach of manners, the marquis
+had not however committed himself to displeasure ere he spied a joke:
+
+'I told you so, mistress Dorothy!' he said again. 'That rival of mine
+has, as I feared, already made a party against me. You see how my own
+knaves, before my very face, cheer my enemy! I presume, my lord,' he
+went on, turning to the mastiff, and removing his hat, 'it will be my
+wisdom to resign castle and title at once, and so forestall deposition.'
+
+Marquis replied with a growl, and amidst subdued yet merry laughter,
+lord Charles hastened to enlighten his father.
+
+'My lord,' he said, 'the dog has done nobly as ever dog, and deserves
+reward, not mockery, which it is plain he understands, and likes not.
+But it was not the mastiff, it was his fair mistress I and my men
+presumed on saluting in your lordship's presence. No dog ever yet shook
+off collar of Cranford's forging; nor is Marquis the only dog that
+merits your lordship's acknowledgment: O'Brien and Tom Fool--the
+lurcher, I mean--seconded him bravely, and perhaps Strafford did best of
+all.'
+
+'Prithee, now, take me with thee,' said the marquis. 'Was, or was not
+the Great Mogul forth of his cage?'
+
+'Indeed he was, my lord, and might be now in the fields but for cousin
+Vaughan there by your side.'
+
+The marquis turned and looked at her, but in his astonishment said
+nothing, and lord Charles went on.
+
+'When we got into the yard, there was the Great Mogul with three dogs
+upon him, and mistress Dorothy uncollaring Tom Fool and hounding him at
+the devilish brute; while poor Shafto, just waking up, lay on the
+stones, about three yards off the combat. It was the finest thing I ever
+saw, my lord.'
+
+The marquis turned again to Dorothy, and stared without speech or
+motion.
+
+'Mean you--?' he said at length, addressing lord Charles, but still
+staring at Dorothy; 'Mean you--?' he said again, half stammering, and
+still staring.
+
+'I mean, my lord,' answered his son, 'that mistress Dorothy, with
+self-shown courage, and equal judgment as to time and order of attack,
+when Tom Fool had fled, and poor Shafto, already evil torn, had swooned
+from loss of blood, came to the rescue, stood her ground, and loosed dog
+after dog, her own first, upon the animal. And, by heaven! it is all
+owing to her that he is already secured and carried back to his cage,
+nor any great harm done save to the groom and the dogs, of which poor
+Strafford hath a hind leg crushed by the jaws of the beast, and must be
+killed.'
+
+'He shall live,' cried the marquis, 'as long as he hath legs enough to
+eat and sleep with. Mistress Dorothy,' he went on, turning to her once
+more, 'what is thy request? It shall be performed even to the half
+of--of my marquisate.'
+
+'My lord,' returned Dorothy, 'it is a small deed I have strewn to gather
+such weighty thanks.'
+
+'Be honest as well as brave, mistress. Mock me no modesty.' said the
+marquis a little roughly.
+
+'Indeed, my lord, I but spoke as I deemed. The thing HAD to be done, and
+I did but do it. Had there been room to doubt, and I had yet done well,
+then truly I might have earned your lordship's thanks. But good my lord,
+do not therefore recall the word spoken,' she added hurriedly, 'but
+grant me my boon. Your lordship sees my poor dog can endure no collar:
+let him therefore be my chamber-fellow until his throat be healed, when
+I shall again submit him to your lordship's mandate.'
+
+'What you will, cousin. He is a noble fellow, and hath a right noble
+mistress.'
+
+'Will you then, my lord Charles, order a bucket of water to be drawn for
+me, that I may wash his wounds ere I take him to my chamber?'
+
+Ten men at the word flew to the draw-well, but lord Charles ordered them
+all back to the guard-room, except two whom he sent to fetch a tub. With
+his own hands he then drew three bucketfuls of water, which he poured
+into the tub, and by the side of the well, in the open paved court,
+Dorothy washed her four-legged hero, and then retired with him, to do a
+like office for herself.
+
+The marquis stood for some time in the gathering dusk, looking on, and
+smiling to see how the sullen animal allowed his mistress to handle even
+his wounds without a whine, not to say a growl, at the pain she must
+have caused him.
+
+'I see, I see!' he said at length, 'I have no chance with a rival like
+that!' and turning away he walked slowly into the oak parlour, threw
+himself down in his great chair, and sat there, gazing at the eyeless
+face of the keep, but thinking all the time of the courage and patience
+of his rival, the mastiff.
+
+'God made us both,' he said at length, 'and he can grant me patience as
+well as him;' and so saying he went to bed.
+
+His washing over, the dog showed himself much exhausted, and it was with
+hanging head he followed his mistress up the grand staircase and the
+second spiral one that led yet higher to her chamber. Thither presently
+came lady Elizabeth, carrying a cushion and a deerskin for him to lie
+upon, and it was with much apparent satisfaction that the wounded and
+wearied animal, having followed his tail but one turn, dropped like a
+log on his well-earned couch.
+
+The night was hot, and Dorothy fell asleep with her door wide open.
+
+In the morning Marquis was nowhere to be found. Dorothy searched for him
+everywhere, but in vain.
+
+'It is because you mocked him, my lord,' said the governor to his father
+at breakfast. 'I doubt not he said to himself, "If I AM a dog, my lord
+need not have mocked me, for I could not help it, and I did my duty."'
+
+'I would make him an apology,' returned the marquis, 'an' I had but the
+opportunity. Truly it were evil minded knowingly to offer insult to any
+being capable of so regarding it. But, Charles, I bethink me: didst ever
+learn how our friend got into the castle? It was assuredly thy part to
+discover that secret.'
+
+'No, my lord. It hath never been found out in so far as I know.'
+
+'That is an unworthy answer, lord Charles. As governor of the castle,
+you ought to have had the matter thoroughly searched into.'
+
+'I will see to it now, my lord,' said the governor, rising.
+
+'Do, my lad,' returned his father.
+
+And lord Charles did inquire; but not a ray of light did he succeed in
+letting in upon the mystery. The inquiry might, however, have lasted
+longer and been more successful, had not lord Herbert just then come
+home, with the welcome news of the death of Hampden, from a wound
+received in attacking prince Rupert at Chalgrove. He brought news also
+of prince Maurice's brave fight at Bath, and lord Wilmot's victory over
+sir William Waller at Devizes--which latter, lord Herbert confessed,
+yielded him some personal satisfaction, seeing he owed Waller more
+grudges than as a Christian he had well known how to manage: now he was
+able to bear him a less bitter animosity. The queen, too, had reached
+Oxford, bringing large reinforcement to her husband, and prince Rupert
+had taken Bristol, castle and all. Things were looking mighty hopeful,
+lord Herbert was radiant, and lady Margaret, for the first time since
+Molly's death, was merry. The castle was illuminated, and Marquis
+forgotten by all but Dorothy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+RICHARD HEYWOOD.
+
+
+So things looked ill for the puritans in general, and Richard Heywood
+had his full portion in the distribution of the evils allotted them.
+Following lord Fairfax, he had shared his defeat by the marquis of
+Newcastle on Atherton moor, where of his score of men he lost five, and
+was, along with his mare, pretty severely wounded. Hence it had become
+absolutely necessary for both of them, if they were to render good
+service at any near future, that they should have rest and tending.
+Towards the middle of July, therefore, Richard, followed by Stopchase,
+and several others of his men who had also been wounded and were in need
+of nursing, rode up to his father's door. Lady was taken off to her own
+stall, and Richard was led into the house by his father--without a word
+of tenderness, but with eyes and hands that waited and tended like those
+of a mother.
+
+Roger Heywood was troubled in heart at the aspect of affairs. There was
+now a strong peace-party in the parliament, and to him peace and ruin
+seemed the same thing. If the parliament should now listen to overtures
+of accommodation, all for which he and those with whom he chiefly
+sympathised had striven, was in the greatest peril, and might be, if not
+irrecoverably lost, at least lost sight of, perhaps for a century. The
+thing that mainly comforted him in his anxiety was that his son had
+showed himself worthy, not merely in the matter of personal courage,
+which he took as a thing of course in a Heywood, but in his
+understanding of and spiritual relation to the questions really at
+issue,--not those only which filled the mouths of men. For the best men
+and the weightiest questions are never seen in the forefront of the
+battle of their time, save by "larger other eyes than ours."
+
+But now, from his wounds, as he thought, and the depression belonging to
+the haunting sense of defeat, a doubt had come to life in Richard's
+mind, which, because it was born IN weakness, he very pardonably looked
+upon as born OF weakness, and therefore regarded as itself weak and
+cowardly, whereas his mood had been but the condition that favoured its
+development. It came and came again, maugre all his self-recrimination
+because of it: what was all this fighting for? It was well indeed that
+nor king nor bishop should interfere with a man's rights, either in
+matters of taxation or worship, but the war could set nothing right
+either betwixt him and his neighbour, or betwixt him and his God.
+
+There was in the mind of Richard, innate, but more rapidly developed
+since his breach with Dorothy, a strong tendency towards the
+supernatural--I mean by the word that which neither any one of the
+senses nor all of them together, can reveal. He was one of those young
+men, few, yet to be found in all ages of the world's history, who, in
+health and good earthly hope, and without any marked poetic or
+metaphysical tendency, yet know in their nature the need of conscious
+communion with the source of that nature--truly the veriest absurdity if
+there be no God, but as certainly the most absolute necessity of
+conscious existence if there be a first life from whom our life is born.
+
+'Am I not free now?' he said to himself, as he lay on his bed in his own
+gable of the many-nooked house; 'Am I not free to worship God as I
+please? Who will interfere with me? Who can prevent me? As to form and
+ceremony, what are they, or what is the absence of them, to the worship
+in which my soul seeks to go forth? What the better shall I be when all
+this is over, even if the best of our party carry the day? Will Cromwell
+rend for me the heavy curtain, which, ever as I lift up my heart, seems
+to come rolling down between me and him whom I call my God? If I could
+pass within that curtain, what would Charles, or Laud, or Newcastle, or
+the mighty Cromwell himself and all his Ironsides be to me? Am I not on
+the wrong road for the high peak?'
+
+But then he thought of others--of the oppressed and the superstitious,
+of injustice done and not endured--not wrapt in the pearly antidote of
+patience, but rankling in the soul; of priests who, knowing not God,
+substituted ceremonies for prayer, and led the seeking heart afar from
+its goal--and said that his arm could at least fight for the truth in
+others, if only his heart could fight for the truth in himself. No; he
+would go on as he had begun; for, might it not be the part of him who
+could take the form of an angel of light when he would deceive, to make
+use of inward truths, which might well be the strength of his own soul,
+to withdraw him from the duties he owed to others, and cause the heart
+of devotion to paralyze the arm of battle? Besides, was he not now in a
+low physical condition, and therefore the less likely to judge truly
+with regard to affairs of active outer life? His business plainly was to
+gain strength of body, that the fumes of weakness might no longer cloud
+his brain, and that, if he had to die for the truth, whether in others
+or in himself, he might die in power, like the blast of an exploding
+mine, and not like the flame of an expiring lamp. And certainly, as his
+body grew stronger, and the impulses to action, so powerful in all
+healthy youth, returned, his doubts grew weaker, and he became more and
+more satisfied that he had been in the right path.
+
+Lady outstripped her master in the race for health, and after a few days
+had oats and barley in a profusion which, although far from careless,
+might well have seemed to her unlimited. Twice every day, sometimes
+oftener, Richard went to see her, and envied the rapidity of her
+recovery from the weakness which scanty rations, loss of blood, and the
+inflammation of her wounds had caused. Had there been any immediate call
+for his services, however, that would have brought his strength with it.
+Had the struggle been still going on upon the fields of battle instead
+of in the houses of words, he would have been well in half the time. But
+Waller and Essex were almost without an army between them, and were at
+bitter strife with each other, while the peace-party seemed likely to
+carry everything before them, women themselves presenting a petition for
+peace, and some of them using threats to support it.
+
+At length, chiefly through the exertions of the presbyterian preachers
+and the common council of the city of London, the peace-party was
+defeated, and a vigorous levying and pressing of troops began anew. So
+the hour had come for Richard to mount. His men were all in health and
+spirits, and their vacancies had been filled up. Lady was frolicsome,
+and Richard was perfectly well.
+
+The day before they were to start he took the mare out for a gallop
+across the fields. Never had he known her so full of life. She rushed at
+hedge and ditch as if they had been squares of royalist infantry. Her
+madness woke the fervour of battle in Richard's own veins, and as they
+swept along together, it grew until he felt like one of the Arabs of
+old, flashing to the harvest field of God, where the corn to be reaped
+was the lives of infidels, and the ears to be gleaned were the heads of
+the fallen. That night he scarcely slept for eagerness to be gone.
+
+Waking early from what little sleep he had had, he dressed and armed
+himself hurriedly, and ran to the stables, where already his men were
+bustling about getting their horses ready for departure.
+
+Lady had a loose box for herself, and thither straight her master went,
+wondering as he opened the door of it that he did not hear usual morning
+welcome. The place was empty. He called Stopchase.
+
+'Where is my mare?' he said. 'Surely no one has been fool enough to take
+her to the water just as we are going to start.'
+
+Stopchase stood and stared without reply, then turned and left the
+stable, but came back almost immediately, looking horribly scared. Lady
+was nowhere to be seen or heard. Richard rushed hither and thither,
+storming. Not a man about the place could give him a word of
+enlightenment. All knew she was in that box the night before; none knew
+when she left it or where she was now.
+
+He ran to his father, but all his father could see or say was no more
+than was plain to every one: the mare had been carried off in the night,
+and that with a skill worthy of a professional horse-thief.
+
+What now was the poor fellow to do? If I were to tell the truth--namely,
+that he wept--so courageous are the very cowards of this century that
+they would sneer at him; but I do tell it notwithstanding, for I have
+little regard to the opinion of any man who sneers. Whatever he may or
+may not have been as a man, Richard felt but half a soldier without his
+mare, and, his country calling him, oppressed humanity crying aloud for
+his sword and arm, his men waiting for him, and Lady gone, what was he
+to do?
+
+'Never heed, Dick, my boy,' said his father.--It was the first time
+since he had put on man's attire that he had called him Dick,--'Thou
+shalt have my Oliver. He is a horse of good courage, as thou knowest,
+and twice the weight of thy little mare.'
+
+'Ah, father! you do not know Lady so well as I. Not Cromwell's best
+horse could comfort me for her. I MUST find her. Give me leave, sir; I
+must go and think. I cannot mount and ride, and leave her I know not
+where. Go I will, if it be on a broomstick, but this morning I ride not.
+Let the men put up their horses, Stopchase, and break their fast.'
+
+'It is a wile of the enemy,' said Stopchase. 'Truly, it were no marvel
+to me were the good mare at this moment eating her oats in the very
+stall where we have even but now in vain sought her. I will go and
+search for her with my hands.'
+
+'Verily,' said Mr. Heywood with a smile, 'to fear the devil is not to
+run from him!--How much of her hay hath she eaten, Stopchase?' he added,
+as the man returned with disconsolate look.
+
+'About a bottle, sir,' answered Stopchase, rather indefinitely; but the
+conclusion drawn was, that she had been taken very soon after the house
+was quiet.
+
+The fact was, that since the return of their soldiers, poor watch had
+been kept by the people of Redware. Increase of confidence had led to
+carelessness. Mr. Heywood afterwards made inquiry, and had small reason
+to be satisfied with what he discovered.
+
+'The thief must have been one who knew the place,' said Faithful.
+
+'Why dost thou think so?' asked his master.
+
+'How swooped he else so quietly upon the best animal, sir?' returned the
+man.
+
+'She was in the place of honour,' answered Mr. Heywood.
+
+'Scudamore!' said Richard to himself. It might be no light--only a flash
+in his brain. But that even was precious in the utter darkness.
+
+'Sir,' he said, turning to his father, 'I would I had a plan of Raglan
+stables.'
+
+'What wouldst thou an' thou hadst, my son?' asked Mr. Heywood.
+
+'Nay, sir, that wants thinking. But I believe my poor mare is at this
+moment in one of those vaults they tell us of.'
+
+'It may be, my son. It is reported that the earl hath of late been
+generous in giving of horses. Poor soldiers the king will find them that
+fight for horses, or titles either. Such will never stand before them
+that fight for the truth--in the love thereof! Eh, Richard?'
+
+'Truly, sir, I know not,' answered his son, disconsolately. 'I hope I
+love the truth, and I think so doth Stopchase, after his kind; and yet
+were we of those that fled from Atherton moor.'
+
+'Thou didst not flee until thou couldst no more, my son. It asketh
+greater courage of some men to flee when the hour of flight hath come,
+for they would rather fight on to the death than allow, if but to their
+own souls, that they are foiled. But a man may flee in faith as well as
+fight in faith, my son, and each is good in its season. There is a time
+for all things under the sun. In the end, when the end cometh, we shall
+see how it hath all gone. When, then, wilt thou ride?'
+
+'To-morrow, an' it please you, sir. I should fight but evil with the
+knowledge that I had left my best battle-friend in the hands of the
+Philistines, nor sent even a cry after her.'
+
+'What boots it, Richard? If she be within Raglan walls, they yield her
+not again. Bide thy time; and when thou meetest thy foe on thy friend's
+back, woe betide him!'
+
+'Amen, sir!' said Richard. 'But with your leave I will not go to-day. I
+give you my promise I will go to-morrow.'
+
+'Be it so, then. Stopchase, let the men be ready at this hour on the
+morrow. The rest of the day is their own.'
+
+So saying, Roger Heywood turned away, in no small distress, although he
+concealed it, both at the loss of the mare and his son's grief over it.
+Betaking himself to his study, he plunged himself straightway deep in
+the comfort of the last born and longest named of Milton's tracts.
+
+The moment he was gone, Richard, who had now made up his mind as to his
+first procedure, sent Stopchase away, saddled Oliver, rode slowly out of
+the yard, and struck across the fields. After a half-hour's ride he
+stopped at a lonely cottage at the foot of a rock on the banks of the
+Usk. There he dismounted, and having fastened his horse to the little
+gate in front, entered a small garden full of sweet-smelling herbs
+mingled with a few flowers, and going up to the door, knocked, and then
+lifted the latch.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+THE WITCH'S COTTAGE.
+
+
+Richard was met on the threshold by mistress Rees, in the same
+old-fashioned dress, all but the hat, which I have already described. On
+her head she wore a widow's cap, with large crown, thick frill, and
+black ribbon encircling it between them. She welcomed him with the
+kindness almost of an old nurse, and led the way to the one chair in the
+room--beside the hearth, where a fire of peat was smouldering rather
+than burning beneath the griddle, on which she was cooking oat-cake. The
+cottage was clean and tidy. From the smoky rafters hung many bunches of
+dried herbs, which she used partly for medicines, partly for charms.
+
+To herself, the line dividing these uses was not very clearly
+discernible.
+
+'I am in trouble, mistress Rees,' said Richard, as he seated himself.
+
+'Most men do be in trouble most times, master Heywood,' returned the old
+woman. 'Dost find thou hast taken the wrong part, eh?--There be no need
+to tell what aileth thee. 'Tis a bit easier to cast off a maiden than to
+forget her--eh?'
+
+'No, mistress Rees. I came not to trouble thee concerning what is past
+and gone,' said Richard with a sigh. 'It is a taste of thy knowledge I
+want rather than of thy skill.'
+
+'What skill I have is honest,' said the old woman.
+
+'Far be it from thee to say otherwise, mother Rees. But I need it not
+now. Tell me, hast thou not been once and again within the great gates
+of Raglan castle?'
+
+'Yes, my son--oftener than I can tell thee,' answered the old woman. 'It
+is but a se'night agone that I sat a talking with my son Thomas Rees in
+the chimney corner of Raglan kitchen, after the supper was served and
+the cook at rest. It was there my lad was turnspit once upon a time, for
+as great a man as he is now with my lord and all the household. Those
+were hard times after my good man left me, master Heywood. But the cream
+will to the top, and there is my son now--who but he in kitchen and
+hall? Well, of all places in the mortal world, that Raglan passes!'
+
+'They tell strange things of the stables there, mistress Rees: know you
+aught of them?'
+
+'Strange things, master? They tell nought but good of the stables that
+tell the truth. As to the armoury, now--well it is not for such as
+mother Rees to tell tales out of school.'
+
+'What I heard, and wanted to ask thee about, mother, was that they are
+under ground. Thinkest thou horses can fare well under ground? Thou
+knowest a horse as well as a dog, mother.'
+
+Ere she replied, the old woman took her cake from the griddle, and laid
+it on a wooden platter, then caught up a three-legged stool, set it down
+by Richard, seated herself at his knee, and assumed the look of mystery
+wherewith she was in the habit of garnishing every bit of knowledge,
+real or fancied, which it pleased her to communicate.
+
+'Hear me, and hold thy peace, master Richard Heywood,' she said. 'As
+good horses as ever stamped in Redware stables go down into Raglan
+vaults; but yet they eat their oats and their barley, and when they lift
+their heads they look out to the ends of the world. Whether it be by the
+skill of the mason or of such as the hidden art of my lord Herbert knows
+best how to compel, let them say that list to make foes where it were
+safer to have friends. But this I am free to tell thee--that in the
+pitched court, betwixt the antechamber to my lord's parlour that hath
+its windows to the moat, and the great bay window of the hall that looks
+into that court, there goeth a descent, as it seemeth of stairs only;
+but to him that knoweth how to pull a certain tricker, as of an
+harquebus or musquetoon, the whole thing turneth around, and straightway
+from a stair passeth into an easy matter of a sloping way by the which
+horses go up and down. And Thomas he telleth me also that at the further
+end of the vaults to which it leads, the which vaults pass under the
+marquis's oak parlour, and under all the breadth of the fountain court,
+as they do call the other court of the castle, thou wilt come to a great
+iron door in the foundations of one of the towers, in which my lord hath
+contrived stabling for a hundred and more horses, and that, mark my
+words, my son, not in any vault or underground dungeon, but in the
+uppermost chamber of all.'
+
+'And how do they get up there, mother?' asked Richard, who listened with
+all his ears.
+
+'Why, they go round and round, and ever the rounder the higher, as a fly
+might crawl up a corkscrew. And there is a stair also in the same screw,
+as it were, my Thomas do tell me, by which the people of the house do go
+up and down, and know nothing of the way for the horses within, neither
+of the stalls at the top of the tower, where they stand and see the
+country. Yet do they often marvel at the sounds of their hoofs, and
+their harness, and their cries, and their chumping of their corn. And
+that is how Raglan can send forth so many horseman for the use of the
+king. But alack, master Heywood! is it for a wise woman like myself to
+forget that thou art of the other part, and that these are secrets of
+state which scarce another in the castle but my son Thomas knoweth aught
+concerning! What will become of me that I have told them to a Heywood,
+being, as is well known, myself no more of a royalist than another?'
+
+And she regarded him a little anxiously.
+
+'What should it signify, mother,'' said Richard, 'so long as neither you
+nor I believe a word of it? Horses go up a tower to bed forsooth! Yet
+for the matter of that, I will engage to ride my mare up any corkscrew
+wide enough to turn her forelock and tail in--ay, and down again too,
+which is another business with most horses. But come now, mother Rees,
+confess this all a fable of thine own contriving to make a mock of a
+farm-bred lad like me.'
+
+'In good sooth, master Heywood,' answered the old woman, 'I tell the
+tale as 'twas told to me. I avouch it not for certain, knowing that my
+son Thomas hath a seething brain and loveth a joke passing well, nor
+heedeth greatly upon whom he putteth it, whether his master or his
+mother; but for the stair by the great hall window, that stair have I
+seen with mine own eyes, though for the horses to come and go thereby,
+that truly have I not seen. And for the rest I only say it may well be,
+for there is nothing of it all which the wise man, my lord Herbert,
+could not with a word--and that a light one for him to speak, though
+truly another might be torn to pieces in saying it.'
+
+'I would I might see the place!' murmured Richard.
+
+'An' it were not thou art such a--! But it boots not talking, master
+Heywood. Thou art too well known for a puritan--roundhead they call
+thee; and thou hast given them and theirs too many hard knocks, my son,
+to look they should be willing to let thee gaze on the wonders of their
+great house. Else, being that I am a friend to thee and thine, I would
+gladly--. But, as I say, it boots nothing--although I have a son, who
+being more of the king's part than I am--.'
+
+'Hast thou not then art enough, mother, to set me within Raglan walls
+for an hour or two after midnight? I ask no more,' said Richard, who,
+although he was but leading the way to quite another proposal, nor
+desired aid of art black or white, yet could not help a little tremor at
+making the bare suggestion of the unhallowed idea.
+
+'An' I had, I dared not use it,' answered the old woman; 'for is not my
+lord Herbert there? Were it not for him--well--. But I dare not, as I
+say, for his art is stronger than mine, and from his knowledge I could
+hide nothing. And I dare not for thy sake either, my young master. Once
+inside those walls of stone, those gates of oak, and those portcullises
+of iron, and thou comes not out alive again, I warrant thee.'
+
+'I should like to try once, though,' said Richard. 'Couldst thou not
+disguise me, mother Rees, and send me with a message to thy son?'
+
+'I tell thee, young master, I dare not,' answered the old woman, with
+utmost solemnity. 'And if I did, thy speech would presently bewray
+thee.'
+
+'I would then I knew that part of the wall a man might scramble over in
+the dark,' said Richard.
+
+'Thinks thou my lord marquis hath been fortifying his castle for two
+years that a young Heywood, even if he be one of the godly, and have
+long legs to boot, should make a vaulting horse of it? I know but one
+knows the way over Raglan walls, and thou wilt hardly persuade him to
+tell thee,' said mother Rees, with a grim chuckle.
+
+As she spoke she rose, and went towards her sleeping chamber. Then first
+Richard became aware that for some time he had been hearing a scratching
+and whining. She opened the door, and out ran a wretched-looking dog,
+huge and gaunt, with the red marks of recent wounds all over his body,
+and his neck swathed in a discoloured bandage. He went straight to
+Richard, and began fawning upon him and licking his hands. Miserable and
+most disreputable as he looked, he recognised in him Dorothy's mastiff.
+
+'My poor Marquis!' he said, 'what evil hath then befallen thee? What
+would thy mistress say to see thee thus?'
+
+Marquis whined and wagged his tail as if he understood every word he
+said, and Richard was stung to the heart at the sight of his apparently
+forlorn condition.
+
+'Hath thy mistress then forsaken thee too, Marquis?' he said, and from
+fellow-feeling could have taken the dog in his arms.
+
+'I think not so,' said mistress Rees. 'He hath been with her in the
+castle ever since she went there.'
+
+'Poor fellow, how thou art torn!' said Richard. 'What animal of thine
+own size could have brought thee into such a plight? Or can it be that
+thou hast found a bigger? But that thou hast beaten him I am well
+assured.'
+
+Marquis wagged an affirmative.
+
+'Fangs of biggest dog in Gwent never tore him like that, master Heywood.
+Heark'ee now. He cannot tell his tale, so I must tell thee all I know of
+the matter. I was over to Raglan village three nights agone, to get me a
+bottle of strong waters from mine host of the White Horse, for the
+distilling of certain of my herbs good for inward disorders, when he
+told me that about an hour before there had come from the way of the
+castle all of a sudden the most terrible noise that ever human ears were
+pierced withal, as if every devil in hell of dog or cat kind had broken
+loose, and fierce battle was waging between them in the Yellow Tower. I
+said little, but had my own fears for my lord Herbert, and came home sad
+and slow and went to bed. Now what should wake me the next morning, just
+as daylight broke the neck of the darkness, but a pitiful whining and
+obstinate scratching at my door! And who should it be but that same
+lovely little lapdog of my young mistress now standing by thy knee! But
+had thou seen him then, master Richard! It was the devil's hackles he
+had been through! Such a torn dishclout of a dog thou never did see! I
+understood it all in a moment. He had made one in the fight, and whether
+he had had the better or the worse of it, like a wise dog as he always
+was, he knew where to find what would serve his turn, and so when the
+house was quiet, off he came to old mother Rees to be plaistered and
+physicked. But what perplexes my old brain is, how, at that hour of the
+night, for to reach my door when he did, and him hardly able to stand
+when I let him in, it must have been dead night when he left--it do
+perplex me, I say, to think how at that time of the night he got out of
+that prison, watched as it is both night and day by them that sleep
+not.'
+
+'He couldn't have come over the wall?' suggested Richard.
+
+'Had thou seen him--thou would not make that the question.'
+
+'Then he must have come through or under it; there are but three ways,'
+said Richard to himself. 'He's a big dog,' he added aloud, regarding him
+thoughtfully as he patted his sullen affectionate head. 'He's a big
+dog,' he repeated.
+
+'I think a'most he be the biggest dog _I_ ever saw,' assented mistress
+Rees.
+
+'I would I were less about the shoulders,' said Richard.
+
+'Who ever heard a man worth his mess of pottage wish him such a wish as
+that, master Heywood! What would mistress Dorothy say to hear thee? I
+warrant me she findeth no fault with the breadth of thy shoulders.'
+
+'I am less in the compass than I was before the last fight,' he went on,
+without heeding his hostess, and as if he talked to the dog, who stood
+with his chin on his knee, looking up in his face. 'Where thou, Marquis,
+canst walk, I doubt not to creep; but if thou must creep, what then is
+left for me? Yet how couldst thou creep with such wounds in thy throat
+and belly, my poor Marquis?'
+
+The dog whined, and moved all his feet, one after the other, but without
+taking his chin off Richard's knee.
+
+'Hast seen thy mistress, little Dick, Marquis?' asked Richard.
+
+Again the dog whined, moved his feet, and turned his head towards the
+door. But whether it was that he understood the question, or only that
+he recognised the name of his friend, who could tell?
+
+'Will thou take me to Dick, Marquis?'
+
+The dog turned and walked to the door, then stood and looked back, as if
+waiting for Richard to open it and follow him.
+
+'No, Marquis, we must not go before night,' said Richard.
+
+The dog returned slowly to his knee, and again laid his chin upon it.
+
+'What will the dog do next, thinkest thou, mother--when he finds himself
+well again, I mean? Will he run from thee?' said Richard.
+
+'He would be like neither dog nor man I ever knew, did he not,' returned
+the old woman. 'He will for sure go back where he got his hurts--to
+revenge them if he may, for that is the custom also with both dogs and
+men.'
+
+'Couldst thou make sure of him that he run not away till I come again at
+night, mother?'
+
+'Certain I can, my son. I will shut him up whence he will not break so
+long as he hears me nigh him.'
+
+'Do so then an' thou lovest me, mother Rees, and I will be here with the
+first of the darkness.'
+
+'An' I love thee, master Richard? Nay, but I do love thy good face and
+thy true words, be thou puritan or roundhead, or fanatic, or what evil
+name soever the wicked fashion of the times granteth to men to call
+thee.'
+
+'Hark in thine ear then, mother: I will call no names; but they of
+Raglan have, as I truly believe, stolen from me my Lady.'
+
+'Nay, nay, master Richard,' interrupted mistress Rees; 'did I not tell
+thee with my own mouth that she went of her own free will, and in the
+company of the reverend sir Matthew Herbert?'
+
+'Alas! thou goest not with me, mother Rees. I meant not mistress
+Dorothy. She is lost to me indeed; but so also is my poor mare, which
+was stolen last night from Redware stables as the watchers slept.'
+
+'Alack-a-day!' cried goody Rees, holding up her hands in sore trouble
+for her friend. 'But what then dreams thou of doing? Not surely, before
+all the saints in heaven, will thou adventure thy body within Raglan
+walls? But I speak like a fool. Thou canst not.'
+
+'This good dog,' said Richard, stroking Marquis, 'must, as thou thyself
+plainly seest, have found some way of leaving Raglan without the
+knowledge or will of its warders. Where he gat him forth, will he not
+get him in again? And where dog can go, man may at least endeavour to
+follow.--Mayhap he hath for himself scratched a way, as many dogs will.'
+
+'But, for the love of God, master Heywood, what would thou do inside
+that stone cage? Thy mare, be she, as thou hast often vaunted her to me,
+the first for courage and wisdom and strength and fleetness of all mares
+created--be her fore feet like a man's hands and her heart like a
+woman's heart, as thou sayest, yet cannot she overleap Raglan walls; and
+thinks thou they will raise portcullis and open gate and drop drawbridge
+to let thee and her ride forth in peace? It were a fool's errand, my
+young master, and nowise befitting thy young wisdom.'
+
+'What I shall do, when I am length within the walls, I cannot tell thee,
+mother. Nor have I ever yet known much good in forecasting. To have to
+think, when the hour is come, of what thou didst before resolve, instead
+of setting thyself to understand what is around thee, and perchance the
+whole matter different from what thou had imagined, is to stand like
+Lazarus bound hand and foot in thine own graveclothes. It will be given
+me to meet what comes; or if not, who will bar me from meeting what
+follows?'
+
+'Master Heywood,' cried goody Rees, drawing herself with rebuke, 'for a
+man that is born of a woman to talk so wisely and so foolishly both in a
+breath!--But,' she added, with a change of tone, 'I know better than bar
+the path to a Heywood. An' he will, he will. And thou hast been vilely
+used, my young master. I will do what I can to help thee to thine
+own--and no more--no more than thine own. Hark in thine ear now. But
+first swear to me by the holy cross, puritan as thou art, that thou wilt
+make no other use of what I tell thee but to free thy stolen mare. I
+know thou may be trusted even with the secret that would slay thine
+enemy. But I must have thy oath notwithstanding thereto.'
+
+'I will not swear by the cross, which was never holy, for thereby was
+the Holy slain. I will not swear at all, mother Rees. I will pledge thee
+the word of a man who fears God, that I will in no way dishonourable
+make use of that which thou tellest me. An' that suffice not, I will go
+without thy help, trusting in God, who never made that mare to carry the
+enemy of the truth into the battle.'
+
+'But what an' thou should take the staff of strife to measure thy doings
+withal? That may then seem honourable, done to an enemy, which thou
+would scorn to do to one of thine own part, even if he wronged thee.'
+
+'Nay, mother; but I will do nothing THOU wouldst think
+dishonourable--that I promise thee. I will use what thou tellest me for
+no manner of hurt to my lord of Worcester or aught that is his. But Lady
+is not his, and her will I carry, if I may, from Raglan stables back to
+Redware.'
+
+'I am content. Hearken then, my son. Raglan watchword for the rest of
+the month is--ST. GEORGE AND ST. PATRICK! May it stand thee in good
+stead.'
+
+'I thank thee, mother, with all my heart,' said Richard, rising
+jubilant. 'Now shut up the dog, and let me go. One day it may lie in my
+power to requite thee.'
+
+'Thou hast requited me beforehand, master Heywood. Old mother Rees never
+forgets. I would have done well by thee with the maiden, an' thou would
+but have hearkened to my words. But the day may yet come. Go now, and
+return with the last of the twilight. Come hither, Marquis.'
+
+The dog obeyed, and she shut him again in her chamber.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+THE MOAT OF THE KEEP.
+
+
+Richard left the cottage, and mounted Oliver. To pass the time and
+indulge a mournful memory, he rode round by Wyfern. When he reached
+home, he found that his father had gone to pay a visit some miles off.
+He went to his own room, cast himself on his bed, and tried to think.
+But his birds would not come at his call, or coming would but perch for
+a moment, and again fly. As he lay thus, his eyes fell on his cousin,
+old Thomas Heywood's little folio, lying on the window seat where he had
+left it two years ago, and straightway his fluttering birds alighting
+there, he thought how the book had been lying unopened all the months,
+while he had been passing through so many changes and commotions. How
+still had the room been around it, how silent the sunshine and the snow,
+while he had inhabited tumult--tumult in his heart, tumult in his ears,
+tumult of sorrows, of vain longings, of tongues and of swords! Where was
+the gain to him? Was he nearer to that centre of peace, which the book,
+as it lay there so still, seemed to his eyes to typify? The maiden loved
+from childhood had left him for a foolish king and a phantom-church: had
+he been himself pursuing anything better? He had been fighting for the
+truth: had he then gained her? where was she? what was she if not a
+living thing in the heart? Would the wielding of the sword in its name
+ever embody an abstraction, call it from the vasty deep of metaphysics
+up into self-conscious existence in the essence of a man's own vitality?
+Was not the question still, how, of all loves, to grasp the thing his
+soul thirsted after?
+
+To many a sermon, cleric and lay, had he listened since he left that
+volume there--in church, in barn, in the open field--but the religion
+which seemed to fill all the horizon of these preachers' vision, was to
+him little better than another tumult of words; while, far beyond all
+the tumults, hung still, in the vast of thought unarrived, unembodied,
+that something without a shape, yet bearing a name around which hovered
+a vague light as of something dimly understood, after which, in every
+moment of inbreaking silence, his soul straightway began to thirst. And
+if the Truth was not to be found in his own heart, could he think that
+the blows by which he had not gained her had yet given her?--that
+through means of the tumult he had helped to arouse in her name and for
+her sake, but in which he had never caught a sight of her beauteous
+form, she now sat radiantly smiling in any one human soul where she sat
+not before?
+
+Or should he say it was Freedom for which he had fought? Was he then one
+whit more free in the reality of his being than he had been before? Or
+had ever a battle wherein he had perilled his own life, striking for
+liberty, conveyed that liberty into a single human heart? Was there one
+soul the freer within, from the nearer presence of that freedom which
+would have a man endure the heaviest wrong, rather than inflict the
+lightest? He could not tell, but he greatly doubted.
+
+His thought went wandering away, and vision after vision, now of war and
+now of love, now of earthly victory and now of what seemed unattainable
+felicity, arose and passed before him, filling its place. At length it
+came back: he would glance again into his cousin Thomas's book. He had
+but to stretch out his hand to take it, for his bed was close by the
+window. Opening it at random, he came upon this passage:
+
+ And as the Mill, that circumgyreth fast,
+ Refuseth nothing that therein is cast,
+ But whatsoever is to it assign'd
+ Gladly receives and willing is to grynd,
+ But if the violence be with nothing fed,
+ It wasts itselfe: e'en so the heart mis-led,
+ Still turning round, unstable as the Ocean,
+ Never at rest, but in continuall Motion,
+ Sleepe or awake, is still in agitation
+ Of some presentment in th' imagination.
+
+ If to the Mill-stone you shall cast in Sand,
+ It troubles them, and makes them at a stand;
+ If Pitch, it chokes them; or if Chaffe let fall,
+ They are employ'd, but to no use at all.
+ So, bitter thoughts molest, uncleane thoughts staine
+ And spot the Heart; while those idle and vaine
+ Weare it, and to no purpose. For when 'tis
+ Drowsie and carelesse of the future blisse,
+ And to implore Heav'n's aid, it doth imply
+ How far is it remote from the most High.
+ For whilst our Hearts on Terrhen things we place,
+ There cannot be least hope of Divine grace.
+
+'Just such a mill is my mind,' he said to himself. 'But can I suppose
+that to sit down and read all day like a monk, would bring me nearer to
+the thing I want?'
+
+He turned over the volume half thinking, half brooding.
+
+'I will look again,' he thought, 'at the verses which that day my father
+gave me to read. Truly I did not well understand them.'
+
+Once more he read the poem through. It closed with these lines:
+
+ So far this LIGHT the Raies extends,
+ As that no place IT comprehends.
+ So deepe this SOUND, that though it speake,
+ It cannot by a Sence so weake
+ Be entertain'd. A REDOLENT GRACE
+ The Aire blowes not from place to place.
+ A pleasant TASTE, of that delight
+ It doth confound all appetite.
+ A strict EMBRACE, not felt, yet leaves
+ That vertue, where it takes it cleaves.
+ This LIGHT, this SOUND, this SAVOURING GRACE,
+ This TASTEFULL SWEET, this STRICT EMBRACE,
+ No PLACE containes, no EYE can see,
+ My GOD is; and there's none but Hee.
+
+'I HAVE gained something,' he crie aloud. 'I understand it now--at least
+I think I do. What if, in fighting for the truth as men say, the doors
+of a man's own heart should at length fly open for her entrance! What if
+the understanding of that which is uttered concerning her, be a sign
+that she herself draweth nigh! Then I will go on.--And that I may go on,
+I must recover my mare.'
+
+Honestly, however, he could not quite justify the scheme. All the
+efforts of his imagination, as he rode home, to bring his judgment to
+the same side with itself, had failed, and he had been driven to confess
+the project a foolhardy one. But, on the other hand, had he not had a
+leading thitherward? Whence else the sudden conviction that Scudamore
+had taken her, and the burning desire to seek her in Raglan stables? And
+had he not heard mighty arguments from the lips of the most favoured
+preachers in the army for an unquestioning compliance with leadings?
+Nay, had he not had more than a leading? Was it not a sign to encourage
+him, even a pledge of happy result, that, within an hour of it, and in
+consequence of his first step in partial compliance with it, he had come
+upon the only creature capable of conducting him into the robber's hold?
+And had he not at the same time learned the Raglan password?--He WOULD
+go.
+
+He rose, and descending the little creaking stair of black oak that led
+from his room to the next storey, sought his father's study, where he
+wrote a letter informing him of his intended attempt, and the means to
+its accomplishment that had been already vouchsafed him. The rest of his
+time, after eating his dinner, he spent in making overshoes for his mare
+out of an old buff jerkin. As soon as the twilight began to fall, he set
+out on foot for the witch's cottage.
+
+When he arrived, he found her expecting him, but prepared with no hearty
+welcome.
+
+'I had liefer by much thee had not come so pat upon thy promise, master
+Heywood. Then I might have looked to move thee from thy purpose, for
+truly I like it not. But thou will never bring an old woman into
+trouble, master Richard?'
+
+'Or a young one either, if I can help it Mother Rees,' answered Richard.
+'But come now, thou must trust me, and tell me all I want to know.'
+
+He drew from his pocket paper and pencil, and began to put to her
+question after question as to the courts and the various buildings
+forming them, with their chief doors and windows, and ever as she gave
+him an answer, he added its purport to the rough plan he was drawing of
+the place.
+
+'Listen to me, Master Heywood,' said the old woman at length after a
+long, silence, during which he had been pondering over his paper. 'An'
+thou get once into the fountain court thou will know where thee is by
+the marble horse that stands in the middle of it. Turn then thy back to
+the horse, with the yellow tower above thee upon thy right hand, and
+thee will be facing the great hall. On the other side of the hall is the
+pitched court with its great gate and double portcullis and drawbridge.
+Nearly at thy back, but to thy right hand, will lie the gate to the
+bowling-green. At which of these gates does thee think to lead out thy
+mare?'
+
+'An' I pass at all, mother, it will be on her back, not at her head.'
+
+'Thou wilt not pass, my son. Be counselled. To thy mare, thou wilt but
+lose thyself.'
+
+Richard heard her as though he heard her not.
+
+'At what hour doth the moon rise, mistress Rees?' he asked.
+
+'What would thou with the moon?" she returned. "Is not she the enemy of
+him who roves for plunder? Shines she not that the thief may be shaken
+out of the earth?'
+
+'I am not thief enough to steal in the dark, mother. How shall I tell
+without her help where I am or whither I go?'
+
+'She will be half way to the top of her hill by midnight.'
+
+'An' thou speak by the card, then is it time that Marquis and I were
+going.'
+
+'Here, take thee some fern-seed in thy pouch, that thou may walk
+invisible,' said the old woman. 'If thee chance to be an hungred, then
+eat thereof,' she added, as she transferred something from her pocket to
+his.
+
+She called the dog and opened the chamber door. Out came Marquis, walked
+to Richard, and stood looking up in his face as if he knew perfectly
+that his business was to accompany him. Richard bade the old woman good
+night, and stepped from the cottage.
+
+No sooner was he in the darkness with the dog, than, fearing he might
+lose sight of him, he tied his handkerchief round the dog's neck, and
+fastened to it the thong of his riding whip--the sole weapon he had
+brought with him--and so they walked together, Marquis pulling Richard
+on. Ere long the moon rose, and the country dawned into the dim creation
+of the light.
+
+On and on they trudged, Marquis pulling at his leash as if he had been a
+blind man's dog, and on and on beside them crept their shadows,
+flattened out into strange distortion upon the road. But when they had
+come within about two miles of Raglan, whether it was that the sense of
+proximity to his mistress grew strong in him, or that he scented the
+Great Mogul, as the horse the battle from afar, Marquis began to grow
+restless, and to sniff about on one side of the way. When at length they
+had by a narrow bridge crossed a brook, the dog insisted on leaving the
+road and going down into the meadow to the left. Richard made small
+resistance, and that only for experiment upon the animal's
+determination. Across field after field his guide led him, until, but
+for the great keep towering dimly up into the moonlit sky, he could
+hardly have even conjectured where he was. But he was well satisfied,
+for, ever as they came out of copse or hollow, there was the huge thing
+in the sky, nearer than before.
+
+At last he was able to descry a short stretch of the castle rampart,
+past which, away to the westward, the dog was pulling, along a rough
+cart-track through a field. This he presently found to be a quarry road,
+and straight into the quarry the dog went, pulling eagerly; but Richard
+was compelled to follow with caution, for the ground was rough and
+broken, and the moon cast black misleading shadows. Towards the blackest
+of these the dog led, and entered a hollow way. Richard went straight
+after him, guarding his head with his arm, lest he might meet a sudden
+descent of the roof, and lengthening his leash to the utmost, that he
+might have timely warning of any descent of the floor.
+
+It was a very rough tunnel, the intent of which will afterwards appear,
+forming part of one of lord Herbert's later contrivances for the safety
+of the castle; but so well had Mr. Salisbury, the surveyor, managed,
+that not one of the men employed upon it had an idea that they were
+doing more than working the quarry for the repair of the fortifications.
+
+From the darkness, and the cautious rate at which he had to proceed,
+holding back the dog who tugged hard at the whip, Richard could not even
+hazard a conjecture as to the distance they had advanced, when he heard
+the noise of a small runnel of water, which seemed from the sound to
+make abrupt descent from some little height. He had gone but a few paces
+further when the handle of the whip received a great upward pull and was
+left loose in his grasp: the dog was away, leaving his handkerchief at
+the end of the thong. So now he had to guide himself, and began to feel
+about him. He seemed at first to have come to the end of the passage,
+for he could touch both sides of it by stretching out his arms, and in
+front a tiny stream of water came down the face of the rough rock; but
+what then had become of Marquis? The answer seemed plain: the water must
+come from somewhere, and doubtless its channel had spare room enough for
+the dog to pass thither. He felt up the rock, and found that, at about
+the height of his head, the water came over an obtuse angle. Climbing a
+foot or two, he discovered that the opening whence it issued was large
+enough for him to enter.
+
+Only one who has at some time passed where lengthened creeping was
+necessary, will know how Richard felt, with water under him,
+pitch-darkness about him, and the rock within an inch or two of his body
+all round. By and by the slope became steeper and the ascent more
+difficult. The air grew very close, and he began to fear he should be
+stifled. Then came a hot breath, and a pair of eyes gleamed a foot or
+two from his face. Had he then followed into the den of the animal by
+which poor Marquis had been so frightfully torn? But no: it was Marquis
+himself waiting for him!
+
+'Go on, Marquis,' he said, with a sigh of relief.
+
+The dog obeyed, and in another moment a waft of cool air came in.
+Presently a glimmer of light appeared. The opening through which it
+entered was a little higher than his horizontally posed head, and looked
+alarmingly narrow.
+
+But as he crept nearer it grew wider, and when he came under it he found
+it large enough to let him through. When cautiously he poked up his
+head, there was the huge mass of the keep towering blank above him! On a
+level with his eyes, the broad, lilied waters of the moat lay betwixt
+him and the citadel.
+
+Marquis had brought him to the one neglected, therefore forgotten, and
+thence undefended spot of the whole building. Before the well was sunk
+in the keep, the supply of water to the moat had been far more
+bountiful, and provision for a free overflow was necessary. For some
+reason, probably for the mere sake of facility in the construction, the
+passage for the superfluous water had been made larger than needful at
+the end next the moat. About midway to its outlet, however--a mere
+drain-mouth in a swampy hollow in the middle of a field--it had narrowed
+to a third of the compass. But the quarriers had cut across it above the
+point of contraction; and no danger of access occurring to lord Herbert
+or Mr. Salisbury, while they found a certain service in the tiny
+waterfall, they had left it as it was.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+RAGLAN STABLES.
+
+
+The passage for the overflow of the water of the moat was under the sunk
+walk which, reaching from the gate of the stone court round to the gate
+of the fountain court, enclosed the keep and its moat, looping them on
+as it were to the side of the double quadrangle of the castle. The only
+way out of this passage, at whose entrance Richard now found himself,
+was into the moat. As quietly therefore as he could, he got through the
+opening and into the water, amongst the lilies, where, much impeded by
+their tangling roots, which caused him many a submergence, but with a
+moon in her second quarter over his head to light him, he swam gently
+along. As he looked up from the water, however, to the huge crag-like
+tower over his head, the soft moonlight smoothing the rigour but
+bringing out all the wasteness of the grim blank, it seemed a hopeless
+attempt he had undertaken. Not the less did he keep his eye on the
+tower-side of the moat, and had not swum far before he caught sight of
+the little stair, which, enclosed in one of the six small round bastions
+encircling it, led up from the moat to the walk immediately around the
+citadel. The foot of this stair was, strangely enough, one of the only
+two points in the defence of the moat not absolutely commanded from
+either one or the other of the two gates of the castle. The top of the
+stair, however, was visible from one extreme point over the western
+gate, and the moment Richard, finding the small thick iron-studded door
+open, put his head out of the bastion, he caught sight of a warder far
+away, against the moonlit sky. All of the castle except the spot where
+that man stood, was hidden by the near bulk of the keep. He drew back,
+and sat down on the top of the stair--to think and let the water run
+from his clothes. When he issued, it was again on all-fours. He had,
+however, only to creep an inch or two to the right to be covered by one
+of the angles of the tower.
+
+But this shelter was merely momentary, for he must go round the tower in
+search of some way to reach the courts beyond; and no sooner had he
+passed the next angle than he found himself within sight of one of the
+towers of the main entrance. Dropping once more on his hands and knees
+he crept slowly along, as close as he could squeeze to the root of the
+wall, and when he rounded the next angle, was in the shadow of the keep,
+while he had but to cross the walk to be covered by the parapet on the
+edge of the moat. This he did, and having crept round the curve of the
+next bastion, was just beginning to fear lest he should find only a
+lifted drawbridge, and have to take to the water again, when he came to
+the stone bridge.
+
+It was well for him that Dorothy and Caspar had now omitted the setting
+of their water-trap, otherwise he would have entered the fountain court
+in a manner unfavourable to his project. As it was, he got over in
+safety, never ceasing his slow crawl until he found himself in the
+archway. Here he stood up, straightened his limbs, went through a few
+gymnastics, as silent as energetic, to send the blood through his
+chilled veins, and the next moment was again on the move.
+
+Peering from the mouth of the archway, he saw to his left the fountain
+court, with the gleaming head of the great horse rising out of the sea
+of shadow into the moonlight, and knew where he was. Next he discovered
+close to him on his right an open door into a dim space, and knew that
+he was looking into the great hall. Opposite the door glimmered the
+large bay window of which Mrs. Rees had spoken.
+
+There was now a point to be ascertained ere he could determine at which
+of the two gates he should attempt his exit--a question which, up to the
+said point, he had thoroughly considered on his way.
+
+The stables opened upon the pitched court, and in that court was the
+main entrance: naturally that was the one to be used. But in front of it
+was a great flight of steps, the whole depth of the ditch, with the
+marble gate at the foot of them; and not knowing the carriageway, he
+feared both suspicion and loss of time, where a single moment might be
+all that divided failure from success. Also at this gate were a double
+portcullis and drawbridge, the working of whose machinery took time, and
+of all things a quick execution was essential, seeing that at any moment
+sleeping suspicion might awake, and find enough to keep her so. At the
+other gate there was but one portcullis and no drawbridge, while from it
+he perfectly knew the way to the brick gate. Clearly this was the
+preferable for his attempt. There was but one point to cast in the other
+scale--namely, that, if old Eccles were still the warder of it, there
+would be danger of his recognition in respect both of himself and his
+mare. But, on the other hand, he thought he could turn to account his
+knowledge of the fact that the marquis's room was over it. So here the
+scale had settled to rebound no more--except indeed he should now
+discover any difficulty in passing from the stone court in which lay the
+MOUTH of the stables, to the fountain court in which stood the
+preferable gate. This question he must now settle, for once on horseback
+there must be no deliberation.
+
+One way at least there must be--through the hall: the hall must be
+accessible from both courts. He pulled off his shoes, and stepped softly
+in. Through the high window immediately over the huge fireplace, a
+little moonlight fell on the northern gable-wall, turning the minstrels'
+gallery into an aerial bridge to some strange region of loveliness, and
+in the shadow under it he found at once the door he sought, standing
+open but dark under a deep porch.
+
+Issuing and gliding along by the side of the hall and round the great
+bay window, he came to the stair indicated by Mrs. Rees, and descending
+a little way, stood and listened: plainly enough to his practised ear,
+what the old woman had represented as the underground passage to the
+airiest of stables, was itself full of horses. To go down amongst these
+in the dark, and in ignorance of the construction of the stable, was
+somewhat perilous; but he had not come there to avoid risk. Step by step
+he stole softly down, and, arrived at the bottom, seated himself on the
+last--to wait until his eyes should get so far accustomed to the
+darkness as to distinguish the poor difference between the faint dusk
+sinking down the stair and the absolute murk. A little further on, he
+could descry two or three grated openings into the fountain court, but
+by them nothing could enter beyond the faintest reflection of moonlight
+from the windows between the grand staircase and the bell tower.
+
+As soon as his eyes had grown capable of using what light there was,
+which however was scarcely sufficient to render him the smallest
+service, Richard began to whistle, very softly, a certain tune well
+known to Lady, one he always whistled when he fed or curried her
+himself. He had not got more than half through it, when a low drowsy
+whinny made reply from the depths of the darkness before him, and the
+heart of Richard leaped in his bosom for joy. He ceased a moment, then
+whistled again. Again came the response, but this time, although still
+soft and low, free from all the woolliness of sleep. Once more he
+whistled, and once more came the answer. Certain at length of the
+direction, he dropped on his hands and knees, and crawled carefully
+along for a few yards, then stopped, whistled again, and listened. After
+a few more calls and responses, he found himself at Lady's heels, which
+had begun to move restlessly. He crept into the stall beside her, spoke
+to her in a whisper, got upon his feet, caressed her, told her to be
+quiet, and, pulling her buff shoes from his pockets, drew them over her
+hoofs, and tied them securely about her pasterns. Then with one stroke
+of his knife he cut her halter, hitched the end round her neck, and
+telling her to follow him, walked softly through the stable and up the
+stair. She followed like a cat, though not without some noise, to whose
+echoes Richard's bosom seemed the beaten drum. The moment her back was
+level, he flung himself upon it, and rode straight through the porch and
+into the hall.
+
+But here at length he was overtaken by the consequences of having an
+ally unequal to the emergency. Marquis, who had doubtless been occupied
+with his friends in the stable yard, came bounding up into the court
+just as Richard threw himself on the back of his mare. At the sight of
+Lady, whom he knew so well, with her master on her back, a vision of
+older and happier times, the poor animal forgot himself utterly, rushed
+through the hall like a whirlwind, and burst into a tempest of barking
+in the middle of the fountain court--whether to rouse his mistress, or
+but to relieve his own heart, matters little to my tale. There was not a
+moment to lose, and Richard rode out of the hall and made for the gate.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX.
+
+THE APPARITION.
+
+
+The voice of her lost Marquis, which even in her dreams she could
+attribute to none but him, roused Dorothy at once. She sprang from her
+bed, flew to the window, and flung it wide. That same moment, from the
+shadows about the hall-door, came forth a man on horseback, and rode
+along the tiled path to the fountain, where never had hoof of horse
+before trod. Stranger still, the tramp sounded far away, and woke no
+echo in the echo-haunted place. A phantom surely--horse and man! As they
+drew nearer where she stared with wide eyes, the head of the rider rose
+out of the shadow into the moonlight, and she recognised the face of
+Richard--very white and still, though not, as she supposed, with the
+whiteness and stillness of a spectre, but with the concentration of
+eagerness and watchful resolution. The same moment she recognised Lady.
+She trembled from head to foot. What could it mean but that beyond a
+doubt they were both dead, slain in battle, and that Richard had come to
+pay her a last visit ere he left the world. On they came. Her heart
+swelled up into her throat, and the effort to queen it over herself, and
+neither shriek nor drop on the floor, was like struggling to support a
+falling wall. When the spectre reached the marble fountain, he gave a
+little start, drew bridle, and seemed to become aware that he had taken
+a wrong path, looked keenly around him, and instead of continuing his
+advance towards her window, turned in the direction of the gate. One
+thing was clear, that whether ghostly or mortal, whether already dead or
+only on the way to death, the apparition was regardless of her presence.
+A pang of disappointment shot through her bosom, and for the moment
+quenched her sense of relief from terror. With it sank the typhoon of
+her emotion, and she became able to note how draggled and soiled his
+garments were, how his hair clung about his temples, and that for all
+accoutrement his mare had but a halter. Yet Richard sat erect and proud,
+and Lady stepped like a mare full of life and vigour. And there was
+Marquis, not cowering or howling as dogs do in spectral presence, but
+madly bounding and barking as if in uncontrollable jubilation!
+
+The acme of her bewilderment was reached when the phantom came under the
+marquis's study-window, and she heard it call aloud, in a voice which
+undoubtedly came from corporeal throat, and that throat Richard's,
+ringing of the morning and the sunrise and the wind that shakes the
+wheat--anything rather than of the tomb:
+
+'Ho, master Eccles!' it cried; 'when? when? Must my lord's business cool
+while thou rubbest thy sleepy eyes awake? What, I say! When?--Yes, my
+lord, I will punctually attend to your lordship's orders. Expect me back
+within the hour.'
+
+The last words were uttered in a much lower tone, with the respect due
+to him he seemed addressing, but quite loud enough to be distinctly
+heard by Eccles or any one else in the court.
+
+Dorothy leaned from her window, and looked sideways to the gate,
+expecting to see the marquis bending over his window-sill, and talking
+to Richard. But his window was close shut, nor was there any light
+behind it.
+
+A minute or two passed, during which she heard the combined discords of
+the rising portcullis. Then out came Eccles, slow and sleepy.
+
+'By St. George and St. Patrick!' cried Richard, 'why keep'st thou six
+legs here standing idle? Is thy master's business nothing to thee?'
+
+Eccles looked up at him. He was coming to his senses.
+
+'Thou rides in strange graith on my lord's business,' he said, as he put
+the key in the lock.
+
+'What is that to thee? Open the gate. And make haste. If it please my
+lord that I ride thus to escape eyes that else might see further than
+thine, keen as they are, master Eccles, it is nothing to thee.'
+
+The lock clanged, the gate swung open, and Richard rode through.
+
+By this time a process of doubt and reasoning, rapid as only thought can
+be, had produced in the mind of Dorothy the conviction that there was
+something wrong. By what authority was Richard riding from Raglan with
+muffled hoofs between midnight and morning? His speech to the marquis
+was plainly a pretence, and doubtless that to Eccles was equally false.
+To allow him to pass unchallenged would be treason against both her host
+and her king.
+
+'Eccles! Eccles!' she cried, her voice ringing clear through the court,
+'let not that man pass.'
+
+'He gave the word, mistress,' said Eccles, in dull response.
+
+'Stop him, I say,' cried Dorothy again, with energy almost frantic, as
+she heard the gate swing to heavily. 'Thou shalt be held to account.'
+
+'He gave the word.'
+
+'He's a true man, mistress,' returned Eccles, in tone of
+self-justification. 'Heard you not my lord marquis give him his last
+orders from his window?'
+
+'There was no marquis at the window. Stop him, I say.'
+
+'He's gone,' said Eccles quietly, but with waking uneasiness.
+
+'Run after him,' Dorothy almost screamed.
+
+'Stop him at the gate. It is young Heywood of Redware, one of the
+busiest of the roundheads.'
+
+Eccles was already running and shouting and whistling. She heard his
+feet resounding from the bridge. With trembling hands she flung a cloak
+about her, and sped bare-footed down the grand staircase and along the
+north side of the court to the bell-tower, where she seized the rope of
+the alarm-bell, and pulled with all her strength. A horrid clangour tore
+the stillness of the night, re-echoed with yelping response from the
+multitudinous buildings around. Window after window flew open, head
+after head was popped out--amongst the first that of the marquis,
+shouting to know what was amiss. But the question found no answer. The
+courts began to fill. Some said the castle was on fire; others, that the
+wild beasts were all out; others, that Waller and Cromwell had scaled
+the rampart, and were now storming the gates; others, that Eccles had
+turned traitor and admitted the enemy. In a few moments all was outcry
+and confusion. Both courts and the great hall were swarming with men and
+women and children, in every possible stage of attire. The main entrance
+was crowded with a tumult of soldiery, and scouts were rushing to
+different stations of outlook, when the cry reached them that the
+western gate was open, the portcullis up, and the guard gone.
+
+The moment Richard was clear of the portcullis, he set off at a sharp
+trot for the brick gate, and had almost reached it when he became aware
+that he was pursued. He had heard the voice of Dorothy as he rode out,
+and knew to whom he owed it. But yet there was a chance. Rousing the
+porter with such a noisy reveillee as drowned in his sleepy ears the
+cries of the warder and those that followed him, he gave the watchword,
+and the huge key was just turning in the wards when the clang of the
+alarm-bell suddenly racked the air. The porter stayed his hand, and
+stood listening.
+
+'Open the gate,' said Richard in authoritative tone.
+
+'I will know first, master,--' began the man.
+
+'Dost not hear the bell?' cried Richard. 'How long wilt thou endanger
+the castle by thy dulness?'
+
+'I shall know first,' repeated the man deliberately, 'what that bell--'
+
+Ere he could finish the sentence, the butt of Richard's whip had laid
+him along the threshold of the gate. Richard flung himself from his
+horse, and turned the key. But his enemies were now close at
+hand--Eccles and the men of his guard. If the porter had but fallen the
+other way! Ere he could drag aside his senseless body and open the gate,
+they were upon him with blows and curses. But the puritan's blood was
+up, and with the heavy handle of his whip he had felled one and wounded
+another ere he was himself stretched on the ground with a sword-cut in
+the head.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX.
+
+RICHARD AND THE MARQUIS.
+
+
+A very few strokes of the brazen-tongued clamourer had been enough to
+wake the whole castle. Dorothy flew back to her chamber, and hurrying on
+her clothes, descended again to the court. It was already in full
+commotion. The western gate stood open, with the portcullis beyond it
+high in the wall, and there she took her stand, waiting the return of
+Eccles and his men.
+
+Presently lord Charles came through the hall from the stone court, and
+seeing the gate open, called aloud in anger to know what it meant.
+Receiving no reply, he ran with an oath to drop the portcullis.
+
+'Is there a mutiny amongst the rascals?' he cried.
+
+'There is no cause for dread, my lord,' said Dorothy from the shadow of
+the gateway.
+
+'How know you that, fair mistress?' returned lord Charles, who knew her
+voice. 'You must not inspire us with too much of your spare courage.
+That would be to make us fool-hardy.'
+
+'Indeed, there is nothing to fear, my lord,' persisted Dorothy. 'The
+warder and his men have but this moment rushed out after one on
+horseback, whom they had let pass with too little question. They are ten
+to one,' added Dorothy with a shudder, as the sounds of the fray came up
+from below.
+
+'If there is then no cause of fear, cousin, why look you so pale?' asked
+lord Charles, for the gleam of a torch had fallen on Dorothy's face.
+
+'I think I hear them returning, doubtless with a prisoner,' said
+Dorothy, and stood with her face turned aside, looking anxiously through
+the gateway and along the bridge. She had obeyed her conscience, and had
+now to fight her heart, which unreasonable member of the community would
+insist on hoping that her efforts had been foiled. But in a minute more
+came the gathering noise of returning footsteps, and presently Lady's
+head appeared over the crown of the bridge; then rose Eccles, leading
+her in grim silence; and next came Richard, pale and bleeding, betwixt
+two men, each holding him by an arm; the rest of the guard crowded
+behind. As they entered the court, Richard caught sight of Dorothy, and
+his face shone into a wan smile, to which her rebellious heart responded
+with a terrible pang.
+
+The voice of lord Charles reached them from the other side of the court.
+
+'Bring the prisoner to the hall,' it cried.
+
+Eccles led the mare away, and the rest took Richard to the hall, which
+now began to be lighted up, and was soon in a blaze of candles all about
+the dais. When Dorothy entered, it was crowded with household and
+garrison, but the marquis, who was tardy at dressing, had not yet
+appeared. Presently, however, he walked slowly in from the door at the
+back of the dais, breathing hard, and seated himself heavily in the
+great chair. Dorothy placed herself near the door, where she could see
+the prisoner.
+
+Lady Mary entered and seated herself beside her father.
+
+'What meaneth all this tumult?' the marquis began. 'Who rang the
+alarum-bell?'
+
+'I did, my lord,' answered Dorothy in a trembling voice.
+
+'Thou, mistress Dorothy!' exclaimed the marquis. 'Then I doubt not thou
+hadst good reason for so doing. Prithee what was the reason? Verily it
+seems thou wast sent hither to be the guardian of my house!'
+
+'It was not I, my lord, gave the first alarm, but--' She hesitated, then
+added, 'my poor Marquis.'
+
+'Not so poor for a marquis, cousin Dorothy, as to be called the poor
+Marquis. Why dost thou call me poor?'
+
+'My lord, I mean my dog.'
+
+'The truth will still lie--between me and thy dog,' said the marquis.
+'But come now, instruct me. Who is this prisoner, and how comes he
+here?'
+
+'He be young Mr. Heywood of Redware, my lord, and a pestilent
+roundhead,' answered one of his captors.
+
+'Who knows him?'
+
+A moment's silence followed. Then came Dorothy's voice again.
+
+'I do, my lord.'
+
+'Tell me, then, all thou knowest from the beginning, cousin,' said the
+marquis.
+
+'I was roused by the barking of my dog,' Dorothy began.
+
+'How came HE hither again?'
+
+'My lord, I know not.'
+
+''Tis passing strange. See to it, lord Charles. Go on, mistress
+Dorothy.'
+
+'I heard my dog bark in the court, my lord, and looking from my window
+saw Mr. Heywood riding through on horseback. Ere I could recover from my
+astonishment, he had passed the gate, and then I rang the alarm-bell,'
+said Dorothy briefly.
+
+'Who opened the gate for him?'
+
+'I did, my lord,' said Eccles. 'He made me believe he was talking to
+your lordship at the study window.'
+
+'Ha! a cunning fox!' said the marquis. 'And then?'
+
+'And then mistress Dorothy fell out upon me--'
+
+'Let thy tongue wag civilly, Eccles.'
+
+'He speaks true, my lord,' said Dorothy. 'I did fall out upon him, for
+he was but half awake, and I knew not what mischief might be at hand.'
+
+'Eccles is obliged to you, cousin. And so the lady brought you to your
+senses in time to catch him?'
+
+'Yes, my lord.'
+
+'How comes he wounded? He was but one to a score.'
+
+'My lord, he would else have killed us all.'
+
+'He was armed then?'
+
+Eccles was silent.
+
+'Was he armed?' repeated the marquis.
+
+'He had a heavy whip, my lord.'
+
+'H'm!' said the marquis, and turned to the prisoner.
+
+'Is thy name Heywood, sirrah?' he asked.
+
+'My lord, if you treat me as a clown, you shall have but clown's manners
+of me; I will not answer.'
+
+''Fore heaven!' exclaimed the marquis, 'our squires would rule the
+roast.'
+
+'He that doth right, marquis or squire, will one day rule, my lord,'
+said Richard.
+
+''Tis well said,' returned the marquis. 'I ask your pardon, Mr. Heywood.
+In times like these a man must be excused for occasionally dropping his
+manners.'
+
+'Assuredly, my lord, when he stoops to recover them so gracefully as
+doth the marquis of Worcester.'
+
+'What, then, would'st thou in my house at midnight, Mr. Heywood?' asked
+the marquis courteously.
+
+'Nothing save mine own, my lord. I came but to look for a stolen mare.'
+
+'What! thou takest Raglan for a den of thieves?'
+
+'I found the mare in your lordship's stable.'
+
+'How then came the mare in my stable?'
+
+'That is not a question for me to answer, my lord.'
+
+'Doubtless thou didst lose her in battle against thy sovereign.'
+
+'She was in Redware stable last night, my lord.'
+
+'Which of you, knaves, stole the gentleman's mare?' cried the
+marquis.--'But, Mr. Heywood, there can be no theft upon a rebel. He is
+by nature an outlaw, and his life and goods forfeit to the king.'
+
+'He will hardly yield the point, my lord. So long as Might, the sword,
+is in the hand of Right, the--'
+
+'Of Right, the roundhead, I suppose you mean,' interrupted the marquis.
+'Who carried off Mr. Heywood's mare?' he repeated, rising, and looking
+abroad on the crowd.
+
+'Tom Fool,' answered a voice from the obscure distance.
+
+A buzz of suppressed laughter followed, which as instantly ceased, for
+the marquis looked angrily around.
+
+'Stand forth, Tom Fool,' he said.
+
+Through the crowd came Tom, and stood before the dais, looking
+frightened and sheepish.
+
+'Sure I am, Tom, thou didst never go to steal a mare of thine own
+notion: who went with thee?' said the marquis.
+
+'Mr. Scudamore, my lord,' answered Tom.
+
+'Ha, Rowland! Art thou there?' cried his lordship.
+
+'I gave him fair warning two years ago, my lord, and the king wants
+horses,' said Scudamore cunningly.
+
+'Rowland, I like not such warfare. Yet can the roundheads say nought
+against it, who would filch kingdom from king and church from bishops,'
+said the marquis, turning again to Heywood.
+
+'As they from the pope, my lord,' rejoined Richard.
+
+'True,' answered the marquis; 'but the bishops are the fairer thieves,
+and may one day be brought to reason and restitution.'
+
+'As I trust your lordship will in respect of my mare.'
+
+'Nay, that can hardly be. She shall to Gloucester to the king. I would
+not have sent to Redware to fetch her, but finding thee and her in my
+house at midnight, it would be plain treason to set such enemies at
+liberty. What! hast thou fought against his majesty? Thou art scored
+like an old buckler!'
+
+Richard had started on his adventure very thinly clad, for he had
+expected to find all possible freedom of muscle necessary, and indeed
+could not in his buff coat have entered the castle. In the scuffle at
+the gate, his garment had been torn open, and the eye of the marquis had
+fallen on the scar of a great wound on his chest, barely healed.
+
+'What age art thou?' he went on, finding Richard made no answer.
+
+'One and twenty, my lord--almost.'
+
+'And what wilt thou be by the time thou art one and thirty, an' I'll let
+thee go,' said the marquis thoughtfully.
+
+'Dust and ashes, my lord, most likely. Faith, I care not.'
+
+As he spoke he glanced at Dorothy, but she was looking on the ground.
+
+'Nay, nay!' said the marquis feelingly. 'These are, but wild and hurling
+words for a fine young fellow like thee. Long ere thou be a man, the
+king will have his own again, and all will be well. Come, promise me
+thou wilt never more bear arms against his majesty, and I will set thee
+and thy mare at liberty the moment thou shalt have eaten thy breakfast.'
+
+'Not to save ten lives, my lord, would I give such a promise.'
+
+'Roundhead hypocrite!' cried the marquis, frowning to hide the gleam of
+satisfaction he felt breaking from his eyes. 'What will thy father say
+when he hears thou liest deep in Raglan dungeon?'
+
+'He will thank heaven that I lie there a free man instead of walking
+abroad a slave,' answered Richard.
+
+''Fore heaven!' said the marquis, and was silent for a moment. 'Owest
+thou then thy king NOTHING, boy?' he resumed.
+
+'I owe the truth everything,' answered Richard.
+
+'The truth!' echoed the marquis.
+
+'Now speaks my lord Worcester like my lord Pilate,' said Richard.
+
+'Hold thy peace, boy,' returned the marquis sternly. 'Thy godly parents
+have ill taught thee thy manners. How knowest thou what was in my
+thought when I did but repeat after thee the sacred word thou didst
+misuse?'
+
+'My lord, I was wrong, and I beg your lordship's pardon. But an' your
+lordship were standing here with your head half beaten in, and your
+clothes--'
+
+Here Richard bethought himself, and was silent.
+
+'Tell me then how gat'st thou in, lunatic,' said the marquis, not
+unkindly, 'and thou shalt straight to bed.'
+
+'My lord,' returned Richard, 'you have taken my mare, and taken my
+liberty, but the devil is in it if you take my secret.'
+
+'I would thy mare had been poisoned ere she drew thee hither on such a
+fool's errand! I want neither thee nor thy mare, and yet I may not let
+you go!'
+
+'A moment more, and it had been an exploit, and no fool's errand, my
+lord.'
+
+'Then the fool's cap would have been thine, Eccles. How camest thou to
+let him out? Thou a warder, and ope gate and up portcullis 'twixt waking
+and sleeping!'
+
+'Had he wanted in, my lord, it would have been different,' said Eccles.
+'But he only wanted out, and gave the watchword.'
+
+'Where got'st thou the watchword, Mr. Heywood?'
+
+'I will tell thee what I gave for it, my lord. More I will not.'
+
+'What gavest thou then?'
+
+'My word that I would work neither thee nor thine any hurt withal, my
+lord.'
+
+'Then there are traitors within my gates!' cried the marquis.
+
+'Truly, that I know not, my lord,' answered Richard.
+
+'Prithee tell me how them gat thee into my house, Mr. Heywood? It were
+but neighbourly.'
+
+'It were but neighbourly, my lord, to hang young Scudamore and Tom Fool
+for thieves.'
+
+'Tell me how thou gat hold of the watchword, good boy, and I will set
+thee free, and give thee thy mare again.'
+
+'I will not, my lord.'
+
+'Then the devil take thee!' said the marquis, rising.
+
+The same moment Richard reeled, and but for the men about him, would
+have fallen heavily.
+
+Dorothy darted forward, but could not come near him for the crowd.
+
+'My lord Charles,' cried the marquis, 'see the poor fellow taken care
+of. Let him sleep, and perchance on the morrow he will listen to reason.
+Mistress Watson will see to his hurts. I would to God he were on our
+side! I like him well.'
+
+The men took him up and followed lord Charles to the housekeeper's
+apartment, where they laid him on a bed in a little turret, and left
+him, still insensible, to her care, with injunctions to turn the key in
+the lock if she went from the chamber but for a moment. 'For who can
+tell,' thought lord Charles, greatly perplexed, 'but as he came he may
+go?'
+
+Some of the household had followed them, and several of the women would
+gladly have stayed, but Mrs. Watson sent all away. Gradually the crowd
+dispersed. The tumult ceased; the household retired. The castle grew
+still, and most of its inhabitants fell asleep again.
+
+'A damned hot-livered roundhead coxcomb!' said lord Worcester to
+himself, pacing his room. 'These pelting cockerel squires and yeomen
+nowadays go strutting and crowing as if all the yard were theirs! We
+shall see how far this heat will carry the rogue! I doubt not the boy
+would tell everything than see his mare whipped. He's a fine fellow, and
+it were a thousand pities he turned coward and gave in. But the affair
+is not mine; it is the king's majesty's. Would to God the rascal were of
+our side! He's the right old English breed. A few such were very
+welcome, if only to show some of our dainty young lordlings of yesterday
+what breed can do. But an ass-foal it is! To run his neck into a halter,
+and set honest people in mortal doubt whether to pull the end or no!
+
+How on earth did he ever dream of carrying off a horse out of the very
+courts of Raglan castle! And yet, by saint George! he would have done it
+too, but for that brave wench of a Vaughan! What a couple the two would
+make! They'd give us a race of Arthurs and Orlandos between them. God be
+praised there are such left in England! And yet the rogue is but a
+pestilent roundhead--the more's the pity! Those coward rascals need
+never have mauled him like that. Yet had the blow gone a little deeper
+it had been a mighty gain to our side. Out he shall not go till the war
+be over! It would be downright treason.'
+
+So ran the thoughts of the marquis as he paced his chamber. But at
+length he lay down once more, and sought refuge in sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI.
+
+THE SLEEPLESS.
+
+
+There were more than the marquis left awake and thinking; amongst the
+rest one who ought to have been asleep, for the thoughts that kept her
+awake were evil thoughts.
+
+Amanda Serafina Fuller was a twig or leaf upon one of many decaying
+branches, which yet drew what life they had from an ancient genealogical
+tree. Property gone, but the sense of high birth swollen to a vice, the
+one thought in her mother's mind, ever since she grew capable of looking
+upon the social world in its relation to herself, had been how, with
+stinted resources, to make the false impression of plentiful ease. For
+one of the most disappointing things in high descent is, that the
+descent is occasionally into depths of meanness. Some who are proudest
+of their lineage, instead of finding therein a spur to nobility of
+thought and action, find in it only a necessity for prostrating
+themselves with the more abject humiliation at the footstool of Mammon,
+to be admitted into the penetralia of which foul god's favours, they
+will hasten to mingle the blood of their pure descent with that of the
+very kennels, yellow with the gold to which a noble man, if poor as
+Jesus himself, would loathe to be indebted for a meal. In 'the high
+countries' there will be a finding of levels more appalling than
+strange.
+
+Hence Amanda had been born and brought up in falsehood, had been all her
+life witness to a straining after the untrue so energetic, as to assume
+the appearance of conscience; while such was the tenor and spirit of the
+remarks she was constantly hearing, that she grew up with the ingrained
+undisputed idea that she and her mother, whom she had only known as a
+widow, had been wronged, spoiled indeed of their lawful rights, by a
+combination of their rich relatives; whereas in truth they had been the
+objects of very considerable generosity, which they resented the more
+that it had been chiefly exercised by such of the family as could least
+easily afford it, yet accepted in their hearts, if not in their words,
+as their natural right. The intercession through which Amanda had been
+received into lady Margaret's household, was the contribution towards
+their maintenance of one of their richer connections: the marquis
+himself, although distantly related, not having previously been aware of
+their existence.
+
+But Amanda felt degraded by her position, and was unaware that to
+herself alone she owed the degradation: she had not yet learned that the
+only service which can degrade is that which is unwillingly rendered. To
+be paid for such, is degradation in its very essence. Every one who
+grumbles at his position as degrading, yet accepts the wages thereof,
+brands himself a slave.
+
+The evil tendencies which she had inherited, had then been nourished in
+her from her very birth--chief of these envy, and a strong tendency to
+dislike. Mean herself, she was full of suspicions with regard to others,
+and found much pleasure in penetrating what she took to be disguise, and
+laying bare the despicable motives which her own character enabled her
+either to discover or imagine, and which, in other people, she hated.
+Moderately good people have no idea of the vileness of which their own
+nature is capable, or which has been developed in not a few who pass as
+respectable persons, and have not yet been accused either of theft or
+poisoning. Such as St. Paul alone can fully understand the abyss of
+moral misery from which the in-dwelling spirit of God has raised them.
+
+The one redeeming element in Amanda was her love to her mother, but
+inasmuch as it was isolated and self-reflected, their mutual attachment
+partook of the nature of a cultivated selfishness, and had lost much of
+its primal grace. The remaining chance for such a woman, so to speak,
+seems--that she should either fall in love with a worthy man, if that be
+still possible to her, or, by her own conduct, be brought into dismal
+and incontrovertible disgrace.
+
+She had stood in the hall within a few yards of Dorothy, and had
+intently watched her face all the time Richard was before the marquis.
+But not because she watched the field of their play was Amanda able to
+read the heart whence ascended those strangely alternating lights and
+shadows. She had, by her own confession, conceived a strong dislike to
+Dorothy the moment she saw her, and without love there can be no
+understanding. Hate will sharpen observation to the point of microscopic
+vision, affording opportunity for many a shrewd guess, and revealing
+facts for the construction of the cleverest and falsest theories, but
+will leave the observer as blind as any bat to the scope of the whole,
+or the meaning of the parts which can be understood only from the whole;
+for love alone can interpret.
+
+As she gazed on the signs of conflicting emotion in Dorothy's changes of
+colour and expression, Amanda came quickly enough to the conclusion that
+nothing would account for them but the assumption that the sly
+puritanical minx was in love with the handsome young roundhead. How else
+could the deathly pallor of her countenance while she fixed her eyes
+wide and unmoving upon his face, and the flush that ever and anon swept
+its red shadow over the pallor as she cast them on the ground at some
+brave word from the lips of the canting psalm-singer, be in the least
+intelligible? Then came the difficulty: how in that case was her share
+in his capture to be explained? But here Amanda felt herself in her own
+province, and before the marquis rose, had constructed a very clever
+theory, in which exercise of ingenuity, however, unluckily for its
+truth, she had taken for granted that Dorothy's nature corresponded to
+her own, and reasoned freely from the character of the one to the
+conduct of the other. This was her theory: Dorothy had expected Richard,
+and contrived his admission. His presence betrayed by the mastiff, and
+his departure challenged by the warder, she had flown instantly to the
+alarm-bell, to screen herself in any case, and to secure the chance, if
+he should be taken, of liberating him without suspicion under cover of
+the credit of his capture. The theory was a bold one, but then it
+accounted for all the points--amongst the rest, how he had got the
+password and why he would not tell--and was indeed in the fineness of
+its invention equally worthy of both the heart and the intellect of the
+theorist.
+
+Nor were mistress Fuller's resolves behind her conclusions in merit: of
+all times since first she had learned to mistrust her, this night must
+Dorothy be watched; and it was with a gush of exultation over her own
+acuteness that she saw her follow the men who bore Richard from the
+hall.
+
+If Dorothy knew more of her own feelings than she who watched her, she
+was far less confident that she understood them. Indeed she found them
+strangely complicated, and as difficult to control as to understand,
+while she stood gazing on the youth who through her found himself
+helpless and wounded in the hands of his enemies. He was all in the
+wrong, no doubt--a rebel against his king, and an apostate from the
+church of his country; but he was the same Richard with whom she had
+played all her childhood, whom her mother had loved, and between whom
+and herself had never fallen shadow before that cast by the sudden
+outblaze of the star of childish preference into the sun of youthful
+love. And was it not when the very mother of shadows, the blackness of
+darkness itself, swept between them and separated them for ever, that
+first she knew how much she had loved him? What if not with the love
+that could listen entranced to its own echo!--love of child or love of
+maiden, Dorothy never asked herself which it had been, or which it was
+now. She was not given to self-dissection. The cruel fingers of analysis
+had never pulled her flower to pieces, had never rubbed the bloom from
+the sun-dyed glow of her feelings. But now she could not help the
+vaporous rise of a question: all was over, for Richard had taken the
+path of presumption, rebellion, and violence--how then came it that her
+heart beat with such a strange delight at every answer he made to the
+expostulations or enticements of the marquis? How was it that his
+approval of the intruder, not the less evident that it was unspoken,
+made her heart swell with pride and satisfaction, causing her to forget
+the rude rebellion housed within the form whose youth alone prevented it
+from looking grand in her eyes?
+
+For the moment her heart had the better of--her conscience, shall I say?
+Yes, of that part of her conscience, I will allow, which had grown weak
+by the wandering of its roots into the poor soil of opinion. In the
+delight which the manliness of the young fanatic awoke in her, she even
+forgot the dull pain which had been gnawing at her heart ever since
+first she saw the blood streaming down his face as he passed her in the
+gateway. But when at length he fell fainting in the arms of his captors,
+and the fear that she had slain him writhed sickening through her heart,
+it was with a grim struggle indeed that she kept silent and conscious.
+The voice of the marquis, committing him to the care of mistress Watson
+instead of the rough ministrations of the guard, came with the power of
+a welcome restorative, and she hastened after his bearers to satisfy
+herself that the housekeeper was made understand that he was carried to
+her at the marquis's behest. She then retired to her own chamber,
+passing in the corridor Amanda, whose room was in the same quarter, with
+a salute careless from weariness and pre-occupation.
+
+The moment her head was on her pillow the great fight began--on that
+only battle-field of which all others are but outer types and pictures,
+upon which the thoughts of the same spirit are the combatants, accusing
+and excusing one another.
+
+She had done her duty, but what a remorseless thing that duty was! She
+did not, she could not, repent that she had done it, but her heart WOULD
+complain that she had had it to do. To her, as to Hamlet, it was a
+cursed spite. She had not yet learned the mystery of her relation to the
+Eternal, whose nature in his children it is that first shows itself in
+the feeling of duty. Her religion had not as yet been shaken, to test
+whether it was of the things that remain or of those that pass. It is
+easy for a simple nature to hold by what it has been taught, so long as
+out of that faith springs no demand of bitter obedience; but when the
+very hiding place of life begins to be laid bare under the scalpel of
+the law, when the heart must forego its love, when conscience seems at
+war with kindness, and duty at strife with reason, then most good
+people, let their devotion to what they call their religion be what it
+may, prove themselves, although generally without recognising the fact,
+very much of pagans after all. And good reason why! For are they not
+devoted to their church or their religion tenfold more than to the
+living Love, the father of their spirits? and what else is that, be the
+church or religion what it will, but paganism? Gentle and strong at once
+as Dorothy was, she was not yet capable of knowing that, however like it
+may look to a hardship, no duty can be other than a privilege. Nor was
+it any wonder if she did not perceive that she was already rewarded for
+the doing of the painful task, at the memory of which her heart ached
+and rebelled, by the fresh outburst in that same troubled heart of the
+half-choked spring of her love to the playmate of her childhood. Had it
+fallen, as she would have judged so much fairer, to some one else of the
+many in the populous place to defeat Richard's intent and secure his
+person, she would have both suffered and loved less. The love, I repeat,
+was the reward of the duty done.
+
+For a long time she tossed sleepless, for what she had just passed
+through had so thorougly possessed her imagination that, ever as her
+wearied brain was sinking under the waves of sleep, up rose the face of
+Richard from its depths, deathlike, with matted curls and bloodstained
+brow, and drove her again ashore on the rocks of wakefulness. By and by
+the form of her suffering changed, and then instead of the face of
+Richard it was his voice, ever as she reached the point of oblivion,
+calling aloud for help in a tone of mingled entreaty and reproach, until
+at last she could no longer resist the impression that she was warned to
+go and save him from some impending evil. This once admitted, not for a
+moment would she delay response. She rose, threw on a dressing-gown, and
+set out in the dim light of the breaking day to find again the room into
+which she had seen him carried.
+
+There was yet another in the house who could not sleep, and that was Tom
+Fool. He had a strong suspicion that Richard had learned the watchword
+from his mother, who, like most people desirous of a reputation for
+superior knowledge, was always looking out for scraps and orts of
+peculiar information. In such persons an imagination after its kind has
+considerable play, and when mother Rees had succeeded, without much
+difficulty on her own, or sense of risk on her son's part, in drawing
+from him the watchword of the week, she was aware in herself of a huge
+accession of importance; she felt as if she had been intrusted with the
+keys of the main entrance, and trod her clay floor as if the fate of
+Raglan was hid in her bosom, and the great pile rested in safety under
+the shadow of her wings. But her imagined gain was likely to prove her
+son's loss; for, as he reasoned with himself, would Mr. Heywood, now
+that he knew him for the thief of his mare, persist, upon reflection, in
+refusing to betray his mother? If not, then the fault would at once be
+traced to him, with the result at the very least, of disgraceful
+expulsion from the marquis's service. Almost any other risk would be
+preferable.
+
+But he had yet another ground for uneasiness. He knew well his mother's
+attachment to young Mr. Heywood, and had taken care she should have no
+suspicion of the way he was going after leaving her the night he told
+her the watchword; for such was his belief in her possession of
+supernatural powers, that he feared the punishment she would certainly
+inflict for the wrong done to Richard, should it come to her knowledge,
+even more than the wrath of the marquis. For both of these weighty
+reasons therefore he must try what could be done to strengthen Richard
+in his silence, and was prepared with an offer, or promise at least, of
+assistance in making his escape.
+
+As soon as the house was once more quiet, he got up, and, thoroughly
+acquainted with the "crenkles" of it, took his way through dusk and
+dark, through narrow passage and wide chamber, without encountering the
+slightest risk of being heard or seen, until at last he stood,
+breathless with anxiety and terror, at the door of the turret-chamber,
+and laid his ear against it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII.
+
+THE TURRET CHAMBER.
+
+
+When mistress Watson had, as gently as if she had been his mother, bound
+up Richard's wounded head, she gave him a composing draught, and sat
+down by his bedside. But as soon as she saw it begin to take effect, she
+withdrew, in the certainty that he would not move for some hours at
+least. Although he did fall asleep, however, Richard's mind was too
+restless and anxious to yield itself to the natural influence of the
+potion. He had given his word to his father that he would ride on the
+morrow; the morrow had come, and here he was! Hence the condition which
+the drug superinduced was rather that of dreaming than sleep, the more
+valuable element, repose, having little place in the result.
+
+The key was in the lock, and Tom Fool as he listened softly turned it,
+then lifted the latch, peeped in, and entered. Richard started to his
+elbow, and stared wildly about him. Tom made him an anxious sign, and,
+fevered as he was and but half awake, Richard, whether he understood it
+or not, anyhow kept silence, while Tom Fool approached the bed, and
+began to talk rapidly in a low voice, trembling with apprehension. It
+was some time, however, before Richard began to comprehend even a
+fragment here and there of what he was saying. When at length he had
+gathered this much, that his visitor was running no small risk in coming
+to him, and was in mortal dread of discovery, he needed but the
+disclosure of who he was, which presently followed, to spring upon him
+and seize him by the throat with a gripe that rendered it impossible for
+him to cry out, had he been so minded.
+
+'Master, master!' he gurgled, 'let me go. I will swear any oath you
+please--'
+
+'And break it any moment YOU please,' returned Richard through his set
+teeth, and caught with his other hand the coverlid, dragged it from the
+bed, and, twisting it first round his face, flung the remainder about
+his body; then, threatening to knock his brains out if he made the least
+noise, proceeded to tie him up in it with his garters and its own
+corners. No sound escaped poor Tom beyond a continuous mumbled entreaty
+through its folds. Richard laid him on the floor, pulled all the bedding
+upon the top of him, and gliding out, closed the door, but, to Tom's
+unspeakable relief, as his ears, agonizedly listening, assured him, did
+not lock it behind him.
+
+Tom's sole anxiety was now to get back to his garret unseen, and nothing
+was farther from his thoughts than giving the alarm. The moment Richard
+was out of hearing--out of sight he had been for some stifling
+minutes--he devoted his energies to getting clear of his entanglement,
+which he did not find very difficult; then stepping softly from the
+chamber, he crept with a heavy heart back as he had come through a
+labyrinth of by-ways.
+
+About half an hour after, Dorothy came gliding through the house, making
+a long circuit of corridors. Gladly would she have avoided passing
+Amanda's door, and involuntarily held her breath as she approached it,
+stepping as lightly as a thief. But alas! nothing save incorporeity
+could have availed her. The moment she had passed, out peeped Amanda and
+crept after her barefooted, saw her to her joy enter the chamber and
+close the door behind her, then 'like a tiger of the wood,' made one
+noiseless bound, turned the key, and sped back to her own chamber--with
+the feeling of Mark Antony when he said, 'Now let it work!'
+
+Dorothy was startled by a slight click, but concluded at once that it
+was nothing but a further fall of the latch, and was glad it was no
+louder. The same moment she saw, by the dim rushlight, the signs of
+struggle which the room presented, and discovered that Richard was gone.
+Her first emotion was an undefined agony: they had murdered him, or
+carried him off to a dungeon! There were the bedclothes in a tumbled
+heap upon the floor! And--yes--it was blood with which they were marked!
+Sickening at the thought, and forgetting all about her own situation,
+she sank on the chair by the bedside.
+
+Knowing the castle as she did, a very little reflection convinced her
+that if he had met with violence it must have been in attempting to
+escape; and if he had made the attempt, might he not have succeeded?
+There had certainly been no fresh alarm given. But upon this consoling
+supposition followed instantly the pang of the question: what was now
+required of her? The same hard thing as before? Ought she not again to
+give the alarm, that the poor wounded boy might be recaptured? Alas! had
+not evil enough already befallen him at her hand? And if she
+did--horrible thought!--what account could she give this time of her
+discovery? What indeed but the truth? And to what vile comments would
+not the confession of her secret visit in the first grey of the dawn to
+the chamber of the prisoner expose her? Would it not naturally rouse
+such suspicion as any modest woman must shudder to face, if but for the
+one moment between utterance and refutation. And what refutation could
+there be for her, so long as the fact remained? If he had escaped, the
+alarm would serve no good end, and her shame could be spared; but he
+might be hiding somewhere about the castle, and she must choose between
+treachery to the marquis--was it?--on the one hand, and renewed hurt,
+wrong, perhaps, to Richard, coupled with the bitterest disgrace to
+herself, on the other. To weigh such a question impartially was
+impossible; for in the one alternative no hurt would befall the marquis,
+while from the other her very soul recoiled sickening. Thus tortured,
+she sat motionless in the very den of the dragon, the one moment vainly
+endeavouring to rouse up her courage and look her duty in the face that
+she might know with certainty what it was; the next, feeling her whole
+nature rise rebellious against the fate that demanded such a sacrifice.
+Ought she to be thus punished for an intent of the purest humanity?
+
+There came a lull, and with the lull a sense of her position: she sat in
+the very, jaws of slander! Any moment mistress Watson or another might
+enter and find her there, and what then more natural or irrefutable than
+the accusation of having liberated him? She sprang to her feet, and
+darted to the door. It was locked!
+
+Her first thought was relief: she had no longer to decide; her second,
+that she was a prisoner--till, horror of horrors! the soldiers of the
+guard came to seek Richard and found her, or stern mistress Watson
+appeared, grim as one of the Fates; or, perhaps, if Richard had been
+carried away, until she was compelled by hunger and misery to call aloud
+for release. But no! she would rather die. Now in this case, now in
+that, her thoughts pursued the horrible possibilities, one or other of
+which was inevitable, through all the windings of the torture of
+anticipation, until for a time she must have lost consciousness, for she
+had no recollection of falling where she found herself--on the heap in
+the middle of the floor. The gray heartless dawn had begun to peer in
+through the dull green glass that closed the one loophole. It grew and
+grew, and its growth was the approach of the grinning demon of shame.
+The nearer a man can arrive to the knowledge of such feelings as hers is
+the conviction that he never can comprehend them. The cruel light seemed
+gathering its strength to publish her shame to the universe. Blameless
+as she was, she would have gladly accepted death in escape from the
+misery that every moment grew nearer. Now and then a faint glimmer of
+comfort reached her in the thought that at least the escape of Richard,
+if he had escaped, was thus ensured, and that without any blame to her.
+And perhaps mistress Watson would be merciful--only she too had her
+obligations, and as housekeeper was severely responsible. And even if
+she should prove pitiful, there was the locking of the door! It followed
+so quickly, that some one must have seen her enter, and wittingly snared
+her, believing most likely that she was not alone in the chamber.
+
+The terrible bolt at length slid back in the lock, gently, yet with
+tearing sound; mistress Watson entered, stood, stared. Before her sat
+Dorothy by the side of the bedstead, in her dressing-gown, her hair
+about her neck, her face like the moon at sunrise, and her eyelids red
+and swollen with weeping. She stood speechless, staring first at the
+disconsolate maiden, and then at the disorder of the room. The prisoner
+was nowhere. What her thoughts were, I must only imagine. That she
+should stare and be bewildered, finding Dorothy where she had left
+Richard, was at least natural.
+
+The moment Dorothy found herself face to face with her doom, her
+presence of mind returned. The blood rushed from her heart to her brain.
+She rose, and ere the astonished matron, who stood before her erect,
+high-nosed, and open-mouthed like Michael Angelo's Clotho, could find
+utterance, said,
+
+'Mistress Watson, I swear to you by the soul of my mother, that although
+all seeming is against me, W--'
+
+'Where is the young rebel?' interrupted mistress Watson sternly.
+
+'I know not,' answered Dorothy. 'When first I entered the chamber, he
+had already gone.'
+
+'And what then hadst thou to do entering it?' asked the housekeeper, in
+a tone that did Dorothy good by angering her.
+
+Mistress Watson was a kind soul in reality, but few natures can resist
+the debasing influence of a sudden sense of superiority. Besides, was
+not the young gentlewoman in great wrong, and therefore before her must
+she not personify an awful Purity?
+
+'That I will tell to none but my lord marquis,' answered Dorothy, with
+sudden resolve.
+
+'Oh, by all means, mistress! but an' thou think to lead him by the nose
+while I be in Raglan,--'
+
+'Shall I inform his lordship in what high opinion his housekeeper holds
+him?' said Dorothy. 'It seems to me he will hardly savour it.'
+
+'It would be an ill turn to do me, but my lord marquis did never heed a
+tale-bearer.'
+
+'Then will he not heed the tale thou wouldst yield him concerning me.'
+
+'What tale should I yield him but that I find--thee here and the
+prisoner gone?'
+
+'The tale I read in thy face and thy voice. Thou lookest and talkest as
+if I were a false woman.'
+
+'Verily to my eyes the thing looketh ill.'
+
+'It would look ill to any eyes, and therefore I need kind eyes to read,
+and just ears to hear my tale. I tell thee this is a matter for my lord,
+and if thou spread any report in the castle ere his lordship hear it,
+whatever evil springs therefrom it will lie at thy door.'
+
+'My life! what dost take me for, mistress Dorothy? My age and holding
+deserves some consideration at thy hands! Am I one to go tattling about
+the courts forsooth?'
+
+'Pardon me, madam, but a maiden's good name may be as precious to
+Dorothy Vaughan as a matron's respectability to mistress Watson. An' you
+had left me with that look on your face, and had but spoken my name to
+it, some one would have guessed ten times more than you know--or I
+either for that gear.'
+
+'I must tell the truth,' said mistress Watson, relenting a little.
+
+'Thou must, or I will tell it for thee--but to the marquis. Thou shalt
+be there to hear, and if, after that, thou tell it to another, then hast
+thou no mother's heart in thee.'
+
+Dorothy gave way at last and burst into tears. Mistress Watson was
+touched.
+
+'Nay, child, I would do thee no wrong,' she rejoined. 'Get thee to bed.
+I must rouse the guard to go look for the prisoner, but I will say
+nothing of thee to any but my lord marquis. When he is dressed and in
+his study, I will come for thee myself.'
+
+Dorothy thanked her warmly, and betook herself to her chamber,
+considerably relieved.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII.
+
+JUDGE GOUT.
+
+
+Dorothy had hardly reached her room when the castle was once more astir.
+The rush of the guard across the stone court, the clang of opening
+lattices, and the voices that called from out-shot heads, again filled
+her ears, but she never once peeped from her window. A moment, and the
+news was all over the castle that the prisoner had escaped.
+
+Lord Charles went at once to his father's room. The old man woke
+instantly. He had but just laid his hand on his mane, not mounted the
+shadowy steed, and was ill pleased to be already, and the second time,
+startled back to conscious weariness. When he heard the bad tidings he
+was silent for a few moments.
+
+'I would Herbert were at home, Charles, to stop this rat-hole for me,'
+he said at length. 'Let the roundhead go--I care not. I had but half a
+right to hold him, and he deserves his freedom. But what a governor art
+thou, my lord? Prithee, dost know the rents in thine own hose, who
+knowest not when thy gingerbread bulwarks gape? Find me out this
+rat-hole, I say, or I will depose thee and send for thy brother John,
+whom the king can ill spare.'
+
+'Have patience with me, father,' said lord Charles gently. 'I am more
+ashamed than thou art angry.'
+
+'Thou know'st I did but jest, my son. But in truth an' thou find it not
+I will send for lord Herbert. If he find what thou canst not, that will
+be no disgrace to thee. But find it we must.'
+
+'Think you not, my lord, it were best set mistress Dorothy on the
+search? She hath a wondrous gift of discovery.'
+
+'A good thought, Charles! I will even do as thou sayest. But search the
+castle first, from vane to dungeon, that we may be assured the roundhead
+hath indeed vanished.'
+
+As he spoke the marquis turned him round, to search the wide gray fields
+again for the shadowy horse that roamed them tetherless. But the steed
+would not come to his call; he grew chilly and asthmatic, tossed to and
+fro, and began to dread an attack of the gout.
+
+The sun rose higher; the hive of men and women was astir once more; the
+clatter of the day's work and the buzz of the day's talk began, and
+nothing was in anybody's mouth but the escape of the prisoner. His
+capture and trial were already of the past, forgotten for the time in
+the nearer astonishment. Lord Charles went searching, questioning,
+peering about everywhere, but could find neither prisoner nor the
+traitorous hole.
+
+Meantime mistress Watson was not a little anxious until she should have
+revealed what she knew to the marquis, for the prisoner was in her
+charge when he disappeared. In the course of the morning lord Charles
+came to her apartment to question her, but she begged to be excused,
+because of a certain disclosure she was not at liberty to make to any
+but his father. Lord Charles, whom she had known from his boyhood,
+readily yielded, and mistress Watson, five minutes after he had left his
+room, followed the marquis to his study, whither it was his custom
+always to repair before breakfast. He was looking pale from the trouble
+of the night, which had resulted in unmistakeable symptoms of the gout,
+listened to all she had to tell him without comment, looked grave, and
+told her to fetch mistress Dorothy. As soon as she was gone, he called
+Scudamore from the antechamber, and sent him to request lord Charles's
+presence. He came at once, and was there when Dorothy entered.
+
+She was very white and worn, and her eyes were heavily downcast. Her
+face wore that expression so much resembling guilt, which indicates the
+misery the most innocent feel the most under the consciousness of
+suspicion. At the sight of lord Charles, she crimsoned: it was one thing
+to confess to the marquis, and quite another to do so in the presence of
+his son.
+
+The marquis sat with one leg on a stool, already in the gradually
+contracting gripe of his ghoulish enemy. Before Dorothy could recover
+from the annoyance of finding lord Charles present, or open her mouth to
+beg for a more private interview, he addressed her abruptly.
+
+'Our young rebel friend hath escaped, it seems, mistress Dorothy!' he
+said, gently but coldly, looking her full in the eyes, with searching
+gaze and hard expression.
+
+'I am glad to hear it, my lord,' returned Dorothy, with a sudden influx
+of courage, coming, as the wind blows, she knew not whence.
+
+'Ha!' said the marquis, quickly; 'then is it news to thee, mistress
+Dorothy?'
+
+His lip, as it seemed to Dorothy, curled into a mocking smile; but the
+gout might have been in it.
+
+'Indeed it is news, my lord. I hoped it might be so, I confess, but I
+knew not that so it was.'
+
+'What, mistress Dorothy! knewest thou not that the young thief was
+gone?'
+
+'I knew that Richard Heywood was gone from his chamber--whether from the
+castle I knew not. He was no thief, my lord. Your lordship's page and
+fool were the thieves.'
+
+'Cousin, I hardly know myself in the change I find in thee! Truly, a
+marvellous change! In the dark night thou takest a roundhead prisoner;
+in the gray of the morning thou settest him free again! Hath one visit
+to his chamber so wrought upon thee? To an old man it seemeth less than
+maidenly.'
+
+Again a burning blush overspread poor Dorothy's countenance. But she
+governed herself, and spoke bravely, although she could not keep her
+voice from trembling.
+
+'My lord,' she said, 'Richard Heywood was my playmate. We were as
+brother and sister, for our fathers' lands bordered each other.'
+
+'Thou didst say nothing of these things last night?'
+
+'My lord! Before the whole hall? Besides, what mattered it? All was over
+long ago, and I had done my part against him.'
+
+'Fell you out together then?'
+
+'What need is there for your lordship to ask? Thou seest him of the one
+part, and me of the other.'
+
+'And from loving thou didst fall to hating?'
+
+'God forbid, my lord! I but do my part against him.'
+
+'For the which thou hadst a noble opportunity unsought, raising the hue
+and cry upon him within his enemy's walls!'
+
+'I would to God, my lord, it had not fallen to me.'
+
+'Thinking better of it, therefore, and repenting of thy harshness, thou
+didst seek his chamber in the night to tell him so? I would fain know
+how a maiden reasoneth with herself when she doth such things.'
+
+'Not so, my lord. I will tell you all. I could not sleep for thinking of
+my wounded playmate. And as to what he had done, after it became clear
+that he sought but his own, and meant no hair's-breadth of harm to your
+lordship, I confess the matter looked not the same.'
+
+'Therefore you would make him amends and undo what you had done? You had
+caught the bird, and had therefore a right to free the bird when you
+would? All well, mistress Dorothy, had he been indeed a bird! But being
+a man, and in thy friend's house, I doubt thy logic. The thing had
+passed from thy hands into mine, young mistress,' said the marquis, into
+the ball of whose foot the gout that moment ran its unicorn-horn.
+
+'I did not set him free, my lord. When I entered the prison-chamber, he
+was already gone.'
+
+'Thou hadst the will and didst it not! Is there yet another in my house
+who had the will and did it?' cried the marquis, who, although more than
+annoyed that she should have so committed herself, yet was willing to
+give such scope to a lover, that if she had but confessed she had
+liberated him, he would have pardoned her heartily. He did not yet know
+how incapable Dorothy was of a lie.
+
+'But, my lord, I had not the will to set him free,' she said.
+
+'Wherefore then didst go to him?'
+
+'My lord, he was sorely wounded, and I had seen him fall fainting,' said
+Dorothy, repressing her tears with much ado.
+
+'And thou didst go to comfort him?'
+
+Dorothy was silent.
+
+'How camest thou locked into his room? Tell me that, mistress.'
+
+'Your lordship knows as much of that as I do. Indeed, I have been sorely
+punished for a little fault.'
+
+'Thou dost confess the fault then?'
+
+'If it WAS a fault to visit him who was sick and in prison, my lord.'
+
+The marquis was silent for a whole minute.
+
+'And thou canst not tell how he gat him forth of the walls? Must I
+believe him to be forth of them, my lord?' he said, turning to his son.
+
+'I cannot imagine him within them, my lord, after such search as we have
+made.'
+
+'Still,' returned the marquis, the acuteness of whose wits had not been
+swallowed up by that of the gout, 'so long as thou canst not tell how he
+gat forth, I may doubt whether he be forth. If the manner of his exit be
+acknowledged hidden, wherefore not the place of his refuge? Mistress
+Dorothy,' he continued, altogether averse to the supposition of
+treachery amongst his people, 'thou art bound by all obligations of
+loyalty and shelter and truth, to tell what thou knowest. An' thou do
+not, thou art a traitor to the house, yea to thy king, for when the
+worst comes, and this his castle is besieged, much harm may be wrought
+by that secret passage, yea, it may be taken thereby.'
+
+'You say true, my lord: I should indeed be so bound, an' I knew what my
+lord would have me disclose.'
+
+'One may be bound and remain bound,' said the marquis, spying
+prevarication. 'Now the thing is over, and the youth safe, all I ask of
+thee, and surely it is not much, is but to bar the door against his
+return--except indeed thou didst from the first contrive so to meet thy
+roundhead lover in my loyal house. Then indeed it were too much to
+require of thee! Ah ha! mistress Dorothy, the little blind god is a
+rascally deceiver. He is but blind nor' nor' west. He playeth hoodman,
+and peepeth over his bandage.'
+
+'My lord, you wrong me much,' said Dorothy, and burst into tears, while
+once more the red lava of the human centre rushed over her neck and
+brow. 'I did think that I had done enough both for my lord of Worcester
+and against Richard Heywood, and I did hope that he had escaped: there
+lies the worst I can lay to my charge even in thought, my lord, and I
+trust it is no more than may be found pardonable.'
+
+'It sets an ill example to my quiet house if the ladies therein go
+anights to the gentlemen's chambers.'
+
+'My lord, you are cruel,' said Dorothy.
+
+'Not a soul in the house knows it but myself, my lord,' said mistress
+Watson.
+
+'Hold there, my good woman! Whose hand was it turned the key upon her?
+More than thou must know thereof. Hear me, mistress Dorothy: I would be
+heart-loath to quarrel with thee, and in all honesty I am glad thy
+lover--'
+
+'He is no lover of mine, my lord! At least--'
+
+'Be he what he may, he is a fine fellow, and I am glad he hath escaped.
+Do thou but find out for my lord Charles here the cursed rat-hole by
+which he goes and comes, and I will gladly forgive thee all the trouble
+thou hast brought into my sober house. For truly never hath been in my
+day such confusion and uproar therein as since thou camest hither, and
+thy dog and thy lover and thy lover's mare followed thee.'
+
+'Alas, my lord! if I were fortunate enough to find it, what would you
+but say I found it where I knew well to look for it?'
+
+'Find it, and I promise thee I will never say word on the matter again.
+Thou art a good girl, and thou do venture a hair too far for a lover.
+The still ones are always the worst, mistress Watson.'
+
+'My lord! my lord!' cried Dorothy, but ended not, for his lordship gave
+a louder cry. His face was contorted with anguish, and he writhed under
+the tiger fangs of the gout.
+
+'Go away,' he shouted, 'or I shall disgrace my manhood before women, God
+help me!'
+
+'I trust thee will bear me no malice,' said the housekeeper, as they
+walked in the direction of Dorothy's chamber.
+
+'You did but your duty,' said Dorothy quietly.
+
+'I will do all I can for thee,' continued mistress Watson, mounted
+again, if not on her high horse then on her palfrey, by her master's
+behaviour to the poor girl--'if thou but confess to me how thou didst
+contrive the young gentleman's escape, and wherefore he locked the door
+upon thee.'
+
+At the moment they were close to Dorothy's room; her answer to the
+impertinence was to walk in and shut the door; and mistress Watson was
+thenceforward entirely satisfied of her guilt.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV.
+
+AN EVIL TIME.
+
+
+And now was an evil time for Dorothy. She retired to her chamber more
+than disheartened by lord Worcester's behaviour to her, vexed with
+herself for doing what she would have been more vexed with herself for
+having left undone, feeling wronged, lonely, and disgraced, conscious of
+honesty, yet ashamed to show herself--and all for the sake of a
+presumptuous boy, whose opinions were a disgust to her and his actions a
+horror! Yet not only did she not repent of what she had done, but, fact
+as strange as natural, began, with mingled pleasure and annoyance, to
+feel her heart drawn towards the fanatic as the only one left her in the
+world capable of doing her justice, that was, of understanding her. She
+thus unknowingly made a step towards the discovery that it is infinitely
+better to think wrong and to act right upon that wrong thinking, than it
+is to think right and not to do as that thinking requires of us. In the
+former case the man's house, if not built upon the rock, at least has
+the rock beneath it; in the latter, it is founded on nothing but sand.
+The former man may be a Saul of Tarsus, the latter a Judas Iscariot. He
+who acts right will soon think right; he who acts wrong will soon think
+wrong. Any two persons acting faithfully upon opposite convictions, are
+divided but by a bowing wall; any two, in belief most harmonious, who do
+not act upon it, are divided by infinite gulfs of the blackness of
+darkness, across which neither ever beholds the real self of the other.
+
+Dorothy ought to have gone at once to lady Margaret and told her all;
+but she naturally and rightly shrank from what might seem an appeal to
+the daughter against the judgment of her father; neither could she dare
+hope that, if she did, her judgment would not be against her also. Her
+feelings were now in danger of being turned back upon herself, and
+growing bitter; for a lasting sense of injury is, of the human moods,
+one of the least favourable to sweetness and growth. There was no one to
+whom she could turn. Had good Dr. Bayly been at home--but he was away on
+some important mission from his lordship to the king: and indeed she
+could scarcely have looked for refuge from such misery as hers in the
+judgment of the rather priggish old-bachelor ecclesiastic. Gladly would
+she have forsaken the castle, and returned to all the dangers and fears
+of her lonely home; but that would be to yield to a lie, to flee from
+the devil instead of facing him, and with her own hand to fix the
+imputed smirch upon her forehead, exposing herself besides to the
+suspicion of having fled to join her lover, and cast in her lot with his
+amongst the traitors. Besides, she had been left by lord Herbert in
+charge of his fire-engine and the water of the castle, which trust she
+could not abandon. Whatever might be yet to come of it, she must stay
+and encounter it, and would in the meantime set herself to discover, if
+she might, the secret pathway by which dog and man came and went at
+their pleasure. This she owed her friends, even at the risk, in case of
+success, of confirming the marquis's worst suspicions.
+
+She was not altogether wrong in her unconscious judgment of lady
+Margaret. Her nature was such as, its nobility tinctured with romance,
+rendered her perfectly capable of understanding either of the two halves
+of Dorothy's behaviour, but was not sufficient to the reception and
+understanding of the two parts together. That is, she could have
+understood the heroic capture of her former lover, or she could have
+understood her going to visit him in his trouble, and even, what Dorothy
+was incapable of, his release; but she was not yet equal to
+understanding how she should set herself so against a man, even to his
+wounding and capture, whom she loved so much as, immediately thereupon,
+to dare the loss of her good name by going to his chamber, so placing
+herself in the power of a man she had injured, as well as running a
+great risk of discovery on the part of her friends. Hence she was quite
+prepared to accept the solution of her strange conduct, which by and by,
+it was hard to say how, came to be offered and received all over the
+castle--that Dorothy first admitted, then captured, and finally released
+the handsome young roundhead.
+
+Her first impressions of the affair, lady Margaret received from lord
+Charles, who was certainly prejudiced against Dorothy, and no doubt
+jealous of the relation of the fine young rebel to a loyal maiden of
+Raglan; while the suspicion, almost belief, that she knew and would not
+reveal the flaw in his castle, the idea of which had begun to haunt him
+like some spot in his own body of which pain made him unnaturally
+conscious, annoyed him more and more. To do him justice, I must not omit
+to mention that he never made a communication on the matter to any but
+his sister-in-law, who would however have certainly had a more kindly as
+well as exculpatory feeling towards Dorothy, had she first heard the
+truth from her own lips.
+
+For some little time, not perceiving the difficulties in her way, and
+perhaps from unlikeness not understanding the disinclination of such a
+girl to self-defence, lady Margaret continued to expect a visit from
+her, with excuse at least, if not confession and apology upon her lips,
+and was hurt by her silence as much as offended by her behaviour. She
+was yet more annoyed, when they first met, that, notwithstanding her
+evident suffering, she wore such an air of reticence, and thence she
+both regarded and addressed her coldly; so that Dorothy was confirmed in
+her disinclination to confide in her. Besides, as she said to herself,
+she had nothing to tell but what she had already told; everything
+depended on the interpretation accorded to the facts, and the right
+interpretation was just the one thing she had found herself unable to
+convey. If her friends did not, she could not justify herself.
+
+She tried hard to behave as she ought, for, conscious how much
+appearances were against her, she felt it would be unjust to allow her
+affection towards her mistress to be in the least shaken by her
+treatment of her, and was if possible more submissive and eager in her
+service than before. But in this she was every now and then rudely
+checked by the fear that lady Margaret would take it as the endeavour of
+guilt to win favour; and, do what she would, instead of getting closer
+to her, she felt every time they met, that the hedge of separation which
+had sprung up between them had in the interval grown thicker. By degrees
+the mistress had assumed towards the poor girl that impervious manner of
+self-contained dignity, which, according to her who wears it, is the
+carriage either of a wing-bound angel, the gait of a stork, or the
+hobble of a crab.
+
+Of a different kind was the change which now began to take place towards
+her on the part of another member of the household.
+
+While she had been intent upon Richard as he stood before the marquis,
+not Amanda only but another as well had been intent upon her. Poor
+creature as Scudamore yet was, he possessed, besides no small generosity
+of nature, a good deal of surface sympathy, and a ready interest in the
+shows of humanity. Hence as he stood regarding now the face of the
+prisoner and now that of Dorothy, whom he knew for old friends, he could
+not help noticing that every phase of the prisoner, so to speak, might
+be read on Dorothy. He was too shallow to attribute this to anything
+more than the interest she must feel in the results of the exploit she
+had performed. The mere suggestion of what had afforded such wide ground
+for speculation on the part of Amanda, was to Scudamore rendered
+impossible by the meeting of two things--the fact that the only time he
+had seen them together, Richard was very plainly out of favour, and now
+the all-important share Dorothy had had in his capture. But the longer
+he looked, the more he found himself attracted by the rich changefulness
+of expression on a countenance usually very still. He surmised little of
+the conflict of emotions that sent it to the surface, had to construct
+no theory to calm the restlessness of intellectual curiosity, discovered
+no secret feeding of the flame from behind. Yet the flame itself drew
+him as the candle draws the moth. Emotion in the face of a woman was
+enough to attract Scudamore; the prettier the face, the stronger the
+attraction, but the source or character of the emotion mattered nothing
+to him: he asked no questions any more than the moth, but circled the
+flame. In a word, Dorothy had now all at once become to him interesting.
+
+As soon as she found a safe opportunity, Amanda told him of Dorothy's
+being found in the turret chamber, a fact she pretended to have heard in
+confidence from mistress Watson, concealing her own part in it. But as
+Amanda spoke, Dorothy became to Rowland twice as interesting as ever
+Amanda had been. There was a real romance about the girl, he thought.
+And then she LOOKED so quiet! He never thought of defending her or
+playing the true part of a cousin. Amanda might think of her as she
+pleased: Rowland was content. Had he cared ever so much more for her
+judgment than he did, it would have been all the same. How far Dorothy
+had been right or wrong in visiting Heywood, he did not even conjecture,
+not to say consider. It was enough that she who had been to him like the
+blank in the centre of the African map, was now a region of marvels and
+possibilities, vague but not the less interesting, or the less worthy of
+beholding the interest she had awaked. As to her loving the roundhead
+fellow, that would not stand long in the way.
+
+In this period then of gloom and wretchedness, Dorothy became aware of a
+certain increase of attention on the part of her cousin. This she
+attributed to kindness generated of pity. But to accept it, and so
+confess that she needed it, would have been to place herself too much on
+a level with one whom she did not respect, while at the same time it
+would confirm him in whatever probably mistaken grounds he had for
+offering it. She therefore met his advances kindly but coldly, a
+treatment under which his feelings towards her began to ripen into
+something a little deeper and more genuine.
+
+During the next ten days or so, Dorothy could not help feeling that she
+was regarded by almost every one in the castle as in disgrace, and that
+deservedly. The most unpleasant proof she had of this was the behaviour
+of the female servants, some of them assuming airs of injured innocence,
+others of offensive familiarity in her presence, while only one, a
+kitchen-maid she seldom saw, Tom Fool's bride in the marriage-jest,
+showed her the same respect as formerly. This girl came to her one night
+in her room, and with tears in her eyes besought permission to carry her
+meals thither, that she might be spared eating with the rude ladies, as
+in her indignation she called them. But Dorothy saw that to forsake
+mistress Watson's table would be to fly the field, and therefore,
+hateful as it was to meet the looks of those around it, she did so with
+unvailed lids and an enforced dignity which made itself felt. But the
+effort was as exhausting as painful, and the reflex of shame, felt as
+shame in spite of innocence, was eating into her heart. In vain she said
+to herself that she was guiltless; in vain she folded herself round in
+the cloak of her former composure; the consciousness that, to say the
+least of it, she was regarded as a young woman of questionable
+refinement, weighed down her very eyelids as she crossed the court.
+
+But she was not left utterly forsaken; she had still one refuge--the
+workshop, where Caspar Kaltoff wrought like an 'artificial god;' for the
+worthy German altered his manner to her not a whit, but continued to
+behave with the mingled kindness of a father and devotion of a servant.
+His respect and trustful sympathy showed, without word said, that he, if
+no other, believed nothing to her disadvantage, but was as much her
+humble friend as ever; and to the hitherto self-reliant damsel, the
+blessedness of human sympathy, embodied in the looks and tones of the
+hard-handed mechanic, brought such healing and such schooling together,
+that for a long time she never said her prayers by her bedside without
+thanking God for Caspar Kaltoff.
+
+Ere long her worn look, thin cheek, and weary eye began to work on the
+heart of lady Margaret, and she relented in spirit towards the favourite
+of her husband, whose anticipated disappointment in her had sharpened
+the arrows of her resentment. But to the watery dawn of favour which
+followed, the poor girl could not throw wide her windows, knowing it
+arose from no change in lady Margaret's judgment concerning her: she
+could not as a culprit accept what had been as a culprit withdrawn from
+her. The conviction burned in her heart like cold fire, that, but for
+compassion upon the desolate state of an orphan, she would have been at
+once dismissed from the castle. Sometimes she ventured to think that if
+lord Herbert had been at home, all this would not have happened; but now
+what could she expect other than that on his return he would regard her
+and treat her in the same way as his wife and father and brother?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV.
+
+THE DELIVERER.
+
+
+But she found some relief in applying her mind to the task which lord
+Worcester had set her; and many a night as she tossed sleepless on her
+bed, would she turn from the thoughts that tortured her, to brood upon
+the castle, and invent if she might some new possible way, however
+difficult, of getting out of it unseen: and many a morning after the
+night thus spent, would she hasten, ere the household was astir, to
+examine some spot which had occurred to her as perhaps containing the
+secret she sought. One time it was a chimney that might have door and
+stair concealed within it; another, the stables, where she examined
+every stall in the hope of finding a trap to an underground way. Had any
+one else been in question but Richard, the traitor, the roundhead, she
+might have imagined an associate within the walls, in which case farther
+solution would not have been for her; but somehow, she did not make it
+clear to herself how, she could not entertain the idea in connection
+with Richard. Besides, in brooding over everything, it had grown plain
+to her that both Richard and Marquis had that night been through the
+moat.
+
+Some who caught sight of her in the early dawn, wandering about and
+peering here and there, thought that she was losing her senses; others
+more ingenious in the thinking of evil, imagined she sought to impress
+the household with a notion of her innocence by pretending a search for
+the concealed flaw in the defences.
+
+Ever since she had been put in charge of the water-works, she had been
+in the habit of lingering a little on the roof of the keep as often as
+occasion took her thither, for she delighted in the far outlook on the
+open country which it afforded; and perhaps it was a proof of the
+general healthiness of her nature that now in her misery, instead of
+shutting herself up in her own chamber, she oftener sought the walk
+around the reservoir, looking abroad in shadowy hope of some lurking
+deliverance, like captive lady in the stronghold of evil knight. On one
+of these occasions, in the first of the twilight, she was leaning over
+one of the battlements looking down upon the moat and its white and
+yellow blossoms and great green leaves, and feeling very desolate. Her
+young life seemed to have crumbled down upon her and crushed her heart,
+and all for one gentle imprudence.
+
+'Oh my mother!' she murmured,--'an' thou couldst hear me, thou wouldst
+help me an' thou couldst. Thy poor Dorothy is sorely sad and forsaken,
+and she knows no way of escape. Oh my mother, hear me!'
+
+As she spoke, she looked away from the moat to the sky, and spread out
+her arms in the pain of her petition.
+
+There was a step behind her.
+
+'What! what! My little protestant praying to the naughty saints! That
+will never do.'
+
+Dorothy had turned with a great start, and stood speechless and
+trembling before lord Herbert.
+
+'My poor child!' he said, holding out both his hands, and taking those
+which Dorothy did not offer--'did I startle thee then so much? I am
+truly sorry. I heard but thy last words; be not afraid of thy secret.
+But what hath come to thee? Thou art white and thin, there are tears on
+thy face, and it seems as thou wert not so glad to see me as I thought
+thou wouldst have been. What is amiss? I hope thou art not sick--but
+plainly thou art ill at ease! Go not yet after my Molly, cousin, for
+truly we need thee here yet a while.'
+
+'Would I might go to Molly, my lord!' said Dorothy. 'Molly would believe
+me.'
+
+'Thou need'st not go to Molly for that, cousin. I will believe thee.
+Only tell me what thou wouldst have me believe, and I will believe it.
+What! think'st thou I am not magician enough to know whom to believe and
+whom not? Fye, fye, mistress! Thou, on thy part, wilt not put faith in
+thy cousin Herbert!'
+
+His kind words were to her as the voice of him that calleth for the
+waters of the sea that he may pour them out on the face of the earth.
+The poor girl burst into a passion of weeping, fell on her knees before
+him, and holding up her clasped hands, cried out in a voice of
+sob-choked agony--for she was not used to tears, and it was to her a
+rending of the heart to weep--
+
+'Save me, save me, my lord! I have no friend in the world who can help
+me but thee.'
+
+'No friend! What meanest thou, Dorothy?' said lord Herbert, taking her
+two clasped hands between his. 'There is my Margaret and my father!'
+
+'Alas, my lord! they mean well by me, but they do not believe me; and if
+your lordship believe me no more than they, I must go from Raglan. Yet
+believing me, I know not how you could any more help me.'
+
+'Dorothy, my child, I can do nothing till thou take me with thee. I
+cannot even comfort thee.'
+
+'Your lordship is weary,' said Dorothy, rising and wiping her eyes. 'You
+cannot yet have eaten since you came. Go, my lord, and hear my tale
+first from them that believe me not. They will assure you of nothing
+that is not true, only they understand it not, and wrong me in their
+conjectures. Let my lady Margaret tell it you, my lord, and then if you
+have yet faith enough in me to send for me, I will come and answer all
+you ask. If you send not for me, I will ride from Raglan to-morrow.'
+
+'It shall be as thou sayest, Dorothy. An' it be not fit for the judge to
+hear both sides of the tale, or an' it boots the innocent which side he
+first heareth, then were he no better judge than good king James, of
+blessed memory, when he was so sore astonished to find both sides in the
+right.'
+
+'A king, my lord, and judge foolishly!'
+
+'A king, my damsel, and judged merrily. But fear me not; I trust in God
+to judge fairly even betwixt friend and foe, and I doubt not it will be
+now to the lightening of thy trouble, my poor storm-beaten dove.'
+
+It startled Dorothy with a gladness that stung like pain, to hear the
+word he never used but to his wife thus flit from his lips in the
+tenderness of his pity, and alight like the dove itself upon her head.
+She thanked him with her whole soul, and was silent.
+
+'I will send hither to thee, my child, when I require thy presence; and
+when I send come straight to my lady's parlour.'
+
+Dorothy bowed her head, but could not speak, and lord Herbert walked
+quickly from her. She heard him run down the stair almost with the
+headlong speed of his boy Henry.
+
+Half an hour passed slowly--then lady Margaret's page came lightly up
+the steps, bearing the request that she would favour his mistress with
+her presence. She rose from the battlement where she had seated herself
+to watch the moon, already far up in the heavens, as she brightened
+through the gathering dusk, and followed him with beating heart.
+
+When she entered the parlour, where as yet no candles had been lighted,
+she saw and knew nothing till she found herself clasped to a bosom
+heaving with emotion.
+
+'Forgive me, Dorothy,' sobbed lady Margaret. 'I have done thee wrong.
+But thou wilt love me yet again--wilt thou not, Dorothy?'
+
+'Madam! madam!' was all Dorothy could answer, kissing her hands.
+
+Lady Margaret led her to her husband, who kissed her on the forehead,
+and seated her betwixt himself and his wife; and for a space there was
+silence. Then at last said Dorothy:
+
+'Tell me, madam, how is it that I find myself once more in the garden of
+your favour? How know you that I am not all unworthy thereof?'
+
+'My lord tells me so,' returned lady Margaret simply.
+
+'And whence doth my lord know it?' asked Dorothy, turning to lord
+Herbert.
+
+''An' thou be not satisfied of thine own innocence, Dorothy, I will ask
+thee a few questions. Listen to thine answers, and judge. How came the
+young puritan into the castle that night? But stay: we must have
+candles, for how can I, the judge, or my lady, the jury, see into the
+heart of the prisoner save through the window of her face?'
+
+Dorothy laughed--her first laugh since the evil fog had ascended and
+swathed her. Lady Margaret rang the bell on her table. Candles were
+brought from where they stood ready in the ante-chamber, and as soon as
+they began to burn clear, lord Herbert repeated his question.
+
+'My lord,' answered Dorothy, 'I look to you to tell me so much, for
+before God I know not.'
+
+'Nay, child! thou need'st not buttress thy words with an oath,' said his
+lordship. 'Thy fair eyes are worth a thousand oaths. But to the
+question: tell me wherefore didst thou not let the young man go when
+first thou spied him? Wherefore didst ring the alarm-bell? Thou sawest
+he was upon his own mare, for thou knewest her--didst thou not?'
+
+'I did, my lord; but he had no business there, and I was of my lord
+Worcester's household. Here I am not Dorothy Vaughan, but my lady's
+gentlewoman.'
+
+'Then why didst thou go to his room thereafter? Didst thou not know it
+for the most perilous adventure maiden could undergo?'
+
+'Perilous it hath indeed proved, my lord.'
+
+'And might have proved worse than perilous.'
+
+'No, my lord. Other danger was none where Richard was,' returned Dorothy
+with vehemence.
+
+'It beareth a look as if mayhap thou dost or mightst one day love the
+young man!' said lord Herbert in slow pondering tone.
+
+'My spirit hath of late been driven to hold him company, my lord. It
+seemed that, save Caspar, I had no friend left but him. God help me! it
+were a fearful thing to love a fanatic! But I will resist the devil.'
+
+'Truly we are in lack of a few such devils on what we count the honest
+side, Dorothy!' said lord Herbert, laughing. 'Not every man that thinks
+the other way is a rogue or a fool. But thou hast not told me why thou
+didst run the heavy risk of seeking him in the night.'
+
+'I could not rest for thinking of him, my lord, with that terrible wound
+in the head I had as good as given him, and from whose effects I had
+last seen him lie as one dead. He was my playmate, and my mother loved
+him.'
+
+Here poor Dorothy broke down and wept, but recovered herself with an
+effort, and proceeded.
+
+'I kept starting awake, seeing him thus at one time, and at another
+hearing him utter my name as if entreating me to go to him, until at
+last I believed that I was called.'
+
+'Called by whom, Dorothy?'
+
+'I thought--I thought, my lord, it might be the same that called Samuel,
+who had opened my ears to hear Richard's voice.'
+
+'And it was indeed therefore thou didst go?'
+
+'I think so, my lord. I am sure, at least, but for that I would not have
+gone. Yet surely I mistook, for see what hath come of it,' she added,
+turning to lady Margaret.
+
+'We must not judge from one consequence where there are a thousand yet
+to follow,' said his lordship. '--And thou sayest, when thou didst enter
+the room thou didst find no one there?'
+
+'I say so, my lord, and it is true.'
+
+'That I know as well as thou. What then didst thou think of the matter?'
+
+'I was filled with fear, my lord, when I saw the bedclothes all in a
+heap on the floor, but upon reflection I hoped that he had had the
+better in the struggle, and had escaped; for now at least he could do no
+harm in Raglan, I thought. But when I found the door was locked,--I dare
+hardly think of that, my lord; it makes me tremble yet.'
+
+'Now, who thinkest thou in thy heart did lock the door upon thee?'
+
+'Might it not have been Satan himself, my lord?'
+
+'Nay, I cannot tell what might or might not be where such a one is so
+plainly concerned. But I believe he was only acting in his usual
+fashion, which, as a matter of course, must be his worst--I mean through
+the heart and hands of some one in the house who would bring thee into
+trouble.'
+
+'I would it were the other way, my lord.'
+
+'So would I heartily. In his own person I fear him not a whit. But hast
+thou no suspicion of any one owing thee a grudge, who might be glad on
+such opportunity to pay it thee with interest?'
+
+'I must confess I have, my lord; but I beg of your lordship not to
+question me on the matter further, for it reaches only to suspicion. I
+know nothing, and might, if I uttered a word, be guilty of grievous
+wrong. Pardon me, my lord.'
+
+Lord Herbert looked hard at his wife. Lady Margaret dropped her head.
+
+'Thou art right, indeed, my good cousin!' he said, turning again to
+Dorothy; 'for that would be to do by another as thou sufferest so sorely
+from others doing by thee. I must send my brains about and make a
+discovery or two for myself. It is well I have a few days to spend at
+home. And now to the first part of the business in hand. Hast thou any
+special way of calling thy dog? It is a moonlit night, I believe.'
+
+He rose and went to the window, over which hung a heavy curtain of
+Flemish tapestry.
+
+'It is a three-quarter old moon, my lord,' said Dorothy, 'and very
+bright. I did use to call my dog with a whistle my mother gave me when I
+was a child.'
+
+'Canst thou lay thy hand upon it? Hast thou it with thee in Raglan?'
+
+'I have it in my hand now, my lord.'
+
+'What then with the moon and thy whistle, I think we shall not fail.'
+
+'Hast lost thy wits, Ned?' said his wife. 'Or what fiend wouldst thou
+raise to-night?'
+
+'I would lay one rather,' returned lord Herbert. 'But first I would
+discover this same perilous fault in the armour of my house. Is thy
+genet still in thy control, Dorothy?'
+
+'I have no reason to think otherwise, my lord. The frolicker he, the
+merrier ever was I.'
+
+'Darest thou ride him alone in the moonlight--outside the walls.'
+
+'I dare anything on Dick's back--that Dick can do, my lord.'
+
+'Doth thy dog know Caspar--in friendly fashion, I mean?'
+
+'Caspar is the only one in the castle he is quite friendly with, my
+lord.'
+
+'Then is all as I would have it. And now I will tell thee what I would
+not have: I would not have a soul in the place but my lady here know
+that I am searching with thee after this dog-and-man hole. Therefore I
+will saddle thy little horse for thee myself, and--'
+
+'No, no, my lord!' interrupted Dorothy. 'That _I_ can do.'
+
+'So much the better for thee. But I am no boor, fair damsel. Then shalt
+thou mount and ride him forth, and Marquis thy mastiff shall see thee go
+from the yard. Then will I mount the keep, and from that point of
+vantage look down upon the two courts, while Caspar goes to stand by thy
+dog. Thou shalt ride slowly along for a minute or two, until these
+preparations shall have been made; then shalt thou blow thy whistle, and
+set off at a gallop to round the castle, still ever and anon blowing thy
+whistle; by which means, if I should fail to see thy Marquis leave the
+castle, thou mayest perchance discover at least from which side of the
+castle he comes to thee.'
+
+Dorothy sprang to her feet.
+
+'I am ready, my lord,' she said.
+
+'And so am I, my maiden,' returned lord Herbert, rising. 'Wilt go to the
+top of the keep, wife, and grant me the light of eyes in aid of the
+moonshine? I will come thither presently.'
+
+'Thou shalt find me there, Ned, I promise thee. Mother Mary speed thy
+quest?'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI.
+
+THE DISCOVERY.
+
+
+All was done as had been arranged. Lord Herbert saddled Dick, not
+unaided of Dorothy, lifted her to his back, and led her to the gate, in
+full vision of Marquis, who went wild at the sight, and threatened to
+pull down kennel and all in his endeavours to follow them. Lord Herbert
+himself opened the yard gate, for the horses had already been suppered,
+and the men were in bed. He then walked by her side down to the brick
+gate. A moment there, and she was free and alone, with the wide green
+fields and the yellow moonlight all about her.
+
+She had some difficulty in making Dick go slowly--quietly she could
+not--for the first minute or two, as lord Herbert had directed. He had
+had but little exercise of late, and moved as if his four legs felt like
+wings. Dorothy had ridden him very little since she came to the castle,
+but being very handy, lord Charles had used him, and one of the grooms
+had always taken him to ride messages. He had notwithstanding had but
+little of the pleasure of speed for a long time, and when Dorothy at
+length gave him the rein, he flew as if every member of his body from
+tail to ears and eyelids had been an engine of propulsion. But Dorothy
+had more wings than Dick. Her whole being was full of wings. It was a
+small thing that she had not had a right gallop since she left Wyfern;
+the strength she had been putting forth to bear the Atlas burden that
+night lifted from her soul, was now left free to upbear her, and she
+seemed in spirit to soar aloft into the regions of aether. With her
+horse under her, the moon over her, "the wind of their own speed" around
+them, and her heart beating with a joy such as she had never known, she
+could hardly help doubting sometimes for a moment whether she was not
+out in one of those delightful dreams of liberty and motion which had so
+frequently visited her sleep since she came to Raglan. Three shrill
+whistles she had blown, about a hundred yards from the gate, had heard
+the eager crowded bark of her dog in answer, and then Dick went flying
+over the fields like a water-bird over the lake, that scratches its
+smooth surface with its feet as it flies. Around the rampart they went.
+The still night was jubilant around them as they flew. The stars shone
+as if they knew all about her joy, that the shadow of guilt had been
+lifted from her, and that to her the world again was fair. She felt as
+the freed Psyche must feel when she drops the clay, and lo! the whole
+chrysalid world, which had hitherto hung as a clog at her foot, fast by
+the inexorable chain our blindness calls gravitation, has dropped from
+her with the clay, and the universe is her own.
+
+At intervals she blew her whistle, and ever kept her keen eyes and ears
+awake, looking and listening before and behind, in the hope of hearing
+her dog, or seeing him come bounding through the moonlight.
+
+Meantime lord Herbert and his wife had taken their stand on the top of
+the great tower, and were looking down--the lady into the stone court,
+and her husband into the grass one. Dorothy's shrill whistle came once,
+twice--and just as it began to sound a third time,
+
+'Here he comes!' cried lady Margaret.
+
+A black shadow went from the foot of the library tower, tearing across
+the moonlight to the hall door, where it vanished. But in vain lord
+Herbert kept his eyes on the fountain court, in the hope of its
+reappearance there. Presently they heard a heavy plunge in the water on
+the other side of the keep, and running round, saw plainly, the moat
+there lying broad in the moonlight, a little black object making its way
+across it. Through the obstructing floats of water-lily-leaves, it held
+steadily over to the other side. There for a moment they saw the whole
+body of the animal, as he scrambled out of the water up against the
+steep side of the moat--when suddenly, and most unaccountably to lady
+Margaret, he disappeared.
+
+'I have it!' cried lord Herbert. 'What an ass I was not to think of it
+before! Come down with me, my dove, and I will show thee. Dorothy's
+Marquis hath got into the drain of the moat! He is a large dog, and
+beyond a doubt that is where the young roundhead entered. Who could have
+dreamed of such a thing! I had no thought it was such a size.'
+
+Dorothy, having made the circuit, and arrived again at the brick gate,
+found lord Herbert waiting there, and pulled up.
+
+'I have seen nothing of him, my lord,' she said, as he came to her side.
+'Shall I ride round once more?'
+
+'Do, prithee, for I see thou dost enjoy it. But we have already learned
+all we want to know, so far as goeth to the security of the castle.
+There is but one marquis in Raglan, and he is, I believe, in the oak
+parlour.'
+
+'You saw my Marquis make his exit then, my lord?'
+
+'My lady and I both saw him.'
+
+'What then can have become of him?--We went very fast, and I suppose he
+gave up the chase in despair.'
+
+'Thou wilt find him the second round. But stay--I will get a horse and
+go with thee.'
+
+Dorothy went within the gate, and lord Herbert ran back to the stables.
+In a few minutes he was by her side again, and together they rode around
+the huge nest. The moon was glorious, with a few large white clouds
+around her, like great mirrors hung up to catch and reflect her light.
+The stars were few, and doubtful near the moon, but shone like diamonds
+in the dark spaces between the clouds. The rugged fortress lay swathed
+in the softness of the creamy light. No noise broke the stillness, save
+the dull drum-beat of their horses' hoofs on the turf, or their
+cymbal-clatter where they crossed a road, and the occasional shrill call
+from Dorothy's whistle.
+
+On all sides the green fields, cow-cropped, divided by hedge-rows, and
+spotted with trees, single and in clumps, came close to the castle
+walls, except in one or two places where the corner of a red ploughed
+field came wedging in. All was so quiet and so soft that the gaunt old
+walls looked as if, having at first with harsh intrusion forced their
+way up into the sweet realm of air from the stony regions of the earth
+beneath, by slow degrees, yet long since, they had suffered an air
+change, and been charmed and gentled into harmony with soft winds and
+odours and moonlight. To Dorothy it seemed as if peace itself had taken
+form in the feathery weight that filled the flaky air; and as her horse
+galloped along, flying like a bird over ditch and mound, her own heart
+so light that her body seemed to float above the saddle rather than rest
+upon it, she felt like a soul which, having been dragged to hell by a
+lurking fiend, a good and strong angel was bearing aloft into bliss. Few
+delights can equal the mere presence of one whom we trust utterly.
+
+No mastiff came to Dorothy's whistle, and having finished their round,
+they rode back to the stables, put up their horses, and rejoined lady
+Margaret, where she was still pacing the sunk walk around the moat.
+There lord Herbert showed Dorothy where her dog vanished, comforting her
+with the assurance that nothing should be altered before the faithful
+animal returned, as doubtless he would the moment he despaired of
+finding her in the open country.
+
+Lord Herbert said nothing to his father that night lest he should spoil
+his rest, for he was yet far from well, but finding him a good deal
+better the next morning, he laid open the whole matter to him according
+to his convictions concerning Dorothy and her behaviour, ending with the
+words: 'That maiden, my lord, hath truth enough in her heart to serve
+the whole castle, an' if it might be but shared. To doubt her is to
+wrong the very light. I fear there are not many maidens in England who
+would have the courage and honesty, necessary both, to act as she hath
+done.'
+
+The marquis listened attentively, and when lord Herbert had ended, sat a
+few moments in silence; then, for all answer, said,
+
+'Go and fetch her, my lad.'
+
+When Dorothy entered,--
+
+'Come hither, maiden,' he said from his chair. 'Wilt thou kiss an old
+man who hath wronged thee--for so my son hath taught me?'
+
+Dorothy stooped, and he kissed her on both cheeks, with the tears in his
+eyes.
+
+'Thou shalt dine at my table,' he said, 'an' thy mistress will permit
+thee, as I doubt not she will when I ask her, until--thou art weary of
+our dull company. Hear me, cousin Dorothy: an' thou wilt go with us to
+mass next Sunday, thou shalt sit on one side of me and thy mistress on
+the other, and all the castle shall see thee there, and shall know that
+thou art our dear cousin, mistress Dorothy Vaughan, and shall do thee
+honour.'
+
+'I thank you, my lord, with all my heart,' said Dorothy, with troubled
+look, 'but--may I then speak without offence to your lordship, where my
+heart knoweth nought but honour, love, and obedience?'
+
+'Speak what thou wilt, so it be what thou would'st,' answered the
+marquis.
+
+'Then pardon me, my lord, that which would have made my mother sad, and
+would make my good master Herbert sorry that he brought me hither. He
+would fear I had forsaken the church of my fathers.'
+
+'And returned to the church of thy grandfathers--eh, mistress Dorothy?
+And wherefore, then, should that weigh so much with thee, so long as
+thou wert no traitor to our blessed Lord?'
+
+'But should I be no traitor, sir, an' I served him not with my best?'
+
+'Thou hast nothing better than thy heart to give him, and nothing worse
+will serve his turn; and that we two have offered where I would have
+thee offer thine--and I trust, Herbert, the offering hath not lain
+unaccepted.'
+
+'I trust not, my lord,' responded Herbert.
+
+'But, my lord,' said Dorothy, with hot cheek and trembling voice, 'if I
+brought it him upon a dish which I believed to be of brass, when I had
+one of silver in the house, would it avail with him that your lordship
+knew the dish to be no brass, but the finest of gold? I should be
+unworthy of your lordship's favour, if, to be replaced in the honour of
+men, I did that which needed the pardon of God.'
+
+'I told thee so, sir!' cried lord Herbert, who had been listening with
+radiant countenance.
+
+'Thou art a good girl, Dorothy,' said the marquis. 'Verily I spoke but
+to try thee, and I thank God thou hast stood the trial, and answered
+aright. Now am I sure of thee; and I will no more doubt thee--not if I
+wake in the night and find thee standing over me with a drawn dagger
+like Judith. An' my worthy Bayly had been at home, perchance this had
+not happened; but forgive me, Dorothy, for the gout is the sting of the
+devil's own tail, and driveth men mad. Verily, it seemeth now as if I
+could never have behaved to thee as I have done. Why, one might say the
+foolish fat old man was jealous of the handsome young puritan! The wheel
+will come round, Dorothy. One day thou wilt marry him.'
+
+'Never, my lord,' exclaimed Dorothy with vehemence.
+
+'And when thou dost,' the marquis went on, 'all I beg of thee is, that
+on thy wedding day thou whisper thy bridegroom: "My lord of Worcester
+told me so;" and therewith thou shalt have my blessing, whether I be
+down here in Raglan, or up the great stair with little Molly.'
+
+Dorothy was silent. The marquis held out his hand. She kissed it, left
+the room, and flew to the top of the keep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII.
+
+THE HOROSCOPE.
+
+
+Ere the next day was over, it was understood throughout the castle that
+lord Herbert was constructing a horoscope--not that there were many in
+the place who understood what a horoscope really was, or had any
+knowledge of the modes of that astrology in whose results they firmly
+believed; yet Kaltoff having been seen carrying several
+mysterious-looking instruments to the top of the library tower, the word
+was presently in everybody's mouth. Nor were the lovers of marvel likely
+to be disappointed, for no sooner was the sun down than there was lord
+Herbert, his head in an outlandish Persian hat, visible over the parapet
+from the stone-court, while from some of the higher windows in the
+grass-court might be seen through a battlement his long flowing gown of
+a golden tint, wrought with hieroglyphics in blue. Now he would stand
+for a while gazing up into the heavens, now would be shifting and
+adjusting this or that instrument, then peering along or through it, and
+then re-arranging it, or kneeling and drawing lines, now circular, now
+straight, upon a sheet of paper spread flat on the roof of the tower.
+There he still was when the household retired to rest, and there, in the
+grey dawn, his wife, waking up and peeping from her window, saw him
+still, against the cold sky, pacing the roof with bent head and
+thoughtful demeanour. In the morning he was gone, and no one but lady
+Margaret saw him during the whole of the following day. Nor indeed could
+any but herself or Caspar have found him, for the tale Tom Fool told the
+rustics of a magically concealed armoury had been suggested by a rumour
+current in the house, believed by all without any proof, and yet not the
+less a fact, that lord Herbert had a chamber of which none of the
+domestics knew door or window, or even the locality. That recourse
+should have been had to spells and incantations for its concealment,
+however, as was also commonly accepted, would have seemed trouble
+unnecessary to any one who knew the mechanical means his lordship had
+employed for the purpose. The touch of a pin on a certain spot in one of
+the bookcases in the library, admitted him to a wooden stair which, with
+the aid of Caspar, he had constructed in an ancient disused chimney, and
+which led down to a small chamber in the roof of a sort of porch built
+over the stair from the stone-court to the stables. There was no other
+access to it, and the place had never been used, nor had any window but
+one which they had constructed in the roof so cunningly as to attract no
+notice. All the household supposed the hidden chamber, whose existence
+was unquestioned, to be in the great tower, somewhere near the workshop.
+
+In this place he kept his books of alchemy and magic, and some of his
+stranger instruments. It would have been hard for himself even to say
+what he did or did not believe of such things. In certain moods,
+especially when under the influence of some fact he had just discovered
+without being able to account for it, he was ready to believe
+everything; in others, especially when he had just succeeded, right or
+wrong, in explaining anything to his own satisfaction, he doubted them
+all considerably. His imagination leaned lovingly towards them; his
+intellect required proofs which he had not yet found.
+
+Hither then he had retired--to work out the sequences of the horoscopes
+he had that night constructed. He was far less doubtful of astrology
+than of magic. It would have been difficult, I suspect, to find at that
+time a man who did not more or less believe in the former, and the
+influence of his mechanical pursuits upon lord Herbert's mind had not in
+any way interfered with his capacity for such belief. In the present
+case, however, he trusted for success rather to his knowledge of human
+nature than to his questioning of the stars.
+
+Before this, the second day, was over, it was everywhere whispered that
+he was occupied in discovering the hidden way by which entrance and exit
+had been found through the defences of the castle; and the next day it
+was known by everybody that he had been successful--as who could doubt
+he must, with such powers at his command?
+
+For a time curiosity got the better of fear, and there was not a soul in
+the place, except one bedridden old woman, who did not that day accept
+lord Herbert's general invitation, and pass over the Gothic bridge to
+see the opening from the opposite side of the moat. To seal the
+conviction that the discovery had indeed been made, permission was given
+to any one who chose to apply to it the test of his own person, but of
+this only Shafto the groom availed himself. It was enough, however: he
+disappeared, and while the group which saw him enter the opening was yet
+anxiously waiting his return by the way he had gone, having re-entered
+by the western gate he came upon them from behind, to the no small
+consternation of those of weaker nerves, and so settled the matter for
+ever.
+
+As soon as curiosity was satisfied, lord Herbert gave orders which, in
+the course of a few days, rendered the drain as impassable to manor dog
+as the walls of the keep itself.
+
+In the middle of the previous night, Marquis had returned, and announced
+himself by scratching and whining for admittance at the door of
+Dorothy's room. She let him in, but not until the morning discovered
+that he had a handkerchief tied round his neck, and in it a letter
+addressed to herself. Curious, perhaps something more than curious, to
+open it, she yet carried it straight to lord Herbert.
+
+'Canst not break the seal, Dorothy, that thou bringest it to me? I will
+not read it first, lest thou repent,' said his lordship.
+
+'Will you open it then, madam?' she said, turning to lady Margaret.
+
+'What my lord will not, why should I?' rejoined her mistress.
+
+Dorothy opened the letter without more ado, crimsoned, read it to the
+end, and handed it again to lord Herbert.
+
+'Pray read, my lord,' she said.
+
+He took it, and read. It ran thus--
+
+ 'Mistress Dorothy, I think, and yet I know not, but I think thou
+ wilt be pleased to learn that my Wound hath not proved mortal,
+ though it hath brought me low, yea, very nigh to Death's Door.
+ Think not I feared to enter. But it grieveth me to the Heart to
+ ride another than my own Mare to the Wars, and it will pleasure
+ thee to know that without my Lady I shall be but Half the Man I
+ was. But do thou the Like again when thou mayest, for thou but
+ didst thy Duty according to thy Lights; and according to what else
+ should any one do? Mistaken as thou art, I love thee as mine own
+ Soul. As to the Ring I left for thee, with a safe Messenger,
+ concerning whom I say Nothing, for thou wilt con her no Thanks for
+ the doing of aught to pleasure me, I restored it not because it was
+ thine, for thy mother gave it me, but because, if for Lack of my
+ Mare I should fall in some Battle of those that are to follow, then
+ would the Ring pass to a Hand whose Heart knew nought of her who
+ gave it me. I am what thou knowest not, yet thine old Play-fellow
+ Richard.--When thou hearest of me in the Wars, as perchance thou
+ mayest, then curse me not, but sigh an thou wilt, and say, he also
+ would in his Blindness do the Thing that lay at his Door. God be
+ with thee, mistress Dorothy. Beat not thy Dog for bringing thee
+ this.
+
+ 'RICHARD HEYWOOD.'
+
+Lord Herbert gave the letter to his wife, and paced up and down the room
+while she read. Dorothy stood silent, with glowing face and downcast
+eyes. When lady Margaret had finished it she handed it to her, and
+turned to her husband with the words,--
+
+'What sayest thou, Ned? Is it not a brave epistle?'
+
+'There is matter for thought therein,' he answered. 'Wilt show me the
+ring whereof he writes, cousin?'
+
+'I never had it, my lord.'
+
+'Whom thinkest thou then he calleth his safe messenger? Not thy
+dog--plainly, for the ring had been sent thee before.'
+
+'My lord, I cannot even conjecture,' answered Dorothy.
+
+'There is matter herein that asketh attention. My lady, and cousin
+Dorothy, not a word of all this until I shall have considered what it
+may import!--Beat not thy dog, Dorothy: that were other than he
+deserveth at thy hand. But he is a dangerous go-between, so prithee let
+him be at once chained up.'
+
+'I will not beat him, my lord, and I will chain him up,' answered
+Dorothy, laughing.
+
+Having then announced the discovery of the hidden passage, and given
+orders concerning it, lord Herbert retired yet again to his secret
+chamber, and that night was once more seen of many consulting the stars
+from the top of the library tower.
+
+The following morning another rumour was abroad--to the effect that his
+lordship was now occupied in questioning the stars as to who in the
+castle had aided the young roundhead in making his escape.
+
+In the evening, soon after supper, there came a gentle tap to the door
+of lady Margaret's parlour. At that time she was understood to be
+disengaged, and willing to see any of the household. Harry happened to
+be with her, and she sent him to the door to see who it was.
+
+'It is Tom Fool,' he said, returning. 'He begs speech of you,
+madam--with a face as long as the baker's shovel, and a mouth as wide as
+an oven-door.'
+
+With their Irish stepmother the children took far greater freedoms than
+would have been permitted them by the jealous care of their own mother
+over their manners.
+
+Lady Margaret smiled: this was probably the first fruit of her husband's
+astrological investigations.
+
+'Tell him he may enter, and do thou leave him alone with me, Harry,' she
+said.
+
+Allowing for exaggeration, Harry had truly reported Tom's appearance. He
+was trembling from head to foot, and very white.
+
+'What aileth thee, Tom, that thou lookest as thou had seen a hobgoblin?'
+said lady Margaret.
+
+'Please you, my lady,' answered Tom, 'I am in mortal terror of my lord
+Herbert.'
+
+'Then hast thou been doing amiss, Tom? for no well-doer ever yet was
+afeard of my lord. Comest thou because thou wouldst confess the truth?'
+
+'Ah, my lady,' faltered Tom.
+
+'Come, then; I will lead thee to my lord.'
+
+'No, no, an't please you, my lady!' cried Tom, trembling yet more. 'I
+will confess to you, my lady, and then do you confess to my lord, so
+that he may forgive me.'
+
+'Well, I will venture so far for thee, Tom,' returned her ladyship;
+'that is, if thou be honest, and tell me all.'
+
+Thus encouraged, Tom cleansed his stuffed bosom, telling all the part he
+had borne in Richard's escape, even to the disclosure of the watchword
+to his mother.
+
+Is there not this peculiarity about the fear of the supernatural, even
+let it be of the lowest and most slavish kind, that under it men speak
+the truth, believing that alone can shelter them?
+
+Lady Margaret dismissed him with hopes of forgiveness, and going
+straight to her husband in his secret chamber, amused him largely with
+her vivid representation, amounting indeed to no sparing mimicry of
+Tom's looks and words as he made his confession.
+
+Here was much gained, but Tom had cast no ray of light upon the matter
+of Dorothy's imprisonment. The next day lord Herbert sent for him to his
+workshop, where he was then alone. He appeared in a state of abject
+terror.
+
+'Now, Tom,' said his lordship, 'hast thou made a clean breast of it?'
+
+'Yes, my lord,' answered Tom; 'there is but one thing more.'
+
+'What is that? Out with it.'
+
+'As I went back to my chamber, at the top of the stair leading down from
+my lord's dining parlour to the hall, commonly called my lord's stair,'
+said Tom, who delighted in the pseudo-circumstantial, 'I stopped to
+recover my breath, of the which I was sorely bereft, and kneeling on the
+seat of the little window that commands the archway to the keep, I saw
+the prisoner--'
+
+'How knewest thou the prisoner ere it was yet daybreak, and that in the
+darkest corner of all the court?'
+
+'I knew him by the way my bones shook at the white sleeves of his shirt,
+my lord,' said Tom, who was too far gone in fear to make the joke of
+pretending courage.
+
+'Hardly evidence, Tom. But go on.'
+
+'And with him I saw mistress Dorothy--'
+
+'Hold there, Tom!' cried lord Herbert. 'Wherefore didst not impart this
+last night to my lady?'
+
+'Because my lady loveth mistress Dorothy, and I dreaded she would
+therefore refuse to believe me.'
+
+'What a heap of cunning goes to the making of a downright fool!' said
+lord Herbert to himself, but so as Tom could not fail to hear him. 'And
+what saw'st thou pass between them?' he asked.
+
+'Only a whispering with their heads together,' answered Tom.
+
+'And what heard'st thou?'
+
+'Nothing, my lord.'
+
+'And what followed?'
+
+'The roundhead left her, and went through the archway. She stood a
+moment and then followed him. But I, fearful of her coming up the stair
+and finding me, gat me quickly to my own place.'
+
+'Oh, Tom, Tom! I am ashamed of thee. What! Afraid of a woman? Verily,
+thy heart is of wax.'
+
+'That can hardly be, my lord, for I find it still on the wane.'
+
+'An' thy wit were no better than thy courage, thou hadst never had
+enough to play the fool with.'
+
+'No, my lord; I should have had to turn philosopher.'
+
+'A fair hit, Tom! But tell me, why wast thou afeard of mistress
+Dorothy?'
+
+'It might have come to a quarrel in some sort, my lord; and there is one
+thing I have remarked in my wanderings through this valley of Baca,'
+said Tom, speaking through his nose, and lengthening his face beyond
+even its own nature, 'namely, that he who quarrels with a woman goes
+ever to the wall.'
+
+'One thing perplexes me, Tom: if thou sawest mistress Dorothy in the
+court with the roundhead, how came she thereafter, thinkest thou, locked
+up in his chamber?'
+
+'It behoves that she went into it again, my lord.'
+
+'How knowest thou she had been there before?'
+
+'Nay, I know not, my lord. I know nothing of the matter.'
+
+'Why say'st it then? Take heed to thy words, Tom. Who then, thinkest
+thou, did lock the door upon her?'
+
+'I know not, my lord, and dare hardly say what I think. But let your
+lordship's wisdom determine whether it might not be one of those demons
+whereof the house hath been full ever since that night when I saw them
+rise from the water of the moat--that even now surrounds us, my
+lord!--and rush into the fountain court.'
+
+'Meddle thou not, even in thy thoughts, with things that are beyond
+thee,' said lord Herbert. 'By what signs knewest thou mistress Dorothy
+in the dark as she stood talking to the roundhead?'
+
+'There was light enough to know woman from man, my lord.'
+
+'And were there then that night no women in the castle but mistress
+Dorothy?'
+
+'Why, who else could it have been, my lord?'
+
+'Why not thine own mother, Tom--rode thither on her broomstick to
+deliver her darling?'
+
+Tom gaped with fresh terror at the awful suggestion.
+
+'Now, hear me, Thomas Rees,' his lordship went on.
+
+'Yes, my lord,' answered Tom.
+
+'An' ever it come to my knowledge that thou say thou then saw mistress
+Dorothy, when all thou sawest was, as thou knowest, a woman who might
+have been thine own mother talking to the roundhead, as thou callest a
+man who might indeed have been Caspar Kaltoff in his shirt sleeves, I
+will set every devil at my command upon thy back and thy belly, thy
+sides and thy soles. Be warned, and not only speak the truth, as thou
+hast for a whole half-hour been trying hard to do, but learn to
+distinguish between thy fancies and God's facts; for verily thou art a
+greater fool than I took thee for, and that was no small one. Get thee
+gone, and send me hither mistress Watson.'
+
+Tom crawled away, and presently mistress Watson appeared, looking
+offended, possibly at being called to the workshop, and a little
+frightened.
+
+'I cannot but think thee somewhat remiss in thy ministrations to a sick
+man, mistress Watson,' he said, 'to leave him so long to himself. Had he
+been a king's officer now, wouldst thou not have shown him more favour?'
+
+'That indeed may be, my lord,' returned mistress Watson with dignity.
+'But an' the young fellow had been very sick, he had not made his
+escape.'
+
+'And left the blame thereof with thee. Besides, that he did for his
+escape he may have done in the strength of the fever that followeth on
+such a wound.'
+
+'My lord, I gave him a potion, wherefrom he should have slept until I
+sought him again.'
+
+'Was he or thou to blame that he did not feel the obligation? When a man
+instead of sleeping runneth away, the potion was ill mingled, I doubt,
+mistress Watson--drove him crazy perchance.'
+
+'She who waked him when he ought to have slept hath to bear the blame,
+not I, my lord.'
+
+'Thou shouldst, I say, have kept better watch. But tell me whom meanest
+thou by that same SHE?'
+
+'She who was found in his chamber, my lord,' said mistress Watson,
+compressing her lips, as if, come what might, she would stand on the
+foundation of the truth.
+
+'Ah?--By the way, I would gladly understand how it came to be known
+throughout the castle that thou didst find her there? I have the
+assurance of my lady, my lord marquis, and my lord Charles, that never
+did one of them utter word so to slander an orphan as thou hast now done
+in my hearing. Who then can it be but her who is at the head of the
+meinie of this house, who hath misdemeaned herself thus to the spreading
+amongst those under her of evil reports and surmises affecting her
+lord's cousin, mistress Dorothy Vaughan?'
+
+'You wrong me grievously, my lord,' cried mistress Watson, red with the
+wrath of injury and undeserved reproof.
+
+'Thou hast thyself to thank for it then, for thou hast this night said
+in mine own ears that mistress Dorothy waked thy prisoner, importing
+that she thereafter set him free, when thou knowest that she denies the
+same, and is therein believed by my lord marquis and all his house.'
+
+'Therein I believe her not, my lord; but I swear by all the saints and
+angels, that to none but your lordship have I ever said the word;
+neither have I ever opened my lips against her, lest I should take from
+her the chance of betterment.'
+
+'I will be more just to thee than thou hast been to my cousin, mistress
+Watson, for I will believe thee that thou didst only harbour evil in thy
+heart, not send it from the doors of thy lips to enter into other
+bosoms. Was it thou then that did lock the door upon her?'
+
+'God forbid, my lord!'
+
+'Thinkest thou it was the roundhead?'
+
+'No, surely, my lord, for where would be the need?'
+
+'Lest she should issue and give the alarm.'
+
+Mistress Watson smiled an acid smile.
+
+'Then the doer of that evil deed,' pursued lord Herbert, 'must be now in
+the castle, and from this moment every power I possess in earth, air, or
+sea, shall be taxed to the uttermost for the discovery of that evil
+person. Let this vow of mine be known, mistress Watson, as a thing thou
+hast heard me say, not commission thee to report. Prithee take heed to
+what I desire of thee, for I am not altogether powerless to enforce that
+I would.'
+
+Mistress Watson left the workshop in humbled mood. To her spiritual
+benefit lord Herbert had succeeded in punishing her for her cruelty to
+Dorothy; and she was not the less willing to mind his injunction as to
+the mode of mentioning his intent, that it would serve to the quenching
+of any suspicion that she had come under his disapproval.
+
+And now lord Herbert, depending more upon his wits than his learning,
+found himself a good deal in the dark. Confident that neither Richard,
+Tom Fool, nor mistress Watson had locked the door of the turret chamber
+after Dorothy's entrance, he gave one moment to the examination of the
+lock, and was satisfied that an enemy had done it. He then started his
+thoughts on another track, tending towards the same point: how was it
+that the roundhead, who had been carried insensible to the
+turret-chamber, had been able, ere yet more than a film of grey thinned
+the darkness, without alarming a single sleeper, to find his way from a
+part of the house where there were no stairs near, and many rooms, all
+occupied? Clearly by the help of her, whoever she was, whom Tom Fool had
+seen with him by the hall door. She had guided him down my lord's stair,
+and thus avoided the risk of crossing the paved court to the hall door
+within sight of the warders of the main entrance. To her indubitably the
+young roundhead had committed the ring for Dorothy. Here then was one
+secret agent in the affair: was it likely there had been two? If not,
+this woman was one and the same with the person who turned the key upon
+Dorothy. She probably had been approaching the snare while the traitress
+talked with the prisoner. What did her presence so soon again in the
+vicinity of the turret-chamber indicate? Possibly that her own chamber
+was near it. The next step then was to learn from the housekeeper who
+slept in the neighbourhood of the turret-chamber, and then to narrow the
+ground of search by inquiring which, if any of them, slept alone.
+
+He found there were two who occupied each a chamber by herself; one of
+them was Amanda, the other mistress Watson.
+
+Now therefore he knew distinctly in what direction first he must point
+his tentatives. Before he went farther, however, he drew from Dorothy an
+accurate description of the ring to which Richard's letter alluded, and
+immediately set about making one after it, from stage to stage of its
+progress bringing it to her for examination and criticism, until, before
+the day was over, he had completed a model sufficiently like to pass for
+the same.
+
+The greater portion of the next day he spent in getting into perfect
+condition a certain mechanical toy which he had constructed many years
+before, and familiarising himself with its working. This done, he found
+himself ready for his final venture, to give greater solemnity to which
+he ordered the alarum-bell to be rung, and the herald of the castle to
+call aloud, first from the bell-tower in the grass-court, next from the
+roof of the hall-porch in the stone-court, communicating with the
+minstrels' gallery, that on the following day, after dinner, so soon as
+they should hear the sound of the alarum-bell, every soul in the castle,
+to the infant in arms, all of whatever condition, save old mother
+Prescot, who was bed-ridden, should appear in the great hall, that lord
+Herbert might perceive which amongst them had insulted the lord and the
+rule of the house by the locking of one of its doors to the imprisonment
+and wrong of his lordship's cousin, mistress Dorothy Vaughan. Three
+strokes of the great bell opened and closed the announcement, and a
+great hush of expectancy, not unmingled with fear, fell upon the place.
+
+There was one in the household, however, who at first objected to the
+whole proceeding. That was sir Toby Mathews, the catholic chaplain. He
+went to the marquis and represented that, if there was to be any
+exercise whatever of unlawful power, the obligations of the sacred
+office with which he was invested would not permit him to be present or
+connive thereat. The marquis merrily insisted that it was a case of
+exorcism; that the devil was in the castle, and out he must go; that if
+Satan assisted in the detection of the guilty and the purging of the
+innocent, then was he divided against himself, and what could be better
+for the church or the world? But for his own part he had no hand in it,
+and if sir Toby had anything to say against it, he must go to his son.
+This he did at once; but lord Herbert speedily satisfied him, pledging
+himself that there should be nothing done by aid from beneath, and
+making solemn assertion that if ever he had employed any of the evil
+powers to work out his designs, it had been as their master and not
+their accomplice.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII.
+
+THE EXORCISM.
+
+
+It was the custom in Raglan to close the gates at eleven o'clock every
+morning, and then begin to lay the tables for dinner; nor were they
+opened again until the meal was over, and all had dispersed to their
+various duties. Upon this occasion directions were given that the gates
+should remain closed until the issue of further orders.
+
+There was little talk in the hall during dinner that day, and not much
+in the marquis's dining-room.
+
+In the midst of the meal at the housekeeper's table, mistress Amanda was
+taken suddenly ill, and nearly fell from her chair. A spoonful of one of
+mistress Watson's strong waters revived her, but she was compelled to
+leave the room.
+
+When the remains of the dinner had been cleared away, the tables lifted
+from the trestles, and all removed, solemn preparations began to be made
+in the hall. The dais was covered with crimson cloth, and chairs were
+arranged on each side against the wall for the lords and ladies of the
+family, while in the wide space between was set the marquis's chair of
+state. Immediately below the dais, chairs were placed by the walls for
+the ladies and officers of the household. The minstrels' gallery was
+hung with crimson; long ladders were brought, and the windows, the great
+bay window and all save the painted one, were hung with thick cloth of
+the same colour, so that a dull red light filled the huge place. The
+floor was then strewn with fresh rushes, and candles were placed and
+lighted in sconces on the walls, and in two large candlesticks, one on
+each side of the marquis's chair. So numerous were the hands employed in
+these preparations, that about one o'clock the alarum-bell gave three
+great tolls, and then silence fell.
+
+Almost noiselessly, and with faces more than grave, the people of the
+castle in their Sunday clothes began at once to come trooping
+in,--amongst the rest Tom Fool, the very picture of dismay. Mrs. Prescot
+had refused to be left behind, partly from terror, partly from
+curiosity, and supine on a hand-barrow was borne in, and laid upon two
+of the table-trestles. Order and what arrangement was needful were
+enforced amongst them by Mr. Cook, one of the ushers. In came the
+garrison also, with clank and clang, and took their places with
+countenances expressive neither of hardihood nor merriment, but a grave
+expectancy.
+
+Mostly by the other door came the ladies and officers, amongst them
+Dorothy, and seated themselves below the dais. When it seemed at length
+that all were present, the two doors were closed, and silence reigned.
+
+A few minutes more and the ladies and gentlemen of the family, in full
+dress, entered by the door at the back of the dais, and were shown to
+their places by Mr. Moyle, the first usher. Next came the marquis,
+leaning on lord Charles, and walking worse than usual. He too was,
+wonderful to tell, in full dress, and, notwithstanding his corpulency
+and lameness, looked every inch a marquis and the head of the house. He
+placed himself in the great chair, and sat upright, looking serenely
+around on the multitude of pale expectant faces, while lord Charles took
+his station erect at his left hand. A moment yet, and by the same door,
+last of all, entered lord Herbert, alone, in his garb of astrologer. He
+came before his father, bowed to him profoundly, and taking his place by
+his right hand, a little in front of the chair, cast a keen eye around
+the assembly. His look was grave, even troubled, and indeed somewhat
+anxious.
+
+'Are all present?' he asked, and was answered only by silence. He then
+waved his right hand three times towards heaven, each time throwing open
+his palm outwards and upwards. At the close of the third wafture, a roar
+as of thunder broke and rolled about the place, making the huge hall
+tremble, and the windows rattle and shake fearfully. Some thought it was
+thunder, others thought it more like the consecutive discharge of great
+guns. It grew darker, and through the dim stained window many saw a
+dense black smoke rising from the stone-court, at sight of which they
+trembled yet more, for what could it be but the chariot upon which Modo,
+or Mahu, or whatever the demon might be called, rode up from the
+infernal lake? Again lord Herbert waved his arm three times, and again
+the thunder broke and rolled vibrating about the place. A third time he
+gave the sign, and once more, but now close over their heads, the
+thunder broke, and in the midst of its echoes, high in the oak roof
+appeared a little cloud of smoke. It seemed to catch the eye of lord
+Herbert. He made one step forward, and held out his hand towards it,
+with the gesture of a falconer presenting his wrist to a bird.
+
+'Ha! art thou here?' he said.
+
+And to the eyes of all, a creature like a bat was plainly visible,
+perched upon his forefinger, and waving up and down its filmy wings. He
+looked at it for a moment, bent his head to it, seemed to whisper, and
+then addressed it aloud.
+
+'Go,' he said, 'alight upon the head of him or of her who hath wrought
+the evil thou knowest in this house. For it was of thine own kind, and
+would have smirched a fair brow.'
+
+As he spoke he cast the creature aloft. A smothered cry came from some
+of the women, and Tom Fool gave a great sob and held his breath tight.
+Once round the wide space the bat flew, midway between floor and roof,
+and returning perched again upon lord Herbert's hand.
+
+'Ha!' said his lordship, stooping his head over it, 'what meanest thou?
+Is not the evil-doer in presence? What?--Nay, but it cannot be? Not
+within the walls?--Ha! "Not in the HALL" thou sayest!'
+
+He lifted his head, turned to his father, and said,
+
+'Your lordship's commands have been disregarded. One of your people is
+absent.'
+
+The marquis turned to lord Charles.
+
+'Call me the ushers of the hall, my lord,' he said.
+
+In a moment the two officers were before him.
+
+'Search and see, and bring me word who is absent,' said the marquis.
+
+The two gentlemen went down into the crowd, one from each side of the
+dais.
+
+A minute or two passed, and then Mr. Cook came back and said,--
+
+'My lord, I cannot find Caspar Kaltoff.'
+
+'Caspar! Art not there, Caspar?' cried lord Herbert.
+
+'Here I am, my lord,' answered the voice of Caspar from somewhere in the
+hall.
+
+'I beg your lordship's pardon,' said Mr. Cook. 'I failed to find him.'
+
+'It matters not, master usher. Look again,' said lord Herbert.
+
+At the moment, Caspar, the sole attendant spirit, that day at least,
+upon his lord's commands, stood in one of the deep windows behind the
+crimson cloth, more than twenty feet above the heads of the assembly.
+The windows were connected by a narrow gallery in the thickness of the
+wall, communicating also with the minstrels' gallery, by means of which,
+and a ladder against the porch, Caspar could come and go unseen.
+
+As lord Herbert spoke, Mr. Moyle came up on the dais, and brought his
+report that mistress Amanda Fuller was not with the rest of the ladies.
+
+Lord Herbert turned to his wife.
+
+'My lady,' he said, 'mistress Amanda is of your people: knowest thou
+wherefore she cometh not?'
+
+'I know not, my lord, but I will send and see,' replied lady
+Margaret.--'My lady Broughton, wilt thou go and inquire wherefore the
+damsel disregardeth my lord of Worcester's commands?'
+
+She had chosen the gentlest-hearted of her women to go on the message.
+
+Lady Broughton came back pale and trembling--indeed there was much
+pallor and trembling that day in Raglan--with the report that she could
+not find her. A shudder ran through the whole body of the hall. Plainly
+the impression was that she had been FETCHED. The thunder and the smoke
+had not been for nothing: the devil had claimed and carried off his own!
+On the dais the impression was somewhat different; but all were one in
+this, that every eye was fixed on lord Herbert, every thought hanging on
+his pleasure.
+
+For a whole minute he stood, apparently lost in meditation. The bat
+still rested on his hand, but his wings were still.
+
+He had intended causing it to settle on Amanda's head, but now he must
+alter his plan. Nor was he sorry to do so, for it had involved no small
+risk of failure, the toy requiring most delicate adjustment, and its
+management a circumspection and nicety that occasioned him no little
+anxiety. It had indeed been arranged that Amanda should sit right under
+the window next the dais, so that he might have the assistance of Caspar
+from above; but if by any chance the mechanical bat should alight upon
+the head of another, mistress Doughty or lady Broughton instead of
+Amanda--what then? He was not sorry to find himself rescued from this
+jeopardy, and scarcely more than a minute had elapsed ere he had devised
+a plan by which to turn the check to the advantage of all--even that of
+Amanda herself, towards whom, while he felt bound to bring her to shame
+should she prove guilty, he was yet willing to remember mercy; while,
+should she be innocent, no harm would now result from his mistaken
+suspicion. He turned and whispered to his father.
+
+'I will back thee, lad. Do as thou wilt,' returned the marquis, gravely
+nodding his head.
+
+'Ushers of the hall,' cried lord Herbert, 'close and lock both its
+doors. Lock also the door to the minstrels' gallery, and, with my lord's
+leave, that to my lord's stair. My lord Charles, go thou prithee, and
+with chalk draw me a pentacle upon the threshold of each of the four;
+and do thou, sir Toby Mathews, make the holy sign thereabove upon the
+lintel and the doorposts. For the door to the pitched court, however,
+leave that until I am gone forth and it is closed behind me, and then do
+thereunto the same as to the others, after which let all sit in silence.
+Move not, neither speak, for any sound of fear or smell of horror. For
+the gift that is in him from his mother, Thomas Rees shall accompany me.
+Go to the door, and wait until I come.'
+
+Having thus spoken he raised the bat towards his face, and, approaching
+his lips, seemed once more to be talking to it in whispers. The menials
+and the garrison had no doubt but he talked to his familiar spirit. Of
+their superiors, mistress Watson at least was of the same conviction.
+Then he bent his ear towards it as if he were listening, and it began to
+flutter its wings, at which sir Toby's faith in him began to waver. A
+moment more and he cast the creature from him. It flew aloft, traversed
+the whole length of the roof, and vanished.
+
+It had in fact, as its master willed, alighted in the farthest corner of
+the roof, a little dark recess. Then, bowing low to his father, the
+magician stepped down from the dais, and walked through a lane of
+awe-struck domestics and soldiery to the door, where Tom stood waiting
+his approach. The fool was in a strange flutter of feelings, a conflict
+of pride and terror, the latter of which would, but for the former, have
+unnerved him quite; for not only was he doubtful of the magician's
+intent with regard to himself, but the hall seemed now the only place of
+security, and all outside it given over to goblins or worse.
+
+The moment they crossed the threshold, the door was closed behind them,
+the holy sign was signed over the one, and the pentacle drawn upon the
+other.
+
+All eyes were turned upon the marquis. He sat motionless. Motionless,
+too, as if they had been carved in stone like the leopard and wyvern
+over their heads, sat all the lords and ladies, embodying in themselves
+the words of the motto there graven, Mulaxe Vel Timere Sperno.
+Motionless sat the ladies beneath the dais, but their faces were
+troubled and pale, for Amanda was one of them, and their imaginations
+were busy with what might now be befalling her. Dorothy sat in much
+distress, for although she could lay no evil intent to her own charge,
+she was yet the cause of the whole fearful business. As for Scudamore,
+though he too was white of blee, he said to himself, and honestly, that
+the devil might fly away with her and welcome for what he cared. One
+woman in the crowd fainted and fell, but uttered never a moan. The very
+children were hushed by the dread that pervaded the air, and the smell
+of sulphur, which from a suspicion grew to a plain presence, increased
+not a little the high-wrought awe.
+
+After about half an hour, during which expectation of something
+frightful had been growing with every moment, three great knocks came to
+the porch door. Mr. Moyle opened it, and in walked lord Herbert as he
+had issued, with Tom Fool, in whom the importance had now at length
+banished almost every sign of dread, at his heels. He reascended the
+dais, bowed once more to his father, spoke a few words to him in a tone
+too low to be overheard, and then turning to the assembly, said with
+solemn voice and stern countenance:
+
+'The air is clear. The sin of Raglan is purged. Every one to his place.'
+
+Had not Tom Fool, who had remained by the door, led the way from the
+hall, it might have been doubtful when any one would venture to stir;
+but, with many a deep-drawn breath and sigh of relief, they trooped
+slowly out after him, until the body of the hall was empty. In their
+hearts keen curiosity and vague terror contended like fire and water.
+
+From that hour, while Raglan stood, the face of Amanda Serafina was no
+more seen within its walls. At midnight shrieks and loud wailings were
+heard, but if they came from Amanda, they were her last signs.
+
+I shall not, however, hide the proceedings of lord Herbert without the
+hall any more than he did himself when he reached the oak parlour with
+the members of his own family, in which Dorothy seemed now included. He
+had taken Tom Fool both because he knew the castle so well, and might
+therefore be useful in searching for Amanda, and because he believed he
+might depend, if not on his discretion, yet on his dread, for secrecy.
+They had scarcely left the hall before they were joined by Caspar, who,
+while his master and the fool went in one direction, set off in another,
+and after a long search in vain, at length found her in an empty stall
+in the subterranean stable, as if, in the agony of her terror at the
+awful noises and the impending discovery, she had sought refuge in the
+companionship of the innocent animals. She was crouching, the very image
+of fear, under the manger, gave no cry when he entered, but seemed to
+gather a little courage when she found that the approaching steps were
+those of a human being.
+
+'Mistress Amanda Fuller,' said his lordship with awful severity, 'thou
+hast in thy possession a jewel which is not thine own.'
+
+'A jewel, my lord?' faltered Amanda, betaking herself by the force of
+inborn propensity and habit, even when hopeless of success in
+concealment, to the falsehood she carried with her like an atmosphere;
+'I know not what your lordship means. Of what sort is the jewel?'
+
+'One very like this,' returned lord Herbert, producing the false ring.
+
+'Why, there you have it, my lord!'
+
+'Traitress to thy king and thy lord, out of thine own mouth have I
+convicted thee. This is not the ring. See!'
+
+As he spoke he squeezed it betwixt his finger and thumb to a shapeless
+mass, and threw it from him--then continued:
+
+'Thou art she who did show the rebel his way from the prison into which
+her lord had cast him.'
+
+'He took me by the throat, my lord,' gasped Amanda, 'and put me in
+mortal terror.'
+
+'Thou slanderest him,' returned lord Herbert. 'The roundhead is a
+gentleman, and would not, to save his life, have harmed thee, even had
+he known what a worthless thing thou art. I will grant that he put thee
+in fear. But wherefore gavest thou no alarm when he was gone?'
+
+'He made me swear that I would not betray him.'
+
+'Let it be so. Why didst thou not reveal the way he took?'
+
+'I knew it not.'
+
+'Yet thou wentest after him when he left thee. And wherefore didst thou
+not deliver the ring he gave thee for mistress Dorothy?'
+
+'I feared she would betray me, that I had held talk with the prisoner.'
+
+'Let that too pass as less wicked than cowardly. But wherefore didst
+thou lock the door upon her when thou sawest her go into the roundhead's
+prison? Thou knewest that therefrom she must bear the blame of having
+set him free, with other blame, and worse for a maiden to endure?'
+
+'It was a sudden temptation, my lord, which I knew not how to resist,
+and was carried away thereby. Have pity upon me, dear my lord,' moaned
+Amanda.
+
+'I will believe thee there also, for I fear me thou hast had so little
+practice in the art of resisting temptation, that thou mightst well
+yield to one that urged thee towards such mere essential evil. But how
+was it that, after thou hadst had leisure to reflect, thou didst spread
+abroad the report that she was found there, and that to the hurt not
+only of her loyal fame, but of her maidenly honour, understanding well
+that no one was there but herself, and that he alone who could bear
+testimony to her innocence and thy guilt was parted from her by
+everything that could divide them except hatred? Was the temptation to
+that also too sudden for thy resistance?'
+
+At length Amanda was speechless. She hung her head, for the first time
+in her life ashamed of herself.
+
+'Go before to thy chamber. I follow thee.'
+
+She rose to obey, but she could scarcely walk, and he ordered the men to
+assist her. Arrived in her room she delivered up the ring, and at lord
+Herbert's command proceeded to gather together her few possessions. That
+done, they led her away to the rude chamber in the watch tower, where
+stood the arblast, and there, seated on her chest, they left her with
+the assurance that if she cried out or gave any alarm, it would be to
+the publishing of her own shame.
+
+At the dead of night Caspar and Tom, with four picked men from the
+guard, came to lead her away. Worn out by that time, and with nothing to
+sustain her from within, she fancied they were going to kill her, and
+giving way utterly, cried and shrieked aloud. Obdurate however, as
+gentle, they gave no ear to her petitions, but bore her through the
+western gate, and so to the brick gate in the rampart, placed her in a
+carriage behind six horses, and set out with her for Caerleon, where her
+mother lived in obscurity. At her door they set her down, and leaving
+the carriage at Usk, returned to Raglan one by one in the night, mounted
+on the horses. By the warders who admitted them they were supposed to be
+returned from distinct missions on the king's business.
+
+Many were the speculations in the castle as to the fate of mistress
+Amanda Serafina Fuller, but the common belief continued to be that she
+had been carried off by Satan, body and soul.
+
+END OF VOLUME II.
+
+
+
+
+START OF VOLUME III
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX.
+
+NEWBURY.
+
+
+Early the next morning, after Richard had left the cottage for Raglan
+castle, mistress Rees was awaked by the sound of a heavy blow against
+her door. When with difficulty she had opened it, Richard or his dead
+body, she knew not which, fell across her threshold. Like poor Marquis,
+he had come to her for help and healing.
+
+When he got out of the quarry, he made for the highroad, but missing the
+way the dog had brought him, had some hard work in reaching it; and long
+before he arrived--at the cottage, what with his wound, his loss of
+blood, his double wetting, his sleeplessness after mistress Watson's
+potion, want of food, disappointment and fatigue, he was in a high
+fever. The last mile or two he had walked in delirium, but happily with
+the one dominant idea of getting help from mother Rees. The poor woman
+was greatly shocked to find that the teeth of the trap had closed upon
+her favourite and mangled him so terribly. A drop or two of one of her
+restoratives, however, soon brought him round so far that he was able to
+crawl to the chair on which he had sat the night before, now ages agone
+as it seemed, where he now sat shivering and glowing alternately, until
+with trembling hands the good woman had prepared her own bed for him.
+
+'Thou hast left thy doublet behind thee,' she said, 'and I warrant me
+the cake I gave thee in the pouch thereof! Hadst thou eaten of that,
+thou hadst not come to this pass.'
+
+But Richard scarcely heard her voice. His one mental consciousness was
+the longing desire to lay his aching head on the pillow, and end all
+effort.
+
+Finding his wound appeared very tolerably dressed, Mrs. Rees would not
+disturb the bandages. She gave him a cooling draught, and watched by him
+till he fell asleep. Then she tidied her house, dressed herself, and got
+everything in order for nursing him. She would have sent at once to
+Redware to let his father know where and in what condition he was, but
+not a single person came near the cottage the whole day, and she dared
+not leave him before the fever had subsided. He raved a good deal,
+generally in the delusion that he was talking to Dorothy--who sought to
+kill him, and to whom he kept giving directions, at one time how to
+guide the knife to reach his heart, at another how to mingle her poison
+so that it should act with speed and certainty.
+
+At length one fine evening in early autumn, when the red sun shone level
+through the window of the little room where he lay, and made a red glory
+on the wall, he came to himself a little.
+
+'Is it blood?' he murmured. 'Did Dorothy do it?--How foolish I am! It is
+but a blot the sun has left behind him!--Ah! I see! I am dead and lying
+on the top of my tomb. I am only marble. This is Redware church. Oh,
+mother Rees, is it you! I am very glad! Cover me over a little. The pall
+there.'
+
+His eyes closed, and for a few hours he lay in a deep sleep, from which
+he awoke very weak, but clear-headed. He remembered nothing, however,
+since leaving the quarry, except what appeared a confused dream of
+wandering through an interminable night of darkness, weariness, and
+pain. His first words were,--
+
+'I must get up, mother Rees: my father will be anxious about me.
+Besides, I promised to set out for Gloucester to-day.'
+
+She sought to quiet him, but in vain, and was at last compelled to
+inform him that his father, finding he did not return, had armed
+himself, mounted Oliver, and himself led his little company to join the
+earl of Essex--who was now on his way, at the head of an army consisting
+chiefly of the trained bands of London, to raise the siege of
+Gloucester.
+
+Richard started up, and would have leaped from the bed, but fell back
+helpless and unconscious. When at length his nurse had succeeded in
+restoring him, she had much ado to convince him that the best thing in
+all respects was to lie still and submit to be nursed--so to get well as
+soon as possible, and join his father.
+
+'Alas, mother, I have no horse,' said Richard, and hid his face on the
+pillow.
+
+'The Lord will provide what thee wants, my son,' said the old woman with
+emotion, neither asking nor caring whether the Lord was on the side of
+the king or of the parliament, but as little doubting that he must be on
+the side of Richard.
+
+He soon began to eat hopefully, and after a day or two she found pretty
+nearly employment enough in cooking for him.
+
+At last, weak as he still was, he would be restrained no longer. To
+Gloucester he must go, and relieve his father. Expostulation was
+unavailing: go he must, he said, or his soul would tear itself out of
+his body, and go without it.
+
+'Besides, mother, I shall be getting better all the way,' he continued.
+'--I must go home at once and see whether there is anything left to go
+upon.'
+
+He rose the same instant, and, regardless of the good woman's
+entreaties, crawled out to go to Redware. She followed him at a little
+distance, and, before he had walked a quarter of a mile, he was ready to
+accept her offered arm to help him back. But his recovery was now very
+rapid, and after a few days he felt able for the journey.
+
+At home he found a note from his father, telling him where to find
+money, and informing him that he was ready to yield him Oliver the
+moment he should appear to claim him. Richard put on his armour, and
+went to the stable. The weather had been fine, and the harvest was
+wearing gradually to a close; but the few horses that were left were
+overworked, for the necessities of the war had been severe, and that
+part of the country had responded liberally on both sides. Besides, Mr.
+Heywood had scarce left an animal judged at all fit to carry a man and
+keep up with the troop.
+
+When Richard reached the stable, there were in it but three, two of
+which, having brought loads to the barn, were now having their mid-day
+meal and rest. The first one was ancient in bones, with pits profound
+above his eyes, and grey hairs all about a face which had once been
+black.
+
+'Thou art but fit for old Father Time to lay his scythe across when he
+is aweary,' said Richard, and turned to the next.
+
+She was a huge-bodied, short-legged punch, as fat as butter, with lop
+ears and sleepy eyes. Having finished her corn, she was churning away at
+a mangerful of grass.
+
+'Thou wouldst burst thy belly at the first charge,' said Richard, and
+was approaching the third, one he did not recognise, when a vicious,
+straight-out kick informed him that here was temper at least, probably
+then spirit. But when he came near enough to see into the stall, there
+stood the ugliest brute he thought that ever ate barley. He was very
+long-bodied and rather short-legged, with great tufts at his fetlocks,
+and the general look of a huge rat, in part doubtless from having no
+hair on his long undocked tail. He was biting vigorously at his manger,
+and Richard could see the white of one eye glaring at him askance in the
+gloom.
+
+'Dunnot go nigh him, sir,' cried Jacob Fortune, who had come up behind.
+'Thou knows not his tricks. His name be his nature, and we call him
+Beelzebub when master Stopchase be not by. I be right glad to see your
+honour up again.'
+
+Jacob was too old to go to the wars, and too indifferent to regret it;
+but he was faithful, and had authority over the few men left.
+
+'I thank you, Jacob,' said Richard. 'What brute is this? I know him
+not.'
+
+'We all knows him too well, master Richard, though verily Stopchase
+bought him but the day before he rode, thinking belike he might carry an
+ear or two of wheat. If he be not very good he was not parlous dear; he
+paid for him but an old song. He was warranted to have work in him if a
+man but knew how to get it out.'
+
+'He is ugly.'
+
+'He is the ugliest horse, cart-horse, nag, or courser, on this
+creation-side,' said the old man, '--ugly enough to fright to death
+where he doth fail in his endeavour to kill. The men are all mortal
+feared on him, for he do kick and he do bite like the living Satan. He
+wonnot go in no cart, but there he do stand eating on his head off as
+fast as he can. An' the brute were mine, I would slay him; I would, in
+good sooth.'
+
+'An' I had but time to cure him of his evil kicking! I fear I must ever
+ride the last in the troop,' said Richard.
+
+'Why for sure, master, thee never will ride such a devil-pig as he to
+the wars! Will Farrier say he do believe he take his strain from the
+swine the devils go into in the miracle. All the children would make a
+mock of thee as thou did ride through the villages. Look at his legs:
+they do be like stile-posts; and do but look at his tail!'
+
+'Lead him out, Jacob, and let me see his head.'
+
+'I dare not go nigh him, sir. I be not nimble enough to get out of the
+way of his hoof. 'I be too old, master.'
+
+Richard pulled on his thick buff glove and went straight into his stall.
+The brute made a grab at him with his teeth, met by a smart blow from
+Richard's fist, which he did not like, and, rearing, would have struck
+at him with his near fore-foot; but Richard caught it by the pastern,
+and with his left hand again struck him on the side of the mouth. The
+brute then submitted to be led out by the halter. And verily he was ugly
+to behold. His neck stuck straight out, and so did his tail, but the
+latter went off in a point, and the former in a hideous knob.
+
+'Here is Jack!' cried the old man. 'He lets Jack ride him to the water.
+Here, Jack! Get thee upon the hog-back of Beelzebub, and mind the
+bristles do not flay thee, and let master Richard see what paces he
+hath.'
+
+The animal tried to take the lad down with his hind foot as he mounted,
+but scarcely was he seated when he set off at a swinging trot, in which
+he plied his posts in manner astonishing. Spirit indeed he must have
+had, and plenty, to wield such clubs in such a fashion. His joints were
+so loose that the bones seemed to fly about, yet they always came down
+right.
+
+'He is guilty of "hypocrisy against the devil,"' said Richard: 'he is
+better than he looks. Anyhow, if he but carry me thither, he will as
+well "fill a pit" as a handsomer horse. I'll take him. Have you got a
+saddle for him?'
+
+'An' he had not brought a saddle with him, thou would not find one in
+Gwent to fit him,' said the old man.
+
+Yet another day Richard found himself compelled to tarry--which he spent
+in caparisoning Beelzebub to the best of his ability, with the result of
+making him, if possible, appear still uglier than before.
+
+The eve of the day of his departure, Marquis paid mistress Rees a second
+visit. He wanted no healing or help this time, seeming to have come only
+to offer his respects. But the knowledge that here was a messenger, dumb
+and discreet, ready to go between and make no sign, set Richard longing
+to use him: what message he did send by him I have already recorded.
+Although, however, the dog left them that night, he did not reach Raglan
+till the second morning after, and must have been roaming the country or
+paying other visits all that night and the next day as well, with the
+letter about him, which he had allowed no one to touch.
+
+At last Richard was on his way to Gloucester, mounted on Beelzebub, and
+much stared at by the inhabitants of every village he passed through.
+Apparently, however, there was something about the centaur-compound
+which prevented their rudeness from going farther. Beelzebub bore him
+well, and, though not a comfortable horse to ride, threw the road behind
+him at a wonderful rate, as often and as long as Richard was able to
+bear it. But he found himself stronger after every rest, and by the time
+he began to draw nigh to Gloucester, he was nearly as well as ever, and
+in excellent spirits; one painful thought only haunting him--the fear
+that he might, mounted on Beelzebub, have to encounter some one on his
+beloved mare. He was consoled, however, to think that the brute was less
+dangerous to one before than one behind him, heels being worse than
+teeth.
+
+He soon became aware that something decisive had taken place: either
+Gloucester had fallen, or Essex had raised the siege, for army there was
+none, though the signs of a lately upbroken encampment were visible on
+all sides. Presently, inquiring at the gate, he learned that, on the
+near approach of Essex, the besieging army had retired, and that, after
+a few days' rest, the general had turned again in the direction of
+London. Richard, therefore, having fed Beelzebub and eaten his own
+dinner, which in his present condition was more necessary than usual to
+his being of service, mounted his hideous charger once more, and pushed
+on to get up with the army.
+
+Essex had not taken the direct road to London, but kept to the
+southward. That same day he followed him as far as Swindon, and found he
+was coming up with him rapidly. Having rested a short night, he reached
+Hungerford the next morning, which he found in great commotion because
+of the intelligence that at Newbury, some seven miles distant only,
+Essex had found his way stopped by the king, and that a battle had been
+raging ever since the early morning.
+
+Having given his horse a good feed of oats and a draught of ale, Richard
+mounted again and rode hard for Newbury. Nor had he rode long before he
+heard the straggling reports of carbines, looked to the priming of his
+pistols, and loosened his sword in its sheath. When he got under the
+wall of Craven park, the sounds of conflict grew suddenly plainer. He
+could distinguish the noise of horses' hoofs, and now and then the
+confused cries and shouts of hand-to-hand conflict. At Spain he was all
+but in it, for there he met wounded men, retiring slowly or carried by
+their comrades. These were of his own part, but he did not stop to ask
+any questions. Beelzebub snuffed at the fumes of the gunpowder, and
+seemed therefrom to derive fresh vigour.
+
+The lanes and hedges between Spein and Newbury had been the scenes of
+many a sanguinary tussle that morning, for nowhere had either army found
+room to deploy. Some of them had been fought over more than once or
+twice. But just before Richard came up, the tide had ebbed from that
+part of the way, for Essex's men had had some advantage, and had driven
+the king's men through the town and over the bridge, so that he found
+the road clear, save of wounded men and a few horses. As he reached
+Spinhamland, and turned sharp to the right into the main street of
+Newbury, a bullet from the pistol of a royalist officer who lay wounded
+struck Beelzebub on the crest--what of a crest he had--and without
+injuring made him so furious that his rider had much ado to keep him
+from mischief. For, at the very moment, they were met by a rush of
+parliament pikemen, retreating, as he could see, over their heads, from
+a few of the kings cavalry, who came at a sharp trot down the main
+street. The pikemen had got into disorder pursuing some of the enemy who
+had divided and gone to the right and left up the two diverging streets,
+and when the cavalry appeared at the top of the main street, both parts,
+seeing themselves in danger of being surrounded, had retreated. They
+were now putting the Kennet with its narrow bridge between them and the
+long-feathered cavaliers, in the hope of gaining time and fit ground for
+forming and presenting a bristled front. In the midst of this confused
+mass of friends Richard found himself, the maddened Beelzebub every
+moment lashing out behind him when not rearing or biting.
+
+Before him the bridge rose steep to its crown, contracting as it rose.
+At its foot, where it widened to the street, stood a single horseman,
+shouting impatiently to the last of the pikemen, and spurring his horse
+while holding him. As the last man cleared the bridge, he gave him rein,
+and with a bound and a scramble reached the apex, and stood--within half
+a neck of the foremost of the cavalier troop. A fierce combat instantly
+began between them. The bridge was wide enough for two to have fought
+side by side, but the roundhead contrived so to work his antagonist, who
+was a younger but less capable and less powerful man, that no comrade
+could get up beside him for the to-and-fro shifting of his horse.
+
+Meantime Richard had been making his slow way through the swarm of
+hurrying pikemen, doing what he could to keep them off Beelzebub. The
+moment he was clear, he made a great bolt for the bridge, and the same
+moment perceived who the brave man was.
+
+'Hold on, sir,' he shouted. 'Hold your own, father! Here I am! Here is
+Richard!'
+
+And as he shouted he sent Beelzebub, like low-flying bolt from
+cross-bow, up the steep crown of the bridge, and wedged him in between
+Oliver and the parapet, just as a second cavalier made a dart for the
+place. At his horse Beelzebub sprang like a fury, rearing, biting, and
+striking out with his fore-feet in such manner as quite to make up to
+his rider for the disadvantage of his low stature. The cavalier's horse
+recoiled in terror, rearing also, but snorting and backing and wavering,
+so that, in his endeavours to avoid the fury of Beelzebub, which was
+frightful to see, for with ears laid back and gleaming teeth he looked
+more like a beast of prey, he would but for the crowd behind him have
+fallen backward down the slope. A bullet from one of Richard's pistols
+sent his rider over his tail, the horse fell sideways against that of
+Mr. Heywood's antagonist, and the path was for a moment barricaded.
+
+'Well done, good Beelzebub!' cried Richard, as he reined him back on to
+the crest of the bridge.
+
+'Boy!' said his father sternly, at the same instant dealing his
+encumbered opponent a blow on the head-piece which tumbled him also from
+his horse, 'is the sacred hour of victory a time to sully with profane
+and foolish jests? I little thought to hear such words at my side--not
+to say from the mouth of my own son!'
+
+'Pardon me, father; I praised my horse,' said Richard. 'I think not he
+ever had praise before, but it cannot corrupt him, for he is such an
+ill-conditioned brute that they that named him did name him Beelzebub:
+Now that he hath once done well, who knoweth but it may cease to fit
+him!'
+
+'I am glad thy foolish words were so harmless,' returned Mr. Heywood,
+smiling. 'In my ears they sounded so evil that I could ill accept their
+testimony.--Verily the animal is marvellous ill-favoured, but, as thou
+sayest, he hath done well, and the first return we make him shall be to
+give him another name. The less man or horse hath to do with Satan the
+better, for what is he but the arch-foe of the truth?'
+
+While they spoke, they kept a keen watch on the enemy--who could not get
+near to attack them, save with a few pistol-bullets, mostly
+wide-shot--for both horses were down, and their riders helpless if not
+slain.
+
+'What shall we call him then, father?' asked Richard.
+
+'He is amazing like a huge rat!' said his father. 'Let us henceforth
+call him Bishop.'
+
+'Wherefore Bishop and not Beelzebub, sir?' inquired Richard.
+
+Mr. Heywood laughed, but ere he could reply, a large troop of horsemen
+appeared at the top of the street. Glancing then behind in some anxiety,
+they saw to their relief that the pikemen had now formed themselves into
+a hollow square at the foot of the bridge, prepared to receive cavalry.
+They turned therefore, and, passing through them, rode to find their
+regiment.
+
+From that day Bishop, notwithstanding his faults many and grievous, was
+regarded with respect by both father and son, Richard vowing never to
+mount another, let laugh who would, so long as the brute lived and he
+had not recovered Lady.
+
+But they had to give him room for two on the march, and the place behind
+him was always left vacant, which they said gave no more space than he
+wanted, seeing he kicked out his leg to twice its walking length. Before
+long, however, they had got so used to his ways that they almost ceased
+to regard them as faults, and he began to grow a favourite in the
+regiment.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL.
+
+DOROTHY AND ROWLAND.
+
+
+Such was the force of law and custom in Raglan that as soon as any
+commotion ceased things settled at once. It was so now. The minds of the
+marquis and lord Charles being at rest both as regarded the gap in the
+defences of the castle and the character of its inmates, the very next
+day all was order again. The fate of Amanda was allowed gradually to
+ooze out, but the greater portion both of domestics and garrison
+continued firm in the belief that she had been carried off by Satan.
+Young Delaware, indeed, who had been revelling late--I mean in the
+chapel with the organ--and who was always the more inclined to believe a
+thing the stranger it was, asserted that he SAW devil fly away with
+her--a testimony which gained as much in one way as it lost in another
+by the fact that he could not see at all.
+
+To Scudamore her absence, however caused, was only a relief. She had
+ceased to interest him, while Dorothy had become to him like an
+enchanted castle, the spell of which he flattered himself he was the
+knight born to break. All his endeavours, however, to attract from her a
+single look such as indicated intelligence, not to say response, were
+disappointed. She seemed absolutely unsuspicious of what he sought,
+neither, having so long pretermitted what claim he might once have
+established to cousinly relations with her, could he now initiate any
+intimacy on that ground. Had she become an inmate of Raglan immediately
+after he first made her acquaintance, that might have ripened to
+something more hopeful; but when she came she was in sorrow, nor felt
+that there was any comfort in him, while he was beginning to yield to
+the tightening bonds mistress Amanda had flung around him. Nor since had
+he afforded her any ground for altering her first impressions, or
+favourably modifying a feature of the portrait lady Margaret had
+presented of him.
+
+Strange to say, however, poorly grounded as was the original interest he
+had taken in her, and little as he was capable of understanding her, he
+soon began, even while yet confident in his proved advantages of person
+and mind and power persuasive, to be vaguely wrought upon by the
+superiority of her nature. With this the establishment of her innocence
+in the eyes of the household had little to do; indeed, that threatened
+at first to destroy something of her attraction; a passionate, yielding,
+even erring nature, had of necessity for such as he far more enchantment
+than a nature that ruled its own emotions, and would judge such as might
+be unveiled to it. Neither was it that her cold courtesy and kind
+indifference roused him to call to the front any of the more valuable
+endowments of his being; something far better had commenced:
+unconsciously to himself, the dim element of truth that flitted vaporous
+about in him had begun to respond to the great pervading and enrounding
+orb of her verity. He began to respect her, began to feel drawn as if by
+another spiritual sense than that of which Amanda had laid hold. He
+found in her an element of authority. The conscious influences to whose
+triumph he had been so perniciously accustomed, had proved powerless
+upon her, while those that in her resided unconscious were subduing him.
+Her star was dominant over his.
+
+At length he began to be aware that this was no light preference, no
+passing fancy, but something more serious than he had hitherto
+known--that in fact he was really, though uncomfortably and
+unsatisfactorily, in love with her. He felt she was not like any other
+girl he had made his shabby love to, and would have tried to make better
+to her, but she kept him at a distance, and that he began to find
+tormenting. One day, for example, meeting her in the court as she was
+crossing towards the keep,--
+
+'I would thou didst take apprentices, cousin,' he said, 'so I might be
+one, and learn of thee the mysteries of thy trade.'
+
+'Wherefore, cousin?'
+
+'That I might spare thee something of thy labour.'
+
+'That were no kindness. I am not like thee; I find labour a thing to be
+courted rather than spared; I am not overwrought.'
+
+Scudamore gazed into her grey eyes, but found there nothing to
+contradict, nothing to supplement the indifference of her words. There
+was no lurking sparkle of humour, no acknowledgment of kindness. There
+was a something, but he could not understand it, for his poor shapeless
+soul might not read the cosmic mystery embodied in their depths. He
+stammered--who had never known himself stammer before, broke the joints
+of an ill-fitted answer, swept the tiles with the long feather in his
+hat, and found himself parted from her, with the feeling that he had not
+of himself left her, but had been borne away by some subtle force
+emanating from her.
+
+Lord Herbert had again left the castle. More soldiers and more must
+still be raised for the king. Now he would be paying his majesty a visit
+at Oxford, and inspecting the life-guards he had provided him, now back
+in South Wales, enlisting men, and straining every power in him to keep
+the district of which his father was governor in good affection and
+loyal behaviour.
+
+Winter drew nigh, and stayed somewhat the rush of events, clogged the
+wheels of life as they ran towards death, brought a little sleep to the
+world and coolness to men's hearts--led in another Christmas, and looked
+on for a while.
+
+Nor did the many troubles heaped on England, the drained purses, the
+swollen hearts, the anxious minds, the bereaved houses, the ruptures,
+the sorrows, and the hatreds, yet reach to dull in any large measure the
+merriment of the season at Raglan. Customs are like carpets, for ever
+wearing out whether we mark it or no, but Lord Worcester's patriarchal
+prejudices, cleaving to the old and looking askance on the new, caused
+them to last longer in Raglan than almost anywhere else: the old were
+the things of his fathers which he had loved from his childhood; the new
+were the things of his children which he had not proven.
+
+What a fire that was that blazed on the hall-hearth under the great
+chimney, which, dividing in two, embraced a fine window, then again
+becoming one, sent the hot blast rushing out far into the waste of
+wintry air! No one could go within yards of it for the fierce heat of
+the blazing logs, now and then augmented by huge lumps of coal. And
+when, on the evenings of special merry-making, the candles were lit, the
+musicians were playing, and a country dance was filling the length of
+the great floor, in which the whole household, from the marquis himself,
+if his gout permitted, to the grooms and kitchen-maids, would take part,
+a finer outburst of homely splendour, in which was more colour than
+gilding, more richness than shine, was not to be seen in all the island.
+
+On such an occasion Rowland had more than once attempted nearer approach
+to Dorothy, but had gained nothing. She neither repelled nor encouraged
+him, but smiled at his better jokes, looked grave at his silly ones, and
+altogether treated him like a boy, young--or old--enough to be
+troublesome if encouraged. He grew desperate, and so one night summoned
+up courage as they stood together waiting for the next dance.
+
+'Why will you never talk to me, cousin Dorothy?' he said.
+
+'Is it so, Mr. Scudamore? I was not aware. If thou spoke and I answered
+not, I am sorry.'
+
+'No, I mean not that,' returned Scudamore. 'But when I venture to speak,
+you always make me feel as if I ought not to have spoken. When I call
+you COUSIN DOROTHY, you reply with MR. SCUDAMORE.'
+
+'The relation is hardly near enough to justify a less measure of
+observance.'
+
+'Our mothers loved each other.'
+
+'They found each other worthy.'
+
+'And you do not find me such?' sighed Scudamore, with a smile meant to
+be both humble and bewitching.
+
+'N-n-o. Thou hast not made me desire to hold with thee much converse.'
+
+'Tell me why, cousin, that I may reform that which offends thee.'
+
+'If a man see not his faults with his own eyes, how shall he see them
+with the eyes of another?'
+
+'Wilt thou never love me, Dorothy?--not even a little?'
+
+'Wherefore should I love thee, Rowland?'
+
+'We are commanded to love even our enemies.'
+
+'Art thou then mine enemy, cousin?'
+
+'No, forsooth! I am the most loving friend thou hast.'
+
+'Then am I sorely to be pitied.'
+
+'For having my love?'
+
+'Nay; for having none better than thine. But thank God, it is not so.'
+
+'Must I then be thine enemy indeed before thou wilt love me?'
+
+'No, cousin: cease to be thine own enemy and I will call thee my
+friend.'
+
+'Marry! wherein then am I mine own enemy? I lead a sober life enough--as
+thou seest, ever under the eye of my lord.'
+
+'But what wouldst thou an' thou wert from under the eye of thy lord? I
+know thee better than thou thinkest, cousin. I have read thy title-page,
+if not thy whole book.'
+
+'Tell me then how runneth my title-page, cousin.'
+
+'The art of being wilfully blind, or The way to see no farther than one
+would.'
+
+'Fair preacher,--' began Rowland, but Dorothy interrupted him.
+
+'Nay then, an' thou betake thee to thy jibes, I have done,' she said.
+
+'Be not angry with me; it is but my nature, which for thy sake I will
+control. If thou canst not love me, wilt thou not then pity me a
+little?'
+
+'That I may pity thee, answer me what good thing is there in thee
+wherefore I should love thee.'
+
+'Wouldst thou have a man trumpet his own praises?'
+
+'I fear not that of thee who hast but the trumpet--I will tell thee this
+much: I have never seen in thee that thou didst love save for the
+pastime thereof. I doubt if thou lovest thy master for more than thy
+place.'
+
+'Oh cousin!'
+
+'Be honest with thyself, Rowland. If thou would have me for thy cousin,
+it must be on the ground of truth.'
+
+Rowland possessed at least good nature: few young men would have borne
+to be so severely handled. But then, while one's good opinion of himself
+remains untroubled, confesses no touch, gives out no hollow sound,
+shrinks not self-hurt with the doubt of its own reality, hostile
+criticism will not go very deep, will not reach to the quick. The thing
+that hurts is that which sets trembling the ground of self-worship, lays
+bare the shrunk cracks and wormholes under the golden plates of the
+idol, shows the ants running about in it, and renders the foolish smile
+of the thing hateful. But he who will then turn away from his imagined
+self, and refer his life to the hidden ideal self, the angel that ever
+beholds the face of the Father, shall therein be made whole and sound,
+alive and free.
+
+The dance called them, and their talk ceased. When it was over, Dorothy
+left the hall and sought her chamber. But in the fountain court her
+cousin overtook her, and had the temerity to resume the conversation.
+The moth would still at any risk circle the candle. It was a still
+night, and therefore not very cold, although icicles hung from the mouth
+of the horse, and here and there from the eaves. They stood by the
+marble basin, and the dim lights and scarce dimmer shadows from many an
+upper window passed athwart them as they stood. The chapel was faintly
+lighted, but the lantern-window on the top of the hall shone like a
+yellow diamond in the air.
+
+'Thou dost me scant justice, cousin,' said Rowland, 'maintaining that I
+love but myself or for mine own ends. I know that love thee better than
+so.'
+
+'For thine own sake, I would, might I but believe it, be glad of the
+assurance. But--'
+
+Amanda's behaviour to her having at last roused counter observation and
+speculation on Dorothy's part, she had become suddenly aware that there
+was an understanding between her and Rowland. It was gradually, however,
+that the question rose in her mind: could these two have been the
+nightly intruders on the forbidden ground of the workshop, and
+afterwards the victims of the water-shoot? But the suspicion grew to all
+but a conviction. Latterly she had observed that their behaviour to each
+other was changed, also that Amanda's aversion to herself seemed to have
+gathered force. And one thing she had found remarkable--that Rowland
+revealed no concern for Amanda's misfortunes, or anxiety about her fate.
+With all these things potentially present in her mind, she came all at
+once to the resolution of attempting a bold stroke.
+
+'--But,' Dorothy went on, 'when I think how thou didst bear thee with
+mistress Amanda--'
+
+'My precious Dorothy!' exclaimed Scudamore, filled with a sudden gush of
+hope, 'thou wilt never be so unjust to thyself as to be jealous of her!
+She is to me as nothing--as if she had never been; nor care I forsooth
+if the devil hath indeed flown away with her bodily, as they will have
+it in the hall and the guard-room.'
+
+'Thou didst seem to hold friendly enough converse with her while she was
+yet one of us.'
+
+'Ye-e-s. But she had no heart like thee, Dorothy, as I soon discovered.
+She had indeed a pretty wit of her own, but that was all. And then she
+was spiteful. She hated thee, Dorothy.'
+
+He spoke of her as one dead.
+
+'How knewest thou that? Wast thou then so far in her confidence, and art
+now able to talk of her thus? Where is thine own heart, Mr. Scudamore?'
+
+'In thy bosom, lovely Dorothy.'
+
+'Thou mistakest. But mayhap thou dost imagine I picked it up that night
+thou didst lay it at mistress Amanda's feet in my lord's workshop in the
+keep?'
+
+Dorothy's hatred of humbug--which was not the less in existence then
+that they had not the ugly word to express the uglier thing--enabled her
+to fix her eyes on him as she spoke, and keep them fixed when she had
+ended. He turned pale--visibly pale through the shadowy night, nor
+attempted to conceal his confusion. It is strange how self-conviction
+will wait upon foreign judgment, as if often only the general conscience
+were powerful enough to wake the individual one.
+
+'Or perhaps,' she continued, 'it was torn from thee by the waters that
+swept thee from the bridge, as thou didst venture with her yet again
+upon the forbidden ground.'
+
+He hung his head, and stood before her like a chidden child.
+
+'Think'st thou,' she went on, 'that my lord would easily pardon such
+things?'
+
+'Thou knewest it, and didst not betray me! Oh Dorothy!' murmured
+Scudamore. 'Thou art a very angel of light, Dorothy.'
+
+He seized her hand, and but for the possible eyes upon them, he would
+have flung himself at her feet.
+
+Dorothy, however, would not yet lay aside the part she had assumed as
+moral physician--surgeon rather.
+
+'But notwithstanding all this, cousin Rowland, when trouble came upon
+the young lady, what comfort was there for her in thee? Never hadst thou
+loved her, although I doubt not thou didst vow and swear thereto an
+hundred times.'
+
+Rowland was silent. He began to fear her.
+
+'Or what love thou hadst was of such sort that thou didst encourage in
+her that which was evil, and then let her go like a haggard hawk. Thou
+marvellest, forsooth, that I should be so careless of thy merits! Tell
+me, cousin, what is there in thee that I should love? Can there be love
+for that which is nowise lovely? Thou wilt doubtless say in thy heart,
+"She is but a girl, and how then should she judge concerning men and
+their ways?" But I appeal to thine own conscience, Rowland, when I ask
+thee--is this well? And if a maiden truly loved thee, it were all one.
+Thou wouldst but carry thyself the same to her--if not to-day, then
+to-morrow, or a year hence.'
+
+'Not if she were good, Dorothy, like thee,' he murmured.
+
+'Not if thou wert good, Rowland, like Him that made thee.'
+
+'Wilt thou not teach me then to be good like thee, Dorothy?'
+
+'Thou must teach thyself to be good like the Rowland thou knowest in thy
+better heart, when it is soft and lowly.'
+
+'Wouldst thou then love me a little, Dorothy, if I vowed to be thy
+scholar, and study to be good? Give me some hope to help me in the hard
+task.'
+
+'He that is good is good for goodness' sake, Rowland. Yet who can fail
+to love that which is good in king or knave?'
+
+'Ah! but do not mock me, Dorothy: such is not the love I would have of
+thee.'
+
+'It is all thou ever canst have of me, and methinks it is not like thou
+wilt ever have it, for verily thou art of nature so light that any wind
+may blow thee into the Dead Sea.'
+
+From a saint it was enough to anger any sinner.
+
+'I see!' cried Scudamore. 'For all thy fine reproof, thou too canst
+spurn a heart at thy feet. I will lay my life thou lovest the roundhead,
+and art but a traitress for all thy goodness.'
+
+'I am indeed traitress enough to love any roundhead gentleman better
+than a royalist knave,' said Dorothy; and turning from him she sought
+the grand staircase.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI.
+
+GLAMORGAN.
+
+
+The winter passed, with much running to and fro, in foul weather and
+fair; and still the sounds of war came no nearer to Raglan, which lay
+like a great lion in a desert that the hunter dared not arouse. The
+whole of Wales, except a castle or two, remained subject to the king;
+and this he owed in great measure to the influence and devotion of the
+Somersets, his obligation to whom he seemed more and more bent on
+acknowledging.
+
+One day in early summer lady Margaret was sitting in her parlour, busy
+with her embroidery, and Dorothy was by her side assisting her, when
+lord Herbert, who had been absent for many days, walked in.
+
+'How does my lady Glamorgan?' he said gaily.
+
+'What mean you, my Herbert?' returned his wife, looking in his eyes
+somewhat eagerly.
+
+'Thy Herbert am I no more; neither plume I myself any more in the spare
+feathers of my father. Thou art, my dove, as thou deservest to be,
+countess of Glamorgan, in the right of thine own husband, first earl of
+the same; for such being the will of his majesty, I doubt not thou wilt
+give thy consent thereto, and play the countess graciously. Come,
+Dorothy, art not proud to be cousin to an earl?'
+
+'I am proud that you should call me cousin, my lord,' answered Dorothy;
+'but truly to me it is all one whether you be called Herbert or
+Glamorgan. So thou remain thou, cousin, and my friend, the king may call
+thee what he will, and if thou art pleased, so am I.'
+
+It was the first time she had ever thou'd him, and she turned pale at
+her own daring.
+
+'St. George! but thou hast well spoken, cousin!' cried the earl. 'Hath
+she not, wife?'
+
+'So well that if she often saith as well, I shall have much ado not to
+hate her,' replied lady Glamorgan. 'When didst thou ever cry "well
+spoken" to thy mad Irishwoman, Ned?'
+
+'All thou dost is well, my lady. Thou hast all the titles to my praises
+already in thy pocket. Besides, cousin Dorothy is young and meek, and
+requireth a little encouragement.'
+
+'Whereas thy wife is old and bold, and cares no more for thy good word,
+my new lord of Glamorgan?'
+
+Dorothy looked so grave that they both fell a-laughing.
+
+'I would thou couldst teach her a merry jest or two, Margaret,' said the
+earl. 'We are decent people enough in Raglan, but she is much too sober
+for us. Cheer up, Dorothy! Good times are at hand: that thou mayest not
+doubt it, listen--but this is only for thy ear, not for thy tongue: the
+king hath made thy cousin, that is me, Edward Somerset, the husband of
+this fair lady, generalissimo of his three armies, and admiral of a
+fleet, and truly I know not what all, for I have yet but run my eye over
+the patent. And, wife, I verily do believe the king but bides his time
+to make my father duke of Somerset, and then one day thou wilt be a
+duchess, Margaret. Think on that!'
+
+Lady Glamorgan burst into tears.
+
+'I would I might have a kiss of my Molly!' she cried.
+
+She had never before in Dorothy's hearing uttered the name of her child
+since her death. New dignity, strange as it may seem to some, awoke
+suddenly the thought of the darling to whom titles were but words, and
+the ice was broken. A pause followed.
+
+'Yes, Margaret, thou art right,' said Glamorgan at length; 'it is all
+but folly; yet as the marks of a king's favour, such honours are
+precious.'
+
+As to what a king's favour itself might be worth, that my lord of
+Glamorgan lived to learn.
+
+'It is I who pay for them,' said his wife.
+
+'How so, my dove?'
+
+'Do they not cost me thee, Herbert--and cost me very dear? Art not ever
+from my sight? Wish I not often as I lay awake in the dark, that we were
+all in heaven and well over with the foolery of it? The angels keep
+Molly in mind of us!'
+
+'Yes, my Peggy, it is hard on thee, and hard on me too,' said the earl
+tenderly, 'yet not so hard as upon our liege lord, the king, who selleth
+his plate and jewels.'
+
+'Pooh! what of that then, Herbert? An' he would leave me thee, he might
+have all mine, and welcome; for thou knowest, Ned, I but hold them for
+thee to sell when thou wilt.'
+
+'I know; and the time may come, though, thank God, it is not yet. What
+wouldst thou say, countess, if with all thy honours thou did yet come to
+poverty? Canst be poor and merry, think'st thou?'
+
+'So thou wert with me, Herbert--Glamorgan, I would say, but my lips
+frame not themselves to the word. I like not the title greatly, but when
+it means thee to me, then shall I love it.'
+
+ 'Art thou poor, yet hast thou golden slumbers?
+ O sweet content!'
+
+--sang the earl in a mellow tenor voice.
+
+'My lord, an' I have leave to speak,' said Dorothy, 'did you not say the
+diamond in that ring Richard Heywood sent me was of some worth?'
+
+'I did, cousin. It is a stone of the finest water, and of good weight,
+though truly I weighed it not.'
+
+'Then would I cast it in the king's treasury, an' if your lordship would
+condescend to be the bearer of such a small offering.'
+
+'No, child; the king robs not orphans.'
+
+'Did the King of Kings rob the poor widow that cast in her two mites,
+then?'
+
+'No; but perhaps the priests did. Still, as I say, the hour may come
+when all our mites may be wanted, and thine be accepted with the rest,
+but my father and I have yet much to give, and shall have given it
+before that hour come. Besides, as to thee, Dorothy, what would that
+handsome roundhead of thine say, if instead of keeping well the ring he
+gave thee, thou had turned it to the use he liked the least?'
+
+'He will never ask me concerning it,' said Dorothy, with a faint smile.
+
+'Be not over-sure of it, child. My lady asks me many things I never
+thought to tell her before the priest made us one. Dorothy, I have no
+right and no wish to spy into thy future, and fright thee with what, if
+it come at all, will come peacefully as June weather. I have not
+constructed thy horoscope to cast thy nativity, and therefore I speak as
+one of the ignorant; but let me tell thee, for I do say it confidently,
+that if these wars were once over, and the king had his own again, there
+will be few men in his three kingdoms so worthy of the hand and heart of
+Dorothy Vaughan as that same roundhead fellow, Richard Heywood. I would
+to God he were as good a catholic as he is a mistaken puritan! And now,
+my lady, may I not send thy maiden from us, for I would talk with thee
+alone of certain matters--not from distrust of Dorothy, but that they
+are not my own to impart, therefore I pray her absence.'
+
+The parliament having secured the assistance of the Scots, and their
+forces having, early in the year, entered England, the king on his side
+was now meditating an attempt to secure the assistance of the Irish
+catholics, to which the devotion of certain of the old catholic houses
+at home encouraged him. But it was a game of terrible danger, for if he
+lost it, he lost everything; and that it should transpire before
+maturity would be to lose it absolutely; for the Irish catholics had,
+truly or falsely, been charged with such enormities during the
+rebellion, that they had become absolutely hateful in the eyes of all
+English protestants, and any alliance with them must cost him far more
+in protestants than he could gain by it in catholics. It was necessary
+therefore that he should go about it with the utmost caution; and indeed
+in his whole management of it, the wariness far exceeded the dignity,
+and was practised at the expense of his best friends. But the poor king
+was such a believer in his father's pet doctrine of the divine right of
+his inheritance, that not only would he himself sacrifice everything to
+the dim shadow of royalty which usurped the throne of his conscience,
+but would, without great difficulty or compunction, though not always
+without remorse, accept any sacrifice which a subject might have
+devotion enough to bring to the altar before which Charles Stuart acted
+as flamen.
+
+In this my story of hearts rather than fortunes, it is not necessary to
+follow the river of public events through many of its windings, although
+every now and then my track will bring me to a ferry, where the boat
+bearing my personages will be seized by the force of the current, and
+carried down the stream while crossing to the other bank.
+
+It must have been, I think, in view of his slowly-maturing intention to
+employ lord Herbert in a secret mission to Ireland with the object above
+mentioned, that the king had sought to bind him yet more closely to
+himself by conferring on him the title of Glamorgan. It was not,
+however, until the following year, when his affairs seemed on the point
+of becoming desperate, that he proceeded, possibly with some protestant
+compunctions, certainly with considerable protestant apprehension, to
+carry out his design. Towards this had pointed the relaxation of his
+measures against the catholic rebels for some time previous, and may to
+some have indicated hopes entertained of them. It must be remembered
+that while these catholics united to defend the religion of their
+country, they, like the Scots who had joined the parliament, professed a
+sincere attachment to their monarch, and in the persons of their own
+enemies had certainly taken up arms against many of his.
+
+Meantime the Scots had invaded England, and the parliament had largely
+increased their forces in the hope of a decisive engagement; but the
+king refused battle and gained time. In the north prince Rupert made
+some progress, and brought on the battle of Marston Moor, where the
+victory was gained by Cromwell, after all had been regarded as lost by
+the other parliamentary generals. On the other hand, the king gained an
+important advantage in the west country over Essex and his army.
+
+The trial and execution of Laud, who died in the beginning of the
+following year, obeying the king rather than his rebellious lords, was a
+terrible sign to the house of Raglan of what the presbyterian party was
+capable of. But to Dorothy it would have given a yet keener pain, had
+she not begun to learn that neither must the excesses of individuals be
+attributed to their party, nor those of his party taken as embodying the
+mind of every one who belongs to it. At the same time the old
+insuperable difficulty returned; how could Richard belong to such a
+party?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII.
+
+A NEW SOLDIER.
+
+
+Moments had scarcely passed after Dorothy left him at the fountain, ere
+Scudamore grievously repented of having spoken to her in such a manner,
+and would gladly have offered apology and what amends he might.
+
+But Dorothy, neither easily moved to wrath, nor yet given to the
+nourishing of active resentment, was not therefore at all the readier to
+forget the results of moral difference, or to permit any nearer approach
+on the part of one such as her cousin had shown himself. As long as he
+continued so self-serene and unashamed, what satisfaction to her or what
+good to him could there be in it, even were he to content himself with
+the cousinly friendship which, as soon as he was capable of it, she was
+willing to afford him? As it was now, she granted him only distant
+recognition in company, neither seeking nor avoiding him; and as to all
+opportunity of private speech, entirely shunning him. For some time, in
+the vanity of his experience, he never doubted that these were only
+feminine arts, or that when she judged him sufficiently punished, she
+would relax the severity of her behaviour and begin to make him amends.
+But this demeanour of hers endured so long, and continued so uniform,
+that at length he began to doubt the universality of his experience, and
+to dread lest the maiden should actually prove what he had never found
+maiden before, inexorable. He did not reflect that he had given her no
+ground whatever for altering her judgment or feeling with regard to him.
+But in truth her thoughts rarely turned to him at all, and while his
+were haunting her as one who was taking pleasure in the idea that she
+was making him feel her resentment, she was simply forgetting him, busy
+perhaps with some self-offered question that demanded an answer, or
+perhaps brooding a little over the past, in which the form of Richard
+now came and went at its will.
+
+So long as Rowland imagined the existence of a quarrel, he imagined
+therein a bond between them; when he became convinced that no quarrel,
+only indifference, or perhaps despisal, separated them, he began again
+to despair, and felt himself urged once more to speak. Seizing therefore
+an opportunity in such manner that she could not escape him without
+attracting very undesirable attention, he began a talk upon the old
+basis.
+
+'Wilt thou then forgive me nevermore, Dorothy?', he said humbly.
+
+'For what, Mr. Scudamore?'
+
+'I mean for offending thee with rude words.'
+
+'Truly I have forgotten them.'
+
+'Then shall we be friends?'
+
+'Nay, that follows not.'
+
+'What quarrel then hast thou with me?'
+
+'I have no quarrel with thee; yet is there one thing I cannot forgive
+thee.'
+
+'And what is that, cousin? Believe me I know not. I need but to know,
+and I will humble myself.'
+
+'That would serve nothing, for how should I forgive thee for being
+unworthy? For such thing there is no forgiveness. Cease thou to be
+unworthy, and then is there nothing to forgive. I were an unfriendly
+friend, Rowland, did I befriend the man who befriendeth not himself.'
+
+'I understand thee not, cousin.'
+
+'And I understand not thy not understanding. Therefore can there be no
+communion between us.'
+
+So saying Dorothy left him to what consolation he could find in such
+china-pastoral abuse as the gallants of the day would, with the aid of
+poetic penny-trumpet, cast upon offending damsels--Daphnes and Chloes,
+and, in the mood, heathen shepherdesses in general. But, fortunately for
+himself, how great soever had been the freedom with which he had lost
+and changed many a foolish liking, he found, let his hopelessness or his
+offence be what it might, he had not the power to shake himself free
+from the first worthy passion ever roused in him. It had struck root
+below the sandy upper stratum of his mind into a clay soil beneath,
+where at least it was able to hold, and whence it could draw a little
+slow reluctant nourishment.
+
+During his poetic anger, he wrote no small amount of fair verse, tried
+by the standard of Cowley, Carew, and Suckling, so like theirs indeed
+that the best of it might have passed for some of their worst, although
+there was not in it all a single phrase to remind one of their best. But
+when the poetic spring began to run dry, he fell once more into a sort
+of wilful despair, and disrelished everything, except indeed his food
+and drink, so much so that his master perceiving his altered cheer, one
+day addressed him to know the cause.
+
+'What aileth thee, Rowland?' he said kindly. 'For this se'en-night past,
+thou lookest like one that oweth the hangman his best suit.'
+
+'I rust, my lord,' said Rowland, with a tragic air of discontent.
+
+The notion had arisen in his foolish head that the way to soften the
+heart of Dorothy would be to ride to the wars, and get himself slain,
+or, rather severely but not mortally wounded. Then he would be brought
+back to Raglan, and, thinking he was going to die, Dorothy would nurse
+him, and then she would be sure to fall in love with him. Yes--he would
+ride forth on the fellow Heywood's mare, seek him in the field of
+battle, and slay him, but be himself thus grievously wounded.
+
+'I rust, my lord,' he said briefly.
+
+'Ha! Thou wouldst to the wars! I like thee for that, boy. Truly the king
+wanteth soldiers, and that more than ever. Thou art a good cupbearer,
+but I will do my best to savour my claret without thee. Thou shalt to
+the king, and what poor thing my word may do for thee shall not be
+wanting.'
+
+Scudamore had expected opposition, and was a little nonplussed. He had
+judged himself essential to his master's comfort, and had even hoped he
+might set Dorothy to use her influence towards reconciling him to remain
+at home. But although self-indulgent and lazy, Scudamore was
+constitutionally no coward, and had never had any experience to give him
+pause: he did not know what an ugly thing a battle is after it is over,
+and the mind has leisure to attend to the smarting of the wounds.
+
+'I thank your lordship with all my heart,' he said, putting on an air of
+greater satisfaction than he felt, 'and with your lordship's leave would
+prefer a further request.'
+
+'Say on, Rowland. I owe thee something for long and faithful service.
+An' I can, I will.'
+
+'Give me the roundhead's mare that I may the better find her master.'
+
+For Lady was still within the walls. The marquis could not restore her,
+but neither could he bring himself to use her, cherishing the hope of
+being one day free to give her back to a reconciled subject. But alas!
+there were very few horses now in Raglan stalls.
+
+'No, Rowland,' he said, 'thou art the last who ought to get any good of
+her. It were neither law nor justice to hand the stolen goods to the
+thief.'
+
+He sat silent, and Rowland, not very eager, stood before him in silence
+also, meaning it to be read as indicating that to the wars except on
+that mare's back he would not ride. But the thought of the marquis had
+now taken another turn.
+
+'Thou shalt have her, my boy. Thou shalt not rust at home for the sake
+of a gouty old man and his claret. But ere thou go, I will write out
+certain maxims for thy following both in the field and in quarters. Ere
+thou ride, look well to thy girths, and as thou ridest say thy prayers,
+for it pleaseth not God that every man on the right side should live,
+and thou mayst find the presence in which thou standest change suddenly
+from that of mortal man to that of living God. I say nothing of
+orthodoxy, for truly I am not one to think that because a man hath been
+born a heretic, which lay not in his choice, and hath not been of his
+parents taught in the truth, that therefore he must howl for ever. Not
+while blessed Mary is queen of heaven, will all the priests in
+Christendom persuade me thereof. Only be thou fully persuaded in thine
+own mind, Rowland; for if thou cared not, that were an evil thing
+indeed. And of all things, my lad, remember this, that a weak blow were
+ever better unstruck. Go now to the armourer, and to him deliver my will
+that he fit thee out as a cuirassier for his majesty's service. I can
+give thee no rank, for I have no regiment in the making at present, but
+it may please his majesty to take care of thee, and give thee a place in
+my lord Glamorgan's regiment of body-guards.'
+
+The prospect thus suddenly opened to Scudamore of a wider life and
+greater liberty, might have dazzled many a nobler nature than his. Lord
+Worcester saw the light in his eyes, and as he left the room gazed after
+him with pitiful countenance.
+
+'Poor lad! poor lad!' he said to himself; 'I hope I see not the last of
+thee! God forbid! But here thou didst but rust, and it were a vile thing
+in an old man to infect a youth with the disease of age.'
+
+Rowland soon found the master of the armoury, and with him crossed to
+the keep, where it lay, above the workshop. At the foot of the stair he
+talked loud, in the hope that Dorothy might be with the fire-engine,
+which he thought he heard at work, and would hear him. Having chosen
+such pieces as pleased his fancy, and needed but a little of the
+armourer's art to render them suitable, he filled his arms with them,
+and following the master down, contrived to fall a little behind, so
+that he should leave the tower before him, when he dropped them all with
+a huge clatter at the foot of the stair. The noise was sufficient, for
+it brought out Dorothy. She gazed for a moment as, pretending not to
+have seen her, he was picking them up with his back towards her.
+
+'Do I see thee arming at length, cousin?' she said. 'I congratulate
+thee.'
+
+She held out her hand to him. He took it and stared. The reception of
+his noisy news was different from what he had been vain enough to hope.
+So little had Dorothy's behaviour in the capture of Rowland enlightened
+him as to her character!
+
+'Thou wouldst have me slain then to be rid of me, Dorothy?' he gasped.
+
+'I would have any man slain where men fight,' returned Dorothy, 'rather
+than idling within stone walls!'
+
+'Thou art hard-hearted, Dorothy, and knowest not what love is, else
+wouldst thou pity me a little.'
+
+'What! art afraid, cousin?'
+
+'Afraid! I fear nothing under heaven but thy cruelty, Dorothy.'
+
+'Then what wouldst thou have me pity thee for?'
+
+'I would, an' I had dared, have said--Because I must leave thee. But
+thou wouldst mock at that, and therefore I say instead--Because I shall
+never return; for I see well that thou never hast loved me even a
+little.'
+
+Dorothy smiled.
+
+'An' I had loved thee, cousin,' she rejoined, 'I had never let thee
+rest, or left soliciting thee, until thou hadst donned thy buff coat and
+buckled on thy spurs, and departed to be a man among men, and no more a
+boy among women.'
+
+So saying she returned to her engine, which all the time had been
+pumping and forcing with fiery inspiration.
+
+Scudamore mounted and rode, followed by one of the grooms. He found the
+king at Wallingford, presented the marquis's letter, proffered his
+services, and was at once placed in attendance on his majesty's person.
+
+In the eyes of most of his comrades the mare he rode seemed too light
+for cavalry work, but she made up in spirit and quality of muscle for
+lack of size, and there was not another about the king to match in
+beauty the little black Lady. Sweet-tempered and gentle although nervous
+and quick, and endowed with a rare docility and a faith which supplied
+courage, it was clear, while nothing was known of her pedigree, both
+from her form and her nature, that she was of Arab descent. No feeling
+of unreality in his possession of her intruding to disturb his
+satisfaction in her, Scudamore became very fond of her. Having joined
+the army, however, only after the second battle of Newbury, he had no
+chance till the following summer of learning how she bore herself in the
+field.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII.
+
+LADY AND BISHOP.
+
+
+In the meantime a succession of events had contributed to enhance the
+influence of Cromwell in the parliament, and his position and power in
+the army. He was now, therefore, more able to put in places of trust
+such men as came nearest his own way of thinking, and amongst the rest
+Roger Heywood, whom, once brought into the active service for which
+modesty had made him doubt his own fitness, he would not allow to leave
+it again, but made colonel of one of his favourite regiments of horse,
+with his son as major.
+
+Richard continued to ride Bishop, which became at length famous for
+courage, as he had become at once for ugliness. Fortunately they found
+that he had developed friendly feelings towards one of the mares of the
+troop, never lashing out when she happened to be behind him; so they
+gave her that place, and were freed from much anxiety. Still the rider
+on each side of him had to keep his eyes open, for every now and then a
+sudden fury of biting would seize him, and bring chaos in the regiment
+for a moment or two. When his master was made an officer, the brute's
+temptations probably remained the same, but his opportunities of
+yielding to them became considerably fewer.
+
+It was strange company in which Richard rode. Nearly all were of the
+independent party in religious polity, all holding, or imagining they
+held, the same or nearly the same tenets. The opinions of most of them,
+however, were merely the opinions of the man to whose influences they
+had been first and principally subjected: to say what their belief was,
+would be to say what they were, which is deeper judgment than a man can
+reach. In Roger Heywood and his son dwelt a pure love of liberty; the
+ardent attachment to liberty which most of the troopers professed, would
+have prevented few of them indeed from putting a quaker in the stocks,
+or perhaps whipping him, had such an obnoxious heretic as a quaker been
+at that time in existence. In some was the devoutest sense of personal
+obligation, and the strongest religious feeling; in others was nothing
+but talk, less injurious than some sorts of pseudo-religious talk, in
+that it was a jargon admitting of much freedom of utterance and
+reception, mysterious symbols being used in commonest interchange. That
+they all believed earnestly enough to fight for their convictions, will
+not go very far in proof of their sincerity even, for to most of them
+fighting came by nature, and was no doubt a great relief to the much
+oppressed old Adam not yet by any means dead in them.
+
+At length the king led out his men for another campaign, and was
+followed by Fairfax and Cromwell into the shires of Leicester and
+Northampton. Then came the battle at the village of Naseby.
+
+Prince Rupert, whose folly so often lost what his courage had gained,
+having defeated Ireton and his horse, followed them from the field,
+while Cromwell with his superior numbers turned Sir Marmaduke Langdale's
+flank, and thereby turned the scale of victory.
+
+But Sir Marmaduke and his men fought desperately, and while the contest
+was yet undecided, the king saw that Rupert, returned from the pursuit,
+was attacking the enemy's artillery, and dispatched Rowland in hot haste
+to bring him to the aid of Sir Marmaduke.
+
+The straightest line to reach him lay across a large field to the rear
+of Sir Marmaduke's men. As he went from behind them, Richard caught
+sight of him and his object together, struck spurs into Bishop's flanks,
+bored him through a bull-fence, was in the same field with Rowland, and
+tore at full speed to head him off from the prince.
+
+Rowland rode for some distance without perceiving that he was followed;
+if Richard could but get within pistol-shot of him, for alas, he seemed
+to be mounted on the fleeter animal! Heavens!--could it be? Yes it was!
+it was his own lost Lady the cavalier rode! For a moment his heart beat
+so fast that he felt as if he should fall from his horse.
+
+Rowland became aware that he was pursued, but at the first glimpse of
+the long, low, rat-like animal on which the roundhead came floundering
+after him, burst into a laugh of derision, and jumping a young hedge
+found himself in a clayish fallow, which his mare found heavy. Soon
+Richard jumped the hedge also, and immediately Bishop had the advantage.
+But now, beyond the tall hedge they were approaching, they heard the
+sounds of the conflict near: there was no time to lose. Richard breathed
+deep, and uttered a long, wild, peculiar cry. Lady started,
+half-stopped, raised her head high, and turned round her ears. Richard
+cried again. She wheeled, and despite spur, and rein, though the
+powerful bit with which Rowland rode her seemed to threaten breaking her
+jaw, bore him, at short deer-like bounds, back towards his pursuer.
+
+Not until the mare refused obedience did Rowland begin to suspect who
+had followed him. Then a vague recollection of something Richard had
+said the night he carried him home to Raglan, crossed his mind, and he
+grew furious. But in vain he struggled with the mare, and all the time
+Richard kept ploughing on towards him. At length he saw Rowland take a
+pistol from his holster. Instinctively Richard did the same, and when he
+saw him raise the butt-end to strike her on the head, firmed--and
+missed, but saved Lady the blow, and ere Rowland recovered from the
+start it gave him to hear the bullet whistle past his ear, uttered
+another equally peculiar but different cry. Lady reared, plunged, threw
+her heels in the air, emptied her saddle, and came flying to Richard.
+
+But now arose a fresh anxiety:-what if Bishop should, as was most
+likely, attack the mare? At her master's word, however, she stood, a few
+yards off, and with arched neck and forward-pricked ears, waited, while
+Bishop, moved possibly with admiration of the manner in which she had
+unseated her rider, scanned her with no malign aspect.
+
+By this time Rowland had got upon his feet, and mindful of his duty,
+hopeful also that Richard would be content with his prize, set off as
+hard as he could run for a gap he spied in the hedge. But in a moment
+Bishop, followed by Lady, had headed him.
+
+'Thou wert better cry quarter,' said Richard.
+
+The reply was a bullet, that struck Bishop below the ear. He stood
+straight up, gave one yell, and tumbled over. Scudamore ran towards the
+mare, hoping to catch her and be off ere the roundhead could recover
+himself. But, although Bishop had fallen on his leg, Richard was unhurt.
+He lay still and watched. Lady seemed bewildered, and Rowland coming
+softly up, seized her bridle, and sprung into the saddle. The same
+moment Richard gave his cry a second time, and again up went Rowland in
+the air, and Lady came trotting daintily to her master, scared, but
+obedient. Rowland fell on his back, and before he came to himself,
+Richard had drawn his leg from under his slain charger, and his sword
+from its sheath. And now first he perceived who his antagonist was, and
+a pang went to his heart at the remembrance of his father's words.
+
+'Mr. Scudamore,' he cried, 'I would thou hadst not stolen my mare, so
+that I might fight with thee in a Christian fashion.'
+
+'Roundhead scoundrel!' gasped Scudamore, wild with wrath. 'Thy
+unmannerly varlet tricks shall cost thee dear. Thou a soldier? A juggler
+with a mountebank jade--a vile hackney which thou hast taught to caper!
+A soldier indeed!'
+
+'A soldier and seatless!' returned Richard. 'A soldier and rail! A
+soldier and steal my mare, then shoot my horse! Bah! an' the rest were
+like thee, we might take the field with dog-whips.'
+
+Scudamore drew a pistol from his belt, and glanced towards the mare.
+
+'An' thou lift thine arm, I will kill thee,' cried Richard. 'What! shall
+a man not teach his horse lest the thief should find him not broke to
+his taste? Besides, did I not give thee warning while yet I judged thee
+an honest man, and a thief but in jest? Go thy ways. I shall do my
+country better service by following braver men than by taking thee. Get
+thee back to thy master. An' I killed thee, I should do him less hurt
+than I would. See yonder how thy master's horse do knot and scatter!'
+
+He approached Lady to mount and ride away.
+
+But Rowland, who had now with the help of his anger recovered from the
+effects of his fall, rushed at Richard with drawn sword. The contest was
+brief. With one heavy blow that beat down his guard and wounded him
+severely in the shoulder, dividing his collarbone, for he was but
+lightly armed, Richard stretched his antagonist on the ground; then
+seeing prince Rupert's men returning, and sir Marmaduke's in flight and
+some of them coming his way, he feared being surrounded, and leaping
+into the saddle, flew as if the wind were under him back to his
+regiment, reaching it just as in the first heat of pursuit. Cromwell
+called them back, and turned them upon the rear of the royalist
+infantry.
+
+This decided the battle. Ere Rupert returned, the affair was so hopeless
+that not even the entreaties of the king could induce his cavalry to
+form again and charge.
+
+His majesty retreated to Leicester and Hereford.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV.
+
+THE KING.
+
+
+Some months before the battle of Naseby, which was fought in June early,
+that is, in the year 1645, the plans of the king having now ripened, he
+gave a secret commission for Ireland to the earl of Glamorgan, with
+immense powers, among the rest that of coining money, in order that he
+might be in a position to make proposals towards certain arrangements
+with the Irish catholics, which, in view of the prejudices of the king's
+protestant council, it was of vital importance to keep secret. Glamorgan
+therefore took a long leave of his wife and family, and in the month of
+March set out for Dublin. At Caernarvon, they got on board a small
+barque, laden with corn, but, in rough weather that followed, were cast
+ashore on the coast of Lancashire. A second attempt failed also, for,
+pursued by a parliament vessel, they were again compelled to land on the
+same coast. It was the middle of summer before they reached Dublin.
+
+During this period there was of course great anxiety in Raglan, the
+chief part of which was lady Glamorgan's. At times she felt that but for
+the sympathy of Dorothy, often silent but always ministrant, she would
+have broken down quite under the burden of ignorance and its attendant
+anxiety.
+
+In the prolonged absence of her husband, and the irregularity of
+tidings, for they came at uncertain as well as wide intervals, her
+yearnings after her vanished Molly, which had become more patient,
+returned with all their early vehemence, and she began to brood on the
+meeting beyond the grave of which her religion waked her hope. Nor was
+this all: her religion itself grew more real; for although there is
+nothing essentially religious in thinking of the future, although there
+is more of the heart of religion in the taking of strength from the love
+of God to do the commonest duty, than in all the longing for a blessed
+hereafter of which the soul is capable, yet the love of a little child
+is very close to the love of the great Father; and the loss that sets
+any affection aching and longing, heaves, as on a wave from the very
+heart of the human ocean, the labouring spirit up towards the source of
+life and restoration. In like manner, from their common love to the
+child, and their common sense of loss in her death, the hearts of the
+two women drew closer to each other, and protestant mistress Dorothy was
+able to speak words of comfort to catholic lady Glamorgan, which the
+hearer found would lie on the shelf of her creed none the less quietly
+that the giver had lifted them from the shelf of hers.
+
+One evening, while yet lady Glamorgan had had no news of her husband's
+arrival in Ireland, and the bright June weather continued clouded with
+uncertainty and fear, lady Broughton came panting into her parlour with
+the tidings that a courier had just arrived at the main entrance,
+himself pale with fatigue, and his horse white with foam.
+
+'Alas! alas!' cried lady Glamorgan, and fell back in her chair, faint
+with apprehension, for what might not be the message he bore? Ere
+Dorothy had succeeded in calming her, the marquis himself came hobbling
+in, with the news that the king was coming.
+
+'Is that all?' said the countess, heaving a deep sigh, while the tears
+ran down her cheeks.
+
+'Is that all?' repeated her father-in-law. 'How, my lady! Is there then
+nobody in all the world but Glamorgan? Verily I believe thou wouldst
+turn thy back on the angel Gabriel, if he dared appear before thee
+without thy Ned under his arm. Bless the Irish heart! I never gave thee
+MY Ned that thou shouldst fall down and worship the fellow.'
+
+'Bear with me, sir,' she answered faintly. 'It is but the pain here.
+Thou knowest I cannot tell but he lieth at the bottom of the Irish Sea.'
+
+'If he do lie there, then lieth he in Abraham's bosom, daughter, where I
+trust there is room for thee and me also. Thou rememberest how thy Molly
+said once to thee, 'Madam, thy bosom is not so big as my lord Abraham's.
+What a big bosom my lord Abraham must have!'
+
+Lady Glamorgan laughed.
+
+'Come then--"to our work alive!" which is now to receive his majesty,'
+said the marquis. 'My wild Irishwoman--'
+
+'Alas, my lord! tame enough now,' sighed the countess.
+
+'Not too tame to understand that she must represent her husband before
+the king's majesty,' said lord Worcester.
+
+Lady Glamorgan rose, kissed her father-in-law, wiped her eyes, and
+said--
+
+'Where, my lord, do you purpose lodging his majesty?'
+
+'In the great north room, over the buttery, and next the
+picture-gallery, which will serve his majesty to walk in, and the
+windows there have the finest prospect of all. I did think of the great
+tower, but--Well--the chamber there is indeed statelier, but it is
+gloomy as a dull twilight, while the one I intend him to lie in is
+bright as a summer morning. The tower chamber makes me think of all the
+lords and ladies that have died therein; the north room, of all the
+babies that have been born there.'
+
+'Spoken like a man!' murmured lady Glamorgan. 'Have you given
+directions, my lord?'
+
+'I have sent for sir Ralph. Come with me, Margaret: you and Mary must
+keep your old father from blundering. Run, Dorothy, and tell Mr.
+Delaware and Mr. Andrews that I desire their presence in my closet. I
+miss the rogue Scudamore. They tell me he hath done well, and is sorely
+wounded. He must feel the better for the one already, and I hope he will
+soon be nothing the worse for the other.'
+
+As he thus talked, they left the room and took their way to the study,
+where they found the steward waiting them.
+
+The whole castle was presently alive with preparations for the king's
+visit. That he had been so sorely foiled of late, only roused in all the
+greater desire to receive him with every possible honour. Hope revived
+in lady Glamorgan's bosom: she would take the coming of the king as a
+good omen for the return of her husband.
+
+Dorothy ran to do the marquis's pleasure. As she ran, it seemed as if
+some new spring of life had burst forth in her heart. The king! the king
+actually coming! The God-chosen monarch of England! The head of the
+church! The type of omnipotence! The wronged, the saintly, the wise! He
+who fought with bleeding heart for the rights, that he might fulfil the
+duties to which he was born! She would see him! she would breathe the
+same air with him! gaze on his gracious countenance unseen until she had
+imprinted every feature of his divine face upon her heart and memory!
+The thought was too entrancing. She wept as she ran to find the master
+of the horse and the master of the fish-ponds.
+
+At length, on the evening of the third of July, a pursuivant,
+accompanied by an advanced guard of horsemen, announced the king, and
+presently on the north road appeared the dust of his approach. Nearer
+they came, all on horseback, a court of officers. Travel-stained and
+weary, with foam-flecked horses, but flowing plumes, flashing armour,
+and ringing chains, they arrived at the brick gate, where lord Charles
+himself threw the two leaves open to admit them, and bent the knee
+before his king. As they entered the marble gate, they saw the marquis
+descending the great white stair to meet them, leaning for his lameness
+on the arm of his brother sir Thomas of Troy, and followed by all the
+ladies and gentlemen and officers in the castle, who stood on the stair
+while he approached the king's horse, bent his knee, kissed the royal
+hand, and, rising with difficulty, for the gout had aged him beyond his
+years, said:
+
+'Domine, non sum dignus.'
+
+I would I had not to give this brief dialogue; but it stands on record,
+and may suggest something worth thinking to him who can read it aright.
+
+The king replied:
+
+'My lord, I may very well answer you again: I have not found so great
+faith in Israel; for no man would trust me with so much money as you
+have done.'
+
+'I hope your majesty will prove a defender of the faith,' returned the
+marquis.
+
+The king then dismounted, ascended the marble steps with his host,
+nearly as stiff as he from his long ride, crossed the moat on the
+undulating drawbridge, passed the echoing gateway, and entered the stone
+court.
+
+The marquis turned to the king, and presented the keys of the castle.
+The king took them and returned them.
+
+'I pray your majesty keep them in so good a hand. I fear that ere it be
+long I shall be forced to deliver them into the hands of who will spoil
+the compliment', said the marquis.
+
+'Nay,' rejoined his majesty, 'but keep them till the King of kings
+demand the account of your stewardship, my lord.'
+
+'I trust your majesty's name will then be seen where it stands therein,'
+said the marquis, 'for so it will fare the better with the steward.'
+
+In the court, the garrison, horse and foot, a goodly show, was drawn up
+to receive him, with an open lane through, leading to the north-western
+angle, where was the stair to the king's apartment. At the draw-well,
+which lay right in the way, and around which the men stood off in a
+circle, the king stopped, laid his hand on the wheel, and said gaily:
+
+'My lord, is this your lordship's purse?'
+
+'For your majesty's sake, I would it were,' returned the marquis.
+
+At the foot of the stair, on plea of his gout, he delivered his majesty
+to the care of lord Charles, sir Ralph Blackstone, and Mr. Delaware, who
+conducted him to his chamber.
+
+The king supped alone, but after supper, lady Glamorgan and the other
+ladies of the family, having requested permission to wait upon him, were
+ushered into his presence. Each of them took with her one of her ladies
+in attendance, and Dorothy, being the one chosen by her mistress for
+that honour, not without the rousing of a strong feeling of injustice in
+the bosoms of the elder ladies, entered trembling behind her mistress,
+as if the room were a temple wherein no simulacrum but the divinity
+himself dwelt in visible presence.
+
+His majesty received them courteously, said kind things to several of
+them, but spoke and behaved at first with a certain long-faced reserve
+rather than dignity, which, while it jarred a little with Dorothy's
+ideal of the graciousness that should be mingled with majesty in the
+perfect monarch, yet operated only to throw her spirit back into that
+stage of devotion wherein, to use a figure of the king's own, the awe
+overlays the love.
+
+A little later the marquis entered, walking slowly, leaning on the arm
+of lord Charles, but carrying in his own hands a present of apricots
+from his brother to the king.
+
+Meantime Dorothy's love had begun to rise again from beneath her awe;
+but when the marquis came in, old and stately, reverend and slow, with a
+silver dish in each hand and a basket on his arm, and she saw him bow
+three times ere he presented his offering, himself serving whom all
+served, himself humble whom all revered, then again did awe nearly
+overcome her. When the king, however, having graciously received the
+present, chose for each of the ladies one of the apricots, and coming to
+Dorothy last, picked out and offered the one he said was likest the
+bloom of her own fair cheek, gratitude again restored the sway of love,
+and in the greatness of the honour she almost let slip the compliment.
+She could not reply, but she looked her thanks, and the king doubtless
+missed nothing.
+
+The next day his majesty rested, but on following days rode to Monmouth,
+Chepstow, Usk, and other towns in the neighbourhood, whose loyalty,
+thanks to the marquis, had as yet stood out. After dinner he generally
+paid the marquis a visit in the oak parlour, then perhaps had a walk in
+the grounds, or a game on the bowling-green.
+
+But although the marquis was devoted to the king's cause, he was not
+therefore either blinded or indifferent to the king's faults, and as an
+old man who had long been trying to grow better, he made up his mind to
+risk a respectful word in the matter of kingly obligation.
+
+One day, therefore, when his majesty entered the oak parlour, he found
+his host sitting by the table with his Gower lying open before him, as
+if he had been reading, which doubtless was the case.
+
+'What book have you there, my lord?' asked the king--while some of his
+courtiers stood near the door, and others gazed from the window on the
+moat and the swelling, towering mass of the keep. 'I like to know what
+books my friends read.'
+
+'Sir, it is old master John Gower's book of verses, entitled Confessio
+Amantis,' answered his lordship.
+
+'It is a book I have never seen before,' said the king, glancing at its
+pages.
+
+'Oh!' returned the marquis, 'it is a book of books, which if your
+majesty had been well versed in, it would have made you a king of
+kings.'
+
+'Why so, my lord?' asked the king.
+
+'Why,' said the marquis, 'here is set down how Aristotle brought up and
+instructed Alexander the Great in all his rudiments, and the principles
+belonging to a prince. Allow me, sir, to read you such a passage as will
+show your majesty the truth of what I say.'
+
+He opened the book and read:
+
+ 'Among the vertues one is chefe,
+ And that is trouthe, which is lefe (dear)
+ To God and eke to man also.
+ And for it hath ben ever so,
+ Taught Aristotle, as he well couth, (knew)
+ To Alisaundre, how in his youth
+ He shulde of trouthe thilke grace (that same)
+ With all his hole herte embrace,
+ So that his word be trewe and pleine
+ Toward the world, and so certeine,
+ That in him be no double speche.
+ For if men shulde trouthe seche,
+ And found it nought within a king,
+ It were an unfittende thing
+ The worde is token of that within;
+ There shall a worthy king begin
+ To kepe his tunge and to be trewe,
+ So shall his price ben ever newe.'
+
+'And here, sir, is what he saith as to the significance of the kingly
+crown, if your majesty will allow me to read it.'
+
+'Read on, my lord; all is good and true,' said the king.
+
+ 'The gold betokneth excellence,
+ That men shuld done him reverence,
+ As to her lege soveraine. (their liege)
+ The stones, as the bokes saine,
+ Commended ben in treble wise.
+ First, they ben hard, and thilke assise (that attribute)
+ Betokeneth in a king constaunce,
+ So that there shall be no variaunce
+ Be found in his condicion.
+ And also by description
+ The vertue, whiche is in the stones,
+ A verray signe is for the nones
+ Of that a king shall ben honest,
+ And holde trewely his behest (promise)
+ Of thing, which longeth to kinghede.' (belongeth)
+
+'And so on--for I were loath to weary your majesty--of the colour of the
+stones, and the circular form of the crown.'
+
+'Read on, my lord,' said the king.
+
+Several passages, therefore, did the marquis pick out and read--amongst
+which probably were certain concerning flatterers--taking care still to
+speak of Alexander and Aristotle, and by no means of king and marquis,
+until at length he had 'read the king such a lesson,' as Dr. Bayly
+informs us, 'that the bystanders were amazed at his boldness.'
+
+'My lord, have you got your lesson by heart, or speak you out of the
+book?' asked the king, taking the volume.
+
+'Sir,' the marquis replied, 'if you could read my heart, it may be you
+might find it there; or if your majesty please to get it by heart, I
+will lend you my book.'
+
+'I would willingly borrow it,' said the king.
+
+'Nay,' said the marquis, 'I will lend it to you upon these conditions:
+first, that you read it; and, second, that you make use of it.'
+
+Here, glancing round, well knowing the nature of the soil upon which his
+words fell, he saw 'some of the new-made lords displeased, fretting and
+biting their thumbs,' and thus therefore resumed:--
+
+'But, sir, I assure you that no man was so much for the absolute power
+of the king as Aristotle. If your majesty will allow me the book again,
+I will show you one remarkable passage to that purpose.'
+
+Having searched the volume for a moment, and found it, he read as
+follows:--
+
+ 'Harpaghes first his tale tolde,
+ And said, how that the strength of kinges
+ Is mightiest of alle thinges.
+ For king hath power over man,
+ And man is he, which reson can,
+ As he, which is of his nature
+ The most noble creature
+ Of alle tho that God hath wrought.
+ And by that skill it seemeth nought, (for that reason)
+ He saith that any erthly thing
+ May be so mighty as a king.
+ A king may spille, a king may save,
+ A king may make of lorde a knave,
+ And of a knave a lord also;
+ The power of a king stant so
+ That he the lawes overpasseth.
+ What he will make lasse, he lasseth;
+ What he will make more, he moreth;
+ And as a gentil faucon soreth,
+ He fleeth, that no man him reclaimeth.
+ But he alone all other tameth,
+ And slant him self of lawe fre.'
+
+'There, my liege! So much for Aristotle and the kinghood! But think not
+he taketh me with him all the way. By our Lady, I go not so far.'
+
+Lifting his head again, he saw, to his wish, that 'divers new-made
+lords' had 'slunk out of the room.'
+
+'My lord,' said the king, 'at this rate you will drive away all my
+nobility.'
+
+'I protest unto your majesty,' the marquis replied, 'I am as new a made
+lord as any of them all, but I was never called knave or rogue so much
+in all my life as I have been since I received this last honour: and why
+should they not bear their shares?'
+
+In high good-humour with his success, he told the story the same evening
+to lady Glamorgan in Dorothy's presence. It gave her ground for thought:
+she wondered that the marquis should think the king required such
+lessoning. She had never dreamed that a man and his office are not only
+metaphysically distinct, but may be morally separate things; she had
+hitherto taken the office as the pledge for the man, the show as the
+pledge for the reality; and now therefore her notion of the king
+received a rude shock from his best friend.
+
+The arrival of his majesty had added to her labours, for now again horse
+must spout every day,--with no Molly to see it and rejoice. Every
+fountain rushed heavenwards, 'and all the air' was 'filled with pleasant
+noise of waters.' This required the fire-engine to be kept pretty
+constantly at work, and Dorothy had to run up and down the stair of the
+great tower several times a-day. But she lingered on the top as often
+and as long as she might.
+
+One glorious July afternoon, gazing from the top of the keep, she saw
+his majesty, the marquis, some of the courtiers, and a Mr. Prichard of
+the neighbourhood, on the bowling-green, having a game together. It was
+like looking at a toy-representation of one, for, so far below,
+everything was wondrously dwarfed and fore-shortened. But certainly it
+was a pretty sight-the gay garments, the moving figures, the bowls
+rolling like marbles over the green carpet, while the sun, and the blue
+sky, and just an air of wind--enough to turn every leaf into a languidly
+waved fan, enclosed it in loveliness and filled it with life. It was
+like a picture from a CAMERA OBSCURA dropped right at the foot of the
+keep, for the surrounding walk, moat, and sunk walk beyond, were, seen
+from that height, but enough to keep the bowling-green, which came to
+the edge of the sunk walk, twelve feet below it, from appearing to cling
+to the foundations of the tower. The circle of arches filled with
+shell-work and statues of Roman emperors, which formed the face of the
+escarpment of the sunk walk, looked like a curiously-cut fringe to the
+carpet.
+
+While Dorothy aloft was thus looking down and watching the game,--
+
+'What a lovely prospect it is!' said his majesty below, addressing Mr.
+Prichard, while the marquis bowled.
+
+Making answer, Mr. Prichard pointed out where his own house lay, half
+hidden by a grove, and said--'May it please your majesty, I have advised
+my lord to cut down those trees, so that when he wants a good player at
+bowls, he may have but to beckon.'
+
+'Nay,' returned the king, 'he should plant more trees, that so he might
+not see thy house at all.'
+
+The marquis, who had bowled, and was coming towards them, heard what the
+king said, and fancying he aimed at the fault of the greedy buying-up of
+land--
+
+'If your majesty hath had enough of the game,' he said, 'and will climb
+with me to the top of the tower, I will show you what may do your mind
+some ease.'
+
+'I should be sorry to set your Lordship such an arduous task,' replied
+the king. 'But I am very desirous of seeing your great tower, and if you
+will permit me, I will climb the stair without your attendance.'
+
+'Sir, it will pleasure me to think that the last time ever I ascended
+those stairs, I conducted your majesty. For indeed it shall be the last
+time. I grow old.'
+
+As the marquis spoke, he led towards the twin-arched bridge over the
+castle-moat, then through the western gate, and along the side of the
+court to the Gothic bridge, on their way despatching one of his
+gentlemen to fetch the keys of the tower.
+
+'My lord,' said the king when the messenger had gone, 'there are some
+men so unreasonable as to make me believe that your lordship hath good
+store of gold yet left within the tower; but I, knowing how I have
+exhausted you, could never have believed it, until now I see you will
+not trust the keys with any but yourself.'
+
+'Sir,' answered the marquis, 'I was so far from giving your majesty any
+such occasion of thought by this tender of my duty, that I protest unto
+you that I was once resolved that your majesty should have lain there,
+but that I was loath to commit your majesty to the Tower.'
+
+'You are more considerate, my lord, than some of my subjects would be if
+they had me as much in their keeping,' answered the king sadly. 'But
+what are those pipes let into the wall up there?' he asked, stopping in
+the middle of the bridge and looking up at the keep.
+
+'Nay, sire, my son Edward must tell you that. He taketh strange
+liberties with the mighty old hulk. But I will not injure his good grace
+with your majesty by talking of that I understand not. I trust that one
+day, when you shall no more require his absence, you will yet again
+condescend to be my guest, when my son, by your majesty's favour now my
+lord Glamorgan, will have things to show you that will delight your eyes
+to behold.'
+
+'I have ere now seen something of his performance,' answered the king;
+'but these naughty times give room for nothing in that kind but guns and
+swords.'
+
+Leaving the workshop unvisited, his lordship took the king up the stair,
+and unlocking the entrance to the first floor, ushered him into a lofty
+vaulted chamber, old in the midst of antiquity, dark, vast, and stately.
+
+'This is where I did think to lodge your majesty,' he said,
+'but--but--your majesty sees it is gloomy, for the windows are narrow,
+and the walls are ten feet through.'
+
+'It maketh me very cold,' said the king, shuddering. 'Good sooth, but I
+were loath to be a prisoner!'
+
+He turned and left the room hastily. The marquis rejoined him on the
+stair, and led him, two stories higher, to the armoury, now empty
+compared to its former condition, but still capable of affording some
+supply. The next space above was filled with stores, and the highest was
+now kept clear for defence, for the reservoir so fully occupied the top
+that there was no room for engines of any sort; and indeed it took up so
+much of the storey below with its depth that it left only such room as
+between the decks of a man of war, rendering it hardly fit for any other
+use.
+
+Reaching the summit at length, the king gazed with silent wonder at the
+little tarn which lay there as on the crest of a mountain. But the
+marquis conducted him to the western side, and, pointing with his
+finger, said--
+
+'Sir, you see that line of trees, stretching across a neck of arable
+field, where to the right the brook catches the sun?'
+
+'I see it, my lord,' answered the king.
+
+'And behind it a house and garden, small but dainty?'
+
+'Yes, my lord.'
+
+'Then I trust your majesty will release me from suspicion of being of
+those to whom the prophet Isaias saith, "Vae qui conjungitis domum ad
+domum, et agrum agro copulatis usque ad terminum loci: numquid
+habitabitis vos soli in medio terrae?" May it please your majesty, I
+planted those trees to hoodwink mine eyes from such temptations, hiding
+from them the vineyard of Naboth, lest they should act the Jezebel and
+tempt me to play the Ahab thereto. If I did thus when those trees and I
+were young, shall I do worse now that I stand with one foot in the
+grave, and purgatory itself in the other?'
+
+The king seemed to listen politely, but only listened half and did not
+perceive his drift. He was looking at Dorothy where she stood at the
+opposite side of the reservoir, unable, because of the temporary
+obstruction occasioned by certain alterations and repairs about the
+cocks now going on, to reach the stair without passing the king and the
+marquis. The king asked who she was; and the marquis, telling him a
+little about her, called her. She came, courtesied low to his majesty,
+and stood with beating heart.
+
+'I desire,' said the marquis, 'thou shouldst explain to his majesty that
+trick of thy cousin Glamorgan, the water-shoot, and let him see it
+work.'
+
+'My lord,' answered Dorothy, trembling betwixt devotion and doubtful
+duty, 'it was the great desire of my lord Glamorgan that none in the
+castle should know the trick, as it pleases your lordship to call it.'
+
+'What, cousin! cannot his majesty keep a secret? And doth not all that
+Glamorgan hath belong to the king?'
+
+'God forbid I should doubt either, my lord,' answered Dorothy, turning
+very pale, and ready to sink, 'but it cannot well be done in the broad
+day without some one seeing. At night, indeed--'
+
+'Tut, tut! it is but a whim of Glamorgan's. Thou wilt not do a jot of
+ill to show the game before his majesty in the sunlight.'
+
+'My lord, I promised.'
+
+'Here standeth who will absolve thee, child! His majesty is paramount to
+Glamorgan.'
+
+'My lord! my lord!' said Dorothy almost weeping, 'I am bewildered, and
+cannot well understand. But I am sure that if it be wrong, no one can
+give me leave to do it, or absolve me beforehand. God himself can but
+pardon after the thing is done, not give permission to do it. Forgive
+me, sir, but so master Matthew Herbert hath taught me.'
+
+'And very good doctrine, too,' said the marquis emphatically, 'let who
+will propound it. Think you not so, sir?'
+
+But the king stood with dull imperturbable gaze fixed on the distant
+horizon, and made no reply. An awkward silence followed. The king
+requested his host to conduct him to his apartment.
+
+'I marvel, my lord,' said his majesty as they went down the stair,
+seeing how lame his host was, 'that, as they tell me, your lordship
+drinks claret. All physicians say it is naught for the gout.'
+
+'Sir,' returned the marquis, 'it shall never be said that I forsook my
+friend to pleasure my enemy.'
+
+The king's face grew dark, for ever since the lecture for which he had
+made Gower the textbook, he had been ready to see a double meaning of
+rebuke in all the marquis said. He made no answer, avoided his
+attendants who waited for him in the fountain court, expecting him to go
+by the bell-tower, and, passing through the hall and the stone court,
+ascended to his room alone, and went into the picture-gallery, where he
+paced up and down till supper-time.
+
+The marquis rejoined the little company of his own friends who had left
+the bowling-green after him, and were now in the oak parlour. A little
+troubled at the king's carriage towards him, he entered with a merrier
+bearing than usual.
+
+'Well, gentlemen, how goes the bias?' he said gayly.
+
+'We were but now presuming to say, my lord,' answered Mr. Prichard,
+'that there are who would largely warrant that if you would you might be
+duke of Somerset.'
+
+'When I was earl of Worcester,' returned the marquis, 'I was well to do;
+since I was marquis, I am worse by a hundred thousand pounds; and if I
+should be a duke, I should be an arrant beggar. Wherefore I had rather
+go back to my earldom, than at this rate keep on my pace to the dukedom
+of Somerset.'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV.
+
+THE SECRET INTERVIEW.
+
+
+Between the third of July, when he first came, and the fifteenth of
+September, when he last departed, the king went and came several times.
+During his last visit a remarkable interview took place between him and
+his host, the particulars of which are circumstantially given by Dr.
+Bayly in the little book he calls Certamen Religiosum: to me it falls to
+recount after him some of the said particulars, because, although
+Dorothy was brought but one little step within the sphere of the
+interview, certain results were which bore a large influence upon her
+history.
+
+'Though money came from him,' that is, the marquis, 'like drops of
+blood,' says Dr. Bayly, 'yet was he contented that every drop within his
+body should be let out,' if only he might be the instrument of bringing
+his majesty back to the bosom of the catholic church--a bosom which no
+doubt the marquis found as soft as it was capacious, but which the king
+regarded as a good deal resembling that of a careless nurse rather than
+mother--frized with pins, and here and there a cruel needle. Therefore,
+expecting every hour that the king would apply to him for more money,
+the marquis had resolved that, at such time as he should do so, he would
+make an attempt to lead the stray sheep within the fold--for the marquis
+was not one of those who regarded a protestant as necessarily a goat.
+
+But the king shrank from making the request in person, and having
+learned that the marquis had been at one point in his history under the
+deepest obligation to Dr. Bayly, who having then preserved both his
+lordship's life and a large sum of money he carried with him, by
+'concealing both for the space that the moon useth to be twice in riding
+of her circuit,' had thereafter become a member of his family and a
+sharer in his deepest confidence, greatly desired that the doctor should
+take the office of mediator between him and the marquis.
+
+The king's will having been already conveyed to the doctor, in the
+king's presence colonel Lingen came up to him and said,
+
+'Dr. Bayly, the king, much wishing your aid in this matter, saith he
+delights not to be a beggar, and yet is constrained thereunto.'
+
+'I am at his majesty's disposal,' returned the doctor, 'although I
+confess myself somewhat loath to be the beetle-head that must drive this
+wedge.'
+
+'Nay,' said the colonel, 'they tell me that no man can make a divorce
+between the Babylonish garment and the wedge of gold sooner than
+thyself, good doctor.'
+
+The end was that he undertook the business, though with
+reluctance--unwilling to be 'made an instrument to let the same horse
+bleed whom the king himself had found so free'--and sought the marquis
+in his study.
+
+'My lord,' he said, 'the thing that I feared is now fallen upon me. I am
+made the unwelcome messenger of bad news: the king wants money.'
+
+'Hold, sir! that's no news,' interrupted the marquis. 'Go on with your
+business.'
+
+'My lord,' said the doctor, 'there is one comfort yet, that, as the king
+is brought low, so are his demands, and, like his army, are come down
+from thousands to hundreds, and from paying the soldiers of his army to
+buying bread for himself and his followers. My lord, it is the king's
+own expression, and his desire is but three hundred pound.'
+
+Lord Worcester remained a long time silent, and Dr. Bayly waited,
+'knowing by experience that in such cases it was best leaving him to
+himself, and to let that nature that was so good work itself into an act
+of the highest charity, like the diamond which is only polished with its
+own dust.'
+
+'Come hither--come nearer, my good doctor,' said his lordship at length:
+'hath the king himself spoken unto thee concerning any such business?'
+
+'The king himself hath not, my lord, but others did, in the king's
+hearing.'
+
+'Might I but speak unto him--,' said the marquis. 'But I was never
+thought worthy to be consulted with, though in matters merely concerning
+the affairs of my own country!--I would supply his wants, were they
+never so great, or whatsoever they were.'
+
+'If the king knew as much, my lord, you might quickly speak with him,'
+remarked the doctor.
+
+'The way to have him know so much is to have somebody to tell him of
+it,' said the marquis testily.
+
+'Will your lordship give me leave to be the informer?' asked the doctor.
+
+'Truly I spake it to the purpose,' answered the marquis.
+
+Away ran the little doctor, ambling through the picture-gallery, 'half
+going and half running,' like some short-winged bird--his heart
+trembling lest the marquis should change his mind and call him back, and
+so his pride in his successful mediation be mortified--to the king's
+chamber, where he told his majesty with diplomatic reserve, and
+something of diplomatic cunning, enhancing the difficulties, that he had
+perceived his lordship desired some conference with him, and that he
+believed, if the king granted such conference, he would find a more
+generous response to his necessities than perhaps he expected. The king
+readily consenting, the doctor went on to say that his lordship much
+wished the interview that very night. The king asked how it could be
+managed, and the doctor told him the marquis had contrived it before his
+majesty came to the castle, having for that reason appointed the place
+where they were for his bed-chamber, and not that in the great tower,
+which the marquis himself liked the best in the castle.
+
+'I know my lord's drift well enough,' said the king, smiling: 'either he
+means to chide me, or else to convert me to his religion.'
+
+'I doubt not, sire,' returned the doctor, 'but your majesty is
+temptation-proof as well as correction-free, and will return the same
+man you go, having made a profitable exchange of gold and silver for
+words and sleep.'
+
+Upon Dr. Bayly's report of his success, the marquis sent him back to
+tell the king that at eleven o'clock he would be waiting his majesty in
+a certain room to which the doctor would conduct him.
+
+This was the room the marquis's father had occupied and in which he
+died, called therefore 'my lord Privy-seal's chamber.' Since then the
+marquis had never allowed any one to sleep in it, hardly any one to go
+into it; whence it came that although all the rest of the castle was
+crowded, this one room remained empty and fit for their purpose.
+
+To understand the precautions taken to keep their interview a secret, we
+must remember that, although he had not a better friend in all England,
+such reason had the king to fear losing his protestant friends from
+their jealousy of catholic influence, that he had never invited the
+marquis of Worcester to sit with him in council; and that the marquis on
+his part was afraid both of injuring the cause of the king, and of being
+himself impeached for treason. Should any of the king's attendant lords
+discover that they were closeted together, he dreaded the suspicion and
+accusation of another Gowry conspiracy even. His lordship therefore
+instructed Dr. Bayly to go, as the time drew nigh, to the drawing-room,
+which was next the marquis's chamber, and the dining parlour, through
+both of which he must pass to reach the appointed place, and clear them
+of the company which might be in them. The chaplain desiring to know how
+he was to manage it, so that it should not look strange and arouse
+suspicion, and what he should do if any were unwilling to go,--
+
+'I will tell you what you shall do,' said the marquis hastily, 'so that
+you shall not need to fear any such thing. Go unto the yeoman of the
+wine-cellar, and bid him leave the keys of the wine-cellar with you, and
+all that you find in your way, invite them down into the cellar, and
+show them the keys, and I warrant you, you shall sweep the room of them,
+if there were a hundred. And when you have done, leave them there.'
+
+But having thus arranged, the marquis grew anxious again. He remembered
+that it was not unusual to pass to the hall from the northern side of
+the fountain court, where were most of the rooms of the ladies'
+gentlewomen, through the picture-gallery, entering it by a passage and
+stair which connected the bell-tower with one of its deep window
+recesses, and leaving it by a door in the middle of the opposite side,
+admitting to a stair in the thickness of the wall--which led downwards,
+opening to the minstrels' gallery on the left hand, and a little further
+below, to the organ loft in the chapel on the right hand. It was not the
+least likely that any of the ladies or their attendants would be passing
+that way so late at night, but there was a possibility, and that was
+enough, the marquis being anxious and nervous, to render him more so.
+
+There was, however, another and more threatening possibility of
+encounter. He remembered that Mr. Delaware, the master of his horse, had
+lately removed to that part of the house: and the fear came upon him
+lest his blind son, who frequently turned night into day in his love for
+the organ, and was uncertain in his movements between chapel and
+chamber, the direct way being that just described, should by evil chance
+appear at the very moment of the king's passing, and alarm him--for
+through the gallery Dr. Bayly must lead his majesty to reach my lord
+Privy-seal's chamber. The marquis, therefore, although reluctant to
+introduce another even to the externals of the plot, felt that the
+assistance of a second confidant was more than desirable, and turning
+the matter over, could think of no one whom he could trust so well, and
+who at the same time would, if seen, be so little liable to the sort of
+suspicion he dreaded, as Dorothy. He therefore sent for her, told her as
+much as he thought proper, gave her the key of his private passage to
+the gallery, leading across the top of the hall-door, the only direct
+communication from the southern side of the castle, and generally kept
+closed, and directed her to be in the gallery ten minutes before eleven,
+to lock the door at the top of the stair leading down into the hall, and
+take her stand in the window at the foot of the stair from the
+bell-tower, where the door was without a lock, and see that no one
+entered by order of the marquis for the king's repose, enjoining upon
+her that, whatever she saw or heard from any other quarter, she must
+keep perfectly still, nor let any one discover that she was there. With
+these instructions, his lordship, considerably relieved, dismissed her,
+and went to lie down upon his bed, and have a nap if he could. He had
+already given the chaplain the key of his chamber, the door of which he
+always locked, that he might enter and wake him when the appointed hour
+was at hand.
+
+As soon as he began to feel that eleven o'clock was drawing near, Dr.
+Bayly proceeded to reconnoitre. The marquis's plan, although he could
+think of none better, was not altogether satisfactory, and it was to his
+relief that he found nobody in the dining-room. When he entered the
+drawing-room, however, there, to his equal annoyance, he saw in the
+light of one expiring candle the dim figure of a lady; he could not
+offer HER the keys of the wine-cellar! What was he to do? What could she
+be there for? He drew nearer, and, with a positive pang of relief,
+discovered that it was Dorothy. A word was enough between them. But the
+good doctor was just a little annoyed that a second should share in the
+secret of the great ones.
+
+The next room was the antechamber to the marquis's bedroom: timorously
+on tiptoe he stepped through it, fearful of waking the two young
+gentlemen--for Scudamore's place had been easily supplied--who waited
+upon his lordship. Opening the inner door as softly as he could, he
+crept in, and found the marquis fast asleep. So slowly, so gently did he
+wake him, that his lordship insisted he had not slept at all; but when
+he told him that the time was come--
+
+'What time?' he asked.
+
+'For meeting the king,' replied the doctor.
+
+'What king?' rejoined the marquis, in a kind of bewildered horror.
+
+The more he came to himself, the more distressed he seemed, and the more
+unwilling to keep the appointment he had been so eager to make, so that
+at length even Dr. Bayly was tempted to doubt something evil in the
+'design that carried with it such a conflict within the bosom of the
+actor.' It soon became evident, however, that it was but the dread of
+such possible consequences as I have already indicated that thus moved
+him.
+
+'Fie, fie!' he said; 'I would to God I had let it alone.'
+
+'My lord,' said the doctor, 'you know your own heart best. If there be
+nothing in your intentions but what is good and justifiable, you need
+not fear; if otherwise, it is never too late to repent.'
+
+'Ah, doctor!' returned the marquis with troubled look, 'I thought I had
+been sure of one friend, and that you would never have harboured the
+least suspicion of me. God knows my heart: I have no other intention
+towards his majesty than to make him a glorious man here, and a
+glorified saint hereafter.'
+
+'Then, my lord,' said Dr. Bayly, 'shake off these fears together with
+the drowsiness that begat them. Honi soit qui mal y pense.'
+
+'Oh, but I am not of that order!' said the marquis; 'but I thank God I
+wear that motto about my heart, to as much purpose as they who wear it
+about their arms.'
+
+'He then,' reports the doctor, 'began to be a little pleasant, and took
+a pipe of tobacco, and a little glass full of aqua mirabilis, and said,
+"Come now, let us go in the name of God," crossing himself.'
+
+My love for the marquis has led me to recount this curious story with
+greater minuteness than is necessary to the understanding of Dorothy's
+part in what follows, but the worthy doctor's account is so graphic that
+even for its own sake, had it been fitting, I would gladly have copied
+it word for word from the Certamen Religiosum.
+
+It is indeed a strange story--king and marquis, attended by a doctor of
+divinity, of the faith of the one, but the trusted friend of the other,
+meeting--at midnight, although in the house of the marquis--to discuss
+points of theology--both king and marquis in mortal terror of discovery.
+
+Meantime Dorothy had done as she had been ordered, had felt her way
+through the darkness to the picture-gallery, had locked the door at the
+top of the one stair, and taken her stand in the recess at the foot of
+the other--in pitch darkness, close to the king's bedchamber, for the
+gallery was but thirteen feet in width, keeping watch over him! The
+darkness felt like awe around her.
+
+The door of the chamber opened: it gave no sound, but the glimmer of the
+night-light shone out. By that she saw a figure enter the gallery. The
+door closed softly and slowly, and all was darkness again. No sound of
+movement across the floor followed: but she heard a deep sigh, as from a
+sorely burdened heart. Then, in an agonised whisper, as if wrung by
+torture from the depths of the spirit, came the words: 'Oh Stafford,
+thou art avenged! I left thee to thy fate, and God hath left me to mine.
+Thou didst go for me to the scaffold, but thou wilt not out of my
+chamber. O God, deliver me from blood-guiltiness.'
+
+Dorothy stood in dismay, a mere vessel containing a tumult of emotions.
+The king re-entered his chamber, and closed the door. The same instant a
+light appeared at the further end of the gallery--a long way off, and
+Dr. Bayly came, like a Will o' the wisp, gliding from afar; till, softly
+walking up, he stopped within a yard or two of the king's door, and
+there stood, with his candle in his hand. His round face was pale that
+should have been red, and his small keen eyes shone in the candle light
+with mingled importance and anxiety. He saw Dorothy, but the only notice
+he took of her presence was to turn from her with his face towards the
+king's door, so that his shadow might shroud the recess where she stood.
+
+A minute or so passed, and the king's door re-opened. He came out, said
+a few words in a whisper to his guide, and walked with him down the
+gallery, whispering as he went.
+
+Dorothy hastened to her chamber, threw herself on the bed, and wept. The
+king was cast from the throne of her conscience, but taken into the
+hospital of her heart.
+
+What followed between the king and the marquis belongs not to my tale.
+When, after a long talk, the chaplain had conducted the king to his
+chamber and returned to lord Worcester, he found him in the dark upon
+his knees.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVI.
+
+GIFTS OF HEALING.
+
+
+Soon after the king's departure, the marquis received from him a letter
+containing another addressed 'To our Attorney or Solicitor-General for
+the time being,' in which he commanded the preparation of a bill for his
+majesty's signature, creating the marquis of Worcester duke of Somerset.
+The enclosing letter required, however, that it should--'be kept
+private, until I shall esteem the time convenient.' In the next year we
+have causes enough for the fact that the king's pleasure never reached
+any attorney or solicitor-general for the time being.
+
+About a month after the battle of Naseby, and while yet the king was
+going and coming as regards Raglan, the wounded Rowland, long before he
+was fit to be moved from the farm-house where his servant had found him
+shelter, was brought home to the castle. Shafto, faithful as
+hare-brained, had come upon him almost accidentally, after long search,
+and just in time to save his life. Mistress Watson received him with
+tears, and had him carried to the same turret-chamber whence Richard had
+escaped, in order that she might be nigh him. The poor fellow was but a
+shadow of his former self, and looked more likely to vanish than to die
+in the ordinary way. Hence he required constant attention--which was so
+far from lacking that the danger, both physical and spiritual, seemed
+rather to lie in over-service. Hitherto, of the family, it had been the
+marquis chiefly that spoiled him; but now that he was so sorely wounded
+for the king, and lay at death's door, all the ladies of the castle were
+admiring, pitiful, tender, ministrant, paying him such attentions as
+nobody could be trusted to bear uninjured except a doll or a baby. One
+might have been tempted to say that they sought his physical welfare at
+the risk of his moral ruin. But there is that in sickness which leads
+men back to a kind of babyhood, and while it lasts there is
+comparatively little danger. It is with returning health that the peril
+comes. Then self and self-fancied worth awake, and find themselves
+again, and the risk is then great indeed that all the ministrations of
+love be taken for homage at the altar of importance. How often has not a
+mistress found that after nursing a servant through an illness, perhaps
+an old servant even, she has had to part with her for unendurable
+arrogance and insubordination? But present sickness is a wonderful
+antidote to vanity, and nourisher of the gentle primeval simplicities of
+human nature. So long as a man feels himself a poor creature, not only
+physically unable, but without the spirit to desire to act, kindness
+will move gratitude, and not vanity. In Rowland's case happily it lasted
+until something better was able to get up its head a little. But no one
+can predict what the first result of suffering will be, not knowing what
+seeds lie nearest the surface. Rowland's self-satisfaction had been a
+hard pan beneath which lay thousands of germinal possibilities
+invaluable; and now the result of its tearing up remained to be seen. If
+in such case Truth's never-ceasing pull at the heart begins to be felt,
+allowed, considered; if conscience begin, like a thing weary with very
+sleep, to rouse itself in motions of pain from the stiffness of its
+repose, then is there hope of the best.
+
+He had lost much blood, having lain a long time, as I say, in the
+fallow-field before Shafto found him. Oft-recurring fever, extreme
+depression, and intermittent and doubtful progress life-wards followed.
+Through all the commotion of the king's visits, the coming and going,
+the clang of hoofs and clanking of armour, the heaving of hearts and
+clamour of tongues, he lay lapped in ignorance and ministration, hidden
+from the world and deaf to the gnarring of its wheels, prisoned in a
+twilight dungeon, to which Richard's sword had been the key. The world
+went grinding on and on, much the same, without him whom it had
+forgotten; but the over-world remembered him, and now and then looked in
+at a window: all dungeons have one window which no gaoler and no tyrant
+can build up.
+
+The marquis went often to see him, full of pity for the gay youth thus
+brought low; but he would lie pale and listless, now and then turning
+his eyes, worn large with the wasting of his face, upon him, but looking
+as if he only half heard him. His master grew sad about him. The next
+time his majesty came, he asked him if he remembered the youth, telling
+him how he had lain wounded ever since the battle at Naseby. The king
+remembered him well enough, but had never missed him. The marquis then
+told him how anxious he was about him, for that nothing woke him from
+the weary heartlessness into which he had fallen.
+
+'I will pay him a visit,' said the king.
+
+'Sir, it is what I would have requested, had I not feared to pain your
+majesty,' returned the marquis.
+
+'I will go at once,' said the king.
+
+When Rowland saw him his face flushed, the tears rose in his eyes, he
+kissed the hand the king held out to him, and said feebly:--
+
+'Pardon, sire: if I had rode better, the battle might have been yours. I
+reached not the prince.'
+
+'It is the will of God,' said the king, remembering for the first time
+that he had sent him to Rupert. 'Thou didst thy best, and man can do no
+more.'
+
+'Nay, sire, but an' I had ridden honestly,' returned Rowland; '--I mean
+had my mare been honestly come by, then had I done your majesty's
+message.'
+
+'How is that?' asked the king.
+
+'Ha!' said the marquis; 'then it was Heywood met thee, and would have
+his own again? Told I not thee so? Ah, that mare, Rowland! that mare!'
+
+But Rowland had to summon all his strength to keep from fainting, for
+the blood had fled again to his heart, and could not reply.
+
+'Thou didst thy duty like a brave knight and true, I doubt not,' said
+the king, kindly wishful to comfort him; 'and that my word may be a true
+one,' he added, drawing his sword and laying it across the youth's
+chest, 'although I cannot tell thee to rise and walk, I tell thee, when
+thou dost arise, to rise up sir Rowland Scudamore.'
+
+The blood rushed to sir Rowland's face, but fled again as fast.
+
+'I deserve no such honour, sire,' he murmured.
+
+But the marquis struck his hands together with pleasure, and cried,
+
+'There, my boy! There is a king to serve! Sir Rowland Scudamore! There
+is for thee! And thy wife will be MY LADY! Think on that!'
+
+Rowland did think on it, but bitterly. He summoned strength to thank his
+majesty, but failed to find anything courtier-like to add to the bare
+thanks. When his visitors left him, he sighed sorely and said to
+himself,
+
+'Honour without desert! But for the roundhead's taunts, I might have run
+to Rupert and saved the day.'
+
+The next morning the marquis went again to see him.
+
+'How fares sir Rowland?' he said.
+
+'My lord,' returned Scudamore, in beseeching tone, 'break not my heart
+with honour unmerited.'
+
+'How! Darest thou, boy, set thy judgment against the king's?' cried the
+marquis. 'Sir Rowland thou art, and SIR ROWLAND will the archangel cry
+when he calls thee from thy last sleep.'
+
+'To my endless disgrace,' added Scudamore.
+
+'What! hast not done thy duty?'
+
+'I tried, but I failed, my lord.'
+
+'The best as often fail as the worst,' rejoined his lordship.
+
+'I mean not merely that I failed of the end. That, alas! I did. But I
+mean that it was by my own fault that I failed,' said Rowland.
+
+Then he told the marquis all the story of his encounter with Richard,
+ending with the words,
+
+'And now, my lord, I care no more for life.'
+
+'Stuff and nonsense!' exclaimed the marquis. 'Thinkest though the
+roundhead would have let thee run to Rupert? It was not to that end he
+spared thy life. Thy only chance was to fight him.'
+
+'Does your lordship think so indeed?' asked Rowland, with a glimmer of
+eagerness.
+
+'On my soul I do. Thou art weak-headed from thy sickness and weariness.'
+
+'You comfort me, my lord--a little. But the stolen mare, my lord?--'
+
+'Ah! there indeed I can say nothing. That was not well done, and evil
+came thereof. But comfort thyself that the evil is come and gone; and
+think not that such chances are left to determine great events. Naseby
+fight had been lost, spite of a hundred messages to Rupert. Not care for
+life, boy! Leave that to old men like me. Thou must care for it, for
+thou hast many years before thee.'
+
+'But nothing to fill them with, my lord.'
+
+'What meanest thou there, Rowland? The king's cause will yet prosper,
+and--'
+
+'Pardon me, my lord; I spoke not of the king's majesty or his affairs.
+Hardly do I care even for them. It is a nameless weight, or rather
+emptiness, that oppresseth me. Wherefore is there such a world? I ask,
+and why are men born thereinto? Why should I live on and labour on
+therein? Is it not all vanity and vexation of spirit? I would the
+roundhead had but struck a little deeper, and reached my heart.'
+
+'I admire at thee, Rowland. Truly my gout causeth me so great grief that
+I have much ado to keep my unruly member within bounds, but I never yet
+was aweary of my life, and scarce know what I should say to thee.'
+
+A pause followed. The marquis did not think what a huge difference there
+is between having too much blood in the feet and too little in the
+brain.
+
+'I pray, sir, can you tell me if mistress Dorothy knoweth it was before
+Heywood I fell?' said Rowland at length.
+
+'I know not; but methinks had she known, I should sooner have heard the
+thing myself. Who indeed should tell her, for Shafto knew it not? And
+why should she conceal it?'
+
+'I cannot tell, my lord: she is not like other ladies.'
+
+'She is like all good ladies in this, that she speaketh the truth: why
+then not ask her?'
+
+'I have had no opportunity, my lord. I have not seen her since I left to
+join the army.'
+
+'Tut, tut!' said his lordship, and frowned a little. 'I thought not the
+damsel had been over nice. She might well have favoured a wounded knight
+with a visit.'
+
+'She is not to blame. It is my own fault,' sighed Rowland.
+
+The marquis looked at him for a moment pitifully, but made no answer,
+and presently took his leave.
+
+He went straight to Dorothy, and expostulated with her. She answered him
+no farther or otherwise than was simply duteous, but went at once to see
+Scudamore.
+
+Mistress Watson was in the room when she entered, but left it
+immediately: she had never been in spirit reconciled to Dorothy: their
+relation had in it too much of latent rebuke for her. So Dorothy found
+herself alone with her cousin.
+
+He was but the ghost of the gay, self-satisfied, good-natured, jolly
+Rowland. Pale and thin, with drawn face and great eyes, he held out a
+wasted hand to Dorothy, and looked at her, not pitifully, but
+despairingly. He was one of those from whom take health and animal
+spirits, and they feel to themselves as if they had nothing. Nor have
+they in themselves anything. With those he could have borne what are
+called hardships fairly well; those gone, his soul sat aghast in an
+empty house.
+
+'My poor cousin!' said Dorothy, touched with profound compassion at
+sight of his lost look. But he only gazed at her, and said nothing. She
+took the hand he did not offer, and held it kindly in hers. He burst
+into tears, and she gently laid it again on the coverlid.
+
+'I know you despise me, Dorothy,' he sobbed, 'and you are right: I
+despise myself.'
+
+'You have been a good soldier to the king, Rowland,' said Dorothy, 'and
+he has acknowledged it fitly.'
+
+'I care nothing for king or kingdom, Dorothy. Nothing is worth caring
+for. Do not mistake me. I am not going to talk presumptuously. I love
+not thee now, Dorothy. I never did love thee, and thou dost right to
+despise me, for I am unworthy. I would I were dead. Even the king's
+majesty hath been no whit the better for me, but rather the worse; for
+another man,--one, I mean, who was not mounted on a stolen mare--would
+have performed his hest unhindered of foregone fault.'
+
+'Thou didst not think thou wast doing wrong when thou stolest the mare,'
+said Dorothy, seeking to comfort him.
+
+'How know'st thou that, Dorothy? There was a spot in my heart that felt
+ashamed all the time.'
+
+'He that is sorry is already pardoned, I think, cousin. Then what thou
+hast done evil is gone and forgotten.'
+
+'Nay, Dorothy. But if it were forgotten, yet would it BE. If I forgot it
+myself, yet would I not cease to be the man who had done it. And thou
+knowest, Dorothy, in how many things I have been false, so false that I
+counted myself honourable all the time. Tell me wherefore should I not
+kill myself, and rid the world of me; what withholdeth?'
+
+'That thou art of consequence to him that made thee.'
+
+'How can that be, when I know myself worthless? Will he be mistaken in
+me?'
+
+'No, truly. But he may have regard to that thou shalt yet be. For surely
+he sent thee here to do some fitting work for him.'
+
+More talk followed, but Dorothy did not seem to herself to find the
+right thing to say, and retired to the top of the Tower with a sense of
+failure, and oppressed with helpless compassion for the poor youth.
+
+The doctors of divinity and of medicine differed concerning the cause of
+his sad condition. The doctor of medicine said it arose entirely from a
+check in the circulation of the animal spirits; the doctor of divinity
+thought, but did not say, only hinted, that it came of a troubled
+conscience, and that he would have been well long ago but for certain
+sins, known only to himself, that bore heavy upon his life. This gave
+the marquis a good ground of argument for confession, the weight of
+which argument was by the divine felt and acknowledged. But both doctors
+were right, and both were wrong. Could his health have been at once
+restored, a great reaction would have ensued, his interest in life would
+have reawaked, and most probably he would have become indifferent to
+that which now oppressed him; but on the slightest weariness or
+disappointment, the same overpowering sense of desolation would have
+returned, and indeed at times amidst the warmest glow of health and
+keenest consciousness of pleasure. On the other hand, if by any argument
+addressed to his moral or religious nature his mind could have been a
+little eased, his physical nature would most likely have at once
+responded in improvement; but he had no individual actions of such heavy
+guilt as the divine presumed to repent of, nor could any amount or
+degree of sorrow for the past have sufficed to restore him to peace and
+health. It was a poet of the time who wrote,
+
+ 'The soul's dark cottage, battered and decayed,
+ Lets in new light, through chinks that time has made:'
+
+sickness had done the same thing as time with Rowland, and he saw the
+misery of his hovel. The cure was a deeper and harder matter than Dr.
+Bayly yet understood, or than probably Rowland himself would for years
+attain to, while yet the least glimmer of its approach would be enough
+to initiate physical recovery.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVII.
+
+THE POET-PHYSICIAN.
+
+
+Time passed, but with little change in the condition of the patient.
+Winter began to draw on, and both doctors feared a more rapid decline.
+
+Early in the month of November, Dorothy received a letter from Mr.
+Herbert, informing her that her cousin, Henry Vaughan, one of his late
+twin pupils, would, on his way from Oxford, be passing near Raglan, and
+that he had desired him to call upon her. Willing enough to see her
+relative, she thought little more of the matter, until at length the day
+was at hand, when she found herself looking for his arrival with some
+curiosity as to what sort of person he might prove of whom she had heard
+so often from his master.
+
+When at length he was ushered into lady Glamorgan's parlour, where her
+mistress had desired her to receive him, both her ladyship and Dorothy
+were at once prejudiced in his favour. They saw a rather tall young man
+of five or six and twenty, with a small head, a clear grey eye, and a
+sober yet changeful countenance. His carriage was dignified yet
+graceful--self-restraint and no other was evident therein; a certain
+sadness brooded like a thin mist above his eyes, but his smile now and
+then broke out like the sun through a grey cloud. Dorothy did not know
+that he was just getting over the end of a love-story, or that he had a
+book of verses just printed, and had already begun to repent it.
+
+After the usual greetings, and when Dorothy had heard the last news of
+Mr. Herbert,--for Mr. Vaughan had made several journeys of late between
+Brecknock and Oxford, taking Llangattock Rectory in his way, and could
+tell her much she did not know concerning her friend,--lady Glamorgan,
+who was not sorry to see her interested in a young man whose royalist
+predilections were plain and strong, proposed that Dorothy should take
+him over the castle.
+
+She led him first to the top of the tower to show him the reservoir and
+the prospect; but there they fell into such a talk as revealed to
+Dorothy that here was a man who was her master in everything towards
+which, especially since her mother's death and her following troubles,
+she had most aspired, and a great hope arose in her heart for her cousin
+Scudamore. For in this talk it had come out that Mr. Vaughan had studied
+medicine, and was now on his way to settle for practice at Brecknock. As
+soon as Dorothy learned this, she entreated her cousin Vaughan to go and
+visit her cousin Scudamore. He consented, and Dorothy, scarcely allowing
+him to pause even under the admirable roof of the great hall as they
+passed through, led him straight to the turret-chamber, where the sick
+man was.
+
+They found him sitting by the fire, folded in blankets, listless and
+sad.
+
+When Dorothy had told him whom she had brought to see him, she would
+have left them, but Rowland turned on her such beseeching eyes, that she
+remained, by no means unwillingly, and seated herself to hear what this
+wonderful young physician would say.
+
+'It is very irksome to be thus prisoned in your chamber, sir Rowland,'
+he said.
+
+'No,' answered Scudamore, 'or yes: I care not.'
+
+'Have you no books about you?' asked Mr. Vaughan, glancing round the
+room.
+
+'Books!' repeated Scudamore, with a wan contemptuous smile.
+
+'You do not then love books?'
+
+'Wherefore should I love books? What can books do for me? I love
+nothing. I long only to die.'
+
+'And go----?' suggested, rather than asked, Mr. Vaughan.
+
+'I care not whither--anywhere away from here--if indeed I go anywhere.
+But I care not.'
+
+'That is hardly what you mean, sir Rowland, I think. Will you allow me
+to interpret you? Have you not the notion that if you were hence you
+would leave behind you a certain troublesome attendant who is scarce
+worth his wages?'
+
+Scudamore looked at him but did not reply; and Mr. Vaughan went on.
+
+'I know well what aileth you, for I am myself but now recovering from a
+similar sickness, brought upon me by the haunting of the same evil one
+who torments you.'
+
+'You think, then, that I am possessed?' said Rowland, with a faint smile
+and a glance at Dorothy.
+
+'That verily thou art, and grievously tormented. Shall I tell thee who
+hath possessed thee?--for the demon hath a name that is known amongst
+men, though it frighteneth few, and draweth many, alas! His name is
+Self, and he is the shadow of thy own self. First he made thee love him,
+which was evil, and now he hath made thee hate him, which is evil also.
+But if he be cast out and never more enter into thy heart, but remain as
+a servant in thy hall, then wilt thou recover from this sickness, and be
+whole and sound, and shall find the varlet serviceable.'
+
+'Art thou not an exorciser, then, Mr. Vaughan, as well as a discerner of
+spirits? I would thou couldst drive the said demon out of me, for truly
+I love him not.'
+
+'Through all thy hate thou lovest him more than thou knowest. Thou seest
+him vile, but instead of casting him out, thou mournest over him with
+foolish tears. And yet thou dreamest that by dying thou wouldst be rid
+of him. No, it is back to thy childhood thou must go to be free.'
+
+'That were a strange way to go, sir. I know it not. There seems to be a
+purpose in what you say, Mr. Vaughan, but you take me not with you. How
+can I rid me of myself, so long as I am Rowland Scudamore?'
+
+'There is a way, sir Rowland--and but one way. Human words at least,
+however it may be with some high heavenly language, can never say the
+best things but by a kind of stumbling, wherein one contradiction
+keepeth another from falling. No man, as thou sayest, truly, can rid him
+of himself and live, for that involveth an impossibility. But he can rid
+himself of that haunting shadow of his own self, which he hath pampered
+and fed upon shadowy lies, until it is bloated and black with pride and
+folly. When that demon king of shades is once cast out, and the man's
+house is possessed of God instead, then first he findeth his true
+substantial self, which is the servant, nay, the child of God. To rid
+thee of thyself thou must offer it again to him that made it. Be thou
+empty that he may fill thee. I never understood this until these latter
+days. Let me impart to thee certain verses I found but yesterday, for
+they will tell thee better what I mean. Thou knowest the sacred volume
+of the blessed George Herbert?'
+
+'I never heard of him or it,' said Scudamore.
+
+'It is no matter as now: these verses are not of his. Prithee, hearken:
+
+ 'I carry with, me, Lord, a foolish fool,
+ That still his cap upon my head would place.
+ I dare not slay him, he will not to school,
+ And still he shakes his bauble in my face.
+
+ 'I seize him, Lord, and bring him to thy door;
+ Bound on thine altar-threshold him I lay.
+ He weepeth; did I heed, he would implore;
+ And still he cries ALACK and WELL-A-DAY!
+
+ 'If thou wouldst take him in and make him wise,
+ I think he might be taught to serve thee well;
+ If not, slay him, nor heed his foolish cries,
+ He's but a fool that mocks and rings a bell.'
+
+Something in the lines appeared to strike Scudamore.
+
+'I thank you, sir,' he said. 'Might I put you to the trouble, I would
+request that you would write out the verses for me, that I may study
+their meaning at my leisure.'
+
+Mr. Vaughan promised, and, after a little more conversation, took his
+leave.
+
+Now, whether it was from anything he had said in particular, or that
+Scudamore had felt the general influence of the man, Dorothy could not
+tell, but from that visit she believed Rowland began to think more and
+to brood less. By and by he began to start questions of right and wrong,
+suppose cases, and ask Dorothy what she would do in such and such
+circumstances. With many cloudy relapses there was a suspicion of dawn,
+although a rainy one most likely, on his far horizon.
+
+'Dost thou really believe, Dorothy,' he asked one day, 'that a man ever
+did love his enemy? Didst thou ever know one who did?'
+
+'I cannot say I ever did,' returned Dorothy. 'I have however seen few
+that were enemies. But I am sure that had it not been possible, we
+should never have been commanded thereto.'
+
+'The last time Dr. Bayly came to see me he read those words, and I
+thought within myself all the time of the only enemy I had, and tried to
+forgive him, but could not.'
+
+'Had he then wronged thee so deeply?'
+
+'I know not, indeed, what women call wronged--least of all what thou,
+who art not like other women, wouldst judge; but this thing seems to me
+strange--that when I look on thee, Dorothy, one moment it seems as if
+for thy sake I could forgive him anything--except that he slew me not
+outright, and the next that never can I forgive him even that wherein he
+never did me any wrong.'
+
+'What! hatest thou then him that struck thee down in fair fight? Sure
+thou art of meaner soul than I judged thee. What man in battle-field
+hates his enemy, or thinks it less than enough to do his endeavour to
+slay him?'
+
+'Know'st thou whom thou wouldst have me forgive? He who struck me down
+was thy friend, Richard Heywood.'
+
+'Then he hath his mare again?' cried Dorothy, eagerly.
+
+Rowland's face fell, and she knew that she had spoken heartlessly--knew
+also that, for all his protestations, Rowland yet cherished the love she
+had so plainly refused. But the same moment she knew something more.
+
+For, by the side of Rowland, in her mind's eye, stood Henry Vaughan, as
+wise as Rowland was foolish, as accomplished and learned as Rowland was
+narrow and ignorant; but between them stood Richard, and she knew a
+something in her which was neither tenderness nor reverence, and yet
+included both. She rose in some confusion, and left the chamber.
+
+This good came of it, that from that moment Scudamore was satisfied she
+loved Heywood, and, with much mortification, tried to accept his
+position. Slowly his health began to return, and slowly the deeper life
+that was at length to become his began to inform him.
+
+Heartless and poverty-stricken as he had hitherto shown himself, the
+good in him was not so deeply buried under refuse as in many a
+better-seeming man. Sickness had awakened in him a sense of
+requirement--of need also, and loneliness, and dissatisfaction. He grew
+ashamed of himself and conscious of defilement. Something new began to
+rise above and condemn the old. There are who would say that the change
+was merely the mental condition resulting from and corresponding to
+physical weakness; that repentance, and the vision of the better which
+maketh shame, is but a mood, sickly as are the brain and nerves which
+generate it; but he who undergoes the experience believes he knows
+better, and denies neither the wild beasts nor the stars, because they
+roar and shine through the dark.
+
+Mr. Vaughan came to see him again and again, and with the concurrence of
+Dr. Spott, prescribed for him. As the spring approached he grew able to
+leave his room. The ladies of the family had him to their parlours to
+pet and feed, but he was not now so easily to be injured by kindness as
+when he believed in his own merits.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVIII.
+
+HONOURABLE DISGRACE.
+
+
+January of 1646, according to the division of the year, arrived, and
+with it the heaviest cloud that had yet overshadowed Raglan.
+
+One day, about the middle of the month, Dorothy, entering lady
+Glamorgan's parlour, found it deserted. A moan came to her ears from the
+adjoining chamber, and there she found her mistress on her face on the
+bed.
+
+'Madam,' said Dorothy in terror, 'what is it? Let me be with you. May I
+not know it?'
+
+'My lord is in prison,' gasped lady Glamorgan, and bursting into fresh
+tears, she sobbed and moaned.
+
+'Has my lord been taken in the field, madam, or by cunning of his
+enemies?'
+
+'Would to God it were either,' sighed lady Glamorgan. 'Then were it a
+small thing to bear.'
+
+'What can it be, madam? You terrify me,' said Dorothy.
+
+No words of reply, only a fresh outburst of agonised--could it also be
+angry?--weeping followed.
+
+'Since you will tell me nothing, madam, I must take comfort that of
+myself I know one thing.'
+
+'Prithee, what knowest thou?' asked the countess, but as if careless of
+being answered, so listless was her tone, so nearly inarticulate her
+words.
+
+'That is but what bringeth him fresh honour, my lady,' answered Dorothy.
+
+The countess started up, threw her arms about her, drew her down on the
+bed, kissed her, and held her fast, sobbing worse than ever.
+
+'Madam! madam!' murmured Dorothy from her bosom.
+
+'I thank thee, Dorothy,' she sighed out at length: 'for thy words and
+thy thoughts have ever been of a piece.'
+
+'Sure, my lady, no one did ever yet dare think otherwise of my lord,'
+returned Dorothy, amazed.
+
+'But many will now, Dorothy. My God! they will have it that he is a
+traitor. Wouldst thou believe it, child--he is a prisoner in the castle
+of Dublin!'
+
+'But is not Dublin in the hands of the king, my lady?'
+
+'Ay! there lies the sting of it! What treacherous friends are these
+heretics! But how should they be anything else? Having denied their
+Saviour they may well malign their better brother! My lord marquis of
+Ormond says frightful things of him.'
+
+'One thing more I know, my lady,' said Dorothy, '--that as long as his
+wife believes him the true man he is, he will laugh to scorn all that
+false lips may utter against him.'
+
+'Thou art a good girl, Dorothy, but thou knowest little of an evil
+world. It is one thing to know thyself innocent, and another to carry
+thy head high.'
+
+'But, madam, even the guilty do that; wherefore not the innocent then?'
+
+'Because, my child, they ARE innocent, and innocence so hateth the very
+shadow of guilt that it cannot brook the wearing it. My lord is
+grievously abused, Dorothy--I say not by whom.'
+
+'By whom should it be but his enemies, madam?'
+
+'Not certainly by those who are to him friends, but yet, alas! by those
+to whom he is the truest of friends.'
+
+'Is my lord of Ormond then false? Is he jealous of my lord Glamorgan?
+Hath he falsely accused him? I would I understood all, madam.'
+
+'I would I understood all myself, child. Certain papers have been found
+bearing upon my lord's business in Ireland, all ears are filled with
+rumours of forgery and treason, coupled with the name of my lord, and he
+is a prisoner in Dublin castle.'
+
+She forced the sentence from her, as if repeating a hated lesson, then
+gave a cry, almost a scream of agony.
+
+'Weep not, madam,' said Dorothy, in the very foolishness of sympathetic
+expostulation.
+
+'What better cause could I have out of hell!' returned the countess,
+angrily.
+
+'That it were no lie, madam.'
+
+'It is true, I tell thee.'
+
+'That my lord is a traitor, madam?'
+
+Lady Glamorgan dashed her from her, and glared at her like a tigress. An
+evil word was on her lips, but her better angel spoke, and ere Dorothy
+could recover herself, she had listened and understood.
+
+'God forbid!' she said, struggling to be calm. 'But it is true that he
+is in prison.'
+
+'Then give God thanks, madam, who hath forbidden the one and allowed the
+other, said Dorothy; and finding her own composure on the point of
+yielding, she courtesied and left the room. It was a breach of etiquette
+without leave asked and given, but the face of the countess was again on
+her pillow, and she did not heed.
+
+For some time things went on as in an evil dream. The marquis was in
+angry mood, with no gout to lay it upon. The gloom spread over the
+castle, and awoke all manner of conjecture and report. Soon, after a
+fashion, the facts were known to everybody, and the gloom deepened. No
+further enlightenment reached Dorothy. At length one evening, her
+mistress having sent for her, she found her much excited, with a letter
+in her hand.
+
+'Come here, Dorothy: see what I have!' she cried, holding out the letter
+with a gesture of triumph, and weeping and laughing alternately.
+
+'Madam, it must be something precious indeed,' said Dorothy, 'for I have
+not heard your ladyship laugh for a weary while. May I not rejoice with
+you, madam?'
+
+'You shall, my good girl: hearken: I will read:--'My dear Heart,'--Who
+is it from, think'st thou, Dorothy? Canst guess?--'My dear Heart, I hope
+these will prevent any news shall come unto you of me since my
+commitment to the Castle of Dublin, to which I assure thee I went as
+cheerfully and as willingly as they could wish, whosoever they were by
+whose means it was procured; and should as unwillingly go forth, were
+the gates both of the Castle and Town open unto me, until I were
+cleared: as they are willing to make me unserviceable to the king, and
+lay me aside, who have procured for me this restraint; when I consider
+thee a Woman, as I think I know you are, I fear lest you should be
+apprehensive. But when I reflect that you are of the House of Thomond,
+and that you were once pleased to say these words unto me, That I should
+never, in tenderness of you, desist from doing what in honour I was
+obliged to do, I grow confident, that in this you will now show your
+magnanimity, and by it the greatest testimony of affection that you can
+possibly afford me; and am also confident, that you know me so well,
+that I need not tell you how clear I am, and void of fear, the only
+effect of a good conscience; and that I am guilty of nothing that may
+testify one thought of disloyalty to his Majesty, or of what may stain
+the honour of the family I come of, or set a brand upon my future
+posterity.'
+
+The countess paused, and looked a general illumination at Dorothy.
+
+'I told you so, madam,' returned Dorothy, rather stupidly perhaps.
+
+'Little fool!' rejoined the countess, half-angered: 'dost suppose the
+wife of a man like my Ned needs to be told such things by a green goose
+like thee? Thou wouldst have had me content that the man was honest--me,
+who had forgotten the word in his tenfold more than honesty! Bah, child!
+thou knowest not the love of a woman. I could weep salt tears over a
+hair pulled from his noble head. And thou to talk of TELLING ME SO,
+hussy! Marry, forsooth!'
+
+And taking Dorothy to her bosom, she wept like a relenting storm.
+
+One sentence more she read ere she hurried with the letter to her
+father-in-law. The sentence was this:
+
+'So I pray let not any of my friends that's there, believe anything,
+until ye have the perfect relation of it from myself.'
+
+The pleasure of receiving news from his son did but little, however, to
+disperse the cloud that hung about the marquis. I do not know whether,
+or how far, he had been advised of the provision made for the king's
+clearness by the anticipated self-sacrifice of Glamorgan, but I doubt if
+a full knowledge thereof gives any ground for disagreement with the
+judgment of the marquis, which seems, pretty plainly, to have been, that
+the king's behaviour in the matter was neither that of a Christian nor a
+gentleman. As in the case of Strafford, he had accepted the offered
+sacrifice, and, in view of possible chances, had in Glamorgan's
+commission pretermitted the usual authoritative formalities, thus
+keeping it in his power, with Glamorgan's connivance, it must be
+confessed, but at Glamorgan's expense, to repudiate his agency. This he
+had now done in a message to the parliament, and this the marquis knew.
+
+His majesty had also written to lord Ormond as follows: 'And albeit I
+have too just cause, for the clearing of my honour, to prosecute
+Glamorgan in a legal way, yet I will have you suspend the execution,'
+&c. At the same time his secretary wrote thus to Ormond and the council:
+'And since the warrant is not' 'sealed with the signet,' &c., &c., 'your
+lordships cannot but judge it to be at least surreptitiously gotten, if
+not worse; for his majesty saith he remembers it not;' and thus again
+privately to Ormond: 'The king hath commanded me to advertise your
+lordship that the patent for making the said lord Herbert of Raglan earl
+of Glamorgan is not passed the great seal here, so as he is no peer of
+this kingdom; notwithstanding he styles himself, and hath treated with
+the rebels in Ireland, by the name of earl of Glamorgan, which is as
+vainly taken upon him as his pretended warrant (if any such be) was
+surreptitiously gotten.' The title had, meanwhile, been used by the king
+himself in many communications with the earl.
+
+These letters never came, I presume, to the marquis's knowledge, but
+they go far to show that his feeling, even were it a little embittered
+by the memory of their midnight conference and his hopes therefrom, went
+no farther than the conduct of his majesty justified. It was no wonder
+that the straight-forward old man, walking erect to ruin for his king,
+should fret and fume, yea, yield to downright wrath and enforced
+contempt.
+
+Of the king's behaviour in the matter, Dorothy, however, knew nothing
+yet.
+
+One day towards the end of February, a messenger from the king arrived
+at Raglan, on his way to Ireland to lord Ormond. He had found the roads
+so beset--for things were by this time, whether from the successes of
+the parliament only, or from the negligence of disappointment on the
+part of lord Worcester as well, much altered in Wales and on its
+borders--that he had been compelled to leave his despatches in hiding,
+and had reached the castle only with great difficulty and after many
+adventures. His chief object in making his way thither was to beg of
+lord Charles a convoy to secure his despatches and protect him on his
+farther journey. But lord Charles received him by no means cordially,
+for the whole heart of Raglan was sore. He brought him, however, to his
+father, who, although indisposed and confined to his chamber, consented
+to see him. When Mr. Boteler was admitted, lady Glamorgan was in the
+chamber, and there remained.
+
+Probably the respect to the king's messenger which had influenced the
+marquis to receive him, would have gone further and modified the
+expression of his feelings a little when he saw him, but that, like many
+more men, his lordship, although fairly master of his temper-horses when
+in health, was apt to let them run away with him upon occasion of even
+slighter illness than would serve for an excuse.
+
+'Hast thou in thy despatches any letters from his majesty to my son
+Glamorgan, master Boteler?' he inquired, frowning unconsciously.
+
+'Not that I know of, my lord,' answered Mr. Boteler, 'but there may be
+such with the lord marquis of Ormond's.'
+
+He then proceeded to give a friendly message from the king concerning
+the earl. But at this the 'smouldering fire out-brake' from the bosom of
+the injured father and subject.
+
+'It is the grief of my heart,' cried his lordship, wrath predominating
+over the regret which was yet plainly enough to be seen in his face and
+heard in his tone--'It is the grief of my heart that I am enforced to
+say that the king is wavering and fickle. To be the more his friend, it
+too plainly appeareth, is but to be the more handled as his enemy.'
+
+'Say not so, my lord,' returned Mr. Boteler. 'His gracious majesty
+looketh not for such unfriendly judgment from your lips. Have I not
+brought your lordship a most gracious and comfortable message from him
+concerning my lord Glamorgan, with his royal thanks for your former
+loyal expressions?'
+
+'Mr. Boteler, thou knowest nought of the matter. That thou has brought
+me a budget of fine words, I go not to deny. But words may be but
+schismatics; deeds alone are certainly of the true faith. Verily the
+king's majesty setteth his words in the forefront of the battle, but his
+deeds lag in the rear, and let his words be taken prisoners. When his
+majesty was last here, I lent him a book to read in his chamber, the
+beginning of which I know he read, but if he had ended, it would have
+showed him what it was to be a fickle prince.'
+
+'My lord! my lord! surely your lordship knoweth better of his majesty.'
+
+'To know better may be to know worse, master Boteler. Was it not enough
+to suffer my lord Glamorgan to be unjustly imprisoned by my lord marquis
+of Ormond for what he had His majesty's authority for, but that he must
+in print protest against his proceedings and his own allowance, and not
+yet recall it? But I will pray for him, and that he may be more constant
+to his friends, and as soon as my other employments will give leave, you
+shall have a convoy to fetch securely your despatches.'
+
+Herewith Mr. Boteler was dismissed, lord Charles accompanying him from
+the room.
+
+'False as ice!' muttered the marquis to himself, left as he supposed
+alone. 'My boy, thou hast built on a quicksand, and thy house goeth down
+to the deep. I am wroth with myself that ever I dreamed of moving such a
+bag of chaff to return to the bosom of his honourable mother.'
+
+'My lord,' said lady Glamorgan from behind the bed-curtains, 'have you
+forgotten that I and my long ears are here?'
+
+'Ha! art thou indeed there, my mad Irishwoman! I had verily forgotten
+thee. But is not this king of ours as the Minotaur, dwelling in the
+labyrinths of deceit, and devouring the noblest in the land? There was
+his own Strafford, next his foolish Laud, and now comes my son, worth a
+host of such!'
+
+'In his letter, my lord of Glamorgan complaineth not of his majesty's
+usage,' said the countess.
+
+'My lord of Glamorgan is patient as Grisel. He would pass through the
+pains of purgatory with never a grumble. But purgatory is for none such
+as he. In good sooth I am made of different stuff. My soul doth loath
+deceit, and worse in a king than a clown. What king is he that will lie
+for a kingdom!'
+
+Day after day passed, and nothing was done to speed the messenger, who
+grew more and more anxious to procure his despatches and be gone; but
+lord Worcester, through the king's behaviour to his honourable and
+self-forgetting son, with whom he had never had a difference except on
+the point of his blind devotion to his majesty's affairs, had so lost
+faith in the king himself that he had no heart for his business. It
+seems also that for his son's sake he wished to delay Mr. Boteler, in
+order that a messenger of his own might reach Glamorgan before Ormond
+should receive the king's despatches. For a whole fortnight therefore no
+further steps were taken, and Boteler, wearied out, bethought him of
+applying to the countess to see whether she would not use her influence
+in his behalf. I am thus particular about Boteler's affair, because
+through it Dorothy came to know what the king's behaviour had been, and
+what the marquis thought of it; she was in the room when Mr. Boteler
+waited on her mistress.
+
+'May it please your ladyship,' he said, 'I have sought speech of you
+that I might beg your aid for the king's business, remembering you of
+the hearty affection my master the king beareth towards your lord and
+all his house.'
+
+'Indeed you do well to remember me of that, master Boteler, for it goeth
+so hard with my memory in these troubled times that I had nigh forgotten
+it,' said the countess dryly.
+
+'I most certainly know, my lady, that his majesty hath gracious
+intentions towards your lord.'
+
+'Intention is but an addled egg,' said the countess. 'Give me deeds, if
+I may choose.'
+
+'Alas! the king hath but little in his power, and the less that his
+business is thus kept waiting.'
+
+'Your haste is more than your matter, master Boteler. Believe me,
+whatsoever you consider of it, your going so hurriedly is of no great
+account, for to my knowledge there are others gone already with
+duplicates of the business.'
+
+'Madam, you astonish me.'
+
+'I speak not without book. My own cousin, William Winter, is one, and he
+is my husband's friend, and hath no relation to my lord marquis of
+Ormond,' said lady Glamorgan significantly.
+
+'My lord, madam, is your lord's very good friend, and I am very much his
+servant; but if his majesty's business be done, I care not by whose hand
+it is. But I thank your honour, for now I know wherefore I am stayed
+here.'
+
+With these words Boteler withdrew--and withdraws from my story, for his
+further proceedings are in respect of it of no consequence.
+
+When he was gone, lady Glamorgan, turning a flushed face, and
+encountering Dorothy's pale one, gave a hard laugh, and said:
+
+'Why, child! thou lookest like a ghost! Was afeard of the man in my
+presence?'
+
+'No, madam; but it seemed to me marvellous that his majesty's messenger
+should receive such words from my mistress, and in my lord of
+Worcester's house.'
+
+'I' faith, marvellous it is, Dorothy, that there should be such good
+cause so to use him!' returned lady Glamorgan, tears of vexation rising
+as she spoke. 'But an' thou think I used the man roughly, thou shouldst
+have heard my father speak to him his mind of the king his master.'
+
+'Hath the king then shown himself unkingly, madam?' said Dorothy aghast.
+
+Whereupon lady Glamorgan told her all she knew, and all she could
+remember of what she had heard the marquis say to Boteler.
+
+'Trust me, child,' she added, 'my lord Worcester, no less than I am, is
+cut to the heart by this behaviour of the king's. That my husband, silly
+angel, should say nothing, is but like him. He would bear and bear till
+all was borne.'
+
+'But,' said Dorothy, 'the king is still the king.'
+
+'Let him be the king then,' returned her mistress. 'Let him look to his
+kingdom. Why should I give him my husband to do it for him and be
+disowned therein? I thank heaven I can do without a king, but I can't do
+without my Ned, and there he lies in prison for him who cons him no
+thanks! Not that I would overmuch heed the prison if the king would but
+share the blame with him; but for the king to deny him--to say that he
+did all of his own motion and without authority!--why, child, I saw the
+commission with my own eyes, nor count myself under any farther
+obligation to hold my peace concerning it! I know my husband will bear
+all things, even disgrace itself, undeserved, for the king's sake: he is
+the loveliest of martyrs; but that is no reason why I should bear it.
+The king hath no heart and no conscience. No, I will not say that; but I
+will say that he hath little heart and less conscience. My good
+husband's fair name is gone--blasted by the king, who raiseth the mist
+of Glamorgan's dishonour that he may hide himself safe behind it. I tell
+thee, Dorothy Vaughan, I should not have grudged his majesty my lord's
+life, an' he had been but a right kingly king. I should have wept enough
+and complained too much, in womanish fashion, doubtless; but I tell thee
+earl Thomond's daughter would not have grudged it. But my lord's truth
+and honour are dear to him, and the good report of them is dear to me. I
+swear I can ill brook carrying the title he hath given me. It is my
+husband's and not mine, else would I fling it in his face who thus
+wrongs my Herbert.'
+
+This explosion from the heart of the wild Irishwoman sounded dreadful in
+the ears of the king-worshipper. But he whom she thus accused the king
+of wronging, had been scarcely less revered of her, even while the idol
+with the feet of clay yet stood, and had certainly been loved greatly
+more, than the king himself. Hence, notwithstanding her struggle to keep
+her heart to its allegiance, such a rapid change took place in her
+feelings, that ere long she began to confess to herself that if the
+puritans could have known what the king was, their conduct would not
+have been so unintelligible--not that she thought they had an atom of
+right on their side, or in the least feared she might ever be brought to
+think in the matter as they did; she confessed only that she could then
+have understood them.
+
+The whole aspect and atmosphere of Raglan continued changed. The marquis
+was still very gloomy; lord Charles often frowned and bit his lip; and
+the flush that so frequently overspread the face of lady Glamorgan as
+she sat silent at her embroidery, showed that she was thinking in anger
+of the wrong done to her husband. In this feeling all in the castle
+shared, for the matter had now come to be a little understood, and as
+they loved the earl more than the king, they took the earl's part.
+
+Meantime he for whose sake the fortress was troubled, having been
+released on large bail, was away, with free heart, to Kilkenny, busy as
+ever on behalf of the king, full of projects, and eager in action. Not a
+trace of resentment did he manifest--only regret that his majesty's
+treatment of him, in destroying his credit with the catholics as the
+king's commissioner, had put it out of his power to be so useful as he
+might otherwise have been. His brain was ever contriving how to remedy
+things, but parties were complicated, and none quite trusted him now
+that he was disowned of his master.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIX.
+
+SIEGE.
+
+
+Things began to look threatening. Raglan's brooding disappointment and
+apprehension was like the electric overcharge of the earth, awaiting and
+drawing to it the hovering cloud: the lightning and thunder of the war
+began at length to stoop upon the Yellow Tower of Gwent. When the month
+of May arrived once more with its moonlight and apple-blossoms, the
+cloud came with it. The doings of the earl of Glamorgan in Ireland had
+probably hastened the vengeance of the parliament.
+
+There was no longer any royal army. Most of the king's friends had
+accepted the terms offered them; and only a few of his garrisons,
+amongst the rest that of Raglan, held out--no longer, however, in such
+trim for defence as at first. The walls, it is true, were rather
+stronger than before, the quantity of provisions was large, and the
+garrison was sufficient; but their horses were now comparatively few,
+and, which was worse, the fodder in store was, in prospect of a long
+siege, scanty. But the worst of all, indeed the only weak and therefore
+miserable fact, was, that the spirit, I do not mean the courage, of the
+castle was gone; its enthusiasm had grown sere; its inhabitants no
+longer loved the king as they had loved him, and even stern-faced
+general Duty cannot bring up his men to a hand-to-hand conflict with the
+same elans as queen love.
+
+The rumour of approaching troops kept gathering, and at every fresh
+report Scudamore's eyes shone.
+
+'Sir Rowland,' said the governor one day, 'hast not had enough of
+fighting yet for all thy lame shoulder?'
+
+''Tis but my left shoulder, my lord,' answered Scudamore.
+
+'Thou lookest for the siege as an' it were but a tussle and over--a
+flash and a roar. An' thou had to answer for the place like me--well!'
+
+'Nay, my lord, I would fain show the roundheads what an honest house can
+do to hold out rogues.'
+
+'Ay, but there's the rub!' returned lord Charles: 'will the house hold
+out the rogues? Bethink thee, Rowland, there is never a spot in it fit
+for defence except the keep and the kitchen.'
+
+'We can make sallies, my lord.'
+
+'To be driven in again by ten times our number, and kept in while they
+knock our walls about our ears! However, we will hold out while we can.
+Who knows what turn affairs may take?'
+
+It was towards the end of April when the news reached Raglan that the
+king, desperate at length, had made his escape from beleaguered Oxford,
+and in the disguise of a serving man, betaken himself to the
+headquarters of the Scots army, to find himself no king, no guest even,
+but a prisoner. He sought shelter and found captivity. The marquis
+dropped his chin on his chest and murmured, 'All is over.'
+
+But the pang that shot to his heart awoke wounded loyalty: he had been
+angry with his monarch, and justly, but he would fight for him still.
+
+'See to the gates, Charles,' he cried, almost springing, spite of his
+unwieldiness, from his chair. 'Tell Caspar to keep the powder-mill going
+night and day. Would to God my boy Ned were here! His majesty hath
+wronged me, but throned or prisoned he is my king still--the church must
+come down, Charles. The dead are for the living, and will not cry out.'
+For in St. Cadocus' church lay the tombs of his ancestors.
+
+On deliberation it was resolved, however, that only the tower, which
+commanded some portions of the castle, should fall. To Dorothy it was
+like taking down the standard of the Lord. She went with some of the
+ladies to look a last look at the ancient structure, and saw mass after
+mass fall silent from the top to clash hideous at the foot amidst the
+broken tomb-stones. It was sad enough! but the destruction of the
+cottages around it, that the enemy might not have shelter there, was
+sadder still. The women wept and wailed; the men growled, and said what
+was Raglan to them that their houses should be pulled from over their
+heads. The marquis offered compensation and shelter. All took the money,
+but few accepted the shelter, for the prospect of a siege was not
+attractive to any but such as were fond of fighting, of whom some would
+rather attack than defend.
+
+The next day they heard that sir Trevor Williams was at Usk with a
+strong body of men. They knew colonel Birch was besieging Gutbridge
+castle. Two days passed, and then colonel Kirk appeared to the north,
+and approached within two miles. The ladies began to look pale as often
+as they saw two persons talking together: there might be fresh news. His
+father and his wife were not the only persons in the castle who kept
+sighing for Glamorgan. Every soul in it felt as if, not to say fancied
+that, his presence would have made it impregnable.
+
+But a strange excitement seized upon Dorothy, which arose from a sense
+of trust and delegation, outwardly unauthorised. She had not the
+presumption to give it form in words, even to Caspar, but she felt as if
+they two were the special servants of the absent power. Ceaselessly
+therefore she kept open eyes, and saw and spoke and reminded and
+remedied where she could, so noiselessly, so unobtrusively, that none
+were offended, and all took heed of the things she brought before them.
+Indeed what she said came at length to be listened to almost as if it
+had been a message from Glamorgan. But her chief business was still the
+fire-engine, whose machinery she anxiously watched--for if anything
+should happen to Caspar and then to the engine, what would become of
+them when driven into the tower?
+
+Discipline, which of late had got very drowsy, was stirred up to fresh
+life. Watch grew strict. The garrison was drilled more regularly and
+carefully, and the guard and sentinels relieved to the minute. The
+armoury was entirely overhauled, and every smith set to work to get the
+poor remainder of its contents into good condition.
+
+One evening lord Charles came to his father with the news that some
+score of fresh horses had arrived.
+
+'Have they brought provender with them, my lord?' asked the marquis.
+
+'Alas, no, my lord, only teeth,' answered the governor.
+
+'How stands the hay?'
+
+'At low ebb, my lord. There is plenty of oats, however.'
+
+'We hear to-day nothing of the roundheads: what say you to turning them
+out and letting them have a last bellyful of sweet grass under the
+walls?'
+
+'I say 'tis so good a plan, my lord, that I think we had better extend
+it, and let a few of the rest have a parting nibble.'
+
+The marquis approved.
+
+There was a postern in the outermost wall of the castle on the western
+side, seldom used, commanded by the guns of the tower, and opening upon
+a large field of grass, with nothing between but a ditch. It was just
+wide enough to let one horse through at a time, and by this the governor
+resolved to turn them out, and as soon as it was nearly dark, ordered a
+few thick oak planks to be laid across the ditch, one above another, for
+a bridge. The field was sufficiently fenced to keep them from straying,
+and with the first signs of dawn they would take them in again.
+
+Dorothy, leaving the tower for the night, had reached the archway, when
+to her surprise she saw the figure of a huge horse move across the mouth
+of it, followed by another and another. Except Richard's mare on that
+eventful night she had never seen horse-kind there before. One after
+another, till she had counted some five-and-twenty, she saw pass, then
+heard them cross the fountain court with heavy foot upon the tiles. At
+length, dark as it was, she recognised her own little Dick moving
+athwart the opening. She sprang forward, seized him by the halter, and
+drew him in beside her. On and on they came, till she had counted
+eighty, and then the procession ceased.
+
+Presently she heard the voice of lord Charles, as he crossed the hall
+and came out into the court, saying,
+
+'How many didst thou count, Shafto?'
+
+'Seventy-nine, my lord,' answered the groom, coming from the direction
+of the gate.
+
+'I counted eighty at the hall-door as they went in.'
+
+'I am certain no more than seventy-nine went through the gate, my lord.'
+
+'What can have become of the eightieth? He must have gone into the
+chapel, or up the archway, or he may be still in the hall. Art sure he
+is not grazing on the turf?'
+
+'Certain sure, my lord,' answered Shafto.
+
+'I am the thief, my lord,' said Dorothy, coming from the archway behind
+him, leading her little horse. '--Good, my lord, let me keep Dick. He is
+as useful as another--more useful than some.'
+
+'How, cousin!' cried lord Charles, 'didst imagine I was sending off thy
+genet to save the hay? No, no! An' thou hadst looked well at the other
+horses, thou wouldst have seen they are such as we want for work--such
+as may indeed save the hay, but after another fashion. I but mean to do
+thy Dick a kindness, and give him a bite of grass with the rest.'
+
+'Then you are turning them out into the fields, my lord?'
+
+'Yes--at the little postern.'
+
+'Is it safe, my lord, with the enemy so near?'
+
+'It is my father's idea. I do not think there is any danger. There will
+be no moon to-night.'
+
+'May not the scouts ride the closer for that,' my lord?'
+
+'Yes, but they will not see the better.'
+
+'I hope, my lord, you will not think me presumptuous, but--please let me
+keep my Dick inside the walls.'
+
+'Do what thou wilt with thine own, cousin. I think thou art
+over-fearful; but do as thou wilt, I say.'
+
+Dorothy led Dick back to his stable, a little distressed that lord
+Charles seemed to dislike her caution.
+
+But she had a strong feeling of the risk of the thing, and after she
+went to bed was so haunted by it that she could not sleep. After a
+while, however, her thoughts took another direction:--Might not Richard
+come to the siege? What if they should meet?--That his party had
+triumphed, no whit altered the rights of the matter, and she was sure it
+had not altered her feelings; yet her feelings were altered: she was no
+longer so fiercely indignant against the puritans as heretofore! Was she
+turning traitor? or losing the government of herself? or was the right
+triumphing in her against her will? Was it St. Michael for the truth
+conquering St. George for the old way of England? Had the king been a
+tyrant indeed? and had the powers of heaven declared against him, and
+were they now putting on their instruments to cut down the harvest of
+wrong? Had not Richard been very sure of being in the right? But what
+was that shaking--not of the walls, but the foundations? What was that
+noise as of distant thunder? She sprang from her bed, caught up her
+night-light, for now she never slept in the dark as heretofore, and
+hurried to the watch-tower. From its top she saw, by the faint light of
+the stars, vague forms careering over the fields. There was no cry
+except an occasional neigh, and the thunder was from the feet of many
+horses on the turf. The enemy was lifting the castle horses!
+
+She flew to the chamber beneath, where, since the earl's departure, in
+the stead of the cross-bow, a small minion gun had been placed by lord
+Charles, with its muzzle in the round where the lines of the loop-hole
+crossed. A piece of match lay beside it. She caught it up, lighted it at
+her candle, and fired the gun. The tower shook with its roar and recoil.
+She had fired the first gun of the siege: might it be a good omen!
+
+In an instant the castle was alive. Warders came running from the
+western gate. Dorothy had gone, and they could not tell who had fired
+the gun, but there were no occasion to ask why it had been fired--for
+where were the horses? They could hear, but no longer see them. There
+was mounting in hot haste, and a hurried sally. Lord Charles flung
+himself on little Dick's bare back, and flew to reconnoitre. Fifty of
+the garrison were ready armed and mounted by the time he came back,
+having discovered the route they were taking, and off they went at full
+speed in pursuit. But, encumbered as they were at first with the driven
+horses, the twenty men who had carried them off had such a start of
+their pursuers that they reached the high road where they could not
+stray, and drove them right before them to sir Trevor Williams at Usk.
+
+'The fodder will last the longer,' said the marquis, with a sigh sent
+after his eighty horses.
+
+'Mistress Dorothy,' said lord Charles the next day, 'methinks thou art
+as Cassandra in Troy. I shall tremble after this to do aught against thy
+judgment.'
+
+'My lord,' returned Dorothy, 'I have to ask your pardon for my
+presumption, but it was borne in upon me, as Tom Fool says, that there
+was danger in the thing. It was scarcely judgment on my part--rather a
+womanish dread.'
+
+'Go thou on to speak thy mind like Cassandra, cousin Dorothy, and let us
+men despise it at our peril. I am humbled before thee,' said lord
+Charles, with the generosity of his family.
+
+'Truly, child,' said lady Glamorgan, 'the mantle of my husband hath
+fallen upon thee!'
+
+The next day sir Trevor Williams and his men sat down before the castle
+with a small battery, and the siege was fairly begun. Dorothy, on the
+top of the keep, watching them, but not understanding what they were
+about in particulars, heard the sudden bellow of one of their cannon.
+Two of the battlements beside her flew into one, and the stones of the
+parapet between them stormed into the cistern. Had her presence been the
+attraction to that thunderbolt? Often after this, while she watched the
+engine below in the workshop, she would hear the dull thud of an iron
+ball against the body of the tower; but although it knocked the parapet
+into showers of stones, their artillery could not make the slightest
+impression upon that.
+
+The same night a sally was prepared. Rowland ran to lord Charles,
+begging leave to go. But his lordship would not hear of it, telling him
+to get well, and he should have enough of sallying before the siege was
+over. The enemy were surprised, and lost a few men, but soon recovered
+themselves and drove the royalists home, following them to the very
+gates, whence the guns of the castle sent them back in their turn.
+
+Many such sallies and skirmishes followed. Once and again there was but
+time for the guard to open the gate, admit their own, and close it, ere
+the enemy came thundering up--to be received with a volley and gallop
+off. At first there was great excitement within the walls when a party
+was out. Eager and anxious eyes followed them from every point of
+vision. But at length they got used to it, as to all the ordinary
+occurrences of siege.
+
+By and by colonel Morgan appeared with additional forces, and made his
+head-quarters to the south, at Llandenny. In two days more the castle
+was surrounded, and they began to erect a larger battery on the east of
+it, also to dig trenches and prepare for mining. The chief point of
+attack was that side of the stone court which lay between the towers of
+the kitchen and the library. Here then came the hottest of the siege,
+and very soon that range of building gave show of affording an easy
+passage by the time the outer works should be taken.
+
+After the first ball, whose execution Dorothy had witnessed, there came
+no more for some time. Sir Trevor waited until the second battery should
+be begun and captain Hooper arrive, who was to be at the head of the
+mining operations. Hence most of the inmates of the castle began to
+imagine that a siege was not such an unpleasant thing after all. They
+lacked nothing; the apple trees bloomed; the moon shone; the white horse
+fed the fountain; the pigeons flew about the courts, and the peacock
+strutted on the grass. But when they began digging their approaches and
+mounting their guns on the east side, sir Trevor opened his battery on
+the west, and the guns of the tower replied. The guns also from the
+kitchen tower, and another between it and the library tower, played upon
+the trenches, and the noise was tremendous. At first the inhabitants
+were nearly deafened, and frequently failed to hear what was said; but
+at length they grew hardened--so much so that they were often unaware of
+the firing altogether, and began again to think a siege no great matter.
+But when the guns of the eastern battery opened fire, and at the first
+discharge a round shot, bringing with it a barrowful of stones, came
+down the kitchen chimney, knocking the lid through the bottom of the
+cook's stewpan, and scattering all the fire about the place; when the
+roof of one of the turrets went clashing over the stones of the paved
+court; when a spent shot struck the bars of the Great Mogul's cage, and
+sent him furious, making them think what might happen, and wishing they
+were sure of the politics of the wild beasts; when the stones and slates
+flew about like sudden showers of hail; when every now and then a great
+rumble told of a falling wall, and that side of the court was rapidly
+turning to a heap of ruins; then were cries and screams, many more
+however of terror than of injury, to be heard in the castle, and they
+began to understand that it was not starvation, but something more
+peremptory still, to which they were doomed to succumb. At times there
+would fall a lull, perhaps for a few hours, perhaps but for a few
+moments, to end in a sudden fury of firing on both sides, mingled with
+shouts, the rattling of bullets, and the falling of stones, when the
+women would rush to and fro screaming, and all would imagine the storm
+was in the breach.
+
+But the gloom of the marquis seemed to have vanished with the breaking
+of the storm, as the outburst of the lightning takes the weight off head
+and heart that has for days been gathering. True, when his house began
+to fall, he would look for a moment grave at each successive rumble, but
+the next he would smile and nod his head, as if all was just as he had
+expected and would have it. One day when sir Toby Mathews and Dr. Bayly
+happened both to be with him in his study, an ancient stack of chimneys
+tumbled with tremendous uproar into the stone court. The two clergymen
+started visibly, and then looked at each other with pallid faces. But
+the marquis smiled, kept the silence for an instant, and then, in slow
+solemn voice, said:
+
+'Scimus enim quoniam si terrestris domus nomus nostra hujus habitationis
+dissolvatur, quod aedificationem ex Deo habemus, domum non manufactam,
+aeternam in coelis.'
+
+The clergymen grasped each other by the hand, then turning bowed
+together to the marquis, but the conversation was not resumed.
+
+One evening in the drawing-room, after supper, the marquis, in good
+spirits, and for him in good health, was talking more merrily than
+usual. Lady Glamorgan stood near him in the window. The captain of the
+garrison was giving a spirited description of a sally they had made the
+night before upon colonel Morgan in his quarters at Llandenny, and sir
+Rowland was vowing that come of it what might, leave or no leave, he
+would ride the next time, when crash went something in the room, the
+marquis put his hand to his head, and the countess fled in terror,
+crying, 'O Lord! O Lord!' A bullet had come through the window, knocked
+a little marble pillar belonging to it in fragments on the floor, and
+glancing from it, struck the marquis on the side of the head. The
+countess, finding herself unhurt, ran no farther than the door.
+
+'I ask your pardon, my lord, for my rudeness,' she said, with trembling
+voice, as she came slowly back. 'But indeed, ladies,' she added, 'I
+thought the house was coming down.--You gentlemen, who know not what
+fear is, I pray you to forgive me, for I was mortally frightened.'
+
+'Daughter, you had reason to run away, when your father was knocked on
+the head,' said the marquis.
+
+He put his finger on the flattened bullet where it had fallen on the
+table, and turning it round and round, was silent for a moment evidently
+framing aright something he wanted to say. Then with the pretence that
+the bullet had been flattened upon his head,
+
+'Gentlemen,' he remarked, 'those who had a mind to flatter me were wont
+to tell me that I had a good head in my younger days, but if I don't
+flatter myself, I think I have a good head-piece in my old age, or else
+it would not have been musket-proof.'
+
+But although he took the thing thus quietly and indeed merrily, it
+revealed to him that their usual apartments were no longer fit for the
+ladies, and he gave orders therefore that the great rooms in the tower
+should be prepared for them and the children.
+
+Dorothy's capacity for work was not easily satisfied, but now for a time
+she had plenty to do. In the midst of the roar from the batteries, and
+the answering roar from towers and walls, the ladies betook themselves
+to their stronger quarters: a thousand necessaries had to be carried
+with them, and she, as a matter of course, it seemed, had to superintend
+the removal. With many hands to make light work she soon finished,
+however, and the family was lodged where no hostile shot could reach
+them, although the frequent fall of portions of its battlemented summit
+rendered even a peep beyond its impenetrable shell hazardous. Dorothy
+would lie awake at night, where she slept in her mistress's room, and
+listen--now to the baffled bullet as it fell from the scarce indented
+wall, now to the roar of the artillery, sounding dull and far away
+through the ten-foot thickness; and ever and again the words of the
+ancient psalm would return upon her memory: 'Thou hast been a shelter
+for me, and a strong tower from the enemy.'
+
+She tended the fire-engine if possible yet more carefully than ever,
+kept the cistern full, and the water lipping the edge of the moat, but
+let no fountain flow except that from the mouth of the white horse. Her
+great fear was lest a shot should fall into the reservoir and injure its
+bottom, but its contriver had taken care that, even without the
+protection of its watery armour, it should be indestructible.
+
+The marquis would not leave his own rooms and the supervision they gave
+him. The domestics were mostly lodged within the kitchen tower, which,
+although in full exposure to the enemy's fire, had as yet proved able to
+resist it. But all between that and the library tower was rapidly
+becoming a chaos of stones and timber. Lord Glamorgan's secret chamber
+was shot through and through; but Caspar, as soon as the direction and
+force of the battery were known, had carried off his books and
+instruments.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER L.
+
+A SALLY.
+
+
+Meantime Mr. Heywood had returned home to look after his affairs, and
+brought Richard with him. In the hope that peace was come they had laid
+down their commissions. Hardly had they reached Redware when they heard
+the news of the active operations at Raglan, and Richard rode off to see
+how things were going--not a little anxious concerning Dorothy, and full
+of eagerness to protect her, but entirely without hope of favour either
+at her hand or her heart. He had no inclination to take part in the
+siege, and had had enough of fighting for any satisfaction it had
+brought him. It might be the right thing to do, and so far the only path
+towards the sunrise, but had he ground for hope that the day of freedom
+had in himself advanced beyond the dawn? His confidence in Milton and
+Cromwell, with his father's, continued unshaken, but what could man do
+to satisfy the hunger for freedom which grew and gnawed within him?
+Neither political nor religious liberty could content him. He might
+himself be a slave in a universe of freedom. Still ready, even for the
+sake of mere outward freedom of action and liberty of worship, to draw
+the sword, he yet had begun to think he had fought enough.
+
+As he approached Raglan he missed something from the landscape, but only
+upon reflection discovered that it was the church tower. Entering the
+village, he found it all but deserted, for the inhabitants had mostly
+gone, and it was too near the gates and too much exposed to the sudden
+sallies of the besieged for the occupation of the enemy. That day,
+however, a large reinforcement, sent from Oxford by Fairfax to
+strengthen colonel Morgan, having arrived at Llandenny, some of its
+officers, riding over to inspect captain Hooper's operations, had halted
+at the White Horse, where they were having a glass of ale when Richard
+rode up. He found them old acquaintances, and sat down with them. Almost
+evening when he arrived, it was quite dusk when they rose and called for
+their horses.
+
+They had placed a man to keep watch towards Raglan, while the rest of
+their attendants, who were but few, leaving their horses in the yard,
+were drinking their ale in the kitchen; but seeing no signs of peril,
+and growing weary of his own position and envious of that of his
+neighbours, the fellow had ventured, discipline being neither active nor
+severe, to rejoin his companions.
+
+The host, being a tenant of the marquis, had decided royalist
+predilections, but whether what followed was of his contriving I cannot
+tell; news reached the castle somehow that a few parliamentary officers
+with their men were drinking at the White Horse.
+
+Rowland was in the chapel, listening to the organ, having in his illness
+grown fond of hearing Delaware play. The brisker the cannonade, the
+blind youth always praised the louder, and had the main stops now in
+full blast; but through it all, Scudamore heard the sound of horses'
+feet on the stones, and running along the minstrels' gallery and out on
+the top of the porch, saw over fifty horsemen in the court, all but
+ready to start. He flew to his chamber, caught up his sword and pistols,
+and without waiting to put on any armour, hurried to the stables, laid
+hold of the first horse he came to, which was fortunately saddled and
+bridled, and was in time to follow the last man out of the court before
+the gate was closed behind the issuing troop.
+
+The parliamentary officers were just mounting, when their sentinel, who
+had run again into the road to listen, for it was now too dark to see
+further than a few yards, came running back with the alarm that he heard
+the feet of a considerable body of horse in the direction of the castle.
+Richard, whose mare stood unfastened at the door, was on her back in a
+moment. Being unarmed, save a brace of pistols in his holsters, he
+thought he could best serve them by galloping to captain Hooper and
+bringing help, for the castle party would doubtless outnumber them.
+Scarcely was he gone, however, and half the troopers were not yet in
+their saddles, when the place was surrounded by three times their
+number. Those who were already mounted, escaped and rode after Heywood,
+a few got into a field, where they hid themselves in the tall corn, and
+the rest barricaded the inn door and manned the windows. There they held
+out for some time, frequent pistol-shots being interchanged without much
+injury to either side. At length, however, the marquis's men had all but
+succeeded in forcing the door, when they were attacked in the rear by
+Richard with some thirty horse from the trenches, and the runaways of
+colonel Morgan's men, who had met them and turned with them. A smart
+combat ensued, lasting half an hour, in which the parliament men had the
+advantage. Those who had lost their horses recovered them, and a
+royalist was taken prisoner. From him Richard took his sword, and rode
+after the retreating cavaliers.
+
+One of their number, a little in the rear, supposing Richard to be one
+of themselves, allowed him to get ahead of him, and, facing about, cut
+him off from his companions. It was the second time he had headed
+Scudamore, and again he did not know him, this time because it was dark.
+Rowland, however, recognised his voice as he called him to surrender,
+and rushed fiercely at him. But scarcely had they met, when the
+cavalier, whose little strength had ere this all but given way to the
+unwonted fatigue, was suddenly overcome with faintness, and dropped from
+his horse. Richard got down, lifted him, laid him across Lady's
+shoulders, mounted, raised him into a better position, and, leading the
+other horse, brought him back to the inn. There first he discovered that
+he was his prisoner whom he feared he had killed at Naseby.
+
+When Rowland came to himself,
+
+'Are you able to ride a few miles, Mr Scudamore?' asked Richard.
+
+At first Rowland was too much chagrined, finding in whose power he was,
+to answer.
+
+'I am your prisoner,' he said at length. 'You are my evil genius, I
+think. I have no choice. Thy star is in the ascendant, and mine has been
+going down ever since first I met thee, Richard Heywood.'
+
+Richard attempted no reply, but got Rowland's horse, and assisted him to
+mount.
+
+'I want to do you a good turn, Mr Scudamore,' he said, after they had
+ridden a mile in silence.
+
+'I look for nothing good at thy hand,' said Scudamore.
+
+'When thou findest what it is, I trust thou wilt change thy thought of
+me, Mr Scudamore.'
+
+'SIR ROWLAND, an' it please you,' said the prisoner, his boyish vanity
+roused by misfortune, and passing itself upon him for dignity.
+
+'Mere ignorance must be pardoned, sir Rowland,' returned Richard: 'I was
+unaware of your dignity. But think you, sir Rowland, you do well to ride
+on such rough errands, while yet not recovered, as is but too plain to
+see, from former wounds?'
+
+'It seems not, Mr. Heywood, for I had not else been your prize, I trust.
+The wound I caught at Naseby has cost the king a soldier, I fear.'
+
+'I hope it will cost no more than is already paid. Men must fight, it
+seems, but I for one would gladly repair, an' I might, what injuries I
+had been compelled to cause.'
+
+'I cannot say the like on my part,' returned sir Rowland. 'I would I had
+slain thee!'
+
+'So would not I concerning thee--in proof whereof do I now lead thee to
+the best leech I know--one who brought me back from death's door, when
+through thee, if not by thy hand, I was sore wounded. With her, as my
+prisoner, I shall leave thee. Seek not to make thy escape, lest, being a
+witch, as they saw of her, she chain thee up in alabaster. When thou art
+restored, go thy way whither thou pleasest. It is no longer as it was
+with the cause of liberty: a soldier of hers may now afford to release
+an enemy for whom he has a friendship.'
+
+'A friendship!' exclaimed sir Rowland. 'And wherefore, prithee, Mr
+Heywood? On what ground?'
+
+But they had reached the cottage, and Richard made no reply. Having
+helped his prisoner to dismount, led him through the garden, and knocked
+at the door,
+
+'Here, mother!' he said as mistress Rees opened it, 'I have brought thee
+a king's-man to cure this time.'
+
+'Praise God!' returned mistress Rees--not that a king's-man was wounded,
+but that she had him to cure: she was an enthusiast in her art. Just as
+she had devoted herself to the puritan, she now gave all her care and
+ministration to the royalist. She got her bed ready for him, asked him a
+few questions, looked at his shoulder, not even yet quite healed, said
+it had not been well managed, and prepared a poultice, which smelt so
+vilely that Rowland turned from it with disgust. But the old woman had a
+singular power of persuasion, and at length he yielded, and in a few
+moments was fast asleep.
+
+Calling the next morning, Richard found him very weak--partly from the
+unwonted fatigue of the previous day, and partly from the old woman's
+remedies, which were causing the wound to threaten suppuration. But
+somehow he had become well satisfied that she knew what she was about,
+and showed no inclination to rebel.
+
+For a week or so he did not seem to improve. Richard came often, sat by
+his bedside, and talked with him; but the moment he grew angry, called
+him names, or abused his party, would rise without a word, mount his
+mare, and ride home--to return the next morning as if nothing unpleasant
+had occurred.
+
+After about a week, the patient began to feel the benefit of the wise
+woman's treatment. The suppuration carried so much of an old
+ever-haunting pain with it, that he was now easier than he had ever been
+since his return to Raglan. But his behaviour to Richard grew very
+strange, and the roundhead failed to understand it. At one time it was
+so friendly as to be almost affectionate; at another he seemed bent on
+doing and saying everything he could to provoke a duel. For another
+whole week, aware of the benefit he was deriving from the witch, as he
+never scrupled to call her, nor in the least offended her thereby,
+apparently also at times fascinated in some sort by the visits of his
+enemy, as he persisted in calling Richard, he showed no anxiety to be
+gone.
+
+'Heywood,' he said one morning suddenly, with quite a new familiarity,
+'dost thou consider I owe thee an apology for carrying off thy mare?
+Tell me what look the thing beareth to thee.'
+
+'Put thy case, Scudamore,' returned Richard.
+
+And sir Rowland did put his case, starting from the rebel state of the
+owner, advancing to the natural outlawry that resulted, going on to the
+necessity of the king, &c., and ending thus:
+
+'Now I know thou regardest neither king nor right, therefore I ask thee
+only to tell me how it seemeth to thee I ought on these grounds to judge
+myself, since for thy judgment in thy own person and on thy own grounds,
+or rather no grounds, I care not at all.'
+
+'Come, then, let it be but a question of casuistry. Yet I fear me it
+will be difficult to argue without breaking bounds. Would my lord
+marquis now walk forth of his castle at the king's command as certainly
+as he will at the voice of the nation, that is, the cannons of the
+parliament?'
+
+'The cannons of the cursed parliament are not the voice of the nation?
+Our side is the nation, not yours.'
+
+'How provest thou that?'
+
+'We are the better born, to begin with.'
+
+'Ye have the more titles, I grant ye, but we have the older families.
+Let it be, however, that I was or am a rebel--then I can only say that
+in stealing--no, I will not say STEALING, for thou didst it with a
+different mind--all I will say is this, sir Rowland, that I should have
+scorned so to carry off thine or any man's horse.'
+
+'Ah, but thou wouldst have no right, being but a rebel!'
+
+'Bethink thee, thou must judge on my grounds when thou judgest me.'
+
+'True; then am I driven to say thou wast made of the better earth--curse
+thee! I am ashamed of having taken thy mare--only because it was in a
+half-friendly passage with thee I learned her worth. But, hang thee! it
+was not through thee I learned to know my cousin, Dorothy Vaughan.'
+
+The recoiling blood stung Richard's heart like the blow of a whip, but
+he manned himself to answer with coolness.
+
+'What then of her?' he said. 'Hast thou been wooing her favour, sir
+Rowland? Thou owest me nothing there, I admit, even had she not sent me
+from her. Besides, I am scarce one to be content with a mistress whose
+favour depended on the not coming between of some certain other, known
+or unknown. This I say not in pride, but because in such case I were not
+the right man for her, neither she the woman for me.'
+
+'Then thou bearest me no grudge in that I have sought the prize of my
+cousin's heart?'
+
+'None,' answered Richard, but could not bring himself to ask how he had
+sped.
+
+'Then will I own to thee that I have gained as little. I will madden
+myself telling thee whom I hate, and to thy comfort, that she despises
+me like any Virginia slave.'
+
+'Nay, that I am sure she doth not. She can despise nothing that is
+honourable.'
+
+'Dost thou then count me honourable, Heywood?' said Scudamore, in a
+voice of surprise, putting forth a thin white hand, and placing it on
+Richard's where it lay huge and brown on the coverlid: 'Then honourable
+I will be.'
+
+'And, in that resolve, art, sir Rowland.'
+
+'I will be honourable,' repeated Scudamore, angrily, with flushing
+cheek, and hard yet flashing eye, 'because thou thinkest me such,
+although my hate would, an' it might, damn thee to lowest hell.'
+
+'Nay, but thou wilt be honourable for honour's sake,' said Richard.
+'Bethink thee, when first we met, we were but boys: now are we men, and
+must put away boyish things.'
+
+'Dost call it a boyish thing to be madly in love with the fairest and
+noblest and bravest mistress that ever trod the earth--though she be
+half a puritan, alack?'
+
+'She half a puritan!' exclaimed Heywood. 'She hates the very wind of the
+word.'
+
+'She may hate the word, but she is the thing. She hath read me such
+lessons as none but a puritan could.'
+
+'Were they not then good lessons, that thou joinest with them a name
+hateful to thee?'
+
+'Ay, truly--much too good for mortal like me--or thee either, Heywood.
+They are but hypocrites that pretend otherwise.'
+
+'Callest thou thy cousin a hypocrite?'
+
+'No, by heaven! she is not. She is a woman, and it is easy for women to
+say prayers.'
+
+'I never rode into a fight but I said my prayer,' returned Richard.
+
+'None the less art thou a hypocrite. I should scorn to be for ever
+begging favours as thou. Dost think God heareth such prayers as thine?'
+
+'Not if He be such as thou, sir Rowland, and not if he who prays be such
+as thou thinkest him. Prithee, what sort of prayer thinkest thou I pray
+ere I ride into the battle?'
+
+'How should I know? My lord marquis would have had me say my prayers at
+such a time, but, good sooth! I always forgot. And if I had done it,
+where would have been the benefit thereof, so long as thou, who wast
+better used to the work, wast praying against me? I say it is a cowardly
+thing to go praying into the battle, and not take thy fair chance as
+other men do.'
+
+'Then will I tell thee to what purpose I pray. But, first of all, I must
+confess to thee that I have had my doubts, not whether my side were more
+in the right than thine, but whether it were worth while to raise the
+sword even in such cause. Now, still when that doubt cometh, ever it
+taketh from my arm the strength, and going down into the very legs of my
+mare causeth that she goeth dull, although willing, into the battle.
+Moreover, I am no saint, and therefore cannot pray like a saint, but
+only like Richard Heywood, who hath got to do his duty, and is something
+puzzled. Therefore pray I thus, or to this effect:
+
+'"O God of battles! who, thyself dwelling in peace, beholdest the
+strife, and workest thy will thereby, what that good and perfect will of
+thine is I know not clearly, but thou hast sent us to be doing, and thou
+hatest cowardice. Thou knowest I have sought to choose the best, so far
+as goeth my poor ken, and to this battle I am pledged. Give me grace to
+fight like a soldier of thine, without wrath and without fear. Give me
+to do my duty, but give the victory where thou pleasest. Let me live if
+so thou wilt; let me die if so thou wilt--only let me die in honour with
+thee. Let the truth be victorious, if not now, yet when it shall please
+thee; and oh! I pray, let no deed of mine delay its coming. Let my work
+fail, if it be unto evil, but save my soul in truth."
+
+'And in truth, sir Rowland, it seemeth to me then as if the God of truth
+heard me. Then say I to my mare, "Come, Lady, all is well now. Let us
+go. And good will come of it to thee also, for how should the Father
+think of his sparrows and forget his mares? Doubtless there are of thy
+kind in heaven, else how should the apostle have seen them there? And if
+any, surely thou, my Lady!" So ride we to the battle, merry and strong,
+and calm, as if we were but riding to the rampart of the celestial
+city.'
+
+Rowland lay gazing at Richard for a few moments, then said:
+
+'By heaven, but it were a pity you should not come together! Surely the
+same spirit dwelleth in you both! For me, I should show but as the
+shadow cast from her brightness. But I tell thee, roundhead, I love her
+better than ever roundhead could.'
+
+'I know not, Scudamore. Nor do I mean to judge thee when I say that no
+man who loves not the truth can love a woman in the grand way a woman
+ought to be loved.'
+
+'Tell me not I do not love her, or I will rise and kill thee. I love her
+even to doing what my soul hateth for her sake. Damned roundhead, she
+loves THEE.'
+
+The last words came from him almost in a shriek, and he fell back
+panting.
+
+Richard sat silent for a few moments, his heart surging and sinking.
+Then he said quietly:--
+
+'It may be so, sir Rowland. We were boy and girl together--fed rabbits,
+flew kites, planted weeds to make flowers of them, played at marbles;
+she may love me a little, roundhead as I am.'
+
+'By heaven, I will try her once more! Who knows the heart of a woman?'
+said Rowland through his teeth.
+
+'If thou should gain her, Scudamore, and afterward she should find thee
+unworthy?'
+
+'She would love me still.'
+
+'And break her heart for thee, and leave thee young to marry
+another--while I--'
+
+He laughed a low, strangely musical laugh, and ceased--then resumed:--
+
+'But what if, instead of dying, she should learn to despise thee,
+finding thou hadst not only deceived her, but deceived thy better self,
+and should turn from thee with loathing, while thou didst love her
+still--as well as thy nature could?--what then, sir Rowland?'
+
+'Then I should kill her.'
+
+'And thou lovest her better than any roundhead could! I will find thee
+man after man from amongst Ireton's or Cromwell's horse--I know not the
+foot so well:--fanatic enough they are, God knows! and many of them
+fools enough to boot!--but I will find thee man after man who is fanatic
+or fool enough, which thou wilt, to love better than thou, thou poor
+atom of solitary selfishness!'
+
+Rowland half flung himself from the bed, seized Richard by the throat,
+and with all the strength he could summon did his best to strangle him.
+For a time Richard allowed him to spend his rage, then removed his grasp
+as gently as he could, and holding both his wrists in his left hand,
+rose and stood over him.
+
+'Sir Rowland,' he said, 'I am not angry with thee that thou art weak and
+passionate. But bethink thee--thou liest in God's hands a thousandfold
+more helpless than now thou liest in mine, and like Saul of Tarsus thou
+wilt find it hard to kick against the pricks. For the maiden, do as thou
+wilt, for thou canst not do other than the will of God. But I thank thee
+for what thou hast told me, though I doubt it meaneth little better for
+me than for thee. Thou hast a kind heart. I almost love thee, and will
+when I can.'
+
+He let go his hands, and walked from the room.
+
+'Canting hypocrite!' cried sir Rowland in the wrath of impotence, but
+knew while he said the words that they were false.
+
+And with the words the bitterness of life seized his heart, and his
+despair shrouded the world in the blackness of darkness. There was
+nothing more to live for, and he turned his face to the wall.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LI.
+
+UNDER THE MOAT.
+
+
+It was some time ere they discovered that Scudamore was missing from the
+castle, but there was the hope that he had been taken prisoner; and
+things were growing so bad within the walls, that there was little
+leisure for lamentation over individual misfortunes. Unless some change
+as entire as unexpected--for there seemed no chance of any except the
+king should win over the Scots to take his part--should occur, it was
+evident that the enemy must speedily make the assault, nor could there
+be a doubt of their carrying the place--an anticipation which, as the
+inevitable drew nearer, became nothing less than terrible to both
+household and garrison. True, their conquerors would be of their own
+people, but battle and bloodshed and victory, and, worst of all,
+party-spirit, the marquis knew, destroy not nationality merely, but
+humanity as well, rousing into full possession the feline beast which
+has his lair in every man--in many, it is true, dwindled to the
+household cat, but in many others a full-sized, only sleepy tiger. To
+what was he about to expose his men, not to speak of his ladies and
+their children!
+
+On the other hand, ever since the balls had been flying about his house,
+and the stones of it leaving their places to keep them company, the
+loyalty of the marquis had been rising, and he had thought of his
+prisoner-king ever with growing tenderness, of his faults with more
+indulgence, and of the wrongs he had done his family with more
+magnanimity and forgiveness, so that, for his own part, he would have
+held out to the very last.
+
+'And truly were it not better to be well buried under the ruins,' he
+would say to himself, looking down with a sigh at his great bulk, which
+added so much to the dismalness of the prospect of being, in his
+seventieth year, a prisoner or a wanderer--the latter a worse fate even
+than the former. To be no longer the master of his own great house, of
+many willing servants, of all ready appliances for liberty and comfort,
+while the weight of his clumsy person must still hang about him, and his
+unfitness to carry the same go on increasing with the bulk to be
+carried--such a prospect required something more than loyalty to meet it
+with equanimity. To the young and strong, adventure ought always to be
+more attractive than ease, but none save those who are themselves within
+sight of old age can truly imagine what an utter horror the breach of
+old habits and loss of old comforts is to the aged.
+
+But to the good marquis it was consolation enough to repeat to himself
+the text from his precious Vulgate: SCIMUS ENIM; FOR WE KNOW THAT IF OUR
+EARTHLY HOUSE OF THIS TABERNACLE WERE DISSOLVED, WE HAVE A BUILDING OF
+GOD, AN HOUSE NOT MADE WITH HANDS, ETERNAL IN THE HEAVENS.
+
+For the ladies, so long as their father-chief was with them, they were
+at least not too anxious. Whatever was done must be the right thing, and
+in the midst of tumult and threat they were content. If only their
+Edward had been with them too!
+
+But surrender, even when the iron shot was driving his stately house
+into showers of dirt, the marquis found it hard indeed to contemplate.
+The eastern side of the stone court was now little better than a heap of
+rubbish, and the hour of assault could not be far off, although as yet
+there had been no second summons; but he could not forget that, though
+the castle was his, it was not for himself but for his king he held it
+garrisoned, and how could he yield it without the approval of his
+sovereign? The governor shared in the same chivalry with his father, and
+was equally anxious for a word from the king. But that king was a
+prisoner in the hands of a hostile nation, and how was he to receive
+message or return answer? Nay, how were they to send message or receive
+answer, not even knowing with certainty where his majesty was, and but
+presuming that he was still at Newcastle? And not to mention
+difficulties at every step of the way, their house itself was so beset
+that no one could issue from its gates without risk of being stopped,
+searched, detained until it should have fallen. For the besiegers knew
+well enough that lord Glamorgan was still in Ireland, straining his
+utmost on behalf of the king; and what more likely than that he should,
+with the men he was still raising in Ireland, make some desperate
+attempt to turn the scales of war, striking first, it might well be, for
+the relief of his father's castle?
+
+These things were all pretty freely spoken of in the family, and Dorothy
+understood the position of affairs as well as any one. And now at length
+it seemed to her that the hour had arrived for attempting some return
+for Raglan's hospitality. No service she had hitherto stumbled upon had
+any magnitude in her eyes, but now--to be the bearer of dispatches to
+the king! It would suffice at least, even if it turned out a failure, to
+prove her not ungrateful. But she too had her confidant, and in the
+absence of lord Glamorgan would consult with Caspar.
+
+Meantime the marquis had made matters worse by sending a request to
+Colonel Morgan that he would grant safe passage for a messenger to the
+king, without whose command he was not at liberty to surrender the
+place. The answer was to the effect that they acknowledged no
+jurisdiction of the king in the business, and that the marquis might
+keep his mind easy as far as his supposed duty to his majesty was
+concerned, for they would so compel a surrender that there could be no
+reflection upon him for making it.
+
+Caspar, fearful of the dangers she would have to encounter, sought to
+dissuade Dorothy from her meditated proposal--but feebly, for every one
+who had anything noble in his nature, and Caspar had more than his
+share, was influenced by the magnanimity that ruled the place. Indeed he
+told her one thing which served to clench her resolution--that there was
+a secret way out of the castle, provided by his master Glamorgan for
+communication during siege: more he was not at liberty to disclose.
+Dorothy went straight to the marquis and laid her plan before him, which
+was that she should make her escape to Wyfern, and thence, attended by
+an old servant, set out to seek the king.
+
+'There is no longer time, alas!' returned the marquis. 'I look for the
+final summons every hour.'
+
+'Could you not raise the report, my lord, that you have undermined the
+castle, and laid a huge quantity of gunpowder, with the determination of
+blowing it up the moment they enter? That would make them fall back upon
+blockade, and leave us a little time. Our provisions are not nearly
+exhausted, and when fodder fails, we can eat the horses first.'
+
+'Thou art a brave lady, cousin Dorothy,' said the marquis. 'But if they
+caught and searched thee, and found papers upon thee, it would go worse
+with us than before.'
+
+'Please your lordship, my lord Glamorgan once showed me such a comb as a
+lady might carry in her pocket, but so contrived that the head thereof
+was hollow and could contain despatches. Methinks Caspar could lay his
+hand on the comb. If I were but at Wyfern! and thither my little horse
+would carry me in less than hour, giving all needful time for caution
+too, my lord.'
+
+'By George, thou speakest well, cousin!' said the marquis. 'But who
+should attend thee?'
+
+'Let me have Tom Fool, my lord, for now have I thought of a betterment
+of my plan: he will guide me to his mother's house by by-ways, and
+thence can I cross the fields to my own--as easily as the great hall, my
+lord.'
+
+'Tom Fool is a mighty coward,' objected the marquis.
+
+'So much the better, my lord. He will not get me into trouble through
+displaying his manhood before me. He hath besides a face long enough for
+three roundheads, and a tongue that can utter glibly enough what
+soundeth very like their jargon. Tom is the right fool to attend me, my
+lord.'
+
+'He can't ride; he never backed a horse in his life, I believe. No, no,
+Dorothy. Shafto is the man.'
+
+'Shafto is much too ready, my lord. He would ride over my hounds. I want
+Tom no farther than his mother's, and there will be no need for him to
+ride.'
+
+'Well, it is a brave offer, my child, and I will think thereupon,' said
+his lordship.
+
+All the rest of the day the marquis and lord Charles, with two or three
+of the principal officers of house and garrison, were in conference, and
+letters were written both to his majesty and lord Glamorgan. Before they
+were finally written out in cipher, Kaltoff was sent for, the comb
+found, its contents gauged, and the paper cut to suit.
+
+About an hour after midnight, Dorothy, lord Charles, and Caspar stood
+together in the workshop, waiting for Tom Fool, who had gone to fetch
+Dick from the stables. Dorothy had the comb in her pocket. She looked
+pale, but her grey eyes shone with courage and determination. She
+carried nothing but a whip. A keen little lamp borne by Caspar was all
+their light.
+
+Presently they heard the sound of Dick's hoofs on the bridge. A moment
+more and Tom led him in, both man and horse looking somewhat scared at
+the strangeness of the midnight proceeding. But Tom was,
+notwithstanding, glad of the office, and ready to risk a good deal in
+order to get out of the castle, where he expected nothing milder at last
+than a general massacre.
+
+Lord Charles himself lifted foot after foot of the little horse to be
+satisfied that his shoes were sound, then made a sign to Caspar, and
+gave his hand to Dorothy. Caspar took Dick by the bridle, and led him up
+to the wall near the door. Lord Charles and Dorothy followed. But Tom,
+observing that they placed themselves within a chalk-drawn circle, hung
+back in terror; he fancied Caspar was going to raise the devil. Yet he
+knew that within the circle was the only safety; a word from Dorothy
+turned the scale, and he stood trembling by her side. Nor was he greatly
+consoled to find that, as he now thought, instead of the devil coming to
+them, they were going to him, as, with the circle upon which they stood,
+they began to sink, through a stone-faced shaft, slowly into the
+foundations of the keep. Dick also was frightened, but happily his faith
+was stronger than his imagination, and a word now and then from his
+mistress, and an occasional pat from her well-known hand, sufficed to
+keep him quiet.
+
+At the depth of about thirty feet they stopped, and found themselves
+facing a ponderous door, studded and barred with iron. Caspar took from
+his pocket a key about the size of a goose quill, felt about for a
+moment, and then with a slight movement of finger and thumb threw back a
+dozen ponderous bolts with a great echoing clang; the door slowly
+opened, and they entered a narrow vaulted passage of stone. Lord Charles
+took the lamp from Caspar, and led the way with Dorothy; Tom Fool came
+next, and Caspar followed with Dick. The lamp showed but a few feet of
+the walls and roof, and revealed nothing in front until they had gone
+about a furlong, when it shone upon what seemed the live rock ending
+their way. But again Caspar applied the little key somewhere, and
+immediately a great mass of rock slowly turned on a pivot, and permitted
+them to pass.
+
+When they were all on the other side of it, lord Charles turned and held
+up the light. Dorothy turned also and looked: there was nothing to
+indicate whence they had come. Before her was the rough rock, seemingly
+solid, certainly slimy and green, and over its face was flowing a tiny
+rivulet.
+
+'See there,' said lord Charles, pointing up; 'that little stream comes
+the way thy dog Marquis and the roundhead Heywood came and went. But I
+challenge anything larger than a rat to go now.'
+
+Dorothy made no answer, and they went on again for some distance in a
+passage like the former, but soon arrived at the open quarry, whence Tom
+knew the way across the fields to the high road as well, he said, as the
+line of life on his own palm. Lord Charles lifted Dorothy to the saddle,
+said good-luck and good-bye, and stood with Caspar watching as she rode
+up the steep ascent, until for an instant her form stood out dark
+against the sky, then vanished, when they turned and re-entered the
+castle.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LII.
+
+THE UNTOOTHSOME PLUM.
+
+
+It was a starry night, with a threatening of moonrise, and Dorothy was
+anxious to reach the cottage before it grew lighter. But they must not
+get into the high road at any nearer point than the last practicable,
+for then they would be more likely to meet soldiers, and Dick's feet to
+betray their approach. Over field after field, therefore, they kept on,
+as fast as Tom, now and then stopping to peer anxiously over the next
+fence or into a boundary ditch, could lead the way. At last they reached
+the place by the side of a bridge, where Marquis led Richard off the
+road, and there they scrambled up.
+
+'O Lord!' cried Tom, and waked a sentry dozing on the low parapet.
+
+'Who goes there?' he cried, starting up, and catching at his carbine,
+which leaned against the wall.
+
+'Oh, master!' began Tom, in a voice of terrified appeal; but Dorothy
+interrupted him.
+
+'I am an honest woman of the neighbourhood,' she said. 'An' thou wilt
+come home with me, I will afford thee a better bed than thou hast there,
+and also a better breakfast, I warrant thee, than thou had a supper.'
+
+'That is, an' thou be one of the godly,' supplemented Tom.
+
+'I thank thee, mistress,' returned the sentinel, 'but not for the
+indulgence of carnal appetite will I forsake my post. Who is he goeth
+with thee?'
+
+'A fellow whose wit is greater than his courage, and yet he goeth with
+many for a born fool. A parlous coward he is, else might he now be
+fighting the Amalekites with the sword of the Lord and of Gideon. Yet in
+good sooth he serveth me well for the nonce.'
+
+The sentry glanced at Tom, but could see little of him except a long
+white oval, and Tom was now collected enough to put in exercise his best
+wisdom, which consisted in holding his tongue.
+
+'Answer me then, mistress, how, being a godly woman, as I doubt not from
+thy speech thou art, thee rides thus late with none but a fool to keep
+thee company? Knowest thou not that the country is full of soldiers,
+whereof some, though that they be all true-hearted and right-minded men,
+would not mayhap carry themselves so civil to a woman as corporal
+Bearbanner? And now, I bethink me, thou comest from the direction of
+Raglan!'
+
+Here he drew himself up, summoned a voice from his chest a storey or two
+deeper, and asked in magisterial tone:
+
+'Whence comest thou, woman? and on what business gaddest thou so late?'
+
+'I am come from visiting at a friend's house, and am now almost on my
+own farm,' answered Dorothy.
+
+The man turned to Tom, and Dorothy began to regret she had brought him:
+he was trembling visibly, and his mouth was wide open with terror.
+
+'See,' she said, 'how thy gruff voice terrifieth the innocent! If now he
+should fall in a fit thou wert to blame.'
+
+As she spoke she put her hand in her pocket, and taking from it her
+untoothsome plum, popped it into Tom's mouth. Instantly he began to make
+such strange uncouth noises that the sentinel thought he had indeed
+terrified him into a fit.
+
+'I must get him straightway home. Good-night, friend,' said Dorothy, and
+giving Dick the rein, she was off like the wind, heedless of the shouts
+of the sentinel or the feeble cries of pursuing Tom, who, if he could
+not fight, could run. Following his mistress at great speed, he was
+instantly lost in the darkness, and the sentinel, who had picketed his
+horse in a neighbouring field, sat down again on the parapet of the
+bridge, and began to examine all that Dorothy had said with a wondrous
+inclination to discover the strong points in it.
+
+Having galloped a little way, Dorothy drew bridle and halted for Tom. As
+soon as he came up, she released him, and telling him to lay hold of
+Dick's mane and run alongside, kept him at a fast trot all the way to
+his mother's house.
+
+The moon had risen before they reached it, and Dorothy was therefore
+glad, when she dismounted at the gate, to think she need ride no
+further. But while Tom went in to rouse his mother, she let Dick have a
+few bites of the grass before taking him into the kitchen--lest the
+roundheads should find him. The next moment, however, out came Tom in
+terror, saying there was a man in his mother's closet, and he feared the
+roundheads were in possession.
+
+'Then take care of thyself, Tom,' said Dorothy; and mounting instantly,
+she made Dick scramble up into the fields that lay between the cottage
+and her own house, and set off at full speed across the grass in the
+moonlight--an ethereal pleasure which not even an anxious secret could
+blast.
+
+Through a gap in the hedge she had just popped into the second field,
+when she heard the click of a flint-lock, and a voice she thought she
+knew ordering her to stand: within a few yards of her was again a
+roundhead soldier. If she rode away, he would fire at her; that mode of
+escape therefore she would keep for a last chance. The moon by this time
+was throwing an unclouded light from more than half a disc upon the
+field.
+
+Keeping a sharp eye upon the man's movements, she allowed him to come
+within a pace or two, but the moment he would have taken Dick by the
+bridle she was three or four yards away.
+
+'Fright not my horse, friend,' she said.--'But how!' she added, suddenly
+remembering him, 'is it possible? Master Upstill! Gently, gently, little
+Dick! Master Upstill is an old friend. What! hast thou too turned
+soldier? Left thy last and lapstone and turned soldier, master Upstill?'
+
+'I have left all and followed him, mistress,' answered Cast-down.
+
+'Art sure he called thee, master Upstill?'
+
+'I heard him with my own ears.'
+
+'Called thee to be a shedder of blood, master Upstill?'
+
+'Called me to be a fisher of men, and thee I catch, mistress--thus,'
+returned the man, stepping quickly forward and making another grasp at
+Dick's bridle.
+
+It was all Dorothy could do to keep herself from giving him a smart blow
+across the face with her whip, and riding off. But she gave Dick the cut
+instead, and sent him yards away.
+
+'Poor Dick! poor Dick!' she said, patting his neck; 'be quiet; master
+Upstill will do thee no wrong. Be quiet, little man.'
+
+As she thus talked to her genet, Upstill again drew near, now more surly
+than at first.
+
+'Say what manner of woman art thou?' he demanded with pompous anger.
+'Whence comes thou, and whither does thee go?'
+
+'Home,' answered Dorothy.
+
+'What place calls thee home?'
+
+'Why! dost not know me, master Upstill? When I was a little one, thou
+didst make my shoes for me.'
+
+'I trust it will be forgiven me, mistress. Truly I had ne'er made shoe
+for thee an' I had foreseen what thee would come to! For I make no
+farther doubt thou art a consorter with malignants, harlots, and
+papists.'
+
+Again he clutched at her bridle, and this time, whether it was Dorothy
+or Dick's fault, with success. Dorothy dropped the bridle, put her hand
+in her pocket, struck Dick smartly with her whip, and as he reared in
+consequence, drew it across Upstill's eyes, and so found the chance of
+administering her bolus.
+
+It was thoroughly effective. The fellow left his hold of the bridle, and
+began a series of efforts to remove it, which rapidly grew wilder and
+wilder, until at last his gestures were those of a maniac.
+
+'There!' she cried, as she bounded from him, 'take thy first lesson in
+good manners. No one can rid thee of that mouthful, which is as thy evil
+words returned to choke thee!--Thou hadst better keep me in sight,' she
+added, as she gave Dick his head, 'for no one else can free thee.'
+
+Upstill ceased his futile efforts, caught up his carbine, and fired--not
+without risk to Dorothy, for he was far too wrathful to take the aim
+that would have ensured her safety. But she rode on unhurt, meditating
+how to secure Upstill when she got him to Wyfern, whither she doubted
+not he would follow her. Her difficulties were not yet past, however,
+for just as she reached her own ground, she was once again met by the
+order to stand.
+
+This time it came in a voice which, notwithstanding the anxiety it
+brought with it, was almost as welcome as well known, and yet made her
+tremble for the first time that night: it was the voice of Richard
+Heywood. Dick also seemed to know it, for he stood without a hint from
+his mistress, while, through the last hedge that parted her from the
+little yet remaining of the property of her fathers, came the man she
+loved--an enemy between her and her own.
+
+The marquis's request to be allowed to communicate with the king had
+been an unfortunate one. It increased suspicion of all kinds, rendered
+the various reports of the landing of the Irish army under lord
+Glamorgan more credible, roused the resolution to render all
+communication impossible, and led to the drawing of a cordon around the
+place that not a soul should pass unquestioned. The measure would indeed
+have been unavailing had the garrison been as able as formerly to make
+sallies; but ever since colonel Morgan received his reinforcement, the
+issuing troopers had been invariably met at but a few yards from home,
+and immediately driven in again by largely superior numbers. Still the
+cordon required a good many more men than the besieging party could well
+spare without too much weakening their positions, and they had therefore
+sought the aid of all the gentlemen of puritian politics in the
+vicinity, and of course that of Mr. Heywood. With the men his father
+sent, Richard himself offered his services, in the hope that, at the
+coming fall of the stronghold, he might have a chance of being useful to
+Dorothy. They had given the cordon a wide extension, in order that an
+issuing messenger might not perceive his danger until he was too far
+from the castle to regain it, and then by capturing him might acquire
+information. Hence it came that posts could be assigned to Richard and
+his men within such a distance of Redware as admitted of their being
+with their own people when off duty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIII.
+
+FAITHFUL FOES.
+
+
+Hearing Upstill's shot, and then Dick's hoofs on the sward, Richard
+fortunately judged well and took the right direction. What was his
+astonishment and delight when, passing hurriedly through the hedge in
+the expectation of encountering a cavalier, he saw Dorothy mounted on
+Dick! What form but hers had been filling soul and brain when he was
+startled by the shot! And there she was before him! He felt like one who
+knows the moon is weaving a dream in his brain.
+
+'Dorothy,' he murmured tremblingly, and his voice sounded to him like
+that of some one speaking far away. He drew nearer, as one might
+approach a beloved ghost, anxious not to scare her. He laid his hand on
+Dick's neck, half fearful of finding him but a shadow.
+
+'Richard!' said Dorothy, looking down on him benignant as Diana upon
+Endymion.
+
+Then suddenly, at her voice and the assurance of her bodily presence, a
+great wave from the ocean of duty broke thunderous on the shore of his
+consciousness.
+
+'Dorothy, I am bound to question thee,' he said: 'whence comest thou?
+and whither art thou bound?'
+
+'If I should refuse to answer thee, Richard?' returned Dorothy with a
+smile.
+
+'Then must I take thee to headquarters. And bethink thee, Dorothy, how
+that would cut me to the heart.'
+
+The moon shone full upon his face, and Dorothy saw the end of a great
+scar that came from under his hat down on to his forehead.
+
+'Then will I answer thee, Richard,' she said, with a strange trembling
+in her voice. '--I come from Raglan.'
+
+'And whither art going, Dorothy?'
+
+'To Wyfern.'
+
+'On what business?'
+
+'Were it then so wonderful, Richard, if I should desire to be at home,
+seeing Wyfern is now safer than Raglan? It was for safety I went
+thither, thou knowest.'
+
+'It might not be wonderful in another, Dorothy, but in thee it were
+truly wonderful; for now are they of Raglan thy friends, and thou art a
+brave woman, and lovest thy friends. I would not believe it of thee even
+from the mouth of thy mother. Confess--thou bearest about thee that thou
+wouldst not willingly show me.'
+
+Dorothy, as if in embarrassment, drew from her pocket her handkerchief,
+and with it a comb, which fell on the ground.
+
+'Prithee, Richard, pick me up my comb,' she said; then, answering his
+question, continued, '--No, I have nothing about me I would not show
+thee, Richard: wilt thou take my word for it?'
+
+When she had spoken, she held out her hand, and receiving from him the
+comb, replaced it in her pocket. But a keen pang of remorse went through
+her heart.
+
+'I am a man under authority,' said Richard, 'and my orders will not
+allow me. Besides thou knowest, Dorothy, although it involves such
+questions in casuistry as I cannot meet, men say thou art not bound to
+tell the truth to thine enemy.'
+
+'An' thou be mine enemy, Richard, then must thou satisfy thyself,' said
+Dorothy, trying to speak in a tone of offence. But while she sat there
+looking at him, it seemed as if her heart were floating on the top of a
+great wave out somewhere in the moonlight. Yet the conscience-dog was
+awake in his kennel.
+
+Richard stood for a moment in silent perplexity.
+
+'Wilt thou swear to me, Dorothy,' he said at length, 'that thou hast no
+papers about thee, neither art the bearer of news or request or sign to
+any of the king's party?'
+
+'Richard,' returned Dorothy, 'thou hast thyself taken from my words the
+credit: I say to thee again, satisfy thyself.'
+
+'Dorothy, what AM I to do?' he cried.
+
+'Thy duty, Richard,' she answered.
+
+'My duty is to search thee,' he said.
+
+Dorothy was silent. Her heart was beating terribly, but she would see
+the end of the path she had taken ere she would think of turning. And
+she WOULD trust Richard. Would she then have him fail of his duty? Would
+she have the straight-going Richard swerve? Even in the face of her
+maidenly fears, she would encounter anything rather than Richard should
+for her sake be false. But Richard would not turn aside. Neither would
+he shame her. He would find some way.
+
+'Do then thy duty, Richard,' she said, and sliding from her saddle, she
+stood before him, one hand grasping Dick's mane.
+
+There was no defiance in her tone. She was but submitting, assured of
+deliverance.
+
+What was Richard to do? Never man was more perplexed. He dared not let
+her pass. He dared no more touch her than if she had been Luna herself
+standing there. He would not had he dared, and yet he must. She was
+silent, seemed to herself cruel, and began bitterly to accuse herself.
+She saw his hazel eyes slowly darken, then began to glitter--was it with
+gathering tears? The glitter grew and overflowed. The man was weeping!
+The tenderness of their common childhood rushed back upon her in a great
+wave out of the past, ran into the rising billow of present passion, and
+swelled it up till it towered and broke; she threw her arm round his
+neck and kissed him. He stood in a dumb ecstasy. Then terror lest he
+should think she was tempting him to brave his conscience overpowered
+her.
+
+'Richard, do thy duty. Regard not me,' she cried in anguish.
+
+Richard gave a strange laugh as he answered,
+
+'There was a time when I had doubted the sun in heaven as soon as thy
+word, Dorothy. This is surely an evil time. Tell me, yea or nay, hast
+thou missives to the king or any of his people? Palter not with me.'
+
+But such an appeal was what Dorothy would least willingly encounter. The
+necessity yet difficulty of escaping it stimulated the wits that had
+been overclouded by feeling. A light appeared. She broke into a real
+merry laugh.
+
+'What a pair of fools we are, Richard!' she said. 'Is there never an
+honest woman of thy persuasion near--one who would show me no favour?
+Let such an one search me, and tell thee the truth.'
+
+'Doubtless,' answered Richard, laughing very differently now at his
+stupidity, yet immediately committing a blunder: 'there is mother Rees!'
+
+'What a baby thou art, Richard!' rejoined Dorothy. 'She is as good a
+friend of mine as of thine, and would doubtless favour the wiles of a
+woman.'
+
+'True, true! Thou wast always the keener of wit, Dorothy--as becometh a
+woman. What say'st thou then to dame Upstill? She is even now at the
+farm there, whence she watches over her husband while he watches over
+Raglan. Will she answer thy turn?'
+
+'She will,' replied Dorothy. 'And that she may show me no favour, here
+comes her husband, who shall bear a witness against me shall rouse in
+her all the malice of vengeance for her injured spouse, whom for his
+evil language, as thou shalt see, I have so silenced as neither thou nor
+any man can restore him to speech.'
+
+While she spoke, Upstill, who had followed his enemy as the sole hope of
+deliverance, drew near, in such plight as the dignity of narrative
+refuses to describe.
+
+'Upstill,' said Richard, 'what meaneth this? Wherefore hast thou left
+thy post? And above all, wherefore hast thou permitted this lady to pass
+unquestioned?'
+
+Sounds of gurgle and strangulation, with other cognate noises, was all
+Upstill's response.
+
+'Indeed, Mr. Heywood,' said Dorothy, 'he was so far from neglecting his
+duty and allowing me to pass unquestioned, that he insulted me
+grievously, averring that I consorted with malignant rogues and papists,
+and worse--the which drove me to punish him as thou seest.'
+
+'Cast-down Upstill, thou hast shamed thy regiment, carrying thyself thus
+to a gentlewoman,' said Richard.
+
+'Then he fired his carbine after me,' said Dorothy.
+
+'That may have been but his duty,' returned Richard.
+
+'And worst of all,' continued Dorothy, 'he said that had he known what I
+should grow to, he would never have made shoes for me when I was an
+infant. Think on that, master Heywood!'
+
+'Ask the lady to pardon thee, Upstill. I can do nothing for thee,' said
+Richard.
+
+Upstill would have knelt, in lack of other mode of petition strong
+enough to express the fervour of his desires for release, but Dorothy
+was content to see him punished, and would not see him degraded.
+
+'Nay, master Upstill,' she said, 'I desire not that thou shouldst take
+the measure of my foot to-night. Prithee, master Heywood, wilt thou
+venture thy fingers in the godly man's mouth for me? Here is the key of
+the toy, a sucket which will pass neither teeth nor throat. I warrant
+thee it were no evil thing for many a married woman to possess. I will
+give it thee when thou marriest, master Heywood, though, good sooth, it
+were hardly fair to my kind!'
+
+So saying she took a ring from her finger, raised from it a key, and
+directed Richard how to find its hole in the plum.
+
+'There! Follow us now to the farm, and find thy wife, for we need her
+aid,' said Richard as he drew by the key the little steel instrument
+from Upstill's mouth, and restored him to the general body of the
+articulate.
+
+Thereupon he took Dick by the bridle, and Dorothy and he walked side by
+side, as if they had been still boy and girl as of old--for of old it
+already seemed.
+
+As they went, Richard washed both plum and ring in the dewy grass, and
+restored them, putting the ring upon her finger.
+
+'With better light I will one day show thee how the thing worketh,' she
+said, thanking him. 'Holding it thus by the ends, thou seest, it will
+bear to be pressed; but remove thy finger and thumb, and straight upon a
+touch it shooteth its stings in all directions. And yet another day,
+when these troubles are over, and honest folk need no longer fight each
+other, I will give it thee, Richard.'
+
+'Would that day were here, Dorothy! But what can honest people do, while
+St. George and St. Michael are themselves at odds?'
+
+'Mayhap it but seemeth so, and they but dispute across the Yule-log,'
+said Dorothy; 'and men down here, like the dogs about the fire, take it
+up, and fall a-worrying each other. But the end will crown all.'
+
+'Discrown some, I fear,' said Richard to himself.
+
+As they reached the farm-house, it was growing light. Upstill fetched
+his dame from her bed in the hayloft, and Richard told her, in formal
+and authoritative manner, what he required of her.
+
+'I will search her!' answered the dame from between her closed teeth.
+
+'Mistress Vaughan,' said Richard, 'if she offer thee evil words, give
+her the same lesson thou gavest her husband. If all tales be true, she
+is not beyond the need of it.--Search her well, mistress Upstill, but
+show her no rudeness, for she hath the power to avenge it in a parlous
+manner, having gone to school to my lord Herbert of Raglan. Not the less
+must thou search her well, else will I look upon thee as no better than
+one of the malignants.'
+
+The woman cast a glance of something very like hate, but mingled with
+fear, upon Dorothy.
+
+'I like not the business, captain Heywood,' she said.
+
+'Yet the business must be done, mistress Upstill. And hark'ee, for every
+paper thou findest upon her, I will give thee its weight in gold. I care
+not what it is. Bring it hither, and the dame's butter-scales withal.'
+
+'I warrant thee, captain!' she returned. '--Come with me, mistress, and
+show what thou hast about thee. But, good sooth, I would the sun were
+up!'
+
+She led the way to the rick-yard, and round towards the sunrise. It was
+the month of August, and several new ricks already stood facing the
+east, yellow, and beginning to glow like a second dawn. Between the two,
+mistress Upstill began her search, which she made more thorough than
+agreeable. Dorothy submitted without complaint.
+
+At last, as she was giving up the quest in despair, her eyes or her
+fingers discovered a little opening inside the prisoner's bodice, and
+there sure enough was a pocket, and in the pocket a slip of paper! She
+drew it out in triumph.
+
+'That is nothing,' said Dorothy: 'give it me.' And with flushed face she
+made a snatch at it.
+
+'Holy Mary!' cried dame Upstill, whose protestantism was of doubtful
+date, and thrust the paper into her own bosom.
+
+'That paper hath nothing to do with state affairs, I protest,'
+expostulated Dorothy. 'I will give thee ten times its weight in gold for
+it.'
+
+But mistress Upstill had other passions besides avarice, and was not
+greatly tempted by the offer. She took Dorothy by the arm, and said,
+
+'An' thou come not quickly, I will cry that all the parish shall hear
+me.'
+
+'I tell thee, mistress Upstill, on the oath of a Christian woman, it is
+but a private letter of mine own, and beareth nothing upon affairs.
+Prithee read a word or two, and satisfy thyself.'
+
+'Nay, mistress, truly I will pry into no secrets that belong not to me,'
+said the searcher, who could read no word of writing or print either.
+'This paper is no longer thine, and mine it never was. It belongeth to
+the high court of parliament, and goeth straight to captain
+Heywood--whom I will inform concerning the bribe wherewith thou didst
+seek to corrupt the conscience of a godly woman.'
+
+Dorothy saw there was no help, and yielded to the grasp of the dame, who
+led her like a culprit, with burning cheek, back to her judge.
+
+When Richard saw them his heart sank within him.
+
+'What hast thou found?' he asked gruffly.
+
+'I have found that which young mistress here would have had me cover
+with a bribe of ten times that your honour promised me for it,' answered
+the woman. 'She had it in her bosom, hid in a pocket little bigger than
+a crown-piece, inside her bodice.'
+
+'Ha, mistress Dorothy! is this true?' asked Richard, turning on her a
+face of distress.
+
+'It is true,' answered Dorothy, with downcast eyes--far more ashamed
+however, of that which had not been discovered, and which might have
+justified Richard's look, than of that which he now held in his hand.
+'Prithee,' she added, 'do not read it till I am gone.'
+
+'That may hardly be,' returned Richard, almost sullenly. 'Upon this
+paper it may depend whether thou go at all.'
+
+'Believe me, Richard, it hath no importance,' she said, and her blushes
+deepened. 'I would thou wouldst believe me.'
+
+But as she said it, her conscience smote her.
+
+Richard returned no answer, neither did he open the paper, but stood
+with his eyes fixed on the ground.
+
+Dorothy meantime strove to quiet her conscience, saying to herself: 'It
+matters not; I must marry him one day--an' he will now have me. Hath not
+the woman told him where the silly paper was hid? And when I am married
+to him, then will I tell him all, and doubtless he will forgive me--Nay,
+nay, I must tell him first, for he might not then wish to have me. Lord!
+Lord! what a time of lying it is! Sure for myself I am no better than
+one of the wicked!'
+
+But now Richard, slowly, reluctantly, with eyes averted, opened the
+paper, stood for an instant motionless, then suddenly raised it, and
+looked at it. His face changed at once from midnight to morning, and the
+sunrise was red. He put the paper to his lips, and thrust it inside his
+doublet. It was his own letter to her by Marquis! She had not thought to
+remove it from the place where she had carried it ever since receiving
+it.
+
+'And now, master Heywood, I may go where I will?' said Dorothy,
+venturing a half-roguish, but wholly shamefaced glance at him.
+
+But Dame Upstill was looking on, and Richard therefore brought as much
+of the midnight as would obey orders, back over his countenance as he
+answered:
+
+'Nay, mistress. An' we had found aught upon thee of greater consequence
+it might have made a question. But this hardly accounts for thy mission.
+Doubtless thou bearest thy message in thy mind.'
+
+'What! thou wilt not let me go to Wyfern, to my own house, master
+Heywood?' said Dorothy in a tone of disappointment, for her heart now at
+length began to fail her.
+
+'Not until Raglan is ours,' answered Richard. 'Then shalt thou go where
+thou wilt. And go where thou wilt, there will I follow thee, Dorothy.'
+
+From the last clause of this speech he diverted mistress Upstill's
+attention by throwing her a gold noble, an indignity which the woman
+rightly resented--but stooped for the money!
+
+'Go tell thy husband that I wait him here,' he said.
+
+'Thou shalt follow me nowhither,' said Dorothy, angrily. 'Wherefore
+should not I go to Wyfern and there abide? Thou canst there watch her
+whom thou trustest not.'
+
+'Who can tell what manner of person might not creep to Wyfern, to whom
+there might messages be given, or whom thou mightest send, credenced by
+secret word or sign?'
+
+'Whither, then, am I to go?' asked Dorothy, with dignity.
+
+'Alas, Dorothy!' answered Richard, 'there is no help: I must take thee
+to Raglan. But comfort thyself--soon shalt thou go where thou wilt.'
+
+Dorothy marvelled at her own resignation the while she rode with Richard
+back to the castle. Her scheme was a failure, but through no fault, and
+she could bear anything with composure except blame.
+
+A word from Richard to colonel Morgan was sufficient. A messenger with a
+flag of truce was sent instantly to the castle, and the firing on both
+sides ceased. The messenger returned, the gate was opened, and Dorothy
+re-entered, defeated, but bringing her secrets back with her.
+
+'Tit for tat,' said the marquis when she had recounted her adventures.
+'Thou and the roundhead are well matched. There is no avoiding of it,
+cousin! It is your fate, as clear as if your two horoscopes had run into
+one. Mind thee, hearts are older than crowns, and love outlives all but
+leasing.'
+
+'All but leasing!' repeated Dorothy to herself, and the BUT was bitter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIV.
+
+DOMUS DISSOLVITUR.
+
+
+Scudamore was now much better, partly from the influence of reviving
+hopes with regard to Dorothy, for his disposition was such that he
+deceived himself in the direction of what he counted advantage; not like
+Heywood, who was ever ready to believe what in matters personal told
+against him. Tom Fool had just been boasting of his exploit in escaping
+from Raglan, and expressing his conviction that Dorothy, whom he had
+valiantly protected, was safe at Wyfern, and Rowland was in consequence
+dressing as fast as he could to pay her a visit, when Tom caught sight
+of Richard riding towards the cottage, and jumping up, ran into the
+chimney corner beyond his mother, who was busy with Scudamore's
+breakfast. She looked from the window, and spied the cause of his
+terror.
+
+'Silly Tom!' she said, for she still treated him like a child,
+notwithstanding her boastful belief in his high position and merits, 'he
+will not harm thee. There never was hurt in a Heywood.'
+
+'Treason, flat treason, witch!' cried the voice of Scudamore from the
+closet.
+
+'Thee of all men, sir Rowland, has no cause to say so,' returned
+mistress Rees. 'But come and break thy fast while he talks to thee, and
+save the precious time which runneth so fast away.'
+
+'I might as well be in my grave for any value it hath to me!' said
+Rowland, who was for the moment in a bad mood. His hope and his faith
+were ever ready to fall out, and a twinge in his shoulder was enough to
+set them jarring.
+
+'Here comes master Heywood, anyhow,' said the old woman, as Richard,
+leaving Lady at the gate, came striding up the walk in his great brown
+boots; 'and I pray you, sir Rowland, to let by-gones be by-gones, for my
+sake if not for your own, lest thou bring the vengeance of general
+Fairfax upon my poor house.'
+
+'Fairfax!' cried Scudamore; 'is that villain come hither?'
+
+'Sir Thomas Fairfax arrived two days agone, answered mistress Rees.
+'Alas, it is but too sure a sign that for Raglan the end is near!'
+
+'Good morrow, mother Rees,' said Richard, looking in at the door,
+radiant as an Apollo. The same moment out came Scudamore from the
+closet, pale as a dying moon.
+
+'I want my horse, Heywood!' he cried, deigning no preliminaries.
+
+'Thy horse is at Redware, Scudamore; I carry him not in my pocket. I saw
+him yesterday; his flesh hath swallowed a good many of his bones since I
+looked on him last. What wouldst thou with him?'
+
+'What is that to thee? Let me have him.'
+
+'Softly, sir Rowland! It is true I promised thee thy liberty, but
+liberty doth not necessarily include a horse.'
+
+'Thou wast never better than a shifting fanatic!' cried sir Rowland.
+
+'An' I served thee as befitted, thou shouldst never see thy horse
+again,' returned Richard. 'Yet I promise thee that so soon as Raglan
+hath fallen, he shall again be thine. Nay, I care not. Tell me whither
+thou goest, and--Ha! art thou there?' he cried, interrupting himself as
+he caught sight of Tom in the chimney corner; and pausing, he stood
+silent for a moment. '--Wouldst like to hear, thou rascal,' he resumed
+presently, 'that mistress Dorothy Vaughan got safe to Wyfern this
+morning?'
+
+'God be praised!' said Tom Fool.
+
+'But thou shalt not hear it. I will tell thee better if less welcome
+news--that I come from conducting her back to Raglan in safety, and have
+seen its gates close upon her. Thou shalt have thy horse, sir Rowland,
+an' thou can wait for him an hour; but for thy ride to Wyfern, that,
+thou seest, would not avail thee. Thy cousin rode by here this morning,
+it is true, but, as I say, she is now within Raglan walls, whence she
+will not issue again until the soldiers of the parliament enter. It is
+no treason to tell thee that general Fairfax is about to send his final
+summons ere he storm the rampart.'
+
+'Then mayst thou keep the horse, for I will back to Raglan on foot,'
+said Scudamore.
+
+'Nay, that wilt thou not, for nought greatly larger than a mouse can any
+more pass through the lines. Dost think because I sent back thy cousin
+Dorothy, lest she should work mischief outside the walls, I will
+therefore send thee back to work mischief within them?'
+
+'And thou art the man who professeth to love mistress Dorothy!' cried
+Scudamore with contempt.
+
+'Hark thee, sir Rowland, and for thy good I will tell thee more. It is
+but just that as I told thee my doubts, whence thou didst draw hope, I
+should now tell thee my hopes, whence thou mayst do well to draw a
+little doubt.'
+
+'Thou art a mean and treacherous villain!' cried Scudamore.
+
+'Thou art to blame in speaking that thou dost not believe, sir Rowland.
+But wilt thou have thy horse or no?'
+
+'No; I will remain where I am until I hear the worst.'
+
+'Or come home with me, where thou wilt hear it yet sooner. Thou shalt
+taste a roundhead's hospitality.'
+
+'I scorn thee and thy false friendship,' cried Rowland, and turning
+again into the closet, he bolted the door.
+
+That same morning a great iron ball struck the marble horse on his proud
+head, and flung it in fragments over the court. From his neck the water
+bubbled up bright and clear, like the life-blood of the wounded
+whiteness.
+
+'Poor Molly!' said the marquis, when he looked from his
+study-window--then smiled at his pity.
+
+Lord Charles entered: a messenger had come from general Fairfax,
+demanding a surrender in the name of the parliament.
+
+'If they had but gone on a little longer, Charles, they might have saved
+us the trouble,' said his lordship, 'for there would have been nothing
+left to surrender.--But I will consider the proposal,' he added. 'Pray
+tell sir Thomas that whatever I do, I look first to have it approved of
+the king.'
+
+But there was no longer the shadow of a question as to submission. All
+that was left was but the arrangement of conditions. The marquis was
+aware that captain Hooper's trenches were rapidly approaching the
+rampart; that six great mortars for throwing shells had been got into
+position; and that resistance would be the merest folly.
+
+Various meetings, therefore, of commissioners appointed on both sides
+for the settling of the terms of submission took place; and at last, on
+the fifteenth of August, they were finally arranged, and the surrender
+fixed for the seventeenth.
+
+The interval was a sad time. All day long tears were flowing, the ladies
+doing their best to conceal, the servants to display them. Every one was
+busy gathering together what personal effects might be carried away. It
+was especially a sad time for lord Glamorgan's children, for they were
+old enough not merely to love the place, but to know that they loved it;
+and the thought that the sacred things of their home were about to pass
+into other hands, roused in them wrath and indignation as well as grief;
+for the sense of property is, in the minds of children who have been
+born and brought up in the midst of family possessions, perhaps stronger
+than in the minds of their elders.
+
+As the sun was going down on the evening of the sixteenth, Dorothy, who
+had been helping now one and now another of the ladies all day long,
+having, indeed, little of her own to demand her attention, Dick and
+Marquis being almost her sole valuables, came from the keep, and was
+crossing the fountain court to her old room on its western side. Every
+one was busy indoors, and the place appeared deserted. There was a
+stillness in the air that SOUNDED awful. For so many weeks it had been
+shattered with roar upon roar, and now the guns had ceased to bellow,
+leaving a sense of vacancy and doubt, an oppression of silence. The hum
+that came from the lines outside seemed but to enhance the stillness
+within. But the sunlight lived on sweet and calm, as if all was well. It
+seemed to promise that wrath and ruin would pass, and leave no lasting
+desolation behind them. Yet she could not help heaving a great sigh, and
+the tears came streaming down her cheeks.
+
+'Tut, tut, cousin! Wipe thine eyes. The dreary old house is not worth
+such bright tears.'
+
+Dorothy turned, and saw the marquis seated on the edge of the marble
+basin, under the headless horse, whose blood seemed still to well from
+his truncated form. She saw also that, although his words were cheerful,
+his lip quivered. It was some little time before she could compose
+herself sufficiently to speak.
+
+'I marvel your lordship is so calm,' she said.
+
+'Come hither, Dorothy,' he returned kindly, 'and sit thee down by my
+side. Thou wast right good to my little Molly. Thou hast been a
+ministering angel to Raglan and its people. I did thee wrong, and thou
+forgavest me with a whole heart. Thou hast returned me good for evil
+tenfold, and for all this I love thee; and therefore will I now tell
+thee what maketh me quiet at heart, for I am as thou seest me, and my
+heart is as my countenance. I have lived my life, and have now but to
+die my death. I am thankful to have lived, and I hope to live hereafter.
+Goodness and mercy went before my birth, and goodness and mercy will
+follow my death. For the ills of this life, if there was no silence
+there would be no music. Ignorance is a spur to knowledge. Darkness is a
+pavilion for the Almighty, a foil to the painter to make his shadows. So
+are afflictions good for our instruction, and adversities for our
+amendment. As for the article of death, shall I shun to meet what she
+who lay in my bosom hath passed through? And look you, fair damsel, thou
+whose body is sweet, and comely to behold--wherefore should I not
+rejoice to depart? When I see my house lying in ruins about me, I look
+down upon this ugly overgrown body of mine, the very foundations whereof
+crumble from beneath me, and I thank God it is but a tent, and no
+enduring house even like this house of Raglan, which yet will ere long
+be a dwelling of owls and foxes. Very soon will Death pull out the
+tent-pins and let me fly, and therefore am I glad; for, fair damsel
+Dorothy, although it may be hard for thee, beholding me as I am, to
+comprehend it, I like to be old and ugly as little as wouldst thou, and
+my heart, I verily think, is little, older than thine own. One day,
+please God, I shall yet be clothed upon with a house that is from
+heaven, nor shall I hobble with gouty feet over the golden pavement--if
+so be that my sins overpass not mercy. Pray for me, Dorothy, my
+daughter, for my end is nigh, that I find at length the bosom of father
+Abraham.'
+
+As he ended, a slow flower of music bloomed out upon the silence from
+under the fingers of the blind youth hid in the stony shell of the
+chapel; and, doubtful at first, its fragrance filled at length the whole
+sunset air. It was the music of a Nunc dimittis of Palestrina. Dorothy
+knelt and kissed the old man's hand, then rose and went weeping to her
+chamber, leaving him still seated by the broken yet flowing fountain.
+
+Of all who prepared to depart, Caspar Kaltoff was the busiest. What best
+things of his master's he could carry with him, he took, but a multitude
+he left to a more convenient opportunity, in the hope of which, alone
+and unaided, he sunk his precious cabinet, and a chest besides, filled
+with curious inventions and favourite tools, in the secret shaft. But
+the most valued of all, the fire-engine, he could not take and would not
+leave. He stopped the fountain of the white horse, once more set the
+water-commanding slave to work, and filled the cistern until he heard it
+roar in the waste-pipe. Then he extinguished the fire and let the
+furnace cool, and when Dorothy entered the workshop for the last time to
+take her mournful leave of the place, there lay the bones of the mighty
+creature scattered over the floor--here a pipe, there a valve, here a
+piston and there a cock. Nothing stood but the furnace and the great
+pipes that ran up the grooves in the wall outside, between which there
+was scarce a hint of connection to be perceived.
+
+'Mistress Dorothy,' he said, 'my master is the greatest man in
+Christendom, but the world is stupid, and will forget him because it
+never knew him.'
+
+Amongst her treasures, chief of them all, even before the gifts of her
+husband, lady Glamorgan carried with her the last garments, from
+sleeve-ribbons to dainty little shoes and rosettes, worn by her Molly.
+
+Dr. Bayly carried a bag of papers and sermons, with his doctor's gown
+and hood, and his best suit of clothes.
+
+The marquis with his own hand put up his Vulgate, and left his Gower
+behind. Ever since the painful proofs of its failure with the king, he
+had felt if not a dislike yet a painful repugnance to the volume, and
+had never opened it.
+
+It was a troubled night, the last they spent in the castle. Not many
+slept. But the lord of it had long understood that what could cease to
+be his never had been his, and slept like a child. Dr. Bayly, who in his
+loving anxiety had managed to get hold of his key, crept in at midnight,
+and found him fast asleep; and again in the morning, and found him not
+yet waked.
+
+When breakfast was over, proclamation was made that at nine o'clock
+there would be prayers in the chapel for the last time, and that the
+marquis desired all to be present. When the hour arrived, he entered
+leaning on the arm of Dr. Bayly. Dorothy followed with the ladies of the
+family. Young Delaware was in his place, and 'with organ voice and voice
+of psalms,' praise and prayer arose for the last time from the house of
+Raglan. All were in tears save the marquis. A smile played about his
+lips, and he looked like a child giving away his toy. Sir Toby Mathews
+tried hard to speak to his flock, but broke down, and had to yield the
+attempt. When the services were over, the marquis rose and said,
+
+'Master Delaware, once more play thy Nunc dimittis, and so meet me every
+one in the hall.'
+
+Thither the marquis himself walked first, and on the dais seated himself
+in his chair of state, with his family and friends around him, and the
+officers of his household waiting. On one side of him stood sir Ralph
+Blackstone, with a bag of gold, and on the other Mr. George Wharton, the
+clerk of the accounts, with a larger bag of silver. Then each of the
+servants, in turn according to position, was called before him by name,
+and with his own hand the marquis, dipping now into one bag, now into
+the other, gave to each a small present in view of coming necessities:
+they had the day before received their wages. To each he wished a kind
+farewell, to some adding a word of advice or comfort. He then handed the
+bags to the governor, and told him to distribute their contents
+according to his judgment amongst the garrison. Last, he ordered every
+one to be ready to follow him from the gates the moment the clock struck
+the hour of noon, and went to his study.
+
+When lord Charles came to tell him that all were marshalled, and
+everything ready for departure, he found him kneeling, but he rose with
+more of agility than he had for a long time been able to show, and
+followed his son.
+
+With slow pace he crossed, the courts and the hall, which were silent as
+the grave, bending his steps to the main entrance. The portcullises were
+up, the gates wide open, the drawbridge down--all silent and deserted.
+The white stair was also vacant, and in solemn silence the marquis
+descended, leaning on lord Charles. But beneath was a gallant show, yet,
+for all its colour and shine, mournful enough. At the foot of the stair
+stood four carriages, each with six horses in glittering harness, and
+behind them all the officers of the household and all the guests on
+horseback. Next came the garrison-music of drums and trumpets, then the
+men-servants on foot, and the women, some on foot and some in waggons
+with the children. After them came the waggons loaded with such things
+as they were permitted to carry with them. These were followed by the
+principal officers of the garrison, colonels and captains, accompanied
+by their troops, consisting mostly of squires and gentlemen, to the
+number of about two hundred, on horseback. Last came the foot-soldiers
+of the garrison and those who had lost their horses, in all some five
+hundred, stretching far away, round towards the citadel, beyond the
+sight. Colours were flying and weapons glittering, and though all was
+silence except for the pawing of a horse here and there, and the ringing
+of chain-bridles, everything looked like an ordered march of triumph
+rather than a surrender and evacuation. Still there was a something in
+the silence that seemed to tell the true tale.
+
+In the front carriage were lady Glamorgan and the ladies Elizabeth,
+Anne, and Mary. In the carriages behind came their gentlewomen and their
+lady visitors, with their immediate attendants. Dorothy, mounted on
+Dick, with Marquis's chain fastened to the pommel of her saddle,
+followed the last carriage. Beside her rode young Delaware, and his
+father, the master of the horse.
+
+'Open the white gate,' said the marquis from the stair as he descended.
+
+The great clock of the castle struck, and with the last stroke of the
+twelve came the blast of a trumpet from below.
+
+'Answer, trumpets,' cried the marquis.
+
+The governor repeated the order, and a tremendous blare followed, in
+which the drums unbidden joined.
+
+This was the signal to the warders at the brick gate, and they flung its
+two leaves wide apart.
+
+Another blast from below, and in marched on horseback general Fairfax
+with his staff, followed by three hundred foot. The latter drew up on
+each side of the brick gate, while the general and his staff went on to
+the marble gate.
+
+As soon as they appeared within it, the marquis, who had halted in the
+midst of his descent, came down to meet them. He bowed to the general,
+and said:--
+
+'I would it were as a guest I received you, sir Thomas, for then might I
+honestly bid you welcome. But that I cannot do when you so shake my poor
+nest that you shake the birds out of it. But though I cannot bid you
+welcome, I will notwithstanding heartily bid you farewell, sir Thomas,
+and I thank you for your courtesy to me and mine. This nut of Raglan
+was, I believe, the last you had to crack. Amen. God's will be done.'
+
+The general returned civil answer, and the marquis, again bowing
+graciously, advanced to the foremost carriage, the door of which was
+held for him by sir Ralph, the steward, while lord Charles stood by to
+assist his father. The moment he had entered, the two gentlemen mounted
+the horses held for them one on each side of the carriage, lord Charles
+gave the word, the trumpets once more uttered a loud cry, the marquis's
+moved, the rest followed, and in slow procession lord Worcester and his
+people, passing through the gates, left for ever the house of Raglan,
+and in his heart Henry Somerset bade the world good-bye.
+
+General Fairfax and his company ascended the great white stair, crossed
+the moat on the drawbridge, passed under the double portcullis and
+through the gates, and so entered the deserted court. All was
+frightfully still; the windows stared like dead eyes--the very houses
+seemed dead; nothing alive was visible except one scared cat: the
+cannonade had driven away all the pigeons, and a tile had killed the
+patriarch of the peacocks. They entered the great hall and admired its
+goodly proportions, while not a few expressions of regret at the
+destruction of such a magnificent house escaped them; then as soldiers
+they proceeded to examine the ruins, and distinguish the results wrought
+by the different batteries.
+
+'Gentlemen,' said sir Thomas, 'had the walls been as strong as the
+towers, we should have been still sitting in yonder field.'
+
+In the meantime the army commissioner, Thomas Herbert by name, was busy
+securing with the help of his men the papers and valuables, and making
+an inventory of such goods as he considered worth removing for sale in
+London.
+
+Having satisfied his curiosity with a survey of the place, and left a
+guard to receive orders from Mr. Herbert, the general mounted again and
+rode to Chepstow, where there was a grand entertainment that evening to
+celebrate the fall of Raglan, the last of the strongholds of the king.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LV.
+
+R. I. P.
+
+
+As the sad, shining company of the marquis went from the gates, running
+at full speed to overtake the rear ere it should have passed through,
+came Caspar, and mounting a horse led for him, rode near Dorothy.
+
+As they left the brick gate, a horseman joined the procession from
+outside. Pale and worn, with bent head and sad face, sir Rowland
+Scudamore fell into the ranks amongst his friends of the garrison, and
+with them rode in silence.
+
+Many a look did Dorothy cast around her as she rode, but only once, on
+the crest of a grassy hill that rose abrupt from the highway a few miles
+from Raglan, did she catch sight of Richard mounted on Lady. All her
+life after, as often as trouble came, that figure rose against the sky
+of her inner world, and was to her a type of the sleepless watch of the
+universe.
+
+Soon, from flank and rear, in this direction and that, each to some
+haven or home, servants and soldiers began to drop away. Before they
+reached the forest of Dean, the cortege had greatly dwindled, for many
+belonged to villages, small towns, and farms on the way, and their
+orders had been to go home and wait better times. When he reached
+London, except the chief officers of his household, one of his own
+pages, and some of his daughters' gentlewomen and menials, the marquis
+had few attendants left beyond Caspar and Shafto.
+
+It was a long and weary journey for him, occupying a whole week. One
+evening he was so tired and unwell that they were forced to put up with
+what quarters they could find in a very poor little town. Early in the
+morning, however, they were up and away. When they had gone some ten
+miles--lord Charles was riding beside the coach and chatting with his
+sisters--a remark was made not complimentary to their accommodation of
+the previous night.
+
+'True,' said lord Charles; 'it was a very scurvy inn, but we must not
+forget that the reckoning was cheap.'
+
+While he spoke, one of the household had approached the marquis, who sat
+on the other side of the carriage, and said something in a low voice.
+
+'Say'st thou so!' returned his lordship. '--Hear'st thou, my lord
+Charles? Thou talkest of a cheap reckoning! I never paid so dear for a
+lodging in my life. Here is master Wharton hath just told me that they
+have left a thousand pound under a bench in the chamber we broke our
+fast in. Truly they are overpaid for what we had!'
+
+'We have sent back after it, my lord,' said Mr. Wharton.
+
+'You will never see the money again,' said lord Charles.
+
+'Oh, peace!' said the marquis. 'If they will not be known of the money,
+you shall see it in a brave inn in a short time.'
+
+Nothing more was said on the matter, and the marquis seemed to have
+forgotten it. Late at night, at their next halting-place, the messenger
+rejoined them, having met a drawer, mounted on a sorry horse, riding
+after them with the bag, but little prospect of overtaking them before
+they reached London.
+
+'I thought our hostess seemed an honest woman!' said lady Anne.
+
+'It is a poor town, indeed, lord Charles, but you see it is an honest
+one nevertheless!' said Dr. Bayly.
+
+'It may be the town never saw so much money before,' said the marquis,
+'and knew not what to make of it.'
+
+'Your lordship is severe,' said the doctor.
+
+'Only with my tongue, good doctor, only with my tongue,' said the
+marquis, laughing.
+
+When they reached London, lord Worcester found himself, to his surprise,
+in custody of the Black Rod, who, as now for some three years Worcester
+House in the Strand had been used for a state-paper office, conducted
+him to a house in Covent Garden, where he lodged him in tolerable
+comfort and mild imprisonment. Parliament was still jealous of Glamorgan
+and his Irish doings--as indeed well they might be.
+
+But his confinement was by no means so great a trial to him as his
+indignant friends supposed; for, long willing to depart, he had at
+length grown a little tired of life, feeling more and more the
+oppression of growing years, of gout varied with asthma, and, worst of
+all to the once active man, of his still increasing corpulence, which
+last indeed, by his own confession, he found it hard to endure with
+patience. The journey had been too much for him, and he began to lead
+the life of an invalid.
+
+There being no sufficient accommodation in the house for his family,
+they were forced to content themselves with lodging as near him as they
+could, and in these circumstances Dorothy, notwithstanding lady
+Glamorgan's entreaties, would have returned home. But the marquis was
+very unwilling she should leave him, and for his sake she concluded to
+remain.
+
+'I am not long for this world, Dorothy,' he said. 'Stay with me and see
+the last of the old man. The wind of death has got inside my tent, and
+will soon blow it out of sight.'
+
+Lady Glamorgan's intention from the first had been to go to Ireland to
+her husband as soon as she could get leave. This however she did not
+obtain until the first of October--five weeks after her arrival in
+London. She would gladly have carried Dorothy with her, but she would
+not leave the marquis, who was now failing visibly. As her ladyship's
+pass included thirty of her servants, Dorothy felt at ease about her
+personal comforts, and her husband would soon supply all else.
+
+The ladies Elizabeth and Mary were in the same house with their father;
+lady Anne and lord Charles were in the house of a relative at no great
+distance, and visited him every day. Sir Toby Mathews also, and Dr.
+Bayly, had found shelter in the neighbourhood, so that his lordship
+never lacked company. But he was going to have other company soon.
+
+Gently he sank towards the grave, and as he sank his soul seemed to
+retire farther within, vanishing on the way to the deeper life. They
+thought he lost interest in life: it was but that the brightness drew
+him from the glimmer. Every now and then, however, he would come forth
+from his inner chamber, and standing in his open door look out upon his
+friends, and tell them what he had seen.
+
+The winter drew on. But first November came, with its 'saint Martin's
+summer, halcyon days' and the old man revived a little. He stood one
+morning and looked from his window on the garden behind the house, all
+glittering with molten hoar-frost. A few leaves, golden with death, hung
+here and there on a naked bough. A kind of sigh was in the air. The very
+light had in it as much of resignation as hope. He had forgotten that
+Dorothy was in the room.
+
+There was Celtic blood in the marquis, and at times his thoughts took
+shapes that hardly belonged to the Teuton.
+
+'Cometh my youth hither again?' he murmured. 'As a stranger he cometh
+whom yet I know so well! Or is it but the face of my old age lighted
+with a parting smile? Either way, change cometh, and change will be
+good. Domine, in manus tuas.'
+
+He turned and saw Dorothy.
+
+'Child!' he exclaimed, 'good sooth, I had forgotten thee. Yet I spake no
+treason. Dorothy, I hold not with them who say that from dust we came
+and to dust we return. Neither my blessed countess, whom thou knewest
+not, nor my darling Molly, whom thou knewest so well, were born of the
+dust. From some better where they came--for, say, can dust beget love?
+Whither they have gone I follow, in the hope that their prayers have
+smoothed for me the way. Lord, lay not my sins to my charge. Mary,
+mother, hear my wife who prayeth for me. Hear my little Molly: she was
+ever dainty and good.'
+
+Again he had forgotten Dorothy, and was with his dead.
+
+But St. Martin's summer is only the lightening of the year that comes
+before its death; and November, although it brought not then such evil
+fogs as it now afflicts London withal, yet brought with it November
+weather--one of God's hounds, with which he hunts us out of the hollows
+of our own moods, and teaches us to sit on the arch of the cellar. But
+though the marquis fought hard and kept it out of his mind, it got into
+his troubled body. The gout left his feet; he coughed distressingly,
+breathed with difficulty, and at length betook himself to bed.
+
+For some time his interest in politics, save in so much as affected the
+king's person, had been gradually ceasing.
+
+'I trust I have done my part,' he said once to the two clergymen, as
+they sat by his bedside. 'Yet I know not. I fear me I clove too fast to
+my money. Yet would I have parted with all, even to my shirt, to make my
+lord the king a good catholic. But it may be, sir Toby, we make more of
+such matters down here than they do in the high countries; and in that
+case, good doctor, ye are to blame who broke away from your mother, even
+were she not perfect.'
+
+He crossed himself and murmured a prayer, in fear lest he had been
+guilty of laxity of judgment. But neither clergyman said a word.
+
+'But tell me, gentlemen, ye who understand sacred things,' he resumed,
+'can a man be far out of the way so long as, with full heart and no
+withholding, he saith, Fiat voluntas tua--and that after no private
+interpretation, but Sicut in caelo?'
+
+'That, my lord, I also strive to say with all my heart,' said Dr. Bayly.
+
+'Mayhap, doctor,' returned the marquis, 'when thou art as old as I, and
+hast learned to see how good it is, how all-good, thou wilt be able to
+say it without any striving. There was a time in my life when I too had
+to strive, for the thought that he was a hard master would come, and
+come again. But now that I have learned a little more of what he meaneth
+with me, what he would have of me and do for me, how he would make me
+pure of sin, clean from the very bottom of my heart to the crest of my
+soul, from spur to plume a stainless knight, verily I am no more content
+to SUBMIT to his will: I cry in the night time, "Thy will be done: Lord,
+let it be done, I entreat thee;" and in the daytime I cry, "Thy kingdom
+come: Lord, let it come, I pray thee."'
+
+He lay silent. The clergymen left the room, and lord Charles came in,
+and sat down by his bedside. The marquis looked at him, and said kindly,
+
+'Ah, son Charles! art thou there?'
+
+'I came to tell you, my lord, the rumour goeth that the king hath
+consented to establish the presbyterian heresy in the land,' said lord
+Charles.
+
+'Believe it not, my lord. A man ought not to believe ill of another so
+long as there is space enough for a doubt to perch. Yet, alas! what
+shall be hoped of him who will yield nothing to prayers, and everything
+to compulsion? Had his majesty been a true prince, he had ere now set
+his foot on the neck of his enemies, or else ascended to heaven a
+blessed martyr. "Protestant," say'st thou? In good sooth, I force not.
+What is he now but a football for the sectaries to kick to and fro! But
+I shall pray for him whither I go, if indeed the prayers of such as I
+may be heard in that country. God be with his majesty. I can do no more.
+There are other realms than England, and I go to another king. Yet will
+I pray for England, for she is dear to my heart. God grant the evil time
+may pass, and Englishmen yet again grow humble and obedient!'
+
+He closed his eyes, and his face grew so still that, notwithstanding the
+labour of his breathing, he would have seemed asleep, but that his lips
+moved a little now and then, giving a flutter of shape to the eternal
+prayer within him.
+
+Again he opened his eyes, and saw sir Toby, who had re-entered silent as
+a ghost, and said, feebly holding out his hand, 'I am dying, sir Toby:
+where will this swollen hulk of mine be hid?'
+
+'That, my lord,' returned sir Toby, 'hath been already spoken of in
+parliament, and it hath been wrung from them, heretics and fanatics as
+they are, that your lordship's mortal remains shall lie in Windsor
+castle, by the side of earl William, the first of the earls of
+Worcester.'
+
+'God bless us all!' cried the marquis, almost merrily, for he was
+pleased, and with the pleasure the old humour came back for a moment:
+'they will give me a better castle when I am dead than they took from me
+when I was alive!'
+
+'Yet is it a small matter to him who inherits such a house as awaiteth
+my lord--domum non manufactam, in caelis aeternam,' said sir Toby.
+
+'I thank thee, sir Toby, for recalling me. Truly for a moment I was
+uplifted somewhat. That I should still play the fool, and the old fool,
+in the very face of Death! But, thank God, at thy word the world hath
+again dwindled, and my heavenly house drawn the nearer. Domine, nunc
+dimittis. Let me, so soon as you judge fit, sir Toby, have the
+consolations of the dying.'
+
+When the last rites, wherein the church yields all hold save that of
+prayer, had been administered, and his daughters with Dorothy and lord
+Charles stood around his bed.
+
+'Now have I taken my staff to be gone,' he said cheerfully, 'like a
+peasant who hath visited his friends, and will now return, and they will
+see him as far upon the road as they may. I tremble a little, but I
+bethink me of him that made me and died for me, and now calleth me, and
+my heart revives within me.'
+
+Then he seemed to fall half asleep, and his soul went wandering in
+dreams that were not all of sleep--just as it had been with little Molly
+when her end drew near.
+
+'How sweet is the grass for me to lie in, and for thee to eat! Eat, eat,
+old Ploughman.'
+
+It was a favourite horse of which he dreamed--one which in old days he
+had named after Piers Ploughman, the Vision concerning whom,
+notwithstanding its severity on catholic abuses, he had at one time read
+much.
+
+After a pause he went on--
+
+'Alack, they have shot off his head! What shall I do without my
+Ploughman--my body groweth so large and heavy!--Hark, I hear Molly!
+"Spout, horse," she crieth. See, it is his life-blood he spouteth! O
+Lord, what shall I do, for I am heavy, and my body keepeth down my soul.
+Hark! Who calleth me? It is Molly! No, no! it is the Master. Lord, I
+cannot rise and come to thee. Here have I lain for ages, and my spirit
+groaneth. Reach forth thy hand, Lord, and raise me. Thanks, Lord,
+thanks!'
+
+And with the word he was neither old man nor marquis any more.
+
+The parliament, with wondrous liberality, voted five hundred pounds for
+his funeral, and Dr. Bayly tells us that he laid him in his grave with
+his own hands. But let us trust rather that Anne and Molly received him
+into their arms, and soon made him forget all about castles and chapels
+and dukedoms and ungrateful princes, in the everlasting youth of the
+heavenly kingdom, whose life is the presence of the Father, whose air to
+breathe is love, and whose corn and wine are truth and graciousness.
+
+There surely, and nowhere else as surely, can the prayer be for a man
+fulfilled: Requiescat in Pace.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVI.
+
+RICHARD AND CASPAR.
+
+
+I have now to recount a small adventure, to which it would scarcely be
+worth while to afford a place, were it not for the important fact that
+it opened to Richard a great window not only in Dorothy's history while
+she lived at the castle, but, which was of far more importance, into the
+character moulding that history--for character has far more to do with
+determining history than history has to do with determining character.
+Without the interview whose circumstances I am about to narrate, Richard
+could not so soon at least have done justice to a character which had
+been, if not keeping parallel pace with his own, yet advancing rapidly
+in the same direction.
+
+The decree of the parliament had gone forth that Raglan should be
+destroyed. The same hour in which the sad news reached Caspar, he set
+out to secure, if possible, the treasures he had concealed. He had
+little fear of their being discovered, but great fear of their being
+rendered inaccessible from the workshop.
+
+Having reached the neighbourhood, he hired a horse and cart from a small
+farmer whom he knew, and, taking the precaution to put on the dress of a
+countryman, got on it and drove to the castle. The huge oaken leaves of
+the brick gate, bound and riveted with iron, lay torn from their hinges,
+and he entered unquestioned. But instead of the solitude of desertion,
+for which he had hoped, he found the whole place swarming with country
+people, men and women, most of them with baskets and sacks, while the
+space between the outer defences and the moat of the castle itself was
+filled with country vehicles of every description, from a wheelbarrow to
+a great waggon.
+
+When the most valuable of the effects found in the place had been
+carried to London, a sale for the large remainder had been held on the
+spot, at which not a few of the neighbouring families had been
+purchasers. After all, however, a great many things were left unhid for,
+which were not, from a money point of view--the sole one taken--worth
+removing; and now the peasantry were, like jackals, admitted to pick the
+bones of the huge carcase, ere the skeleton itself should be torn
+asunder. Nor could the invading populace have been disappointed of their
+expectations: they found numberless things of immense value in their
+eyes, and great use in their meagre economy. For years, I might say
+centuries after, pieces of furniture and panels of carved oak, bits of
+tapestry, antique sconces and candlesticks of brass, ancient
+horse-furniture, and a thousand things besides of endless interest, were
+to be found scattered in farm-houses and cottages all over Monmouth and
+neighbouring shires. I should not wonder if, even now in the third
+century, and after the rage for the collection of such things has so
+long prevailed, there were some of them still to be discovered in places
+where no one has thought of looking.
+
+When Caspar saw what was going on, he judged it prudent to turn and
+drive his cart into the quarry, and having there secured it, went back
+and entered the castle. There was a great divided torrent of humanity
+rushing and lingering through the various lines of rooms, here meeting
+in whirlpools, there parted into mere rivulets--man and woman searching
+for whatever might look valuable in his or her eyes. Things that
+nowadays would fetch their weight in silver, some of them even in gold,
+were passed by as worthless, or popped into a bag to be carried home for
+the amusement of cottage children. The noises of hobnailed shoes on the
+oak floors, and of unrestrained clownish and churlish voices everywhere,
+were tremendous. Here a fat cottager might be seen standing on a lovely
+quilt of patchwork brocade, pulling down, rough in her cupidity,
+curtains on which the new-born and dying eyes of generations of nobles
+had rested, henceforth to adorn a miserable cottage, while her husband
+was taking down the bed, larger perhaps, than the room itself in which
+they would in vain try to set it up, or cruelly forcing a lid, which,
+having a spring lock, had closed again after the carved chest had been
+already rifled by the commissioner or his men. The kitchen was full of
+squabbling women, and the whole place in the agonies of dissolution. But
+there was a small group of persons, fortuitously met, but linked
+together by an old painful memory of the place itself, strongly revived
+by their present meeting, to whom a fanatical hatred of everything
+catholic, coupled with a profound sense of personal injury, had
+prevailed over avarice, causing them to leave the part of acquisition to
+their wives, and aspire to that of pure destruction. It was the same
+company, almost to a man, whose misadventures in their search of Raglan
+for arms, under the misguidance of Tom Fool, I have related in an early
+chapter. In their hearts they nursed a half-persuasion that Raglan had
+fallen because of their wrongs within its walls, and the shame that
+there had been heaped upon the godly.
+
+These men, happening to meet, as I say, in the midst of the surrounding
+tumult, had fallen into a conversation chiefly occupied with
+reminiscences of that awful experience, whose terrors now looked like an
+evil dream, and, in a place thus crowded with men and women, buzzing
+with voices, and resounding with feet, as little likely to return as a
+vanished thundercloud. In the course of their conversation, therefore,
+they grew valiant; grew conscious next of a high calling, and resolved
+therewith to take to themselves the honour of giving the first sweep of
+the besom of destruction to Raglan Castle. Satisfying themselves first
+therefore that their wives were doing their duty for their
+household,--mistress Upstill was as good as two men at least at
+appropriation,--they set out, Cast-down taking the lead, master
+Sycamore, John Croning, and the rest following, armed with crowbars, for
+the top of the great tower, ambitious to commence the overthrow by
+attacking the very summit, the high places of wickedness, the crown of
+pride; and after some devious wandering, at length found the way to the
+stair.
+
+When Caspar Kaltoff entered the castle, he made straight for the keep,
+and to his delight found no one in the lower part. To make certain
+however that he was alone in the place, ere he secured himself from
+intrusion, he ran up the stair, gave a glance at the doors as he ran,
+and reached the top just as Upstill in fierce discrowning pride was
+heaving the first capstone from between two battlements. Caspar was
+close by the cocks; instantly he turned one, and as the dislodged stone
+struck the water of the moat, a sudden hollow roaring invaded their
+ears, and while they stood aghast at the well-remembered sound, and ere
+yet the marrow had time to freeze in their stupid bones, the very moat
+itself into which they had cast the insulted stone, storming and
+spouting, seemed to come rushing up to avenge it upon them were they
+stood. The moment he turned the cock, Caspar shot half-way down the
+stair, but as quietly as he could, and into a little chamber in the
+wall, where stood two great vessels through which the pipes of the
+fire-engine inside had communicated with the pipes in the wall outside.
+There he waited until the steps which, long before he reached his
+refuge, he heard come thundering down the stairs after him, had passed
+in headlong haste, when he sprang up again to save the water for another
+end, and to attach the drawbridge to the sluice, so that it would raise
+it to its full height. Then he hurried down to the water trap under the
+bridge and set it, after which he could hardly help wasting a little of
+his precious time, lurking in a convenient corner to watch the result.
+
+He had not to wait long. The shrieks of the yokels as they ran, and
+their looks of horror when they appeared, quickly gathered around them a
+gaping crowd to hear their tale, the more foolhardy in which, partly
+doubting their word, for the fountains no longer played, and partly
+ambitious of showing their superior courage, rushed to the Gothic
+bridge. Down came the drawbridge with a clang, and with it in sheer
+descent a torrent of water fit to sweep a regiment away, which shot
+along the stone bridge and dashed them from it bruised and bleeding, and
+half drowned with the water which in their terror and surprise found
+easy way into their bodies. Caspar withdrew satisfied, for he now felt
+sure of all the time he required to get some other things he had thought
+of saving down into the shaft with the cabinet and chest.
+
+Having effected this, and with much labour and difficulty, aided by
+rollers, got all into the quarry and then into the cart, he did not
+resist the temptation to go again amongst the crowd, and enjoy listening
+to the various remarks and conjectures and terrors to which doubtless
+his trick had given rise. He therefore got a great armful of trampled
+corn from the field above, and laid it before his patient horse, then
+ran round and re-entered the castle by the main gate.
+
+He had not been in the crowd many minutes, however, when he saw
+indications of suspicion ripening to conviction. What had given ground
+for it he could not tell, but at some point he must have been seen on
+the other side of the tower-moat. All this time Upstill and his party
+had been recounting with various embellishment their adventures both
+former and latter, and when Kaltoff was recognised, or at least
+suspected in the crowd, the rumour presently arose and spread that he
+was either the devil himself, or an accredited agent of that potentate.
+
+'Be it then the old Satan himself?' Caspar heard a man say anxiously to
+his neighbour, as he tried to get a look at his feet, which was not easy
+in such a press. Caspar, highly amused, and thinking such evil
+reputation would rather protect than injure him, showed some anxiety
+about his feet, and made as if he would fain keep them out of the field
+of observation. But thereupon he saw the faces and gestures of the
+younger men begin to grow threatening; evidently anger was succeeding to
+fear, and some of them, fired with the ambition possibly of thrashing
+the devil, ventured to give him a rough shove or two from behind.
+Neither outbreak of sulphurous flashes nor even kick of cloven hoof
+following, they proceeded with the game, and rapidly advanced to such
+extremities, expostulation in Caspar's broken English, for such in
+excitement it always became, seeming only to act as fresh incitement and
+justification, that at length he was compelled in self-defence to draw a
+dagger. This checked them a little, and ere audacity had had time to
+recover itself, a young man came shoving through the crowd, pushing them
+all right and left until he reached Caspar, and stood by his side. Now
+there was that about Richard Heywood to give him influence with a crowd:
+he was a strong man and a gentleman, and they drew back.
+
+'De fools dink I was de tuyfel!' said Caspar.
+
+Richard turned upon them with indignation.
+
+'You Englishmen!' he cried, 'and treat a foreigner thus!'
+
+But there was nothing about him to show that he was a roundhead, and
+from behind rose the cry: 'A malignant! A royalist!' and the fellows
+near began again to advance threateningly.
+
+'Mr. Heywood,' said Caspar hurriedly, for he recognised his helper from
+the time he had seen him a prisoner, 'let us make for the hall. I know
+the place and can bring us both off safe.'
+
+It was one of Richard's greatest virtues that he could place much
+confidence. He gave one glance at his companion, and said, 'I will do as
+thou sayest.'
+
+'Follow me then, sir,' said Caspar, and turning with brandished dagger,
+he forced his way to the hall-door, Richard following with fists, his
+sole weapons, defending their rear.
+
+There were but few in the hall, and although their enemies came raging
+after them, they were impeded by the crowd, so that there was time as
+they crossed it for Caspar to say:
+
+'Follow me over the bridge, but, for God's sake, put your feet exactly
+where I put mine as we cross. You will see why in a moment after.'
+
+'I will,' said Richard, and, delayed a little by needful care, gained
+the other side just as the foremost of their pursuers rushed on the
+bridge, and with a clang and a roar were swept from it by the descending
+torrent.
+
+They lost no time in explanations. Caspar hurried Richard to the
+workshop, down the shaft, through the passage, and into the quarry,
+whence, taking no notice of his cart, he went with him to the White
+Horse, where Lady was waiting him.
+
+And Richard was well rewarded for the kindness he had shown, for ere
+they said good bye, the German, whose heart was full of Dorothy, and
+understood, as indeed every one in the castle did, something of her
+relation to Richard, had told him all he knew about her life in the
+castle, and how she had been both before and during the siege a guardian
+angel, as the marquis himself had said, to Raglan. Nor was the story of
+her attempted visit to her old playfellow in the turret chamber, or the
+sufferings she had to endure in consequence, forgotten; and when Caspar
+and he parted, Richard rode home with fresh strength and light and love
+in his heart, and Lady shared in them all somehow, for she constantly
+reflected, or imaged rather, the moods of her master. As much as ever he
+believed Dorothy mistaken, and yet could have kneeled in reverence
+before her. He had himself tried to do the truth, and no one but he who
+tries to do the truth can perceive the grandeur of another who does the
+same. Alive to his own shortcomings, such a one the better understands
+the success of his brother or sister: there the truth takes to him
+shape, and he worships at her shrine. He saw more clearly than before
+what he had been learning ever since she had renounced him, that it is
+not correctness of opinion--could he be SURE that his own opinions were
+correct?--that constitutes rightness, but that condition of soul which,
+as a matter of course, causes it to move along the lines of truth and
+duty--the LIFE going forth in motion according to the law of light: this
+alone places a nature in harmony with the central Truth. It was in the
+doing of the will of his Father that Jesus was the son of God--yea the
+eternal son of the eternal Father.
+
+Nor was this to make little of the truth intellectually considered--of
+the FACT of things. The greatest fact of all is that we are bound to
+obey the truth, and that to the full extent of our knowledge thereof,
+however LITTLE that may be. This obligation acknowledged and OBEYED, the
+road is open to all truth--and the ONLY road. The way to know is to do
+the known.
+
+Then why, thought Richard with himself, should he and Dorothy be parted?
+Why should Dorothy imagine they should? All depended on their common
+magnanimity, not the magnanimity that pardons faults, but the
+magnanimity that recognises virtues. He who gladly kneels with one who
+thinks largely wide from himself, in so doing draws nearer to the Father
+of both than he who pours forth his soul in sympathetic torrent only in
+the company of those who think like himself. If a man be of the truth,
+then and only then is he of those who gather with the Lord.
+
+In forms natural to the age and his individual thought, if not
+altogether in such as I have here put down, Richard thus fashioned his
+insights as he sauntered home upon Lady, his head above the clouds, and
+his heart higher than his head--as it ought to be once or twice a day at
+least. Poor indeed is any worldly success compared to a moment's
+breathing in divine air, above the region where the miserable word
+SUCCESS yet carries a meaning.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVII.
+
+THE SKELETON.
+
+
+The death of the marquis took place in December, long before which time
+the second marquis of Worcester, ever busy in the king's affairs, and
+unable to show himself with safety in England, or there be useful, had
+gone from Ireland to Paris.
+
+As the country was now a good deal quieter, and there was nothing to
+detain her in London, and much to draw her to Wyfern, Dorothy resolved
+to go home, and there, if possible, remain. Indeed, there was now
+nothing else she could well do, except visit Mr. Herbert at Llangattock.
+But much as she revered and loved the old man, and would have enjoyed
+his company, she felt now such a longing for activity, that she must go
+and look after her affairs. What with the words of the good marquis and
+her own late experiences and conflicts, Dorothy had gained much
+enlightenment. She had learned that well-being is a condition of inward
+calm, resting upon yet deeper harmonies of being, and resulting in
+serene activity, the prevention of which natural result reacts in
+perturbation and confusion of thought and feeling. But for many sakes
+the thought of home was in itself precious and enticing to her. It was
+full of clear memories of her mother, and vague memories of her father,
+not to mention memories of the childhood Richard and she had spent
+together, from which the late mists had begun to rise, and reveal them
+sparkling with dew and sunshine. As soon, therefore, as marquis Henry
+had gone to countess Anne, Dorothy took her leave, with many kind words
+between, of the ladies Elizabeth, Anne, and Mary, and set out, attended
+by her old bailiff and some of the men of her small tenantry, who having
+fought the king's battle in vain, had gone home again to fight their
+own.
+
+At Wyfern she found everything in rigid order, almost cataleptic repose.
+How was it ever to be home again? What new thing could restore the
+homefulness where the revered over-life had vanished? And how shall the
+world be warmed and brightened to him who knows no greater or better man
+than himself therein--no more skilful workman, no diviner thinker, no
+more godlike doer than himself? And what can the universe have in it of
+home, of country, nay even of world, to him who cannot believe in a soul
+of souls, a heart of hearts? I should fall out with the very beating of
+the heart within my bosom, did I not believe it the pulse of the
+infinite heart, for how else should it be heart of MINE? I made it not,
+and any moment it may SEEM to fail me, yet never, if it be what I think
+it, can it betray me. It is no wonder then, that, with only memories of
+what had been to render it lovely in her eyes, Dorothy should have soon
+begun to feel the place lonely.
+
+The very next morning after her rather late arrival, she sent to saddle
+Dick once more, called Marquis, and with no other attendant, set out to
+see what they had done to dear old Raglan. Marquis had been chained up
+almost all the time they were in London, and freedom is blessed even to
+a dog: Dick was ever joyful under his mistress, and now was merry with
+the keen invigorating air of a frosty December morning, and frolicsome
+amidst the early snow, which lay unusually thick on the ground,
+notwithstanding his hundred and twenty miles' ride, for they had taken
+nearly a week to do it; so that between them they soon raised Dorothy's
+spirits also, and she turned to her hopes, and grew cheerful.
+
+This mood made her the less prepared to encounter the change that
+awaited her. What a change it was! While she approached, what with the
+trees left, and the towers, the rampart, and the outer shell of the
+courts--little injured to the distant eye, she had not an idea of the
+devastation within. But when she rode through one entrance after another
+with the gates torn from their hinges, crossed the moat by a mound of
+earth instead of the drawbridge, and rode through the open gateway,
+where the portcullises were wedged up in their grooves and their chains
+gone, into the paved court, she beheld a desolation, at sight of which
+her heart seemed to stand still in her bosom. The rugged horror of the
+heaps of ruins was indeed softly covered with snow, but what this took
+from the desolation in harshness, it added in coldness and desertion and
+hopelessness. She felt like one who looks for the corpse of his friend,
+and finds but his skeleton.
+
+The broken bones of the house projected gaunt and ragged. Its eyes
+returned no shine--they did not even stare, for not a pane of glass was
+left in a window: they were but eye-holes, black and blank with shadow
+and no-ness. The roofs were gone--all but that of the great hall, which
+they had not dared to touch. She climbed the grand staircase, open to
+the wind and slippery with ice, and reached her own room. Snow lay on
+the floor, which had swollen and burst upwards with November rains.
+Through room after room she wandered with a sense of loneliness and
+desolation and desertion such as never before had she known, even in her
+worst dreams. Yet was there to her, in the midst of her sorrow and loss,
+a strange fascination in the scene. Such a hive of burning human life
+now cold and silent! Even Marquis appeared aware of the change, for with
+tucked-in tail he went about sadly sniffing, and gazing up and down.
+Once indeed, and only once, he turned his face to the heavens, and gave
+a strange protesting howl, which made Dorothy weep, and a little
+relieved her oppressed heart.
+
+She would go and see the workshop. On the way, she would first visit the
+turret chamber. But so strangely had destruction altered the look of
+what it had spared, that it was with difficulty she recognised the doors
+and ways of the house she had once known so well. Here was a great hole
+to the shining snow where once had been a dark corner; there a heap of
+stones where once had been a carpeted corridor. All the human look of
+indwelling had past away. Where she had been used to go about as if by
+instinct, she had now to fall back upon memory, and call up again, with
+an effort sometimes painful in its difficulty, that which had vanished
+altogether except from the minds of its scattered household.
+
+She found the door of the turret chamber, but that was all she found:
+the chamber was gone. Nothing was there but the blank gap in the wall,
+and beyond it, far down, the nearly empty moat of the tower. She turned,
+frightened and sick at heart, and made her way to the bridge. That still
+stood, but the drawbridge above was gone.
+
+She crossed the moat and entered the workshop. A single glance took in
+all that was left of the keep. Not a floor was between her and the sky!
+The reservoir, great as a little mountain-tarn, had vanished utterly!
+All was cleared out; and the white wintry clouds were sailing over her
+head. Nearly a third part of the walls had been brought within a few
+feet of the ground. The furnace was gone--all but its mason-work. It was
+like the change of centuries rather than months. The castle had
+half-melted away. Its idea was blotted out, save from the human spirit.
+She turned from the workshop, in positive pain of body at the sight, and
+wandered she hardly knew whither, till she found herself in lady
+Glamorgan's parlour. There was left a single broken chair: she sat down
+on it, closed her eyes, and laid back her head.
+
+She opened them with a slight start: there stood Richard a yard or two
+away.
+
+He had heard of her return, and gone at once to Wyfern. There learning
+whither she had betaken herself, he had followed, and tracking what of
+her footsteps he could discover, had at length found her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LVIII.
+
+LOVE AND NO LEASING.
+
+
+Their eyes met in the flashes of a double sunrise. Their hands met, but
+the hand of each grasped the heart of the other. Two honester purer
+souls never looked out of their windows with meeting gaze. Had there
+been no bodies to divide them, they would have mingled in a rapture of
+faith and high content.
+
+The desolation was gone; the desert bloomed and blossomed as the rose.
+To Dorothy it was for a moment as if Raglan were rebuilt; the ruin and
+the winter had vanished before the creative, therefore prophetic, throb
+of the heart of love; then her eyes fell, not defeated by those of the
+youth, for Dorothy's faith gave her a boldness that was lovely even
+against the foil of maidenly reserve, but beaten down by conscience: the
+words of the marquis shot like an arrow into her memory: 'Love outlives
+all but leasing,' and her eyes fell before Richard's.
+
+But Richard imagined that something in his look had displeased her, and
+was ashamed, for he had ever been, and ever would be, sensitive as a
+child to rebuke. Even when it was mistaken or unjust he would always
+find within him some ground whereon it MIGHT have alighted.
+
+'Forgive me, Dorothy,' he said, supposing she had found his look
+presumptuous.
+
+'Nay, Richard,' returned Dorothy, with her eyes fast on the ground,
+whence it seemed rosy mists came rising through her, 'I know no cause
+wherefore thou shouldst ask me to forgive thee, but I do know, although
+thou knowest not, good cause wherefore I should ask thee to forgive me.
+Richard, I will tell thee the truth, and thou wilt tell me again how I
+might have shunned doing amiss, and how far my lie was an evil thing.'
+
+'Lie, Dorothy! Thou hast never lied!'
+
+'Hear me, Richard, first, and then judge. Thou rememberest I did tell
+thee that night as we talked in the field, that I had about me no
+missives: the word was true, but its purport was false. When I said
+that, thou didst hold in thy hand my comb, wherein were concealed
+certain papers in cipher.'
+
+'Oh thou cunning one!' cried Richard, half reproachfully, half
+humorously, but the amusement overtopped the seriousness.
+
+'My heart did reproach me; but Richard, what WAS I to do?'
+
+'Wherefore did thy heart reproach thee, Dorothy?'
+
+'That I told a falsehood--that I told THEE a falsehood, Richard.'
+
+'Then had it been Upstill, thou wouldst not have minded?'
+
+'Upstill! I would never have told Upstill a falsehood. I would have
+beaten him first.'
+
+'Then thou didst think it better to tell a falsehood to me than to
+Upstill?'
+
+'I would rather sin against thee, an' it were a sin, Richard. Were it
+wrong to think I would rather be in thy hands, sin or none, or sin and
+all, than in those of a mean-spirited knave whom I despised? Besides I
+might one day, somehow or other, make it up to thee--but I could not to
+him. But was it sin, Richard?--tell me that. I have thought and thought
+over the matter until my mind is maze. Thou seest it was my lord
+marquis's business, not mine, and thou hadst no right in the matter.'
+
+'Prithee, Dorothy, ask not me to judge.'
+
+'Art thou then so angry with me that thou will not help me to judge
+myself aright?'
+
+'Not so, Dorothy, but there is one command in the New Testament for the
+which I am often more thankful than for any other.'
+
+'What is that, Richard.'
+
+'JUDGE NOT. Prythee, between whom lieth the quarrel, Dorothy? Bethink
+thee.'
+
+'Between thee and me, Richard.'
+
+'No, verily, Dorothy. I accuse thee not.'
+
+Dorothy was silent for a moment, thinking.
+
+'I see, Richard,' she said. 'It lieth between me and my own conscience.'
+
+'Then who am I, Dorothy, that I should dare step betwixt thee and thy
+conscience? God forbid. That were a presumption deserving indeed the
+pains of hell.'
+
+'But if my conscience and I seek a daysman betwixt us?'
+
+'Mortal man can never be that daysman, Dorothy. Nay, an' thou need an
+umpire, thou must seek to him who brought thee and thy conscience
+together and told thee to agree. Let God, over all and in all, tell thee
+whether or no thou wert wrong. For me, I dare not. Believe me, Dorothy,
+it is sheer presumption for one man to intermeddle with the things that
+belong to the spirit of another man.'
+
+'But these are only the things of a woman,' said Dorothy, in pure
+childish humility born of love.
+
+'Sure, Dorothy, thou wouldst not jest in such sober matters.'
+
+'God forbid, Richard! I but spoke that which was in me. I see now it was
+foolishness.'
+
+'All a man can do in this matter of judgment,' said Richard, 'is to lead
+his fellow man, if so be he can, up to the judgment of God. He must
+never dare judge him for himself. An' thou cannot tell whether thou did
+well or ill in what thou didst, thou shouldst not vex thy soul. God is
+thy refuge--even from the wrongs of thine own judgment. Pray to him to
+let thee know the truth, that if needful thou mayst repent. Be patient
+and not sorrowful until he show thee. Nor fear that he will judge thee
+harshly because he must judge thee truly. That were to wrong God. Trust
+in him even when thou fearest wrong in thyself, for he will deliver thee
+therefrom.'
+
+'Ah! how good and kind art thou, Richard.'
+
+'How should I be other to thee, beloved Dorothy?'
+
+'Thou art not then angry with me that I did deceive thee?'
+
+'If thou didst right, wherefore should I be angry? If thou didst wrong,
+I am well content to know that thou wilt be sorry therefor as soon as
+thou seest it, and before that thou canst not, thou must not, be sorry.
+I am sure that what thou knowest to be right that thou will do, and it
+seemeth as if God himself were content with that for the time. What the
+very right thing is, concerning which we may now differ, we must come to
+see together one day--the same, and not another, to both, and this doing
+of what we see, is to each of us the path thither. Let God judge us,
+Dorothy, for his judgment is light in the inward parts, showing the
+truth and enabling us to judge ourselves. For me to judge thee and thee
+me, Dorothy, would with it bear no light. Why, Dorothy, knowest thou
+not--yet how shouldst thou know? that this is the very matter for the
+which we, my father and his party, contend--that each man, namely, in
+matters of conscience, shall be left to his God, and remain unjudged of
+his brother? And if I fight for this on mine own part, unto whom should
+I accord it if not to thee, Dorothy, who art the highest in soul and
+purest in mind and bravest in heart of all women I have known? Therefore
+I love thee with all the power of a heart that loves that which is true
+before that which is beautiful, and that which is honest before that
+which is of good report.'
+
+What followed I leave to the imagination of such of my readers as are
+capable of understanding that the truer the nature the deeper must be
+the passion, and of hoping that the human soul will yet burst into
+grander blossoms of love than ever poet has dreamed, not to say sung. I
+leave it also to the hearts of those who understand that love is greater
+than knowledge. For those who have neither heart nor imagination--only
+brains--to them I presume to leave nothing, knowing what self-satisfying
+resources they possess of their own.
+
+The pair wandered all over the ruins together, and Dorothy had a hundred
+places to take Richard to, and tell him what they had been and how they
+had looked in their wholeness and use--amongst the rest her own chamber,
+whither Marquis had brought her the letter which mistress Upstill had
+found so badly concealed.
+
+Then Richard's turn came, and he gave Dorothy a sadly vivid account of
+what he had seen of the destruction of the place; how, as if with whole
+republics of ants, it had swarmed all over with men paid to destroy it;
+how in every direction the walls were falling at once; how they dug and
+drained at fish-ponds and moat in the wild hope of finding hidden
+treasure, and had found in the former nothing but mud and a bunch of
+huge old keys, the last of some lost story of ancient days,--and in the
+latter nothing but a pair of silver-gilt spurs, which he had himself
+bought of the fellow who found them. He told her what a terrible shell
+the Tower of towers had been to break--how after throwing its
+battlemented crown into the moat, they had in vain attacked the walls,
+might almost as well have sought with pickaxes and crowbars to tear
+asunder the living rock, and at last--but this was hearsay, he had not
+seen it--had undermined the wall, propped it up with timber, set the
+timber on fire, and so succeeded in bringing down a portion of the hard,
+tough massy defence.
+
+'What became of the wild beasts in the base of the kitchen-tower, dost
+know, Richard?'
+
+'I saw their cages,' answered Richard, 'but they were empty. I asked
+what they were, and what had become of the animals, of which all the
+country had heard, but no one could tell me. I asked them questions
+until they began to puzzle themselves to answer them, and now I believe
+all Gwent is divided between two opinions as to their fate--one, that
+they are roaming the country, the other that lord Herbert, as they still
+call him, has by his magic conveyed them away to Ireland to assist him
+in a general massacre of the Protestants.'
+
+Mighty in mutual faith, neither politics, nor morals, nor even theology
+was any more able to part those whose plain truth had begotten absolute
+confidence. Strive they might, sin they could not, against each other.
+They talked, wandering about, a long time, forgetting, I am sorry to
+say, even their poor shivering horses, which, after trying to console
+themselves with the renewal of a friendship which a broad white line
+across Lady's face had for a moment, on Dick's part, somewhat impeded,
+had become very restless. At length an expostulatory whinny from Lady
+called Richard to his duty, and with compunctions of heart the pair
+hurried to mount. They rode home together in a bliss that would have
+been too deep almost for conscious delight but that their animals were
+eager after motion, and as now the surface of the fields had grown soft,
+they turned into them, and a tremendous gallop soon brought their
+gladness to the surface in great fountain throbs of joy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER LIX.
+
+AVE! VALE! SALVE!
+
+
+And now must I bury my dead out of my sight--bid farewell to the old
+resplendent, stately, scarred, defiant Raglan, itself the grave of many
+an old story, and the cradle of the new, and alas! in contrast with the
+old, not merely the mechanical, but the unpoetic and commonplace, yes
+vulgar era of our island's history. Little did lord Herbert dream of the
+age he was initiating--of the irreverence and pride and destruction that
+were about to follow in his footsteps, wasting, defiling, scarring,
+obliterating, turning beauty into ashes, and worse! That divine
+mechanics should thus, through selfishness and avarice, be leagued with
+filth and squalor and ugliness! When one looks upon Raglan, indignation
+rises--not at the storm of iron which battered its walls to powder,
+hardly even at the decree to level them with the dust, but at the later
+destroyer who could desecrate the beauty yet left by wrath and fear, who
+with the stones of my lady's chamber would build a kennel, or with the
+carved stones of chapel or hall a barn or cowhouse! What would the
+inventor of the water-commanding engine have said to the pollution of
+our waters, the destruction of the very landmarks of our history, the
+desecration of ruins that ought to be venerated for their loveliness as
+well as their story! Would he not have broken it to pieces, that the
+ruin it must occasion might not be laid to his charge? May all such men
+as for the sake of money constitute themselves the creators of ugliness,
+not to speak of far worse evils in the land, live--or die, I care not
+which--to know in their own selves what a lovely human Psyche lies hid
+even in the chrysalis of a railway-director, and to loathe their past
+selves as an abomination--incredible but that it had been. He who calls
+such a wish a curse, must undergo it ere his being can be other than a
+blot.
+
+But this era too will pass, and truth come forth in forms new and more
+lovely still.
+
+The living Raglan has gone from me, and before me rise the broken,
+mouldering walls which are the monument of their own past. My heart
+swells as I think of them, lonely in the deepening twilight, when the
+ivy which has flung itself like a garment about the bareness of their
+looped and windowed raggedness is but as darker streaks of the all
+prevailing dusk, and the moon is gathering in the east. Fain would the
+soul forsake the fettersome body for a season, to go flitting hither and
+thither, alighting and flitting, like a bat or a bird--now drawing
+itself slow along a moulding to taste its curve and flow, now creeping
+into a cranny, and brooding and thinking back till the fancy feels the
+tremble of an ancient kiss yet softly rippling the air, or descries the
+dim stain which no tempest can wash away. Ah, here is a stair! True
+there are but three steps, a broken one and a fragment. What said I? See
+how the phantom-steps continue it, winding up and up to the door of my
+lady's chamber! See its polished floor, black as night, its walls rich
+with tapestry, lovelily old, and harmoniously withered, for the ancient
+time had its ancient times, and its things that had come down from
+solemn antiquity--see the silver sconces, the tall mirrors, the
+part-open window, long, low, carved latticed, and filled with lozenge
+panes of the softest yellow green, in a multitude of shades! There
+stands my lady herself, leaning from it, looking down into the court!
+Ah, lovely lady! is not thy heart as the heart of my mother, my wife, my
+daughters? Thou hast had thy troubles. I trust they are over now, and
+that thou art satisfied with God for making thee!
+
+The vision fades, and the old walls rise like a broken cenotaph. But the
+same sky, with its clouds never the same, hangs over them; the same moon
+will fold them all night in a doubtful radiance, befitting the things
+that dwell alone, and are all of other times, for she too is but a
+ghost, a thing of the past, and her light is but the light of memory;
+into the empty crannies blow the same winds that once refreshed the
+souls of maiden and man-at-arms, only the yellow flower that grew in its
+gardens now grows upon its walls. And however the mind, or even the
+spirit of man may change, the heart remains the same, and an effort to
+read the hearts of our forefathers will help us to know the heart of our
+neighbour.
+
+Whoever cares to distinguish the bones of fact from the drapery of
+invention in the foregone tale, will find them all in the late Mr.
+Dirck's 'Life of the Marquis of Worcester,' and the 'Certamen
+Religiosum' and 'Golden Apophthegms' of Dr. Bayly.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's St. George and St. Michael, by George MacDonald
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